What is B2B sales enablement? It’s the engine behind a smooth buyer journey—and it often gets ignored. When marketing doesn’t deliver solid enablement content, the team stalls, sales loses momentum, and buyers walk away.
So what counts as “good” enablement content, why does it matter, and how do you build it?
Simple:
- It equips sales with useful tools: one-pagers, case studies, competitor briefs, pricing explainers, etc.
- It quickly answers real buyer questions about things like ROI, implementation, or proof it works.
- It aligns what buyers search for with what the brand delivers.
Curious how to create it? Start with:
- Sales call notes to surface common objections.
- Top-performing blog posts to convert into talk tracks or leave-behinds.
- A lightweight library that’s easy to find and update.
Ready to dig in? Here’s what to make, why it matters, and how to ship it without slowing down.
TOC
- What Is B2B Sales Enablement?
- What Does B2B Sales Enablement Content Look Like?
- Who Creates B2B Sales Enablement Content?
- How Does Sales Enablement Content Benefit Your Brand?
- How to Create Good B2B Sales Enablement Content
What Is B2B Sales Enablement?
Actually, let’s start with what sales enablement is not. Sales enablement has often and lately been relegated to whitepapers, presentation decks, battle cards, and other content that marketing hands off to sales. While that isn’t necessarily false, it’s a bit narrow-minded to reduce sales enablement to just a set of deliverables. In reality, sales enablement encompasses a broader role, supporting sales reps with resources, processes, and best practices to drive overall sales effectiveness.
Sales enablement runs on collaboration. Marketing and sales align to give reps what they need to close—on-message assets, timely insights, and clear plays that make complex conversations simple. The enablement team keeps that alignment tight, smoothing feedback loops and standardizing what works so it scales. Curious which formats consistently move deals forward? Explore 5 types of sales enablement content.
The goal is straightforward: help teams sell faster and smarter. A strong enablement plan turns scattered efforts into a repeatable system. Reps get practical tools they can use mid-call. Managers get visibility to coach on real behaviors. Leadership gets a strategy that compounds, with more consistent outcomes today and stronger growth tomorrow.
What Does B2B Sales Enablement Content Look Like?
Of course, sales enablement content can take many different forms, including sales enablement materials and sales materials that support the sales process, including:
- Product Collateral: Think brochures, product guides, and spec sheets that provide detailed info about your products or services.
- Case Studies: Case studies showcase real-world examples of how your products or services have helped customers solve specific problems or achieve their goals.
- Decks and Presentations: This type of content helps explain processes, products, or other relevant information. It often functions as a useful template to guide conversations with prospects.
- Whitepapers and Ebooks: These longer-form pieces dive deep into industry trends, challenges, and solutions. They help position your brand as a thought leader in your industry.
- Blog Posts: Blog posts can cover a ton of topics, from industry news and trends to tips and best practices. They’re a great way to attract prospects to your website and provide valuable info.
- Email Templates: Personalized email templates can help your sales reps quickly and effectively communicate with prospects. (AI tools can be especially helpful for this.)
- Social Media Posts: Sales enablement content for social media can include both written and visual content that is informative, engaging, and tailored to the platform and audience.
- Video Content: Video content is helpful to demonstrate products, provide tutorials, or share customer testimonials. It’s especially great for explaining complex concepts or showcasing product features.
You probably already have versions of some of these pieces, but think of other content opportunities that can enhance your buyer journey. In many ways, it almost doesn’t matter what form sales enablement content takes as long as it serves its purpose: to support sales.
Who Creates B2B Sales Enablement Content?
Remember: 50%-90% of a B2B-buying journey is completed before a buyer can interact with a sales rep (per Spotio). That puts sales enablement in the hands of marketing—with sales’ help. The best sales enablement content comes from strong collaboration between teams.
- The marketing team has expertise in content creation and is best positioned to understand the target audience’s needs and preferences.
- The sales team plays a crucial role in informing the content creation process because they are the ones on the front lines, interacting with prospects, navigating their pain points, and offering solutions. Sales provides valuable insights to help the marketing team create content that resonates with the target audience.
When these teams work in sync, they build strategies and content that actually move deals forward—think a targeted case study that answers a buyer’s last-mile question. But that can’t happen if teams are siloed. There are a few ways to combat that:
- Create an enablement team. This is a dedicated group that builds the strategy, runs the tools, and delivers the training, giving teams exactly what they need, when they need it. Think targeted playbooks for new segments, clean reporting that flags gaps before deals stall, and short workshops that turn product updates into usable talk tracks. In a startup, that might be one specialist rolling out a simple content hub. In an enterprise, it could be a small crew standardizing processes across regions.
