Search for any professional-services topic and the first ten results will sound interchangeable. Same generic structure, same hedging language, same lack of perspective. The firms that win on content do the opposite — they have an actual point of view, they answer the questions buyers actually ask, and they sound like the firm wrote it.
Topic selection
- Questions your clients ask in the first call. These are the queries other prospects are typing too.
- Questions your competitors’ clients ask (visible in their reviews and social mentions).
- Recent regulatory or industry changes where your firm has a defensible point of view.
- Cost and pricing questions. Most firms refuse to address these in content; the firms that do get the inquiries.
Voice and substance
Take a position. The most-shared professional-services content has a real perspective: this approach works, this one doesn’t, here’s why. Generic ‘here are the considerations’ content gets ignored. Buyers want to see how the firm actually thinks — that’s the trust-building work content does that referrals can’t.
Length and depth
Long enough to actually answer the question (2,000+ words for a substantive topic), short enough that every paragraph earns its place. Buyers will read 4,000 words on a topic that matters to them; they will not read 800 words of fluff on the same topic.