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12 min read

How to find the best influencers for your brand

Brand strategy

Influencer marketing has been picking up momentum in recent years. It’s an effective form of marketing that has the potential to generate a large return on investment (ROI), with 89% of marketers considering influencers to offer a higher ROI than other popular marketing tactics. We already see how prevalent it is in B2C, but can it bring just as many benefits to B2B?

Yes, in fact, possibly even more.The purchase size in B2B dwarfs that of B2C, and referrals and word of mouth are critical to successful sales. And with the explosion of smaller or more niche influencers across social media, these micro-influencers can reach highly targeted segments of your audience - but more on that later.

Not every influencer is going to best represent your brand. Just because an influencer has a huge following online, doesn’t mean they’d automatically be the right choice for your company. If you’re thinking of implementing influencer marketing into your next content strategy, check out these tips for picking the right influencer for your brand.

In this article, we cover: 

The pros and cons of influencer marketing

Influencer marketing taps into a major asset: engaged human voices that followers already trust. Whether macro or micro-influencers, they garner higher post engagement and conversion rates than branded content alone. 

Essentially, influencers do our talking for us in an authentic way that resonates more deeply with target audiences. This allows you and your brand to expand reach into fresh, relevant markets because most follower overlap with current audiences is minimal. When strategically executed, the value exchange is well worth the boost in messaging and credibility lent by leaders in those communities.

However, the handover of creative control to influencers poses risks if not properly vetted or aligned throughout the partnership. Fake followers are everywhere, and disclosure protocols may not be upheld by all, jeopardizing your brand integrity and consumer trust.

You also tend to surrender some image control and must accept unpredictability in performance metrics. The key is choosing those who authentically engage their niche about relevant products. With tightened partnership management, your brand can leverage influencer voices for exponential returns compared to traditional media.

How to find the best influencers for your brand

Understand your target market

Before you can put a list together of potential influencers, you need to make sure you fully understand your audience base.

Your target audience needs to actually be following the influencer before you decide to collaborate, so you can ensure their content will actually reach the right people. Use hashtags on social media to search for the right kind of media content relevant to your brand. This will not only help you discover what kind of content your audience cares about but can also be a great place to start your search for influencers.

ICP vs buyer persona
Your audience can vary a lot, and you need marketing strategies to reflect that. This is where segmentation comes into play! Find out more here.

Meaningful content

Follower count is not a good metric to use to decide on what influencers to contact, you need to consider the actual content they share. Spend some time on each of the influencer’s social media platforms to get an idea of the kind of content they produce and support.

Are they producing the kind of posts you’d be happy for your brand to associate with? Also, check out the comment sections, do the posts tend to generate engagement, and does the influencer take the time to respond?

You need to know what kind of content the influencer is putting out there, whether their values align with your brand’s own, and whether their audience shares them too.

Industry credibility

When you’re exploring an influencer’s content and social posts, try and get a sense of how familiar they are with topics your brand cares about. Do they sound informed and can they demonstrate any areas of expertise on topics that matter in your industry?

Enlisting the services of someone with no knowledge of your industry or what your brand does will come across as inauthentic, and their audience will likely be confused by the partnership. No matter how strong your script or pitch, authenticity cannot be faked.

Another place you can check is an influencer’s follower list and who they follow. Check for signs of inactive followers or even fake accounts, as this could be a sign that this person would not make a great influencer to partner with. As for their followers, check for any thought leaders or publications relevant to your industry, as that’s a good sign that you’ll both be on the same page.

Engagement levels

Engagement is crucial in influencer marketing, but it needs to be the right kind of engagement for your brand. Check out an influencer’s most popular posts and compare them to the ones that don’t have the same engagement levels. Are there any notable differences between these types of posts? Do they get more or less engagement from sponsored posts? How does their audience base react to sponsored posts?

These things will all indicate an influencer’s ability to connect with their audience, and by checking any sponsored posts you’ll be able to see whether they can share your brand’s beliefs in a way that seems genuine.

Try and seek out influencers that get lots of engagement on sponsored posts, or posts that share your brand values. But make sure you check their followers to ensure they’re not all bots. Their engagement should include comments and responses to CTAs, not just a load of likes.

Relevant audience

Of course, you’ll want an influencer with an audience that overlaps with your own, but not completely. The whole point of working with an influencer is to further expand your reach, so look for influencers whose followers are likely to want to learn more about your brand, as opposed to those who may already know about it.

Check out the comment sections on their posts to get a sense of their reactions to branded content and to see what kind of community they’re building. Not all reactions and comments on an influencer’s posts will be positive, so make sure anyone you’re working with doesn’t bring in lots of negative reactions to their posts promoting brands.

