In complex B2B sales cycles, buying decisions are made by groups, not individuals. Yet for years, marketers relied almost entirely on single-user digital analytics—page visits, email opens, form fills—to infer group-level intent. These signals rarely reveal whether a buying committee is actually activated or aligned.
MARC changes that. Its analytics surface multi-viewer behavior in a way that no digital channel can replicate. When several stakeholders watch a MARC brochure together—or when the same brochure circulates internally over several days—teams gain a powerful early signal of alignment inside the account.
This article examines why multi-viewer engagement is one of the most reliable indicators of B2B buying momentum and how revenue teams can use these insights to adjust strategy, timing, and prioritization.
One of the biggest myths in B2B marketing is that buying committees engage only after a demo or late-stage qualification. In reality, stakeholders talk much earlier—sometimes before your sales team ever gets involved.
Internal conversations often revolve around:
Digital analytics rarely surface these early patterns. MARC does.
When someone shares a MARC brochure with a colleague, it shows the message resonated strongly enough to advocate for it internally—one of the hardest-to-detect behaviors in B2B marketing.
If several viewers watch together, it often means the team is beginning to discuss the problem or evaluate options. Even if they haven’t contacted sales yet, momentum is building.
Accounts that produce multi-viewer engagement almost always become high-priority targets. The more people who engage, the more serious the evaluation.
While MARC anonymizes viewer identities for privacy, multi-day and multi-viewer patterns reveal when additional stakeholders get involved. These signals help teams anticipate who the champions and detractors might be.
If a brochure is watched by groups on multiple days, it’s a sign that the conversation is evolving. Stakeholders are revisiting specific sections, asking questions, and seeking alignment.
If the video is replayed several times in a short window, especially during common meeting hours, it’s likely being used as a reference or discussion tool.
This combination indicates deep shared attention—usually a precursor to pipeline creation.
MARC gives you the clearest signals of internal momentum—long before digital intent tools detect anything.