Are you keeping pace with your competitors when it comes to lead generation for manufacturing companies? Or better yet, are you getting ahead of them when it comes to securing customers?
If your manufacturing company is asking these questions, you’re not alone. In fact, it may explain why, according to a CMO Survey, digital marketing spending is expected to increase by 12.7% over the next 12 months. This may not come as a surprise, given the low cost of generating online leads.
And when you consider how 8.9% of manufacturing company budgets are already dedicated to marketing, it’s easier to see just how much that 10% will increase. Those precious marketing dollars will go farthest when they’re invested in strategies that help your company differentiate from — and ultimately surpass — the competition.
The good news? Staying ahead of your manufacturing competitors isn’t as hard as you might think, especially when it comes to lead generation and new sales. It doesn’t require deep pockets or an extensive staff to outrun your competitors in the area of online lead generation. With the right strategies in place, your leads (and customers) can grow substantially.
Before we dive in, here’s a refresher on why manufacturers must incorporate newer, better lead generation strategies:
Content:
Lead Generation for Manufacturing Companies
6 Manufacturing Lead Generation Strategies to Stay Ahead of the Competition
1. Creating Problem-Solving Content to Establish Your Brand as a Trusted Resource
2. Putting a Lead Generation Process in Place
3. Using PPC to Supercharge Manufacturing Leads
5. Utilizing Social Media for your Manufacturing Company
6. Optimize for Generative Search Engines
Ready to Turn Strategy into Sales?
We can attribute the need for better lead generation strategies to the changing buyer/seller dynamic. Buyers, whether they realize it or not, are searching online for ways to solve their problems — including manufactured solutions.
When buyers come across your website during their search and easily find the perfect solution in your company, it’s a no-brainer for them to become loyal customers. If the buyer already sees your company as a trusted source, the decision to purchase is that much easier.
To navigate the changing buyer/seller dynamic, your company needs to:
A strong B2B manufacturing content marketing strategy can go a long way in attracting the right prospects, especially as those prospects search for ways to solve the problems they regularly face.
The key here is to create problem-centric content rather than promotional, product-centric content (which is good for nothing—unless you want to frustrate your customer and create friction in the buying process!).
In order to be seen, today’s content must do more than just educate. It needs to rank for AI-generated answers, meaning it needs to follow best practices, which we talk about a little further down.
For those who aren’t used to (or aren’t interested in) writing content regularly, this can seem daunting. But the good news is that AI-driven tools are helping to make the lift a lot easier. Resources like ChatGPT, Grammarly, or HubSpot’s Breeze Copilot can create the first draft of blogs for you so you have a solid starting point.
Keep in mind: every piece of AI-produced content should go through a revision to add a human touch. This helps you avoid being dinged by search engines and creates a better user experience. We talk more about building a strong AI-driven strategy here.
Once you’ve produced strong content for your site, you can then use it as a way to encourage prospects to reach out by filling out a form. Whether it’s a newsletter signup or access to an industry-specific eBook or whitepaper, you’ll want to make sure that the amount of information they're given is comparable to the value of the content they're receiving.
While it’s common for marketers to gate content (or require information from a prospect in order to access content or other resources), keep in mind that not all content should be hidden behind a form. Some content marketers believe this actually causes friction; in turn causing your website visitors to bounce.
Additionally, a chatbot can help you accomplish the same goal. Nowadays, people expect to have a quick and easy way to find out information about a company, and believe that chatbots are the best way to do so. In fact, 82% said they would rather use a chatbot than wait for a human, according to a survey by Tidio.
These chatbots can help answer some low-hanging fruit questions in exchange for some basic information (like a person’s name and email) or guide them toward other conversion opportunities on your site. With the information from the chat itself, your team can then figure out how best to nurture that lead in the future.
Once you have these leads, you can then use AI-powered tools like HubSpot or 6sense to score them based on factors like engagement and their industry, so you can easily see which ones are worth pursuing. You can also use these tools to write personalized content designed to increase engagement and conversion rates, and help to create predictions for your sales pipeline.
APPC isn’t just about driving traffic anymore—it’s about driving the right traffic with clear buyer intent. For manufacturing companies, a modern PPC strategy should go beyond branded terms or general industry keywords.
This means using long-tail, bottom-of-funnel keywords like “RFQ software for injection molding” or “automated palletizing system pricing” since these types of searches offer far better conversion potential than broad phrases like “manufacturing solutions.” AI tools can help uncover and group these high-intent terms faster than ever before.
