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Gen Z Buyers: How the Next Generation Is Reshaping B2B Buying

Carly Miller
July 9, 2026 7 MIN Blog

Millennials helped usher B2B buying into the digital era. Gen Z is taking it a step further. 

As more Gen Z professionals enter the workforce, they’re becoming influential members of buying committees—often researching vendors, evaluating solutions, and shaping shortlists long before executives approve a purchase. While they may not always control the budget, they increasingly control how buying decisions begin. 

Unlike previous generations, Gen Z has never known a workplace without search engines, collaboration tools, or digital-first workflows. They’re also the first generation to incorporate AI into everyday research, making them faster and more self-directed than their predecessors. At the same time, many are early in their careers, which means every recommendation carries personal stakes. Recommending the wrong vendor can feel like a reflection of their credibility. 

This combination of digital fluency and professional caution is changing how B2B purchases are researched, validated, and championed. And for marketers, understanding Gen Z isn’t about adopting the latest social platform or chasing trends. It’s about recognizing how the next generation builds confidence—and creating buying experiences that help them make informed recommendations. 

Gen Z Is Gaining Influence on Buying Committees 

Every year, Gen Z represents a larger share of the B2B workforce—and with that comes greater influence over purchasing decisions.  

TrustRadius reports that Gen Z accounted for 9% of B2B software buyers in 2025, surpassing Baby Boomers for the first time. And according to Forrester, 71% of B2B buying group members are now millennials or Gen Z, and 67% of buyers involved in purchases of $1 million or more belong to one of these younger generations. That means today’s enterprise buying committees increasingly reflect the expectations of digital-native professionals who expect relevant, self-directed experiences throughout the buying journey. 

While many Gen Z professionals serve as individual contributors rather than final decision-makers, they’re increasingly responsible for researching vendors, comparing solutions, and bringing recommendations to senior stakeholders. This reflects a broader shift in modern B2B buying. Purchases are no longer driven by a single executive. Buying committees continue to expand, drawing in practitioners, managers, IT, finance, operations, and executive leadership to evaluate purchases from multiple perspectives. 

For Gen Z, participation in these committees represents an opportunity to demonstrate expertise, influence strategic decisions, and establish credibility within their organizations. They’re building the shortlist, which means marketers need to earn their confidence and influence them early to win the deal. 

Gen Z Is Researching Vendors Differently 

Gen Z approaches vendor research with an expectation of speed, independence, and self-service. 

Gen Z’s research habits span more formats than previous generations. eMarketer reports that 90% of millennial and Gen Z B2B decision-makers are digital audio listeners, reflecting a broader preference for learning across channels rather than relying on a single source. Podcasts, webinars, thought leadership, search, AI tools, and product documentation all play complementary roles as buyers build confidence before engaging with vendors. Rather than relying on sales representatives as an early source of information, they’re more likely to educate themselves through various channels before ever filling out a form.   

According to TrustRadius, Gen Z buyers are more likely than older generations to trust AI-assisted research during the buying process, with nearly one-third saying they frequently rely on AI-generated content to accelerate discovery. That’s because they trust the systems they’ve grown up with, versus older generations who had to dedicate time to searching and scrolling through results and pages for the information they needed.  

But faster research doesn’t mean less research. If anything, Gen Z gathers information from more sources before forming an opinion. They expect to compare vendors quickly, validate claims independently, and arrive at conversations with sales already informed about the market. 

This reinforces a growing reality for B2B marketers: by the time buyers engage with sales, much of the buying journey has already happened. Organizations that invest in educational content, transparent product information, and discoverable resources are better positioned to become part of that early research process. 

Gen Z Is Building Trust Through Independent Validation 

If previous generations trusted vendors to educate them, Gen Z prefers to verify vendor claims independently. 

TrustRadius found that user reviews rank among the most influential resources for Gen Z buyers. They’re also more likely than other generations to seek recommendations from peers and colleagues who have firsthand experience with a product than to rely solely on vendor-provided references. 

