The Situation
A precision aluminum components manufacturer in Austria — serving automotive, aerospace, and medical device companies across Europe. Excellent engineering capabilities, ISO-certified, competitive pricing. But in terms of digital presence? Invisible.
They had no blog, no content strategy, and their website consisted of 5 pages: Home, About, Products, Contact, and a PDF datasheet. When procurement managers searched for "aluminum CNC machining tolerances" or "aerospace aluminum supplier Europe," they found competitors — not this client.
The Strategy
The team started with a comprehensive analysis: their target buyer personas (procurement managers, design engineers), their actual search behavior, and the competitive landscape. The team found that their competitors were publishing shallow, generic content — leaving genuine gaps in technical depth that a well-informed manufacturer could own.
Key finding: 73% of their target keywords were "comparison" or "education" queries — buyers in research mode, not ready to contact anyone yet. This was the content to own.
The team identified 3 topic clusters to own:
- Aluminum alloy selection — technical guides comparing 6061, 7075, 2024, and specialty alloys
- CNC machining for aerospace — tolerances, standards (AS9100), and compliance requirements
- Prototyping and low-volume production — bridging the gap between prototype and production
The team wrote 3 "pillar" articles (3,000+ words each) — comprehensive, technically accurate, genuinely useful resources that no competitor had published at this level of depth.
For each pillar article, the team developed 8-10 supporting articles: specific FAQ answers, comparison pieces, case studies, and technical reference content. Internal linking connected everything into a coherent ecosystem.
The team also established a monthly publishing cadence: 4 new articles per month, each filling a specific gap in the cluster.
By month 8, the team saw the first major ranking movements. By month 9, they held position 1-3 for 12 core industry terms. The traffic wasn't just growing — it was qualifying. Procurement managers, design engineers, and technical directors were finding them through search.
The Content That Actually Worked
The most successful pieces weren't the broad "what is CNC machining" articles. They were the highly specific, technically nuanced pieces:
- "6061-T6 vs. 7075-T651: A Machinist's Perspective" — written with input from their lead engineer, this article got shared in machining forums and became their top organic traffic driver
- "Understanding AS9100 Rev D: What Aerospace Buyers Actually Need From Their Suppliers" — reached procurement managers at aerospace companies who were evaluating new vendors
- "DFM (Design for Manufacturability): 15 Mistakes That Add Cost to CNC Parts" — attracted design engineers who specified components, not just procurement buyers
What This Means for Any B2B Manufacturer
Industrial B2B is one of the most underserved content markets online. Most manufacturer websites are brochure-ware. The companies that invest in genuine technical content — written by people who understand the industry — build enormous competitive advantages that are very hard to replicate.
Ready to Build Content That Establishes Authority?
The team develop content strategies for B2B industrial and technical companies. The process starts with understanding your buyers, your competitive landscape, and your technical differentiation — then building a content plan that puts you in front of the right people at the right time.
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