Who buyers actually trust: peers and practitioners over brands and analysts
The question: which information sources do B2B buyers rank as most trustworthy when forming a shortlist?
The dataset: recurring B2B buyer-trust surveys (LinkedIn, TrustRadius, 6sense-style research) asking thousands of buyers to rank source credibility for purchase decisions.
Three findings:
— Peer recommendations, user reviews and hands-on practitioners consistently outranked vendor websites, sales reps and even paid analysts.
— 'People like me' content — a practitioner describing real use — beat polished brand assets on perceived honesty.
— Buyers increasingly self-educate through communities and review sites before ever contacting sales, often arriving with a near-final shortlist.
Caveats: trust rankings are stated preferences, not observed behavior — people claim to distrust ads while still being influenced by them. Survey framing shapes results. Treat as directional.
What it means for B2B: your most persuasive content may not be yours at all — it's a customer's review, a community thread, a practitioner's teardown. Brand-published content competes against these from a trust deficit. The move is to enable credible third parties, not just out-publish them.
Bottom line: buyers trust people who use the product over people who sell it — make the users visible.
The B2B Lab Report
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Who buyers actually trust: peers and practitioners over brands and analysts
Этот пост опубликован в Telegram-канале The B2B Lab Report. Подписаться можно по ссылке: @B2BLabReport.