Contents
Why It Matters: Long-Form Content Is a Lead Gen PowerhouseSMS: A High-Engagement Channel for Content DistributionHow SMS Fits into a Blog Distribution StrategySMS + Blog Pairing: Some More Practical Use Cases for B2B SaaSWhen to Send SMS: Timing, Frequency, and TacticsCompliance, Consent, and Consideration: Staying Human (and Legal) with SMSThe Missing "Ping" in Your Content StrategyFAQA few months ago, I spent a week working on a blog post for a SaaS client.
I interviewed their product manager, gathered key data, and fine-tuned every detail. It was solid, strategic content designed to make an impact.
We published it, shared it on LinkedIn, and sent it out via email. And then?
Silence.
If you’ve worked in B2B marketing, you’ve probably felt this frustration.
You put effort into long-form content—blogs, whitepapers, case studies—because it’s meant to educate, build trust, and nurture leads.
But too often, it gets buried.
Email inboxes are crowded, and LinkedIn’s algorithm doesn’t favor long-form posts. In fact, 55% of SMS messages are opened, compared to just around 20% for email.
So, what’s the solution? SMS.
In this post, we’ll explain why SMS should be a key part of your B2B content strategy.
We’ll also show you how it can drive engagement, nurture leads, and speed up your sales cycle.
Let’s get to it. 👇
Before we dive into the fun stuff (yes, SMS is the fun stuff), let’s take a step back and remember why long-form content still matters.
A client once said, "Our blog is nice, but it’s not really bringing in leads." So, we took a closer look. They were creating great content—it just wasn’t reaching the right audience or tied to their sales funnel.
When we revamped their strategy, aligned blogs with different stages of the buyer journey, and made sure the right people saw it?
That’s when things clicked.
Long-form content isn’t just for thought leadership or SEO. It’s a lead-gen powerhouse.
👉 At the top of the funnel, educational blog posts attract the right audience through search and shares.
👉 In the middle, case studies and comparison pieces help prospects decide if you’re the right fit.
👉 At the bottom, technical guides and whitepapers are perfect for nurturing warm leads.
But none of that matters if no one sees it. Your content can do the heavy lifting, but only if it’s in front of the right people.
A while ago, I got a text from a company I’d signed up for.
Instead of the usual "20% off" or "your appointment is confirmed," it was a short message linking to a blog post. And not just any blog post—it was exactly what I needed to solve a challenge I was dealing with.
I clicked. I read the whole thing. I even bookmarked it.
That’s when it hit me: why aren’t more B2B marketers doing this?
We usually think of SMS as a tool for sending reminders or order updates. But it can also be a super-effective content distribution tool.
It’s fast, personal, and doesn’t compete with unread emails or LinkedIn’s algorithm. That kind of visibility is priceless for B2B marketers looking to get eyes on their blogs, case studies, or reports.
And the data backs it up:
If your blog post isn’t getting the attention it deserves, SMS might be your new best friend. And no, not for spamming. Just a simple, thoughtful nudge that actually gets seen.
So, how do you share blog content over SMS without annoying people or sounding pushy?
Just treat it like a personal way to share your best stuff. Here are a few ways we’ve seen it work really well:
Just published a new blog post? Maybe it's a deep dive on churn or a guide to better onboarding.
Instead of hoping people find it through email or social, why not send a quick text to your most engaged leads?
Example SMS:
“📝 New blog: 5 Proven Ways to Reduce SaaS Churn - We just dropped this; it might help you out. 👉 [link]
It’s short, helpful, and feels like something a colleague might text you.
This one feels fancy, and it works like a charm.
Send VIPs or warm leads early access to high-value content, like whitepapers, industry trend reports, or gated blog content, before it's officially live elsewhere.
Example SMS:
“📊 You’re first in line! Our 2025 SaaS Benchmark Report is out! Early access for our subscribers here: [link]
It adds a sense of exclusivity without needing a massive production.
Long-form content is a goldmine. But not everyone has time to read a 2,000-word post.
SMS is perfect for dropping bite-sized takeaways or summaries that drive people back to the full piece.
