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Marketing

Marketing Content That Moves Federal Cyber Deals Forward (3/3)

  • April 6, 2026
  • Com 0
Part of the series: Is it Time to Shift Your Cyber Marketing Approach?

Illustration generataed using AI

If your marketing can’t support how buyers evaluate, it won’t make it through security review or procurement.

This is the third article in a three-part series that examines the shift in federal cyber policies, and how it impacts messaging, positioning and marketing. We’ll cover:

  • Is it Time to Shift Your Cyber Marketing Approach?
  • The New Federal Cybersecurity Vocabulary
  • Marketing Content That Moves Federal Cyber Deals Forward

Federal cyber buyers are moving beyond awareness-level messaging and into operational evaluation. They want to see how vendors support remediation workflows, produce defensible evidence, and reduce friction across security review and procurement.

That means the assets that move deals forward are changing, too. Let’s take a look at how.


A marketing framework that doesn’t sound like everyone else

Most cyber content stops at “problem” and “features.” Your best differentiation right now is to market the whole operational system: “Problem → Workflow → Evidence → Measurable Outcome”.

This type of marketing framework leads very naturally into nurture sequences, ABM and other common marketing tactics. It also builds trust with the buyer, as it follows their natural line of thinking.

Problem: “Known exploited vulns create real compromise risk.”
Workflow: “Here’s how we identify assets, map exposures, prioritize to KEV, and drive remediation.”
Evidence: “Here’s what we produce to prove action (tickets, audit trails, SLA reports).”
Measurable outcome: “Here’s what gets better (MTTR, exposure window, compliance performance).”

This framework also aligns to the logic behind BOD 22-01’s emphasis on a curated exploitation-driven catalog and required remediation actions.

Your content opportunity

The shift in federal cyber from executive orders to continuous operations is a content opportunity for vendors that can help agencies operationalize vulnerability response. A good white paper, webinar, solution brief, or campaign can go further than explaining BOD 22-01, it can show the buyer how to move from catalog awareness to operational execution:

  1. Find the affected assets.
  2. Prioritize based on KEV status and mission impact.
  3. Assign ownership.
  4. Remediate or mitigate.
  5. Track deadline performance.
  6. Document exceptions.
  7. Produce evidence.

Below are a few ideas on assets and emails that embody the shift and vocabulary we’ve been talking about.

Core enablement assets

  • “KEV-to-Remediation Proof Pack” (1–2 pages): What you track, what you automate, what evidence you output, what metrics improve
  • One-slide workflow graphic: Identify → Prioritize (KEV) → Remediate → Report/Prove
  • Security team FAQ: “How we support BOD 22-01-aligned operations”

Notice that for these assets, they focus on education and putting the vendor’s solution into context against the larger set of cybersecurity operations. This is by design. When you speak to specific benefits and capabilities, and anchor them to the larger workflows and initiatives, you’re helping your federal cyber buyer more easily understand the value you can deliver.


Customer-facing emails (copy themes)

  • Email A (re-engagement): “CISA just retired 10 emergency directives—here’s what that changes for vuln programs”
  • Email B (proof-first): “3 artifacts we can share to speed up security review (KEV prioritization, remediation SLA reporting, audit trail)”

Similarly, these emails deliver a blend of education and context. The goal is a value-forward message, delivering insight that federal buyers will respond to. These emails shouldn’t be contain product or solution messaging. The idea is to connect and engage the federal buyer on the topics they are most interested in as they figure out what is changing and how to adapt.


Blog ideas to build a mini-series

  • “Emergency Directives are Fading. KEV Operations Are the New Standard”
  • “The KEV-to-Remediation Playbook: How High-Performing Agencies Close Exposure Windows”
  • “What Proof Federal Security Reviewers Actually Want: Evidence Outputs That Unblock ATO/Security Approval”

These blogs are heavy on the kinds of information that federal cyber buyers are looking for: insight, proof and actionable guidance. In these blogs, the vendor solution discussion should be light (if any at all). Just like the emails, the goal is to first connect and engage. Use the blogs as a way of building ‘trusted advisor’ credibility.


It’s Your Move

CISA’s retirement of ten Emergency Directives is a clear market signal: federal cyber leaders are being pushed toward repeatable vulnerability operations anchored in exploited-vulnerability focus, operational accountability, and demonstrable remediation.

As federal buying behavior continues shifting, marketing teams must evolve alongside it. Messaging, and content that aligns to how agencies operate in this ‘new normal’ will shape reply rates, deal velocity, evaluation outcomes, and long-term credibility.

The vendors that stand out in this environment will not be the ones relying on the loudest messaging or the broadest claims. They will be the organizations that help agencies operationalize the workflow, reduce friction, accelerate remediation, and produce defensible proof across the process.


← Previous
The New Federal Cybersecurity Vocabulary

Continue Learning →
How to Keep Moving Forward During a Federal Shutdown

Share on:
The New Federal Cybersecurity Vocabulary (2/3)
How to Keep Moving Forward During a Federal Shutdown (1/5)

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