Buyer’s journey

The buyer’s journey is the process a prospective customer goes through from first recognising a problem to researching options, evaluating alternatives, and finally making a purchase decision. It is typically described in three stages: Awareness (the buyer recognises they have a challenge and begins looking for information), Consideration (they have defined the problem clearly and are evaluating possible approaches or solutions), and Decision (they have chosen a solution category and are comparing specific vendors). These stages map onto the kind of content and communication that is most useful to a buyer at each point.

Understanding the buyer’s journey shapes everything from content strategy to sales messaging. A prospect in the Awareness stage wants educational content that helps them understand the problem space, not a product demo. A prospect in the Decision stage wants case studies, pricing information, and proof that your solution fits their specific context. Misaligning content to journey stage is one of the most common reasons well-produced content fails to convert.

For B2B marketing teams, mapping the buyer’s journey is foundational to building a coherent content and campaign architecture. It helps you identify gaps in your content library, design nurture sequences that progress contacts through the funnel, and brief sales on where in the process each inbound lead is likely to be. The journey is rarely linear in practice, but having a map gives your programme structure that is far more effective than treating all prospects as if they are in the same place.

Learn how to identify the stages of your buyer’s journey, create content for each stage, and use journey mapping to improve lead nurturing and conversion.

What are the three stages of the buyer’s journey?

The three stages are Awareness, Consideration, and Decision. In the Awareness stage, the buyer recognises they have a problem or goal but may not yet know what type of solution they need. In the Consideration stage, they have defined their problem and are actively researching different approaches. In the Decision stage, they are comparing specific solutions or vendors and are close to making a purchase. Each stage calls for different types of content and different levels of sales involvement.

How is the buyer’s journey different from the customer journey?

The buyer’s journey focuses on the pre-purchase process: the path from problem recognition to purchase decision. The customer journey is broader and includes post-purchase stages such as onboarding, product adoption, renewal, and advocacy. In B2B marketing, the buyer’s journey is particularly important for demand generation and content strategy, while the full customer journey informs customer success, retention, and expansion programmes.

How do you create content for each stage of the buyer’s journey?

Awareness stage content should be educational and problem-focused: blog posts, guides, podcast episodes, and social content that helps buyers understand their challenge and explore the broader solution landscape without pushing a specific product. Consideration stage content helps buyers evaluate approaches: comparison guides, webinars, detailed case studies, and analyst reports. Decision stage content helps them choose you specifically: product demos, free trials, pricing pages, customer testimonials, and ROI calculators.

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