Straight To Voicemail

Audience trust lives with people, not logos. That’s exactly why brands need to start investing in influencers with intention.

In this episode of Straight to Voicemail, Rachel Elsts Downey talks with Justin Levy, Director of Content and Social Media at ZoomInfo, about why creator partnerships are one of the smartest investments a brand can make. With 15 years of building influencer programs, Justin breaks down how influencer relationships expand reach, deepen credibility, and unlock audiences brands can’t access on their own. He also shares how to choose the right creators, what smart cross‑platform investment actually looks like, and why starting with small, structured pilots is the fastest path to proof.

You’ll learn:
  • How to start small with 3–5 creators
  • Where to invest beyond LinkedIn
  • What guardrails keep creator content on-brand
Jump into the conversation:
(00:00) Why we called Justin Levy about influencer marketing
(00:09) From affiliate links to creator-led brands
(00:35) The core reason brands should invest in influencers
(00:54) Why audiences trust creators over logos
(01:24) How platform influence has evolved, and why LinkedIn isn’t enough
(02:11) Where to invest beyond LinkedIn: podcasts, newsletters, YouTube
(02:37) Why brands should start small with creator pilots
(03:05) Choosing platforms and setting smart guardrails
(03:22) The brands that wait will fall behind

Straight to Voicemail is for CMOs, CEOs, and Heads of Marketing in B2B tech who want insights from the people who’ve been there. Each episode centers on one big question answered like a voicemail you’ll want to play again.

Don’t miss this conversation! Follow Straight to Voicemail and explore Genius Cuts for more B2B content strategy insights. 

What is Straight To Voicemail?

What are the best brands doing to stay relevant, build trust, and create content smarter?

At Share Your Genius, we have the same questions, so we're tapping the best in the space for their answers—one voicemail at a time.

Join us each week for quick hits of insights from b2b marketers and leaders.

[00:00:00] ​

[00:00:09] Rachel Elsts Downey: There are some people who were doing influencer marketing before it had a name, before brands were hiring creators, before it was a vibe. So I called Justin Levy. Justin Levy has over 15 years in social and influencer marketing. He's seen the evolution of brand influence from the early days of affiliate links and brand reps to the current ecosystem where creators are the media.

[00:00:35] So that's who I called when I was curious about why brands should invest in influencers and what's the real impact. Here's what he had to say.

[00:00:44]

[00:00:54] Justin Levy: Hey Rachel. Thanks for giving me a call. You know, I think that one of the main reasons why brands should be invested in influencers is because they carry an audience and a level of trust that the brand does not or does not have access to, right? People trust other people, not logos that they're used to seeing.

[00:01:15] So by investing in influencers, you're accessing their communities and also their authenticity with their audience.

[00:01:24] So I think that we've seen this arc happen, right? Over the past 15 years or so that I've been doing this. Originally, it was on Twitter, and that's where all the influence was driven. But now over time, as Twitter's turned X, and we've had the rise of, kind of the LinkedIn influencer and whatnot. Brands should invest across other areas like podcasts where you can have influencers interview your execs or your customers. Substack has a platform as well as newsletter, other newsletter platforms. YouTube, where you can drive, you know, demos and some people have their podcast on YouTube, podcast read ads.

[00:02:11] So if you're not gonna invest in a whole podcast, for example, it might just be an ad read. So trying to go where those audiences are. I think a lot of brands focus only on a platform, so they only go and focus on LinkedIn, but what they're missing is possibly tens of thousands, if not more, of subscribers and community members in these other platforms where they could reach out.

[00:02:37] So I think the kind of TLDR on this is that brands shouldn't be afraid of trying to work with creators. You don't need a massive budget. You don't need to have a huge strategy or things like that. What you really need is buy-in from your organization. And to start small, you might only start with three to five creators around a brand awareness campaign.

[00:03:05] Or maybe you have a product launch. You might only start with one or two platforms, you know, maybe just with LinkedIn or LinkedIn and a podcast sort of thing. But don't be afraid of it. You have to make sure you have the guardrails up. You don't want the content kind of going off those rails.

[00:03:22] But it's not something that you should be nervous of. And the brands that don't start to invest are going to be left behind by the brands that are. Hit me back, Rachel, if you have any questions.