For years, B2B marketers have chased a familiar formula: more leads equal more opportunities. Build the list, blast the message, and chase the pipeline.
Yet despite better data, smarter tools, and growing investment in performance marketing, many organizations are still challenged when it comes to driving measurable revenue impact.
The problem isn’t reach—it’s relevance. Most performance strategies were built for individuals, not buying groups.
Modern B2B decisions are made by large, diverse groups of stakeholders spanning departments, seniority levels, priorities, and generations. And while most marketers now acknowledge this reality in theory, their engagement strategies haven’t yet evolved to match it.
Instead of orchestrating personalized, multi-channel experiences across the entire buying group, too many organizations still treat demand generation like a numbers game—emailing long lists of contacts with one-size-fits-all messaging and hoping something sticks.
But it rarely does, and its quietly undermining performance marketing results.
Buying groups are bigger and more diverse
The rapid evolution of enterprise technology, from AI-driven platforms to automated systems and cloud-based infrastructures, has increased both the cost and complexity of purchasing decisions. As solutions become more strategic and more integrated across the business, leaders are bringing more voices into the room.
According to Gartner, B2B purchases now involve five to 16 people across as many as four functions all coming to the table with different perspectives, needs, and pain points. Finance evaluates risk and ROI. IT scrutinizes security and integrations. Operations focuses on implementation. Executives assess strategic impact. End users care about usability and experience. There is no single buying group member with unilateral authority. And the more expensive and transformative the purchase, the larger the committee and the longer the sales cycle.
Research consistently shows that consensus-driven buying is the norm and that deals stall when buying groups can’t align internally. Yet many campaigns still revolve around a single “decision maker” persona, as if everyone else is merely observing.
When marketers ignore the diversity of stakeholders, their individual behaviors, and group alignment needed, they don’t simplify the journey; they create friction.
Next generation decision-makers are changing the game
Layer in generational change and buying group complexity multiplies.
Millennials and Generation Z now account for the majority of B2B buyers. Forrester research indicates that together they make up 71% of the buying group. While this generational transition has always been inevitable, its impact on B2B purchasing is now impossible to ignore. These buyers were raised in a fully digital environment and approach evaluation, trust, and decision-making differently than their predecessors. Technology is part of the equation, but the shift runs deeper than platform preference; it’s about mindset.
Unlike previous generations who relied heavily on analyst briefings and direct sales interactions, Millennial and Gen Z buyers gather information across streaming platforms, podcasts, online communities, Slack groups, review sites, and AI-powered tools. These less obvious channels are increasingly shaping decisions long before buyers ever visit a brand site or fill out a form.
Millennials and Gen Zers are also more collaborative. Decisions are rarely top-down mandates, but instead consensus-driven conversations happening across group chats, internal threads, and cross-functional working sessions.
For marketers, this fundamentally changes performance strategy.
You can’t rely on gated content and outbound email alone or optimize solely for qualified lead volume. You can no longer assume that the “economic buyer” is the only one shaping the outcome.
Modern account-based marketing (ABM) strategies must reflect the way professionals now discover, validate, and champion solutions. You must meet them across channels, deliver value without friction, and build credibility long before a sales conversation begins.
Performance marketing must orchestrate, not blast
In this current reality of expanded buying committees and invisible influence networks, performance marketing can no longer afford to optimize for isolated lead capture. It must optimize for buying group momentum.
This requires a fundamental shift from channel execution to orchestration, from campaign bursts to sustained, coordinated engagement, and from single-touch attribution to account-level impact.
Orchestrating personalized, synchronized experiences across entire accounts means aligning messaging by role, channel, and stage to ensure every stakeholder receives the information they need, when they need it.
A modern, multi-channel performance strategy blends intent data-driven targeting across known stakeholders, always-on digital engagement that sustains visibility, emerging ABM channels like connected TV and audio to reach decision-makers beyond traditional feeds, role-specific content journeys tailored to stakeholder priorities, and real-time optimization informed by account-level buying signals.
This coordinated presence ensures that influence spreads across the buying group—not just to one contact—accelerating alignment and reducing deal friction. Stakeholders don’t just see your brand; they experience it as relevant, credible, and aligned to their specific role in the decision.
This is how performance marketing evolves from chasing contacts to driving consensus. Success is no longer measured by how many leads enter the funnel, but by how effectively engagement spreads across the buying group.
The question performance marketers must answer
As B2B purchases are further shaped by cross-functional committees, digitally native stakeholders, and influence networks, the real question is whether your strategies have adapted.
If your focus still revolves around generating as many individual leads as possible, you’re optimizing for a version of the buyer that no longer exists and measuring activity at the edges of a decision while ignoring the group dynamics that determine whether a deal moves forward.
Buying groups don’t convert because one person clicked. They convert when multiple stakeholders build shared confidence.
The shift B2B performance marketers must make isn’t tactical—it’s philosophical. Driving that kind of momentum demands coordinated relevance across roles, sustained presence in the channels where influence takes shape long before a sales conversation, and measurement models built around how consensus forms—not simply how many forms are completed.
The brands that outperform in this environment won’t have the largest databases or the lowest cost per lead. They’ll understand a simple truth: Performance isn’t driven by individuals. It’s driven by buying group alignment that only happens when you create clarity and confidence across the entire ecosystem of decision-makers shaping a deal.
Keith Turco is CEO of Madison Logic.