Let’s be real.
Most marketers say they’re “doing demand gen,” but what they’re actually doing is chasing leads.
The kind of leads that download your whitepaper, ghost your SDRs, and make you wonder if anyone out there actually wants what you’re selling. Sound familiar?
That’s not demand generation. That’s just filling a pipeline with names.
Real demand generation is different.
It’s about creating curiosity and desire long before someone’s ready to buy. It’s making sure your buyers know you, trust you, and think of you first when the budget opens up.
Done right, demand gen doesn’t just fill a funnel—it creates a market.
This isn’t theory. This is the playbook.
By the time you finish this, you’ll know:
Ready? Let’s build your demand engine.
Here’s the simplest way I can explain it:
If you’re in B2B SaaS, this distinction is life or death. Without demand gen, you’re begging people to care.
With demand gen, you’ve got buyers raising their hand before you even reach out.
Think of it like dating. Lead gen is speed dating—you’re collecting phone numbers.
Demand gen is building a reputation as someone worth dating. Guess which one leads to real relationships?
Every winning B2B demand strategy sits on four pillars. Skip one, and the whole thing wobbles.
📊 The kicker? With AllFactors, you don’t just run these plays, you can literally see which pillar drives the most revenue.
Maybe it’s your blog. Maybe it’s your webinars. Maybe it’s that case study no one thought mattered. Either way, you’ll know.
Here’s the step-by-step. No fluff.
Step 1: Nail your ICP and personas.
If you’re trying to sell to “anyone who needs analytics,” good luck. Demand generation works when you know exactly who you’re talking to and what keeps them up at night.
Step 2: Map the buyer’s journey.
What are they Googling when they first feel the pain? What do they need to believe before they’ll take a demo? Create content for each stage.
Step 3: Pick your channels.
Don’t spread yourself thin. Maybe LinkedIn + SEO are your best bets. Maybe it’s events + ABM. Choose 2–3, not 12.
Step 4: Make content that doesn’t suck.
Hot take: most “thought leadership” is boring. Stop publishing white noise. Write like you’re helping a friend solve a real problem. Show proof. Use stories. (Like this post is doing right now.)
Step 5: Align with sales.
If your SDRs aren’t armed with the same story you’re pushing in marketing, you’ll confuse buyers. Demand gen only works if sales and marketing sound like one team.
Step 6: Set KPIs and measure ruthlessly.
Leads don’t pay the bills. Pipeline and revenue do.
⚡ This is where AllFactors comes in. Instead of wrestling with spreadsheets, you get one dashboard showing you which campaigns, ads, and blog posts are actually generating demand across the funnel.
This is the part where marketers usually panic: “But how do I get people to want my product?”
Here’s the play:
💡 Bonus: With AllFactors, you don’t have to guess which of these is working. You’ll know if your case study, launch post, or ad campaign actually moved the needle—or if it was just noise.
This is where strategy turns into a machine.
📈 AllFactors ties it together. You’ll know whether it was your webinar or your LinkedIn campaign that tipped the account into pipeline.
Here’s the ugly truth: most demand gen programs fail because nobody knows if they’re working.
Key metrics to track:
The problem? Stitching this across GA4, ad platforms, and your CRM is painful.
That’s why AllFactors exists. It:
No more “We think the webinar helped.” Now you know.
Even great teams stumble here. Watch out for these traps:
Here’s the mindset shift:
Demand generation isn’t a campaign. It’s a system. A machine that—when built right—keeps pulling in the right people, warming them up, and feeding your pipeline with buyers who actually want what you sell.
It takes time. It takes discipline. And it takes measurement.
But the companies who invest in demand gen are the ones who win. They’re not begging for attention. They’re creating it.
And with tools like AllFactors, you can finally see what’s working across the funnel so you can double down with confidence. No more flying blind. No more wasted budget. Just a clear path to revenue.
So ask yourself: what’s one thing you can start today to create demand, not just collect leads?
Because in B2B, the companies that create demand are the ones that get remembered.