However, you’re unlikely to find any influencers with wholly positive feedback and comments, so look out for those willing to engage with criticisms and weed out unconstructive comments. Keep an eye on whether their audience appears to be growing or whether they have plateaued, as this can help you consider what kind of future reach they will likely have and if a partnership is worth it.

Micro-influencers

Micro-influencer marketing is something we’ve discussed before in our blog about the top B2B marketing trends in 2023/24, and it’s no wonder. These days, people have wised up to advertising and they hate to feel like they’re being marketed at. That’s why many brands are abandoning the bigger influencers with millions of followers in favor of micro-influencers, those with a much smaller, yet very dedicated following. 

These influencers have the advantage that they can deliver a truly authentic message to their trusted audience. B2B brands can benefit from these intimate relationships micro-influencers have with their audience, as they’re much less likely to receive negative reactions to their branded posts.

You could have a much better ROI by going with a micro-influencer over a top influencer, as they can use their authentic relationship with their invested audience to share your message in a way that won’t be immediately rejected.

The rise of micro-influencers
Influencer marketing is one of the hottest topics in the marketing world right now. Yet it’s the micro-influencer that is making waves in the B2B space.

Affiliate marketing vs influencer marketing

It’s easy to get affiliate marketing and influencer marketing confused as both leverage content creators to promote products. However, affiliate marketing is very conversion-driven while influencer marketing focuses more on exposure and amplification through public figures that followers relate with. 

One thing we will say is that it isn’t an either/or situation. Affiliate marketing and influencer marketing can complement each other as part of an integrated digital marketing strategy.

Let’s take a look at some of their differences: 

Affiliate marketing

Influencer marketing

Focuses on driving conversions and sales directly. Affiliates earn commissions on the actual sales or leads generated from their promotional content.

Centers on expanding brand awareness and exposure through endorsements. Influencers are paid fees upfront or given free products rather than earning commissions.

Typically done through blogs, niche sites, or platforms like rewardStyle where affiliates share special links and promo codes to track sales.

Usually implemented through visual social platforms like Instagram and TikTok where influencers blend sponsored brand messaging into their own lifestyle content.

Generally attracts participants focused heavily on monetization opportunities rather than organic reach.

Works best with influencers who have established credible personal brands in their niche with engaged followings, not just monetization motivations.

Success is measured strictly through tracked sales or leads, and commissions earned.

It’s harder to quantify direct ROI - success is measured through reach, engagement rates, clicks, and impressions rather than direct sales conversions.

Influencer marketing vs traditional marketing

Now, let’s add traditional marketing to the mix. What are the main differences here? Well…

Traditional marketing

Affiliate marketing

Influencer marketing

Messages are explicitly branded, and commercial - they have a clear sales agenda.


Focuses on driving conversions and sales directly. Affiliates earn commissions on the actual sales or leads generated from their promotional content.

Centers on expanding brand awareness and exposure through endorsements. Influencers are paid fees upfront or given free products rather than earning commissions.

Encompasses mediums like TV/radio ads, billboards, print ads, catalogs. They are owned and paid media spaces.

Typically done through blogs, niche sites, or platforms like rewardStyle where affiliates share special links and promo codes to track sales.

Usually implemented through visual social platforms like Instagram and TikTok where influencers blend sponsored brand messaging into their own lifestyle content.

Can cost hundreds of thousands for a single TV spot or Times Square billboard placement. They have a wide reach but are not as targeted.

Generally attracts participants focused heavily on monetization opportunities rather than organic reach.

Works best with influencers who have established credible personal brands in their niche with engaged followings, not just monetization motivations.

Success is measured through direct response tracking (800 numbers, promo codes, etc) or aided brand awareness surveys after exposure.

Success is measured strictly through tracked sales or leads, and commissions earned.

It’s harder to quantify direct ROI - success is measured through reach, engagement rates, clicks, and impressions rather than direct sales conversions.

Final thoughts

Working with influencers can be a great way to raise brand awareness and generate new leads. Once you’ve vetted some potential influencers, it’s time to reach out. Follow and engage with them on their social platforms, and when you’re ready, you can send out a compelling proposal explaining why you’re reaching out, what you can offer, and how they can take the conversation forward.

Want to find out more about recruiting influencers in B2B? Join the Revenue Marketing Alliance community!

Written by:

Hannah Wesson

Hannah Wesson

Hannah has worked in content marketing since graduating and has a wealth of experience writing for a wide range of B2B and B2C companies.

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How to find the best influencers for your brand