
A LinkedIn post with thousands of likes can look influential, but when a B2B buying team is debating a vendor shortlist, that’s rarely the only voice they turn to.
In complex buying environments, the people who shape decisions are often different from the ones who generate the most attention. They’re the analyst whose research reframes the problem, the practitioner whose perspective sparks internal debate, and the peer who validates a decision when the stakes get real.
In other words, real influence isn’t defined by audience size alone—it’s defined by who actually shapes how buyers think, evaluate, and decide.
That distinction matters more than ever in modern B2B marketing because while visibility can amplify an idea, it doesn’t guarantee it will change how buyers approach a decision. To understand real influence, you need a better way to evaluate it.
Influence Looks Different in Large Buying Groups
Modern buying dynamics have altered how organizations research and validate vendors.
B2B decisions rarely happen in isolation and most purchases now involve large, cross-functional buying groups, where multiple stakeholders evaluate a solution from different perspectives. Each participant enters the conversation with different priorities, information sources, and trusted voices.
That complexity changes how influence works. Instead of a single person shaping the decision, influence tends to be distributed across the buying network. As buying groups work toward consensus, participants seek out different sources of information to validate assumptions, pressure-test options, and build internal alignment.
As a result, influence in B2B isn’t linear. It’s layered across multiple moments in the buying process, with different voices shaping how the group frames the problem, evaluates options, and builds confidence in a solution.
For marketers trying to reach these buying groups, this creates a challenge: the voices that influence one stakeholder may be completely different from those that influence another. That’s why evaluating influence through a single metric—like audience size—rarely captures the full picture.
The 4 Dimensions of Real B2B Influence
To better understand how influence actually works inside modern buying networks, it helps to look at the intersection of four elements: reach, relevance, resonance, and reference. Together, these dimensions help distinguish voices that simply attract attention from those that actually shape decisions. And when those elements align, influence becomes something far more powerful than popularity.

1. Reach: Who Can See the Message
Reach is the most visible form of influence. It represents the size of someone’s audience and their ability to distribute ideas broadly.
Reach certainly matters—awareness is still the first step in most buyer journeys. Industry analysts, media personalities, well-known creators, and large media platforms often bring significant reach to a conversation. Their content can introduce new ideas, trends, or problem frameworks to a wide audience quickly.
But reach alone doesn’t guarantee impact. A message can reach thousands of people without meaningfully influencing how buyers evaluate solutions. Visibility can start a conversation, but it doesn’t necessarily determine how a buying group frames a decision.
Instead of relying solely on metrics like impressions, followers, subscribers, or event audiences to evaluate and determine influence fit, spend time understanding whether what the B2B influencer says resonates with you target audience by looking at how they engage and interact with what is being said.
2. Relevance: Who the Message Matters To
Relevance is about alignment with a specific audience and problem set.
An individual may have a smaller audience but be deeply trusted by the exact community your buyers belong to. Their insights speak directly to the operational challenges, tools, and decisions those professionals deal with every day. For example, a practitioner who regularly shares lessons from implementing a particular technology stack may carry significant weight with technical buyers evaluating similar solutions.
In B2B, relevance often outweighs sheer scale. A niche expert respected within a specialized community—whether that’s a developer forum, industry Slack group, or practitioner-led newsletter—can shape buying conversations more effectively than a broadly known voice speaking to a general audience. Because when buyers feel that someone understands their exact context, the message carries more credibility.
3. Resonance: Who Actually Moves the Conversation
Resonance measures how strongly an idea lands with its audience.
Do people engage with the content? Share it internally? Debate it with colleagues? Reference it in meetings or Slack threads? These signals indicate that an idea isn’t just being seen but that it’s sparking discussion and influencing how teams think about a problem.
Resonance often shows up in subtle ways: a post that keeps resurfacing in internal conversations, a concept that starts appearing in how buyers frame their challenges, or a framework that gets reused in presentations or strategy discussions.
When a message resonates, it moves beyond content consumption and becomes part of the conversation buyers are having with each other. That’s why, in many cases, resonance is the signal that an idea has entered the real buying conversation.
4. Reference: Who Buyers Turn to When Decisions Get Real
Reference is where influence becomes tangible in the buying process.
At critical moments in the journey—vendor evaluation, internal justification, or final selection—buying groups often look for trusted voices to validate their thinking. This might mean reviewing analyst research, consulting with an industry expert, asking peers about their experience with a vendor, or referencing a practitioner who has documented their implementation journey. These voices carry weight because they help buyers reduce uncertainty and defend their decision internally. In many cases, they become the sources that buyers cite when building business cases or explaining their recommendations to leadership.
In other words, they become part of the buyer’s decision framework—the voices that help transform a preference into a confident choice.
Moving From Popularity to Real Influence
Individually, each of these dimensions provides value. But true B2B influence happens where they intersect.
A voice with meaningful reach, strong relevance to your target buyers, content that resonates with real challenges, and credibility as a reference point can shape the direction of entire buying conversations.
This model also reveals something important for marketers: The people who shape buyer decisions are not always the most visible voices online.
In fact, some of the most impactful influencers operate within smaller communities, professional networks, peer groups, and even your own executive leadership where credibility and expertise matter more than follower counts.
For marketers trying to reach modern buying groups, identifying these voices can make the difference between simply generating awareness and actually shaping demand. Rather than asking, “Who has the biggest audience?” ask:
- Who do our buyers trust?
- Whose perspectives actually shape how problems are framed?
- Which voices do buyers reference during evaluation and justification?
- Where do ideas gain traction within buying communities?
When influence is viewed through this broader lens, it becomes easier to distinguish signals that drive buying behavior from noise that simply attracts attention. And that distinction matters more than ever as buying journeys become more complex and distributed.
See the Influence Shift in Action
Understanding how reach, relevance, resonance, and reference intersect can fundamentally change how marketers identify and activate influence within their strategies.
Watch our webinar, “The Trust Shift: How Influence, Identity, and Communities Are Reshaping B2B Growth” on demand to learn how this model applies to modern B2B buying networks, and how you can use it to better identify the voices that truly shape buyer decisions.


