OTReniX runs marketing for industrial brands with 12 - 24 month sales cycles and 6 - 10 stakeholders per deal. We reach plant managers, procurement, engineering, and C-suite the way they actually buy.
Industrial brands
Pipeline lift
Pipeline built
An industrial marketing agency runs marketing for companies that sell physical equipment, industrial components, automation, and process technology to manufacturers, utilities, energy, mining, construction, and logistics.
The buyers are different from a typical SaaS deal. A plant manager evaluating a $400K conveyor system doesn't convert from a webinar funnel. The decision involves engineering, maintenance, procurement, EHS, and a CFO sign-off, with each function applying its own criteria before the PO is even drafted.
So the work is different too. An industrial agency builds specification sheets, CAD libraries, application case studies, distributor enablement, trade-show programs, and account-based outreach to named plants, not generic top-of-funnel content.
From first touch to PO
Across 4–5 functions: engineering, ops, procurement, finance, EHS
Project, equipment, multi-year MRO
General B2B marketing optimises for fast funnels: capture a lead, qualify in a week, close in a month. Industrial cycles run 4x longer or more, with technical evaluations, site visits, and pilots that no SaaS funnel ever sees. Forrester reports up to 80% of the industrial buying journey now happens before any sales rep is contacted.
Apply a SaaS playbook to a pump manufacturer and the math collapses: cost per MQL stays low, cost per closed PO is unmeasurable. Retargeting burns budget on prospects who won't sign for over a year, webinars pull the wrong job titles, and sales blames the lead quality. The execution is fine; the system is wrong for the cycle.
| Dimension | General B2B / SaaS | Industrial |
|---|---|---|
| Sales cycle | 2–8 weeks | 12–24 months |
| Buying committee | 1–3 people | 6–10 across engineering, ops, procurement, finance, EHS |
| Average deal | $5K–$50K ARR | $50K–$5M project + multi-year MRO |
| Decision drivers | Features, integrations, price | Uptime, safety, lifecycle cost, references on the same equipment |
| Content that converts | Demos, blogs, webinars, free trial | Spec sheets, CAD/BIM files, application notes, ROI calculators, plant case studies |
| Primary channels | SEO, paid social, content, email | Trade shows, industry publications, distributor enablement, ABM to named plants, technical SEO |
| Sales motion | Inside sales / PLG | Field sales + distributors + application engineers |
| Attribution model | Last-touch in CRM, weekly | Multi-touch over quarters, distributor pass-through, offline lift |
Bottom line: a generalist agency optimises for clicks and MQLs. An industrial agency optimises for influenced plants, qualified RFQs, and closed POs over a 12 - 24 month window.
Industrial markets generate over $20 trillion in annual global output, about 30% of world GDP. Manufacturing alone employs over 470 million people worldwide, and the IEA tracked more than $2 trillion in energy and renewables capital investment in 2024. These ten verticals cover the bulk of capital-intensive purchasing on the planet: equipment, automation, software, services, and infrastructure.
Gartner reports B2B industrial buyers spend only 17% of their evaluation time talking to vendors, and just 5% with any single supplier. The agencies that win here own the technical content, references, and signals the buying committee sees during the other 95%.
Plant operations, industrial engineering, and capex teams across mid-market and enterprise plants.
Equipment manufacturers selling machines, components, and aftermarket service into industrial accounts.
Machine builders, robotics, conveyors, and packaging-line vendors selling capital equipment.
Power generation, transmission, distribution, and utilities targeting grid operators and asset owners.
Upstream, midstream, and downstream operators, EPCs, and oilfield service brands.
Solar, wind, BESS, hydrogen, and EV-infrastructure companies scaling into utility and C&I buyers.
Specialty and commodity chemical producers selling reliability, safety, and process control.
Fabs, semiconductor equipment makers, and materials suppliers in 12 - 24 month qualification cycles.
Food & beverage, packaging, and consumer-goods manufacturing: automation, sustainability, and reliability buyers.
Pharma, medtech, and biotech manufacturing: GMP validation, data integrity, and regulated environments.
