B2B influence just got a bigger stage on LinkedIn

For a long time, “influencer marketing” and “B2B” lived in separate rooms of the marketing conversation. One conjured images of unboxing videos and lifestyle aesthetics, while the other conjured whitepapers, lead generation forms, and quarterly sales targets.

LinkedIn is now bringing those two realms together, announcing a meaningful expansion of its creator partnership infrastructure for B2B marketers, rolling out across several interconnected tools. The centerpiece is the Premium Creator Sponsorships with Top Voices 360 program, which gives brands structured access to LinkedIn’s most influential creators. This isn’t limited to mere ad placement alongside their content, but also encompasses extended partnerships that can span co-branded posts, editorial shows, and industry event appearances. Alongside this, LinkedIn is also expanding its BrandLink ad placement options while simplifying the buying process with self-serve access in Campaign Manager and a new Stripe-powered creator payout system. CTV ads are also now purchasable programmatically through The Trade Desk.

It’s a lot of moving pieces, but they all point in the same direction: making creator partnerships on LinkedIn easier to buy, easier to run, and harder to ignore. The landscape on LinkedIn has been recently metamorphing, partly due to the maturation of the video environment, which has given creators a format that suits expertise-driven content, and partly the due to the broader shift in how B2B buyers make decisions, increasingly influenced by the same social proof dynamics that govern consumer purchases. There’s also the simple fact that LinkedIn’s audience is unusually valuable to reach.

Hence, when a trusted voice in that space endorses a product or appears alongside a brand, the signal carries weight that paid placement alone rarely achieves. By anchoring a partnership in an editorial show and then extending it across other touchpoints (posts, events, appearances), LinkedIn is effectively offering brands something closer to a spokesperson relationship than a traditional ad buy.

That’s a different kind of value proposition than reach or impressions. It’s about sustained association with credibility.

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