Ready to build your own Founder-Led Growth engine? Book a Strategy Call
Frontlines.io | Where B2B Founders Talk GTM.
Strategic Communications Advisory For Visionary Founders
MRI moved away from tracking pieces-per-quarter in favor of a content engagement score that measures views, unique visits, and sales team usage across every asset. The shift forced content creators to own distribution, not just production — because you can't improve a score by publishing and walking away.
Rather than starting with a content calendar, MRI starts with surveys sent into each of its target markets. Those responses generate trend reports, which then cascade into webinars, companion blogs, partner quotables, and outbound outreach sequences. Every downstream asset has a defensible source, and the whole system compounds instead of expiring.
A vendor publishing its own data faces an obvious credibility problem. MRI solved this by partnering with industry organizations to both promote the surveys and co-produce the reports — so the research carries institutional credibility on its face before anyone reads a word. This is the CB Insights model applied at the vertical level.
MRI has deliberately built a reputation among industry orgs as a company that shows up to teach, not sell. That reputation earns them session slots, which they use to present survey data to rooms full of prospects — and those prospects come up afterwards to say they're dealing with the same problems. The product conversation happens, but organically.
This is the number MRI is seeing in how prospects traverse their website and what resources they download before ever engaging sales. Given that reality, outbound SDR motions that lead with product features are structurally misaligned with buyer behavior. MRI's SDRs now lead with content — inviting prospects to sessions, sharing research — because that's what matches where buyers actually are in the process.
MRI has found a workable middle ground between the "CEO as sole thought leader" model and a fully distributed approach. SDRs are equipped to post and engage on social. But for long-form pieces that will get PR pickup, MRI identifies specific authors with established digital equity in each market segment — because domain authority and name recognition compound, and diluting that by constantly rotating authors throws it away.
MRI's content and design team is the same size it was before they integrated AI tools. What changed is throughput — they can produce significantly more across a product portfolio of roughly 150 solutions and the corresponding persona set. But Nicholas draws a clear line: AI hasn't replaced the human judgment required to understand personas and craft messaging that actually lands with specific audiences.
In this episode of The Marketing Front Lines, we speak with Nicholas Frank, Senior Director of Content, Digital, and Thought Leadership at MRI Software. MRI is a global real estate software company serving commercial, multifamily, and investment markets. Over the past year, Nicholas has led a fundamental repositioning of the company’s content strategy — moving away from sector-specific, pipeline-first content toward a thought leadership engine built on proprietary survey data and companion content that drives attributable pipeline without ever leading with a product pitch.
Topics Discussed: