What’s Changed (and What Hasn’t) in B2B Marketing for 2026
Published
January 27, 2026
Updated

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Tl;dr: The big shifts (and non-shifts) in B2B marketing
- Gated content still works—when it captures real intent and ties directly to product value.
- Brands need to go beyond SEO rankings and start measuring GEO impact as buyer research shifts into AI tools.
- Owning pages and feeds isn’t enough for distribution: custom GPTs are emerging as a new kind of publisher.
- AI can’t manufacture trust, so internal experts and authentic voices are becoming increasingly valuable differentiators.
- AI also can’t replace marketers, who still need to own strategy and exercise good judgment.
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Don’t confuse change with collapse
The B2B marketing world is often too quick to declare things “dead.” Forms. SEO. Content teams.
And while no one can deny that things move fast in marketing, the truth is that fundamentals still work, as long as you apply them with intention and context.
In 2026, the teams that struggle won’t be the ones who missed a trend, but those who refused to update how they capture intent, measure influence, and enforce quality.
“Most marketing fundamentals still work. What’s changing is where buyers get influenced and how we measure it.”
— Tyler Ellison, Founder & CEO, Right Side Up
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📺 Watch the full webinar: 2026 B2B Marketing Hot Takes
This article distills key insights from Right Side Up’s 2026 B2B Marketing Hot Takes webinar, featuring senior leaders across demand gen, content, affiliate, and AI strategy.
Speakers include:
- Tyler Ellison, Founder & CEO, Right Side Up
- Kevin Lord Barry, Co-Founder, Right Percent
- Sterling Beck, VP, Demand Generation, Customer.io
- Amy Scanlon, GM, Affiliate Practice, Right Side Up
- Brooke Gocklin, Founder, BSG Consulting
- Vinnie Balistreri, Executive Marketing Consultant
In the full session, you’ll hear deeper examples, live Q&A, and practical guidance.
👉 Watch the full webinar on demand.
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High-quality, original gated content still converts
One of the loudest narratives in B2B marketing currently is that gated content is no longer effective. The data doesn’t necessarily agree.
In reality, gated content still drives a significant share of B2B revenue because it does something few assets can: it captures explicit buying intent and creates a clear sales handoff.
But something actually is broken when it comes to gated content, and it’s what teams choose to gate.
Assets that sit too far from product value—generic thought leadership, loosely related trend reports—rarely convert. In contrast, practical assets like templates, checklists, and handbooks act as bridges from interest to evaluation.
Across mature paid programs, gated content still sometimes accounts for roughly 40% of revenue, even though gated leads convert at lower rates. The math works because cost per lead is lower and intent signals are stronger.
Another misconception that gives gated content a bad B2B rep? That it closes leads on its own without requiring sales involvement .
“It’s almost impossible to turn gated content into revenue without sales involvement. This works best in a sales-led motion.”
— Kevin Lord Barry, Co-Founder, Right Percent
The takeaway: For your gated content to work, it needs to clearly connect to how your product creates value.
Buyers aren’t clicking as much—and that’s OK
Many B2B teams are seeing the same pattern: rankings look healthy, content output is steady, but organic traffic and pipeline impact are declining.
This doesn’t mean your SEO strategy is failing. It does mean you need to add generative engine optimization (GEO) to the mix.
As discussed in the webinar, buyers are still researching extensively, but more of that research now happens inside AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini. In that environment, visibility matters more than position.
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Related article
Read our GEO 101 guide to learn how to build—and scale—a winning strategy today.
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One demand gen team shifted from keyword rankings to tracking AI visibility, measuring whether they showed up in AI-generated answers at all. The result: AI-assisted search grew to account for 10%+ of total traffic, with measurable impact on demos and trials.
“We stopped caring about how we ranked for keywords and started caring whether we showed up at all in AI answers.”
— Sterling Beck, VP, Demand Generation, Customer.io
The takeaway: Make sure you’re optimizing for GEO and tracking your efforts; AI search and LLMs often account for more traffic (and leads) than you think.
New publishers are emerging, including customs GPTs
One of the quieter but more strategic shifts discussed was the rise of custom GPTs as a new distribution surface.
As traditional publishers lose algorithmic reach, affiliates and creators are experimenting with custom GPTs built for comparisons, workflows, and evaluations—shared via Reddit and LinkedIn and monetized through affiliate models.
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Related webinar
Communities, creators, and forums (like Reddit) now play a key role in growth strategies. Watch our webinar with ReddVisible to incorporate them in your affiliate strategy.
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These GPTs often function like decision engines—and their rising popularity is another reason brands need a GEO strategy.
“Affiliates always find the new distribution surfaces first. Custom GPTs are just the next version of that.”
— Amy Scanlon, GM, Affiliate Practice, Right Side Up
The takeaway: Owning pages and feeds isn’t enough for distribution; brands need to also influence the systems buyers are increasingly trusting—like custom GPTs.
AI can’t scale authenticity
As much as AI can augment content production, the same doesn’t apply to credibility and authenticity.
One story shared during the webinar captured this clearly: at an industry conference, an attendee left early after learning a specific employee wouldn’t be speaking until later, even though the company’s CEO was on stage.
In other words: trust still trumps everything.
“AI can scale content, but it can’t replace the pull of a real expert people actually trust.”
— Vinnie Balistreri, Executive Marketing Consultant
This is why more companies will need intentional internal influencer strategies that support product leaders, customer experts, and operators who already carry credibility in the market.
The takeaway:
In a world of infinite content, earning trust is fickle. Make it a priority.
AI can’t replace marketers with good judgment
Used poorly, AI produces fast, forgettable output. But be intentional with it and it can become an invaluable thought partner. In 2026, humans should still own strategy, point of view, and judgment—in fact, that responsibility is as important as ever.
“AI doesn’t make mediocre marketers better. It makes great marketers dangerous.”
— Brooke Gocklin, Founder, BSG Consulting
The takeaway:
AI scales execution. Humans still control strategy and judgment.
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Ready to turn these insights into action?
The ideas in this article—and the 2026 B2B Marketing Hot Takes webinar—only matter if they translate into results.
Right Side Up helps B2B teams turn modern demand gen, content, and AI strategy into results. Let’s explore what that looks like for your team!
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