Example SMS:
“⚡Key takeaway from our latest blog: 'The best time to send SaaS onboarding emails is within 2 minutes of sign-up.' Catch the full breakdown here 👉 [link]
Boom! That’s value.
Now this one’s a little more advanced, but super effective if you’re running ongoing campaigns.
Let’s say you host a webinar on product-led growth and send out a blog post recap via SMS after the event.
A few days later, another SMS drops with a follow-up blog comparing top PLG tools.
You’re building a mini content journey via SMS, while keeping people engaged beyond the first touchpoint.
You can even segment by buyer stage. Early-stage leads receive how-to guides and blog explainers, while warmer leads receive case studies and product comparisons.
Everyone gets what’s most relevant to them.
Now let’s talk real-life, rubber-meets-the-road kind of stuff.
While the theory behind SMS as a distribution channel is solid, how it works in a B2B SaaS workflow matters.
So here are some plug-and-play ideas you can steal, adapt, and run with (no guesswork required).
You just wrapped a killer webinar.
You had solid attendance, great questions in the chat, and people stuck around until the end.
But here’s where many teams drop the ball. They stop the conversation cold with a boring thank-you email.
What if you kept the momentum going with a friendly SMS that links to a recap blog instead?
Or better yet, a deep-dive piece inspired by questions people asked live?
Example SMS:
“🎥 Missed part of our PLG webinar? Here's a 3-min recap blog with all the takeaways: [link]
You could even segment based on engagement. People who stayed till the end get one blog, while no-shows get a FOMO-driven link like:
“👀 Couldn’t make it to the webinar? No worries. Catch the best bits in this quick read: [link]
These tiny touches extend the life of your webinar content and give your blog more visibility.
So someone’s been poking around your product pages.
Maybe they downloaded a checklist or booked a demo. This is where your content can nudge them gently toward "yes."
Instead of hitting them with a sales pitch, send a quick text with a blog-based case study that mirrors their use case or industry.
Example SMS:
“🚀 How Acme Co. cut churn by 28% in 3 months using our platform. Real story here: [link]
Bonus points if the blog includes actual metrics, testimonials, or even a short video clip from the client.
This works well for niche verticals, too. You can tailor your outreach:
“🏥 Healthcare SaaS? See how we helped another HIPAA-compliant platform scale with fewer support tickets: [link]
Whether it’s a virtual event, product launch, or new industry report, you’ve probably got it covered on email and social media.
But let’s be honest. Emails are easy to ignore, and algorithms don’t always play nice.
A clear SMS can cut through the noise and drive immediate action.
Example SMS:
“📥 New drop: 'The 2025 Guide to B2B SaaS Retention' is live. Grab your copy: [link]
Keep it simple, direct, and valuable.
If the content is gated, SMS is gold for reminding your existing contacts about it.
You're not cold-texting here; you’re re-engaging people who already are interested in what you have to say.
Reactivation tip:
“💡You asked for our 2025 Trends Report, but didn’t download it. Here’s your link again: [link]
This kind of message feels personal and helpful, not pushy.
Now this is where an SMS + blog pairing really shines.
You can sneak valuable content into your nurture flows without it feeling like a nurture flow.
Instead of a series of long-winded emails, pepper in a few timely, relevant blog posts that meet your lead exactly where they are in their buying journey.
Examples:
👋 New to your list
“Just getting started? Here's our beginner-friendly guide to choosing the right tool: [link]
🤔 Still researching
“Wondering how we stack up? This comparison blog breaks it down: [link]
✅ Ready to buy
“Want to see how we scaled a team from 10 to 100 users in under 6 months? Here’s the full story: [link]
Because SMS feels like a 1:1 message (even when it’s automated), it helps your brand stay approachable.
You don’t need to reinvent your entire strategy. Just layer in SMS to support what you’re already doing.
The goal isn’t to replace email or LinkedIn, but to boost the odds that your best blog content actually gets seen, read, and acted on.
So you’re on board with SMS for content distribution. Awesome.
But now you’re wondering:
"How do I do this without annoying my audience or sounding like a pushy used car salesperson?"
Fair question.
