The brands winning wholesale today publish people-first content that answers retailer questions in plain English and shows product and merchandising decisions with data.
These brands are also meeting buyers where they research (LinkedIn, search, email), and make it easy for a buying committee to say “yes.”
Video and trusted voices are some of the most successful marketing tactics, and the best teams pair that with SEO fundamentals, a clean resource hub (like a pillar page), and ABM-style distribution.
Keep reading to get a better idea of what marketing strategies your brand can start implementing today.
Create a single hub on your site for wholesale buyers with sections like Order Windows & MOQs, Size Runs, Embellishment/Decoration Rules, Prebook vs. At-Once, EDI & Routing Guides, Co-Op Marketing Assets, and Sell-Through Tips.
Organize it by audience so buyers can find what applies to them fast. This helps de-risk decisions for the buying committee (it’s rarely one person) and shortens back-and-forth with your reps.
SEO Tip: Write each page to rank for “{brand} wholesale + {topic}” and category queries like “golf shop preseason order guide,” “resort apparel minimums,” or “tactical outerwear size chart.”
B2B marketers continue to prioritize video because it builds credibility and human connection quickly. Short-form is leading ROI and creator/subject-matter-expert content is rising because trust is the outcome that moves pipeline.
Translate that to apparel by featuring buyers, fit experts, team athletes/pros, and decorators explaining what works on the floor.
Video Tip: 60- to 90-second clips on “How to assort polos for a pro shop in spring” or “What to stock around a logoed headwear program.” Post natively to LinkedIn, then embed on relevant hub pages and rep follow-ups. Summarize each video into a short article for search.
Google’s guidance hasn’t changed: write helpful, reliable, people-first content; avoid content made mainly to game rankings.
In the apparel wholesale space, for example, you want to prioritize pages that genuinely help retailers do their jobs. This can include fit & fabric explainers, MOQ calculators, seasonal buy checklists, floor set examples, and sell-through playbooks.
Support with clear authorship (product/merch leads), product data, and real examples.
Quick wins
Publish “Open-to-Buy templates,” “door-level buy calculators,” and simple tables that model GM% and turns for common capsules ( like 18-piece polo + 12 caps + 6 midlayers).
Cite real sell-through ranges where you can. Pair these with a seasonal “What’s moving” update and a reorder trigger guide. Data-backed content earns trust and repeat buys.
This strategy works because B2B ecommerce keeps growing and is a top revenue driver for brands that sell online. Content that clarifies the business case accelerates online orders.
Turn your best rep email explanations into on-site articles your buyers can self-serve: “How to enter multi-date deliveries,” “How logo approvals work,” “How to request visual merchandising kits.”
Record short Loom-style demos, transcribe them, and post the written how-to guide as well as the video. It compounds SEO and cuts support tickets.
In B2B, trusted voices and video drive full-funnel impact.
For apparel, recruit club pros, shop managers, resort merchandisers, tactical gear instructors, or fit specialists to co-create content.
A couple examples of topics you can cover are: “What I reordered three themes this spring (and why),” and “How we size a women’s bottom wall for a coastal resort.”
Track assisted pipeline (inbound wholesale inquiries, portal activations, POs within 30–60 days of content exposure), not just vanity metrics.
The best teams target the audience for their content.
Build small account lists (top golf resorts, key tactical dealers, regional boutiques) and then:
Industry research shows B2B marketers are doubling down on owned content and distribution (email, social, video) as AI scales production capacity; the differentiator is trust and usefulness, not volume.
If online is a major revenue driver, your content should push naturally to your B2B portal.
Every hub page should end with a clear next step like “Preview the spring catalog,” “Start a prebook,” “Check inventory.”
Publish catalog teasers, lookbooks, and line-sheet explainers in public, then link into the portal for ordering. B2B sellers who lean into ecommerce continue to rate it among their most effective channels.
Ditch “blog views” as your north star. Track metrics such as:
If you have a smaller team, use AI to your advantage to help scale production and reduce costs for your content.
We’ve also been helping brands scale their wholesale for nearly 20 years and can help do the same for your brand. If you have questions about what RepSpark can do for your business, reach out to our team.
What kind of content should I create first when launching a wholesale channel?
Start with foundational content that removes friction: your Order Window & MOQ guide, size and fit explanations, routing/lead time details, and a downloadable Assortment Calculator. These build trust for buyers and help sellers act faster.
How long does it take from publishing content to seeing wholesale orders?
It varies, but many brands see inbound wholesale interest within 30-60 days when content is targeted, useful and paired with distribution (email + LinkedIn). Reorders often happen faster when you provide reorder triggers and sell-through stories.
Do I really need video for B2B apparel content marketing?
Yes. Video humanizes your brand and shows product in context (fit, display, logo programs). Short form (60-90 sec) with trusted voices (buyers, club pros, decorators) is especially effective. Pair with transcript and written version for SEO.
What KPI should I measure beyond web traffic?
Key metrics include content-assisted pipeline (inbound forms + POs after content exposure), new buyer portal activations, reorder timeframe, and qualitative feedback (“this guide helped us order earlier”). Traffic alone doesn’t tell the whole story.
How do I ensure my content actually helps our reps and sells wholesale?
Repurpose the most common questions your sales team gets into content (articles + short videos). Give reps links they can share, track which links lead to orders, and use content to reduce support back-and-forth.