Today’s most effective campaigns also utilize firmographic targeting. Using platforms like LinkedIn Ads, you can target job titles (like Director of Operations or Head of Procurement) within your key verticals, from precision machining to food processing. Pair that with custom landing pages tailored to each audience’s challenges, and you’ve got a recipe for effective lead generation for manufacturing companies.
Keep in mind that the way people interact with paid results has also changed significantly.
AI-powered search previews, like Google’s AI Overviews, often pull snippets directly from PPC landing pages before a user even clicks. That means your PPC pages need to:
And don’t forget about performance. Use AI-assisted platforms to dynamically generate and test multiple versions of ad copy. Let machine learning find the combinations that outperform. Then, optimize continuously based on behavior and engagement, not just cost-per-click.
In short, PPC still drives results, but it’s no longer a standalone tactic. For manufacturing marketers, it should be integrated into a wider content and AI visibility strategy to drive leads that actually convert.
Your website is still the backbone of your lead generation engine, but what “optimized” means today has shifted. In 2025, your site isn’t just being scanned by human users and Google bots. AI models crawl, interpret and summarize your website so it can be fed into search previews, chatbots and virtual assistants.
To keep up, your site needs to serve both audiences: buyers and machines.
Start with the basics. Ensure fast load times, mobile responsiveness and secure browsing (HTTPS) to enhance performance and searchability. But beyond that, your structure matters more than ever. AI engines rely on clean, semantic HTML to understand your content. That means using true <h1>–<h3> heading tags (not just styled text), descriptive image alt text, and consistent internal linking between related pages.
Structured data is no longer optional. Use JSON-LD schema markup to define your content types—especially for blog posts, FAQs, how-to guides and product overviews. These help AI platforms understand context, which improves your chances of showing up in Google’s AI Overviews or being cited in ChatGPT responses.
Another new best practice: add a llms.txt file to your site’s root directory. This tells large language models like GPT-4 or Gemini which parts of your site they can crawl, similar to a robots.txt file, but AI-specific. If this file isn’t present, your site may be ignored by some AI engines entirely.
Consider formatting your most important insights at the top of key pages in ways that machines can digest, with methods like:
These formatting choices make it easier for AI crawlers to extract value and for human users to quickly find what they need.
Ultimately, optimizing your site isn’t just about SEO anymore—it’s about being findable in a new class of search. If your manufacturing company wants to stay visible and credible, your site must support traditional and generative discovery paths.
In manufacturing, where long sales cycles and technical buyers are the norm, a strategic social presence helps you reach decision-makers early, earn trust, and create content signals that AI engines can cite and surface.
In 2025, AI-powered search engines like Perplexity and ChatGPT pull content from a wide range of sources, including LinkedIn posts, YouTube channels, and third-party publications. That means your social distribution efforts now have SEO-level importance.
Here’s how to make your social channels work harder:
Search behavior is shifting fast. More B2B buyers are turning to AI-powered tools like ChatGPT, Gemini and Perplexity to ask complex questions, evaluate vendors and explore solutions. If your manufacturing brand isn’t optimized for these platforms, you’re losing visibility in key moments of early research.
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the next evolution of SEO. It’s not just about ranking in Google anymore—it’s about making sure your content is crawlable, quotable and trustworthy across AI-powered search experiences.
Along with some of the other tips we’ve shared (like using a clean semantic HTML with proper headings), here are some other ways to get started:
Generative search engines reward clarity, relevance and authority. By optimizing for how AI platforms evaluate and present content, you ensure your manufacturing company shows up in the moments that matter: before buyers even visit your site.
Lead generation is about identifying qualified buyers, moving them through a complex sales process, and proving marketing’s impact on revenue. That means success must be measured with clarity, consistency, and alignment to business goals.
It starts by defining what counts as a lead at each stage. Are you tracking top-of-funnel contacts who downloaded a spec sheet? Or only SQLs passed to sales? Agreeing on definitions with your sales team sets the foundation for accurate performance tracking.
Be sure to share any reporting with your sales team to close the loop and get feedback on lead quality. After all, the numbers might say one thing while their in-field experience says another. Should this be the case, their insight will be invaluable in optimizing campaigns going forward so that they resonate with your audience better.
Lead generation for manufacturing companies needs to evolve in order to meet modern demands. From AI-optimized content to smarter PPC, from website structure to social distribution, success today means showing up where your buyers are looking and giving them a reason to engage.
At Conveyor, we help industrial and manufacturing brands build lead generation systems that actually move the needle, driving qualified opportunities, not just clicks. Whether you need help refining your strategy, launching a campaign, or overhauling your digital footprint, we bring the clarity, tools and partnership to make it happen.
Let’s talk about how to turn your marketing into a measurable growth engine. Contact us today to get started.