SMS is one of the most personal digital channels out there.
You're popping up on someone’s lock screen, which means expectations are higher.
But when done right, it can feel like a helpful nudge from a wise friend, not an interruption.
Here’s how to walk that line:
Timing isn’t just about not texting people at 10 PM (please don’t). It’s about meeting your audience when they’re most open to hearing from you.
🕘 Best bet? Mid-morning (around 10–11 AM) or early afternoon (1–2 PM).
People are usually past the early inbox chaos and haven’t mentally checked out yet.
🛑 Avoid:
Monday mornings (everyone’s just trying to survive)
Late evenings (you're not Netflix. Please don’t ping them after dinner)
Weekends (unless it’s something fun and optional, like an event or webinar reminder)
🧠 Think about context. For example:
Just published a blog on "How SaaS startups can stretch a Q2 budget"? That’s perfect to send mid-April, when finance teams are doing budget reviews.
Writing about "AI tools for marketing teams"? Maybe time that around major conferences or industry trend weeks.
SMS is not the place to unleash your inner Shakespeare.
You’ve got only a few brief characters to grab attention, offer value, and share a link.
This could be your go-to structure:
[Hook or emoji] + What’s in it for them + Short link
Examples:
⚠️ Don’t forget: Test your links. A broken link is the SMS equivalent of a dead-end street. It’s frustrating, confusing, and a surefire way to get unsubscribed.
Nobody wants a surprise text from a brand they don’t remember interacting with. So make sure your subscribers actually want to hear from you.
Here’s how to build opt-in seamlessly into your content funnel:
Add a “Text me updates” checkbox on your newsletter sign-up
Include SMS opt-in during webinar registration (“Want the replay + extra content via text?”)
Create a dedicated landing page for SMS blog alerts (“Join 5,000 marketers who get smart B2B content via text”)
And yes, compliance matters. Be crystal clear about what they’re signing up for, include opt-out instructions in every message (e.g., “Reply STOP to unsubscribe”), and don’t play fast and loose with your list.
This one’s huge.
Even if your content is top-tier, too many texts can lead to fatigue, or worse, unsubscribes.
Good rule of thumb?
Stick to 1 - 2 blog-related texts per month.
3 - 4 during a specific launch, product rollout, or campaign.
🔁 Example: Let’s say you’re releasing a three-part blog series on “SaaS onboarding mistakes.” You could:
Text Part 1 at launch
Text Part 3 two weeks later, with a call to binge the whole series
Bonus: Send a final SMS linking to a gated checklist based on the series
That’s value-packed and not overwhelming to your audience.
Even small touches of personalization can make a big difference.
Instead of:
"New blog alert! Click here."
Try:
"Hey Jamie! Thought you’d love our latest post on retention during pricing changes: [link]"
You can personalize based on:
First name
Content interest (e.g., if they opted in after reading a blog on onboarding, send them more onboarding tips)
Location (e.g., "Hey NYC founders! Here’s a new post just for early-stage teams")
💡 If you’re using a tool like Mobile Text Alerts, personalization can often be automated based on tags or behaviors. Use that to your advantage.
Want to make sure your content gets read and appreciated?
SMS is like the espresso shot of your content strategy. It is strong, short, helpful, and always welcome when delivered at just the right time.
Let me tell you a quick story. A few months ago, I signed up for a webinar from a SaaS company I genuinely liked.
Great topic, helpful speakers. I was all in.
But the next day, I started getting texts. Not "Hey, thanks for coming!" kind of texts. I mean hard-sell, "Book a demo now!!!" kind of texts.
No warning. No opt-in.
Needless to say, I unsubscribed quickly, and I haven’t looked at that brand the same way since.
The moral of the story? SMS can be magic, but only when it’s used with respect.
So let’s talk about how to stay compliant and considerate:
More than just a legal checkbox, it’s about trust.
Always get explicit permission before you hit send. That means:
Clear language in your forms (“Text me helpful blog content 1 - 2x/month”)
No sneaky pre-checked boxes
Letting people know exactly what to expect
It's like knocking before walking into someone’s office.
