Creative agencies lose revenue when the deliverables do not support the clients' B2B customer acquisition goals. It’s not always your fault— budget cuts, in-house hires, threats from AI, and many other things could make you lose a client.
However, you can improve the value of your work (and your client retention rate) if every piece of creative work is strategic. If each deliverable shows that you thought about your clients’ users & prospects and is strategic in helping through the B2B customer journey.
In this article, I will explain the customer journey, how you can contribute to it through strategic deliverables, and what success should look like for you. I’ll also show you the type of assets you should create for your clients to help them meet their target audience’s needs when it matters.
The B2B customer journey is the stages business clients go through before they become customers. It is the period between being aware of a problem and choosing the best solution.
To HubSpot, it is "the process buyers go through to become aware of, evaluate, and decide to purchase a new product or service." That’s why the stage is divided into 5:
Most of your work is in the awareness, consideration, and conversion stages. They are where your assets are valuable and can be strategic in helping your clients get their prospects from A to Z.
Your client’s prospects (B2B buyers) spend only 17% of their time speaking to your client. This means that although they become more problem-aware by learning from your client’s website, they prefer to evaluate the top solutions and decide whether or not to choose your solution over others— without speaking to your client’s team 83% of the time.
The last time you subscribed to a software, you most likely didn't reach out to the company during the research.
You didn't email them after you saw their YouTube videos or read other content that made you feel strongly about the product.
Your clients' customers would do the same before they convert. Every touchpoint with your client’s brand must have actionable assets to make the prospect choose their brand. And that’s where you come in.
This means that if you are a Webflow (or web design), graphic design, marketing, or video creation agency, your deliverables are meant to help throughout the multiple target audience touchpoints.
According to Gartner, your deliverables do two things:
Let’s zoom out a bit. What are the specific deliverables for each B2B customer journey stage?
Each agency type contributes different deliverables at different stages. By understanding where your work fits in the journey, you can better optimize the impact of each asset. Here's how different agencies typically support their clients' customer journeys:
Awareness Stage Deliverables
Consideration Stage
Conversion Stage Deliverables
Awareness Stage Deliverables
Consideration Stage Deliverables
Conversion Stage Deliverables
Awareness Stage Deliverables
Consideration Stage Deliverables
Conversion Stage Deliverables
Ensure that the web designers also embed ratings like Ahrefs did here:
Awareness Stage Deliverables
Consideration Stage Deliverables
Conversion Stage Deliverables
Successful creative agency project management begins with understanding how each deliverable supports your client's journey stages. FocusVision’s 2020 survey shows that the average B2B buyer interacts with 13 pieces of content before engaging with a brand. This includes websites, webinars, videos, and other social media assets, as seen below:
This shows that every company asset contributes to how people perceive their brand. They also contribute to how third-party vendors rate their brands (or explain the company's solution).
So, how can your work support your clients’ B2B customer journey? These steps form the foundation of effective creative agency project management to ensure deliverables consistently meet client objectives.
Use this 3-point checklist when discussing the intent of a deliverable:
Then, they’d give answers that look like this example for a SaaS client comparison article:
You can use this brief for other questions:
When they tell you why they want that feature or asset, you’ll understand how to better ensure the asset meets their target audience’s needs.
This will help you create valuable and relevant deliverables as they would be precisely what they need.
If you don’t understand your client’s solution, learn more from their website or use the product. If there is more to know, book a call with your point of contact or one of their product developers to ask questions about their product features.
This is important for content and video marketing agencies.
You can also consider the six strategic elements of an actionable plan from Forrester summed up below:
Now, what next?
Creative agency project management works best with tools that match how agencies work—handling multiple projects, organizing client assets, and tracking deadlines without creating extra busy work.
Using a project management tool with a client portal like ManyRequests is the best way to stay organized. ManyRequests is designed for service agencies and has different features to support your work through:
1. Client Portal: use the portal to invite your clients to a platform. You can brand this platform with your logo, colors, and domain name like one of our clients, Prontto, did here.
Here, you can quickly onboard clients, show them your workflows, and create new tasks when they need you to work on something. It’s best to have a breakdown of your services so clients can “subscribe” to a specific service category with a specific number of deliverables they can ask for. That category breakdown can look like this:
Or this:
2. Organize Tasks: When clients request a deliverable, it automatically becomes a task box. You can assign this task to someone on your team. You can use the order form attached to each service/task to take details about the deliverable so that you and your assignee can know precisely what the client needs. Here’s what a task box looks like:
3. Use tags. The tags in ManyRequests can indicate if the deliverable is an awareness, consideration, conversion, or retention stage deliverable. All you’d have to do is select it while assigning a task. Here’s an example:
You can use this tag to report on the asset stages you’ve delivered for all clients over time, as seen here:
4. Use the project tracking feature: ManyRequests lets you track project progress in real-time. The client can also see when the project status turns to “In Progress” or “Pending Feedback,” which means the assignee has delivered the project and your team is reviewing it.
You can use permissions to decide what your clients can see so that private information (such as who your contractors are) stays private.
5. Client Collaboration Features: The messaging feature lets you directly chat with clients. This helps you carry them along or ask for more details about the project (if needed).
ManyRequests also has a file storage section where you can upload all kinds of files: contracts, project files, brand messaging, deliverables, and requirements.
6. Track time: If your clients pay you hourly (or you pay your contractors hourly), use the time tracking feature to know their billable hours without any administrative error.
7. Invoicing and billing: ManyRequests shows clients their invoice immediately after a service is complete. Depending on your payment structure, you can collect 100% or 50% of the payment upfront before the task begins.
You can also use ManyRequests’ Stripe integration to accept direct payments.
Willing to onboard your team members and clients to see how it works? Sign up for a 14-day free trial to see why Hatchly’s founder says, “ManyRequests has been the backbone of our business since day 1”.
No credit card is required for sign-ups.
One of the ways to demonstrate ROI is to measure the success of every deliverable. Some of these metrics are what you should use:
I understand that this information is confidential data for your clients. But if you’re curious, ask them.
Marketing agencies can also use tools like Ahrefs and SEMrush to track the results of the content they create for their clients.
Graphic designers can check the brand mentions on social media to know the performance of your deliverables.
Webflow/web designers can use tools like PageSpeed Insights and other website analytics tools to see if the website is functioning as it should.
The bottom line is that you’ll become a trusted partner to the client, which can increase your value and the volume of jobs you’ll get. They can also refer you to high-paying clients.
Start by mapping your core services to specific stages of the B2B customer journey.
Ask your client for the intent of the deliverable they have asked for and identify how your work can deliver the most impact.
Use ManyRequests to organize everything from task assignments to eventual deliveries.
These are project management with a client portal like ManyRequests and website analytics tools like Ahrefs or SEMrush.
Track metrics like conversion rates, organic traffic, click-through rates, and others listed in the previous section.
The B2B customer journey allows you to show your value to your clients. This guide has shown how your agency can evolve from a typical service provider to a strategic partner by aligning your work with your client’s B2B customer journey stages.
To get started, know where your creative services influence client journey stages, structure your offerings around these stages to maximize client success, and use ManyRequests to manage everything. Sign up for free today and use it with your client and team members for 14 days—no credit card required.