< Resources

How to Diagnose and Fix Messaging That’s Falling Flat in B2B Tech

Is your messaging falling flat? Learn how to spot outdated brand messaging, fix it, and build a narrative that drives real results in B2B marketing.

Camela Thompson
9 April 2025
Videos

Your Messaging Isn’t Broken. It’s Just Outdated.

Marketing gets blamed for everything—from poor pipeline to declining revenue.

But sometimes, the problem is marketing. 

Specifically: your message no longer resonates.

In this article, we’ll show you how to diagnose stale messaging, figure out what’s changed, and build a new narrative that actually drives results.

What We Actually Mean by “Brand Messaging.”

In short, your brand message is the story behind your brand’s existence. It encompasses the reason your brand exists, its personality, your position in the market, and your value proposition. It’s what your brand is – and aspires to be seen as – in the marketplace.

We’re big fans of the 6 Ps of brand messaging:

  • Purpose – Why do we exist? What change are we trying to create?
  • Perception – How do we want our audience to describe us?
  • Personality – What’s our vibe? What do we want people to feel?
  • Position – Who do we serve, and why are we different?
  • Promotion – How do we pitch our value?
  • Value Proposition – What problems do we solve, and why do we solve them better?

When messaging is on point, it just clicks. But getting there—and staying there—is far from easy.

The Messaging Lifecycle: Why Good Messaging Stops Working.

If you’ve read Crossing the Chasm by Geoffrey A. Moore, you know tech adoption follows a lifecycle:

  • Innovators – Technical experimenters who love risk.
  • Early Adopters – Forward-thinkers chasing advantage (a.k.a. your “growth hacker” crowd).
  • Early Majority – Cautious but curious; they need proof.
  • Late Majority – Followers who need safety in numbers.
  • Laggards – Only buy when there’s no alternative left.
a chart illustrating the chasm in the technology adoption lifecycle between early adopter and early majority

The infamous “chasm” lies between Early Adopters and the Early Majority—and it’s where a lot of messaging dies.

This is the pivot point where you need to stop talking about how cool or cutting-edge your product is—and start proving it works. Early Majority buyers want case studies, ROI, and social proof, not vague innovation-speak.

Worse, this may be the moment when buyers realize your product is a “nice to have.” If Early Adopters are churning, it’s time to reassess whether your message is hiding real value—or revealing the absence of it.

External factors can also mess with your narrative: economic shifts, behavioral changes, new competitors, or global events (we’re looking at you, pandemic). Your message can get outdated even if your product hasn’t.

So yes, messaging can age out. And when it does, marketing’s job is to identify the problem—and lead the fix.

How to Know When Your Messaging Is the Problem.

Unless multiple prospects are telling you – straight up – your messaging doesn’t make sense, you’ll need to use a combination of qualitative and quantitative indicators to figure things out.

Qualitative Red Flags

It can feel like sales always complains about marketing, but there are certain phrases to watch for:

  • “People have never heard of us.”
  • “They were confused by the website.”
  • “People ask what it is we do.”

Chat bots and website forms can also be a good source of feedback. Your analyst should be able to use an LLM or old fashioned text searches to figure out what people are saying about your website and what kind of questions they ask. If you have people from your target audience expressing confusion over what your company does, you have a problem.

Quantitative Metrics

Messaging isn’t the only reason your funnel could be slipping—but it’s one of the first you should check. Just make sure you slice the data by segment.

Here are the signs to track, in rough order of appearance:

  • Website traffic
  • Website engagement (bounce rate, time on page)
  • Conversion rate trends (by campaign, by audience)
  • Opportunity creation volume
  • Opportunity-to-stage conversion rates
  • Closed/won ratios
  • Total bookings
lead chart illustrating topline decline and segment growth

If top-line leads are dropping, but leads in your ideal segment are rising—good news. You might be shedding unqualified traffic and leaning into sharper messaging.

When done right, refined messaging boosts lead quality, pipeline velocity, and revenue. And once your CFO sees the numbers, they’ll stop asking why volume dipped.

How to fix your messaging.

Here’s your roadmap. You don’t need to do all of this at once—but skipping steps comes back to bite you later.

1. Get Stakeholders Involved

Interview sales, CS, product, and leadership. Share your data. Listen more than you talk. Your best messaging will reflect real customer language—and the fastest way to drive adoption is making stakeholders feel like it was their idea.

2. Revisit Your ICP

Markets evolve. Customer profiles shift. Your early adopters might be tapped out, and your product may be maturing into a different segment. Let data—not assumptions—guide you. (Need a framework? Doug Bell has a great one.)

3. Conduct Customer Interviews

Nothing beats direct input from users. Ask what problem your product solves, how they describe it, and what nearly stopped them from buying. Yael Morris from Decode Insights gave us a fantastic breakdown of this process.

4. Mine Call Recordings

Analyze why deals are lost, what objections come up, and what competitors are in the mix. While it’s no replacement for interviews, it’s an incredible supplement—especially at scale.

5. Test, Iterate, Repeat

Use A/B tests to validate copy variations in ads, landing pages, nurture flows, and more. Keep everything else constant so you can isolate message performance.

Messaging Isn’t Set-and-Forget

Your product evolves. Your market shifts. Your customers change.

Yet most B2B companies treat messaging like a one-time project.

That’s how messaging becomes stale—and how marketing becomes the scapegoat.

Strong, resonant messaging is a living system. It needs regular validation, tight alignment with your ICP, and cross-functional support to survive the gauntlet of B2B growth. Start with the signals. Follow the data. And rebuild a message that actually moves the needle.

Register to our Newsletter

Stories and trends of tech b2b marketing websites, zero fluff, tons of fun stuff

Thank you for submitting the form.

Related posts

Marketing Data Shows What, But Not Why with Yael Morris

Marketing Data Shows What, But Not Why with Yael Morris

How To Interpret Heatmaps for a B2B Website

How To Interpret Heatmaps for a B2B Website

An Intro to GEO Optimization for B2B Marketers

An Intro to GEO Optimization for B2B Marketers

Why do B2B marketers struggle to prove their value?

Why do B2B marketers struggle to prove their value?

Expecting more from your website?

So do we. Let’s chat about ways to improve your buyer journey.