An industrial deal moves through five distinct stages: awareness, internal scoping, vendor shortlist, technical evaluation, and procurement. Aberdeen reports industrial buyers consume 8 - 12 pieces of content before they ever reach out to a vendor, and reference checks or site visits happen on the majority of deals above $250K.
Marketing influences the first three stages but rarely gets credit, since procurement records only capture the final touch. Forrester estimates 74% of B2B buyers choose the vendor that was first to add value during their research. Show up early, or lose the deal before it ever reaches sales.
Operations or engineering identifies a trigger: downtime, regulatory change, capacity constraint, or a planned retrofit. The problem is named but the project doesn't yet have a budget or an owner.
Rank for problem-stage SEO, publish in industry titles, run thought leadership on LinkedIn for plant managers and engineers.
Engineering writes the spec. Reliability and operations validate it. Finance signs off on a budget envelope. Most of the deal value is decided here, before any vendor enters the room.
Spec sheets, ROI calculators, sizing tools, technical white papers, application notes that match how engineering actually writes specs.
Procurement and engineering build a longlist from search, analyst reports, distributor recommendations, and peer references. The list narrows to 3 - 5 vendors who receive the formal RFQ.
Analyst presence, head-to-head comparison pages, named customer references, third-party reviews, distributor enablement.
RFQ responses, technical demos, reference calls, site visits, pilots, and bench tests. The full committee is now active: engineering, operations, reliability, EHS, IT/OT, and procurement. This is the longest and most expensive stage in the cycle.
Plant case studies, application notes, sales engineering enablement, reference programs, pilot playbooks, hard ROI proof.
Final commercial negotiation, legal review, EHS and compliance sign-off, CFO approval, PO issued. Most deals slip here on terms, not technology.
Security and compliance documents, vendor onboarding kits, contract templates, customer success previews that de-risk the CFO sign-off.
No single channel produces industrial pipeline on its own. The average industrial deal takes 20+ touches across 6 channels before a PO clears. The six strategies below carry the most weight in that mix: high signal, high conversion, defensible against cycle slippage.
Each strategy matches a specific stage of the buyer journey: awareness, scoping, shortlist, or evaluation. Skip a stage and pipeline thins; bundle them and the same campaign budget delivers 3 - 5× more qualified meetings.
Build a target list of specific plants, sites, and facilities matching your ICP. Run coordinated outreach to engineering, operations, and procurement at the same account, not as separate campaigns.
Rank for spec-stage queries on Google and earn citations inside AI answers from ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini. Industrial buyers now research in both before any vendor enters the room.
Arm your distributor network with co-branded content, lead capture tools, and joint pipeline tracking. Most industrial revenue still flows through channel; they win or lose your deals.
Wrap each show with pre-event meeting booking, on-site content capture, and post-event nurture. Trade shows still drive the single largest pipeline slice in industrial B2B.
In the technical evaluation stage, peer references and structured plant visits close deals. We build reference libraries and orchestrate tours matched to the prospect's exact application.
Long cycles need an ongoing stream of technical assets for SEs to share between calls: calculators, sizing tools, FAQs, application notes. The content engine replaces «I'll send you that PDF».
Industrial benchmarks sit on different scales than generic B2B. Cycles are longer, deals are larger, conversion rates per stage look different. The numbers below come from industrial-specific data, not blended B2B averages, so you can compare your funnel to peers in your category, not to a SaaS startup running a 30-day cycle.
The gap between median and top quartile is rarely about budget. It is about process: tight ICP, consistent messaging across channels, distributor enablement, and disciplined pipeline review. Move three of the four funnel stages below from median to target and pipeline typically doubles inside 12 months.
Targets reflect top-quartile industrial B2B performance across manufacturing, OEM, process, and equipment segments. Your benchmarks may shift by vertical and deal size.
Industrial marketing is too broad for any single agency specialty. A complete pipeline engine needs strategy, demand generation, SEO and AI visibility, LinkedIn, PR, content, partner enablement, and paid working in concert across a long sales cycle. Below are the nine practice areas we run for industrial brands, by the same team that owns your pipeline number.
