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When building a B2B influencer program from scratch, begin conversations with creators *before* you have a finalized plan or budget. These initial talks provide crucial, real-world data on pricing, working styles, and potential opportunities that will allow you to build a much more effective and realistic strategy.
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.
Instead of guessing influencer costs and building a budget in a silo, proactively reach out to potential creators to ask for their rates. This data-driven approach allows you to build a more realistic and defensible budget proposal for leadership.
Because B2B buying cycles are long, one-off influencer posts are less effective. A recurring presence over 3-6 months or longer builds trust and keeps the brand top-of-mind for when buyers are actually in-market.
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.
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.
Forcing brand messaging on an influencer leads to inauthentic content that fails to resonate. A better approach is to educate them on your product and collaborate on an angle that aligns with their established voice and topics. Authenticity drives distribution and engagement, making the partnership more effective than a boilerplate promotion.
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.
In B2B marketing, one-off influencer posts for launches are ineffective and a waste of money. Brands should instead pursue long-term, integrated partnerships with creators who have built entire networks (events, newsletters, social). This approach treats the collaboration as a strategic investment in 'world building' rather than a tactical play.
A common mistake is running short-term influencer "pilots" with a transactional mindset (money for posts). In B2B, you are buying long-term trust, not immediate reach. This requires building genuine relationships and ensuring influencers actually use and believe in your product, advocating for it organically.
Most marketers jump straight to finding influencers. The crucial first step is aligning on what success looks like with all stakeholders (marketing, sales, C-suite). Different departmental goals, like booked demos versus brand awareness, fundamentally change the campaign's strategy and creator selection.