I came across a study on B2B in Asia, and one idea stuck with me: we sell with numbers, we buy with emotions. Even among professionals. We pile up rational proofs, believing we’re talking to a cold brain, while the decision is made elsewhere.
What I take away from it for us is mainly what it says about nurturing.
There, nurturing isn’t an automated drip
It’s a kept commitment, a demonstration of seriousness repeated at every contact. Companies that accept long cycles — 3 to 18 months — beat those that chase a quick signature. This market rewards substance, not persistence.
And the timing favors this approach everywhere, not just in Asia. The buyer has become empowered: they form their own opinion long before a sales rep enters the scene. As a result, campaigns that rely entirely on the ‘book a demo’ at the end of the cycle only speak to the handful already decided. For the rest of the market, there’s nothing to harvest. Demand is built.
Three requirements, not one more
Segment properly. Asia isn’t a market, it’s a mosaic. Japan wants formality and a long relationship; Singapore wants speed. The same message doesn’t win both.
Speak the local codes. Beyond the first name in the subject line: tone, examples, proofs change from country to country. A case study that works in Malaysia may fall flat in Tokyo.
Keep the rhythm. Cycles are long and based on consensus. Trust is earned slowly. It’s a constraint to shoulder, not a flaw to fix.
The real obstacle isn’t Asia. It’s our impatience.
Most nurturing programs have only one reflex: turning a lead into an appointment as quickly as possible. But no one progresses in a straight line, and a downloaded white paper isn’t worth a purchase intent. One figure sums it up: 59% of B2B teams admit that their nurturing is off. Most know it. Almost no one fixes it.
AI is here to help — structure, accelerate, scale. But it doesn’t manufacture the nuance a decision-maker expects. The story that touches still requires a human to write it.
The question before hitting ‘Send’
Your next email to a prospect: does it make them think, or does it make them feel something?
Innovation in nurturing isn’t another tool. It’s another way to build a relationship that lasts.
#B2BMarketing #LeadNurturing #MarketingAsia #B2BStrategy #NurturingAsia #InnovationB2B