- Use collaboration tools to enable marketing and sales teams to work together efficiently. This allows for live editing, real-time feedback, and instant updates to maintain alignment and streamline communication.
Tl;dr: If you’re a marketing professional who’s been tasked with creating sales enablement collateral, you need to cultivate a good relationship with sales and create the infrastructure to produce (and improve) the right sales enablement content.
How Does Sales Enablement Content Benefit Your Brand?
Sales enablement gives you the support you need to fill gaps, answer questions, and move buyers along the journey. Here are the key benefits of sales enablement content for your business:
- Building Trust and Credibility: If you can create high-quality, informative content, you can turn your brand into a trusted authority in your industry, making prospects more likely to consider your offerings.
- Educating Prospects: As you educate prospects about your products or services, you can directly address their pain points and demonstrate how your offerings can meet their needs. This makes conversations more natural and inviting. (See how to create content for every stage of the buyer journey.)
- Facilitating Sales Conversations: Good sales enablement content gives you the perfect blueprint to start and guide conversations, whether that’s through a well-crafted email, a compelling case study, or a product demo video.
- Addressing Objections: The more you can anticipate your audience’s needs (and hesitations), the more you can make them feel at ease. Sales enablement content lets you address issues proactively, helping prospects overcome objections more effectively and close deals faster.
- Improving Sales Efficiency: By giving your team access to a library of sales enablement content, you make everyone’s lives easier. Sales reps can quickly find and share relevant content with prospects, saving internal time and effort. Prospects can get quicker answers and have more productive conversations with sales. Plus, by providing sales teams with the training, support, and resources they need to succeed, you can help them feel more valued and motivated to succeed. This can shorten sales cycles and lead to lower turnover rates and a more engaged sales force—a huge win-win-win for your customers, team, and business.
- Measuring Effectiveness: Sales enablement content uses analytics to measure effectiveness. By tracking metrics such as open rates, click-through rates, and conversion rates, you can gain insights into what content resonates with prospects and adjust your strategy accordingly. (For more on that, see our guide to using content marketing metrics.)
Collectively, sales enablement content gives you a stronger ROI because it allows you to create more tailored, targeted, and effective content that empowers your sales team.
How to Create Good B2B Sales Enablement Content
No matter what type of content you’re creating, it’s important to create that content intentionally and strategically with a clear understanding of its purpose. Here’s how to do it.
1) Align sales and marketing to identify opportunities.
Your sales and marketing teams have to work together to make strong sales enablement content. This includes aligning on goals and strategies, brainstorming, and sharing insights and feedback. I suggest you have a quarterly meeting (at a minimum) to talk about potential content opportunities, debrief on what’s working/what’s not, etc. (For more tips to do this, find out how to align your sales and marketing teams.)
2) Brainstorm ideas that make you more effective.
What knowledge gaps can you fill with content? What type of information do you often repeat? How can you better package information into a more compelling format? These are helpful questions to identify your best sales enablement opportunities. Use clear, data-backed signals to zero in on the content that will move the needle.
3) Know your audience.
What are their key pain points, objections, or hesitations? Your content should address these naturally to move people down the path to purchase. Shape your messaging to kickstart useful customer conversations, and layer in targeted engagement plays that make each touchpoint feel tailored, building real rapport that nudges qualified prospects toward a confident yes. (If you haven’t identified your audience, use our guide to create personas to identify your audience and their key emotional drivers.)
4) Choose the most effective format.
Do people want to slog through a long brochure, or do they want a short, snappy explainer video? Your content should help both your audience and your sales team interact more effectively, and the format matters as much as the message. Leveraging content management systems and digital sales rooms makes your content easy to find, easy to use, and delivered in the right format—so that sales move faster and engagement grows.
5) Add personality.
Every piece of content you create is an opportunity to showcase who you are and build a relationship. It should reflect your brand personality and make people excited to learn more and/or work with you.
6) Use the right tools.
Technology can do the heavy lifting in sales enablement, giving teams faster ways to work and clearer signals on what to do next. With a strong tech stack, you can track performance, automate tasks, and use analytics to pinpoint what moves deals forward. That helps you spot gaps, adjust in real time, and keep momentum across long enterprise cycles. With the right mix, you can empower reps to perform, support managers with visibility, and keep the entire process rolling. AI can also automate many of these tasks. (See our roundup of 50 handy AI tools to find out how.)
Ultimately, the goal is to create a smooth buying experience from first touch to close. How do you get there? Talk to sales—often. The more teams collaborate, the more valuable insights you gain, and the better content you can create.
Want support building your B2B sales enablement content? Talk to us at Column Five.