That preference reflects a broader shift in how trust is established. 

Gen Z has grown up in a world where nearly every purchase—from restaurants to software—can be researched through reviews, ratings, and community discussions. They bring those same expectations into B2B buying, and easily scour sites like G2, Trustpilot, and Capterra to later reinforce with deeper research from community spaces, including LinkedIn and Reddit.  

This shift also changes the kind of content that resonates with Gen Z buyers. Rather than polished promotional messaging, younger buyers gravitate toward authentic customer experiences, transparent discussions of implementation challenges, and stories grounded in real business outcomes. They expect B2B content to feel more like the trustworthy, experience-driven information they encounter as consumers—where credibility comes from practical proof instead of polished claims. 

You still want buyers to be led to your website, yet Gen Z’s behaviors and preferences lead toward the realization that trust isn’t built through claims alone—it’s built through validation. While vendor messaging still matters (and you can control it through your owned channels, like your website and company LinkedIn profile), it works best when reinforced by independent proof. Customer success stories, analyst reports, user-generated reviews, third-party research, and measurable outcomes all help reduce uncertainty for buyers who want evidence before they advocate for a solution internally. 

Gen Z Is Championing Purchases Before Sales Ever Does 

Many Gen Z buyers don’t make the final purchasing decision. Instead, they make the recommendation—and that distinction matters to understand how to appeal to them. 

After researching potential solutions, Gen Z often needs to present findings, justify costs, answer objections, and build consensus across stakeholders with different priorities. In many ways, they’re selling the purchase internally before a vendor ever presents a proposal. 

This helps explain why practical buying resources matter so much. ROI calculators, implementation guidance, pricing transparency, customer examples, and business cases don’t just educate buyers—they equip internal champions with the evidence they need to advocate confidently. 

TrustRadius research found that more than one-third of Gen Z buyers wish ROI were easier to calculate during the buying process, highlighting the importance of helping buyers connect product capabilities to measurable business outcomes. The easier marketers make it for buyers to explain value internally (especially to the executive buyers, who influence decisions across the department’s budget), the easier it becomes for buying committees to reach consensus. 

Marketers Must Adapt to How Gen Z Buys 

As Gen Z’s influence continues to grow, B2B marketing strategies must evolve alongside them. That doesn’t mean replacing every tactic with the latest trend. Instead, it means reducing friction throughout the buying journey and helping buyers build confidence at every stage. 

Madison Logic’s Q2 2025 Harris Poll found that 93% of B2B marketing leaders believe millennial and Gen Z marketers are reshaping the industry. More than 70% say these younger professionals are accelerating the adoption of new marketing channels, encouraging more authentic brand storytelling, and pushing teams to experiment with new technologies and engagement strategies. 

The result is a closer alignment between how modern marketing operates and how today’s buyers prefer to buy—through personalized, transparent, and value-driven experiences delivered across multiple digital touchpoints. 

Organizations can better engage Gen Z buyers by: 

  • Creating educational content that answers questions before buyers contact sales. 
  • Supporting AI-driven discovery with authoritative, trustworthy content. 
  • Showcasing authentic customer stories, reviews, and measurable outcomes. 
  • Providing interactive tools like ROI calculators and assessments that help buyers build internal business cases. 
  • Personalizing experiences based on buying stage and demonstrated intent instead of relying solely on demographic assumptions. 

Gen Z Is Already Reshaping B2B Buying 

Gen Z isn’t waiting to become the next generation of decision-makers—they’re already influencing how buying committees research, evaluate, and justify purchases. 

As this generation takes on a larger role in the workplace, success will depend on marketers’ ability to adapt to a buying process built around speed, transparency, and independent validation. Failing to understand what drives Gen Z buyers can make it harder to reach the right people, earn their trust, and move deals forward. By using data to understand how Gen Z researches, validates, and champions solutions, marketers can deliver more relevant experiences that build confidence across the buying committee. 

Want to learn how to activate better campaigns that reach and engage all members of the buying committee? Request a demo to learn how Madison Logic can help. 


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