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Don't rely on generic influencer databases. The most effective way to find creators who resonate with your audience is to go to the source. Ask your existing customers which podcasts, newsletters, and social media accounts they follow for industry insights to build your target list.
Many B2B marketers mistakenly believe influencers don't exist in technical fields like cybersecurity. The reality is every community has trusted voices. These individuals may have small followings (e.g., 2,000 on LinkedIn), not consider themselves 'influencers,' and may have never done a brand deal before, making outreach a delicate process.
For technical B2B products, the influencer's role is not to be a salesperson or demo the product. Their value lies in building credibility and top-of-funnel interest with their trusted audience. The company is then responsible for nurturing those leads with product-specific details.
Instead of relying on generic databases, the most effective way to find relevant B2B influencers is to go to the source. Ask your existing customers which newsletters they read, podcasts they listen to, and experts they follow to build a highly targeted list of potential partners.
When selecting B2B influencers, the most important initial filter is their professional title and expertise, ensuring they are a genuine member of your Ideal Customer Profile. This is more critical than follower count, as audience relevance trumps raw reach. Only after confirming professional alignment should you assess metrics like average views.
For new product launches, give a cohort of influencers access with no creative brief. Ask them to explore the feature and propose their own content angle. This provides invaluable, unfiltered feedback, revealing which value propositions resonate most authentically with your target audience's trusted experts before you commit to a message.
Finding existing influencer databases ineffective, Lemlist built their network manually. A key tactic was running outreach campaigns targeting creators that their current, trusted influencers already follow themselves. This 'friend of a friend' approach surfaced more relevant micro-influencers.
Influencers aren't a monolith. Choose partners based on specific goals by bucketing them into four types: "Practitioner Experts" for deep niche authority, "Cultural Amplifiers" for broad trust, "Community Connectors" for targeted reach, and "Attention Drivers" for top-of-funnel awareness.
Don't task influencers with deep product demos or direct sales pitches, especially for technical products. Their value lies in their credibility and ability to attract the right audience with thought leadership. Leverage them to build trust, then nurture that audience with your own product-focused content.
A powerful, underutilized LinkedIn tactic is to filter your first-degree connections by who they follow. Identify a key influencer in your target industry, then search your network for everyone who follows them. This creates a hyper-relevant list for outreach, as you can reference the shared interest in the influencer.
Instead of only featuring industry celebrities on your B2B podcast, strategically interview your ideal customers. The insights and language they use can be repurposed into highly effective ad creative and sales collateral that resonates directly with other potential buyers, turning content into a direct sales tool.