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Don't run influencer campaigns in a silo. The most effective approach is to view influencers as creators who provide assets (videos, quotes) that can be repurposed across PR, paid ads, and social channels, maximizing the ROI of the initial engagement.
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.
Don't just pay influencers for a single post. Instead, view them as skilled content creators. Hire them to produce a library of authentic, vlog-style videos that you can then use in your own ad campaigns. This leverages their creative talent for scalable assets, not just a one-off audience blast.
To preserve authenticity, treat the creative brief as the destination (the goal, the key message), but let the creator 'drive.' They know their audience and platform best. Overly prescriptive briefs with scripts or restrictive guardrails kill the authenticity that makes influencer marketing effective, turning the content into a generic ad.
B2B marketers often resist the term 'influencer,' feeling it downplays the credibility of subject matter experts. This semantic hang-up creates an unnecessary barrier to adopting a powerful marketing channel, as they fail to recognize that any industry leader with an audience is, by definition, an influencer.
The primary value of working with smaller creators is not their audience reach, but their ability to produce authentic content at scale. This content can then fuel paid media campaigns, which is the biggest driver of growth in the influencer marketing industry today.
Brands mistakenly buy single posts from influencers, which yields poor results. The effective approach is to form long-term, integrated partnerships with creators who have built a network (events, newsletters, social), treating it as a strategic investment rather than a one-time transaction.
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.
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.
Small-budget B2B influencer marketing succeeds by having influencers create authentic content that the brand then uses in its own channels. This avoids paying for irrelevant audience reach and is often cheaper since the influencer isn't required to post publicly.
Given the average B2B deal cycle is over 200 days, expecting immediate conversions from a single influencer post is unrealistic. Instead of pushing for a download or sale, the focus should be on leveraging the influencer to amplify a core brand message over time.