You wouldn’t just barge in waving a flyer, right?
Even if your SMS platform automatically adds "Reply STOP to unsubscribe," you should still make it clear.
Why? Because it shows you're human. You’re not trying to trap people in some content loop. No. They’re in control.
And honestly, if someone opts out, that’s okay. It means you’re keeping your list healthy and respectful.
Here’s the golden rule: don’t sell before you serve.
If someone gave you their number for blog updates or whitepaper access, treat it like a privilege.
Send them helpful, insightful, or even delightful content. Build that relationship.
Once you’ve earned their trust (and you’ve got the right opt-ins), invite them to book a call, check out a demo, or explore your offer.
But lead with value, not with "Buy now."
You’ve already put in the hard work: interviewing subject matter experts, collaborating with sales, and crafting long-form content that actually helps people.
But creating great content is only half the job. Getting it seen is the other.
That’s where SMS comes in. It’s not just for flash sales or appointment reminders anymore.
For B2B marketers, it’s a low-lift, high-impact way to get your content in front of the right people at the right time—without getting buried in an inbox or lost in an algorithm.
Use it to tease new blog posts, share quick takeaways, or give VIP subscribers early access to exclusive content.
Done right, SMS becomes the distribution channel your strategy didn’t know it needed.
Ready to Try SMS for Your Content Strategy?
Start with a single blog post. Test a teaser SMS. See how it performs.
👉 Start your free trial with Mobile Text Alerts today and amplify your B2B content marketing strategy.
B2B (business-to-business) content marketing refers to creating and distributing valuable, relevant content to attract, engage, and retain a target audience of business decision-makers.
This content can take many forms, such as blogs, whitepapers, eBooks, webinars, or case studies, and is typically used to educate potential clients about your solutions or industry, nurture leads through the sales funnel, and ultimately, drive business growth.
It’s the long game—helping your audience solve problems, learn something new, or make informed decisions, which builds trust and authority over time.
In the B2B world, the buying process is long and complex and often involves multiple decision-makers.
Content marketing helps simplify this journey by offering valuable information at every stage.
Here’s why it’s important for B2B companies:
Builds Authority and Trust: Consistently publishing educational content positions your brand as an expert in your field, which is key when building trust with business buyers.
Supports Lead Generation: High-quality content attracts potential leads, guides them through their buying journey, and nurtures them until they are ready to make a purchasing decision.
Improves SEO and Organic Reach: Great content helps your website rank higher in search results, making it easier for prospects to find you.
Drives Conversions: Well-crafted content that aligns with your audience's needs can lead to better conversion rates, especially when paired with strategic SMS and email outreach.
In essence, content marketing helps your business stand out in a crowded market and builds long-term relationships with potential customers.
While pairing SMS with blog content is an exciting way to boost visibility and engagement, there are several other strategies you can use in your B2B content marketing plan:
SEO and Content Optimization: Focus on keyword research and on-page SEO optimization to make sure your content is discoverable. Blog posts, case studies, and landing pages should all align with your SEO strategy to rank higher and attract organic traffic.
Email Marketing: Create email drip campaigns that nurture leads through educational content. Combine this with SMS to keep your audience engaged across multiple channels.
Webinars and Live Events: Hosting webinars is a fantastic way to engage your audience in real-time. Afterward, repurpose the content into blog posts, podcasts, or social media updates.
Guest Blogging and Influencer Collaborations: Partner with other brands or influencers in your industry to create content that expands your reach and taps into new audiences.
Video Content: Videos (especially explainer videos, demos, or interviews) are a highly engaging form of content. Share snippets via SMS to drive interest in longer-form video content on your website or YouTube channel.
Remember, a diversified content marketing strategy is often the most successful, combining various formats and distribution methods to build a well-rounded approach.
--
Author bio:
Priyanka John is the founder of 31 Cookies, a boutique content agency that helps B2B companies turn content into revenue.
She specializes in long-form blogs that align with buyer journeys and drive pipeline for early-stage startups. When not strategizing content, she's likely training her team to think like SaaS marketers.
Start sending mass text alerts to your entire list today!
GET FREE TRIAL