Not long ago, cranking out blog posts and white papers was a surefire way to fill your pipeline.
Today? You’re publishing nonstop, but the results just aren’t there.
Google has changed the rules—but not in the way most marketers think. It’s not just about depth or expertise. What’s actually driving rankings?
At the same time, Google’s real goal isn’t to send traffic to your site—it’s to keep users on Google.
AI-powered search snippets now deliver instant answers, reducing the need for users to click through.
Rand Fishkin of SparkToro has highlighted that less than half of Google searches now result in a click.
Google also favors large, well-established publishers, making it nearly impossible for most companies to break onto page one.
This shift reflects a deeper change in buyer behavior.
People aren’t following a linear journey through SEO-optimized blog posts anymore.
They’re scanning, jumping between sources, and relying on AI, communities, and dark social to get the answers they need.
The real problem isn’t just Google. It’s your audience.
Buyers are drowning in content. More blog posts, more insights, more “thought leadership” isn’t helping—it’s overwhelming them.
They don’t need another take.
They need clarity. They need context.
Without it, they’re stuck—uncertain, overloaded, and unable to move forward.
Stop adding to the pile.
Start creating content that connects the dots, guides decisions, and actually earns attention.
For years, the formula for successful content marketing seemed simple: publish as much as possible, covering every topic even tangentially related to your audience.
This approach worked for companies like HubSpot, whose expansive content strategy turned them into a marketing juggernaut.
However, this playbook has run its course.
Algorithms have changed, and buyers have changed. What used to feel like a surefire strategy now feels like shouting into the void.
The idea behind the old playbook was straightforward: produce enough content, and you’ll inevitably capture your audience at some point in their buyer journey.
For a while, it worked. Google rewarded sites that churned out consistent, keyword-rich content, and buyers appreciated a steady stream of helpful articles, even if not every piece directly addressed their needs.
Today, though, Google’s priorities have shifted.
Algorithms now prioritize depth over breadth, favoring content that gets straight to the point and offers real value.
For SaaS companies, this means focusing on highly targeted content that addresses specific challenges your buyers face, rather than covering broad or tangential topics.
This shift not only aligns with Google’s updated preferences but also meets your audience’s demand for actionable, relevant insights that speak directly to their needs.
At the same time, Google’s own tools, like AI-powered snippets, have started keeping users on the search results page rather than driving traffic to your site.
If you’ve noticed a drop in engagement despite maintaining your content cadence, this could be why.
Buyers no longer need to click through to find answers; Google hands it to them on a platter.
It’s not just about search engines. Buyers themselves are savvier.
They’ve seen it all before—the guides, the blog posts, the eBooks.
More often than not, they’re left asking, “So what?”
Without a clear, immediate connection to their specific challenges, even the most well-written content gets lost in the noise.
The problem today certainly isn’t a lack of content—it’s an overload of it.
Buyers aren’t just consuming your blog posts or white papers; they’re juggling competing insights from analysts, advisors, and other vendors, all clamoring for their attention.
Brent Adamson son calls this the "smartness arms race." Every company is trying to outdo the next with fresher insights, better data, and more thought leadership.
But instead of feeling inspired to take action, buyers feel buried. “They’re not saying, ‘Wow, I need to do something different.’ They’re saying, ‘Wow, there’s another thing I need to worry about,’” Adamson explains in his HBR article, Sensemaking for Sales.
The way forward isn’t producing more content—it’s producing content that helps buyers connect the dots.
For instance, rather than pushing another white paper on industry trends, curate a guide that ties those trends to your buyers' specific challenges.
If they’re researching automation tools, don’t just list product specs—show how those tools integrate into their workflows, eliminate bottlenecks, and solve real business problems.
This approach simplifies decision-making and proves that you understand their challenges.
Buyers don’t need more information—they need clarity.
Today’s buyers aren’t just overwhelmed with information—they’re drowning in it.
They’re consuming vendor content, third-party reports, analyst opinions, and peer recommendations, all while trying to make a high-stakes decision.
But instead of feeling informed, they feel stuck.
Brent Adamson, in Sensemaking for Sales (Harvard Business Review), explains that when buyers are overloaded with conflicting information, they lose confidence—not just in vendors, but in their ability to make a decision at all.
He writes, “A lack of self-confidence impedes big deals more often than a lack of confidence in a particular vendor does.”
Therefore, the key to winning attention isn’t more content—it’s better framing, guidance, and clarity.
Adamson outlines three essential activities that help buyers move forward:
Content that wins today isn’t just informative—it’s actionable, decision-focused, and built for engagement. Buyers don’t need more content. They need content that helps them move forward.