Each practice ladders into the others. SEO content fuels ABM lists, ABM lists feed LinkedIn outreach, outreach surfaces interest that sales engineering closes. Clients running three or more of these practices together typically see 2 - 3× higher marketing-attributed pipeline than single-channel programs.
Most industrial CMOs underestimate marketing ROI because attribution windows are too short for long sales cycles. A deal closed in Q4 may have started with a content download a year earlier, but most analytics systems only credit the last touch. The calculator below uses industrial-specific defaults to estimate real marketing-attributed revenue and ROI on your current budget.
Set your annual revenue target, average deal size, win rate, marketing budget, and the share of deals marketing influences. We compute deals needed, pipeline coverage, marketing-sourced revenue, cost per deal, and the ROI multiple. Move the sliders to see what a 5-point lift in win rate or a 10-point lift in marketing attribution does to the bottom line.
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Marketing ROI multiple
Deals needed / year
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Pipeline required
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Pipeline coverage
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Marketing-attributed revenue
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Cost per marketing-sourced deal
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Marketing-sourced deals / year
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Analysis
Adjust the inputs to see your industrial marketing ROI.
Free 30-minute call. We will walk through your numbers and show what changes to ship first.
Our methodology is built for industrial cycles, not SaaS sprints. We move in four phases that compound: first qualified meetings within 60 days, stable monthly pipeline by month 4, and a measurable lift in win rate by month 9 as the content stack and distributor enablement layer in. Industrial pipeline rewards consistency, not campaigns.
A dedicated industrial team runs your account end-to-end: strategist, content lead, SEO and AI search lead, ABM operator, distributor enablement lead, and analyst. The same people from week 1 to year 3, accountable to your pipeline number, not internal RACI charts.
Three industrial brands that compounded pipeline within 180 days. Each ran a different mix of ABM, technical content, distributor enablement, and trade-show amplification, on the same four-phase methodology described above.
Founders ran outreach manually with no inbound engine and an 18-month average cycle. We built an ABM motion targeting 350 named plants, launched technical SEO on spec-stage queries, and stood up a sales engineering content stack of calculators and application notes.
Meetings · 90d
Pipeline · 180d
100% trade-show dependent, three events per year, pipeline went dark for eight months between shows. We wrapped every event with pre and post sequences, enabled distributors with co-branded content, and ran always-on LinkedIn targeting plant managers and procurement directors.
RFQs · 60d non-event
Pipeline YoY
Previous agency ran a SaaS playbook on a process buyer. MQLs piled up, RFQs did not. We replaced top-funnel content with spec-stage application notes, opened analyst relationships with ARC and Gartner, and launched a plant-tour reference program for the technical evaluation stage.
RFQ rate lift
Cycle compressed
Industrial marketing engagements range from $10K one-time diagnostics to $75K+/month retainer programs. Pricing scales with company stage, deal size, channel mix, and how much of the work the agency owns end-to-end. Three common engagement models below, plus the factors that move the number.
For industrial brands that need a plan before spending on execution.
For established industrial brands ready to compound pipeline across every channel.
Seed or pre-revenue brands need lighter retainers. PE-backed scale-ups need full pipeline engines.
$50K ACV deals need different content depth than $1M+ capital equipment. Bigger deals justify deeper investment.
Running one or two channels is cheaper. Full-stack programs (ABM + SEO + LinkedIn + trade shows + distributor) cost more.
US-only programs cost less than global rollouts across EMEA and APAC with localized content and trade-show ops.
Enabling 10 distributors is fast. Enabling 100+ across regions with co-branded content and joint reporting is a sizable workstream.
Standard 4-6 week onboarding is base price. Compressed 2-week launches require extra dedicated capacity and cost more.
Indicative ranges based on 30+ industrial engagements. Actual scope and price confirmed after a 30-minute call and a written scope of work.
30 minutes with an industrial marketing strategist. We walk through your ICP, deal size, and current pipeline gaps, then show what changes would move the needle first. Walk away with a one-page plan either way.