Why Quality Case Studies Matter (And How to Create a Case Study)

Humans love stories. We and digital marketing also happen to love data. And what do you get when you mix data with storytelling? For our purposes, a case study.

Why Quality Case Studies Matter

When you have a compelling story to tell potential clients, one about how your widget can solve not only X problem but also Y and Z tangential pain points, your secret weapon is a client case study.

This format lets you combine potent storytelling with real-world data from an existing client to add a punch. Bonus points are given, in the form of traffic, for well-executed studies since people trust not only numbers but also people. Telling a story that combines your client and their company brand and personality with the power of numbers and statistics is the best way to drive the point home.

What is a Marketing Case Study?

A case study is a detailed analysis of a given situation to highlight particular effects a service or product has on a customer. For example, if you're a business consultant, you can talk about client ABC Co., who had difficulty getting their invoicing system up to snuff with an increased client load. The inefficiencies were drowning them in incomplete invoices and inconsistent results that required rework from multiple stakeholders. Then they hired you, and in X months, they saw a Y% improvement in P2C and a decrease in the rework of 15%. All that from implementing your proven Z system. See how that works?

Find a real-life case study about the Impact of Content Marketing in driving sales and growth in B2B technology environments.

Case Studies: Marketing Gold?

According to the CMI, case studies rank #5 among content marketers' favorite tools, and 63% of those surveyed say they consider them a highly effective element of content for inbound marketing.

That's a good place to start. Some additional benefits provided by high-quality client case studies include:

  • Self-promotion, without the sales pitch. Because you're touting the results your product/service delivered to your client, the study will convey the benefits provided naturally in telling the story. No sales pitch to turn away potential customers.

  • Keyword integration. Case studies are the perfect way to naturally use your long-tail and semantic search phrases. They can enhance the flow of the narrative since other people will have the same problems and questions. Putting the semantic search phrase in the mouth of the client will draw readers in.

  • Audience targeting is baked right in. Since your existing client likely matches your target audience, you'll target audience members who can relate to writing about that client.

  • A natural venue for product placement. Your client used your product/service, or else you wouldn't write a case study about them. So, when you work in a paragraph outlining the features of that product, it's a natural part of the flow rather than a jarring sales pitch.

  • Ready-made evergreen content. The benefits seen by your client won't age, so the content you create to highlight those benefits is perfect evergreen content. Post it to the blog, then promote it via social media and maybe produce a video testimonial from the client. Then, in 6 months, do a more in-depth review of the case and make it a gated download. Then, in 6 more months, start the cycle over again.

Case Studies: A Short How-To Guide

What makes a good case study? As with any effective content marketing, there are some things to remember about crafting great case studies. This is not meant as a definitive guide by any means. Use these tips as starting points, something to guide your first foray into case study production, and then go from there as questions arise.

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Don't Be Sales -y

We know we already mentioned this, but it's essential. Sales pitches turn people off. Think about those phone calls during dinner trying to woo you to a new cellular provider - no, thank you.

What people do want is to be told a good story. So tell them how fast your client got up and running because of your intuitive user interface. Then, include stats that prove your point, followed by a quote for some social proof (see below).

Use Numbers

Along with stories, people love numbers. Numbers don't lie, so they're reassuring. Pepper in some statistics and a graph or two that add weight to your story. Be sure they're appropriate numbers, and don't get too technical; there's a time and a place for deep, technical detail, but a case study isn't it. Save the deep dive for the whitepaper.

Add Social Proof

Quote the client; this kind of social proof is invaluable in helping prove your worth to a potential customer. Remember, people, trust people. Some quotes spread throughout the narrative that drive home a point are a great way to provide social proof that you are as good as you say you are.

Stay In Voice

Just because this is business writing doesn't mean you have to break the brand voice. Don't do that. Your readers have come to trust your brand voice, so the last thing you want to do is turn on an academic-sounding, bone-dry voice just because you're presenting something different in the form of this case study. Be who you always are. Your audience trusts you already - play on that.

Tell the Story

Again, we know; we already said that. And again, it's that important. The whole point of releasing a case study is to tell how your client used your product to solve their problem and how your product or service can do the same for your readers.

To ensure the best reach for your new case study, make it as easy to access as possible so the most eyeballs can see the story you're telling.

Post a summary blog post with a CTA to download the complete study. Then, link to the summary from your social media accounts.

Then, after some time, you can upgrade and re-purpose the content on a pillar page, with more linking from social. And finally, make the whole thing, maybe with additional details added, available as a gated PDF, so people can take it with them and print it out, whatever they want. Now, the story of your success and your client's results is available and ready to start directing new interested parties your way.

Want to learn more? Download our FREE case study template today!  

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Jesse
Jesse
Jesse hails from Seattle, WA. When he's not creating great content or staring at his laptop screen waiting for inspiration, he's probably walking in the trees somewhere in the foothills of the nearby Cascade Mountains.
 

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