The Pipeline Question: Why Executive Visibility Is No Longer Optional in B2B

By Phoebe Yong, Founder and President, Magnolia Communications

When was the last time your client's CEO posted on LinkedIn and it actually moved the business forward?

If you can't answer that question with specifics, a partnership initiated, a sales cycle shortened, or an investor inquiry, you're not alone. Most PR and marketing teams still treat executive visibility as a ‘nice to have’ rather than what it actually is: a measurable business driver.

After 25+ years in this industry, I've watched the conversation shift. Decision-makers now spend over an hour per week consuming thought leadership content, and roughly 60% say good thought leadership makes them willing to give business to an organization. That's not brand awareness. That is not vanity. That is influence over demand creation.

That's pricing power.

Yet here's the disconnect: while executives report making a purchase decision based on thought leadership content they consumed, most B2B companies still measure executive visibility through vanity metrics such as likes, shares, and follower counts. They're tracking the wrong thing.

The ROI Is Real (And Finally Measurable)

For years, the challenge with executive thought leadership was proving it mattered beyond reputation building. That barrier has fallen. Recent research shows thought leadership delivers a 14x return on investment, and the mechanisms are becoming clearer.

75% of executives have explored products or services they weren't previously considering after engaging with compelling thought leadership, and 53% say it directly influenced a purchasing decision. When your client's CEO publishes a perspective piece that lands with the right audience, you're not just building awareness, you're opening doors that would otherwise remain closed.

The trust factor is equally significant. Most B2B executives regard thought leadership as more trustworthy than marketing materials when assessing a company's capabilities. This means what your CEO says carries more weight than what your marketing department says.

The business impact usually shows up in one of five places:

  • Higher-quality inbound from target accounts.

  • More sales conversations that reference executive content.

  • Faster progression through long, consensus-driven buying cycles.

  • Stronger partner or investor interest.

  • Greater willingness to engage before a formal evaluation begins.

The real shift is simple: executive visibility is no longer just a reputation asset. It is a commercial lever.

What Separates Signal From Noise

Not all executive visibility is created equal. Some leaders generate noise. Others generate trust. Only the second kind affects the pipeline.

The executives who create business impact usually do three things well.

First, they know their audience isn't ‘everyone on LinkedIn.’ CEO posts generate four times more engagement than other content on LinkedIn, but engagement without strategic intent is just noise. The executives who win are those who consistently address the specific concerns of those who shape buying decisions: CFOs, COOs, CIOs, procurement leaders, and other stakeholders who care about risk, efficiency, and measurable outcomes.

Second, they understand timing and show up consistently. At any given moment, B2B clients aren't actively seeking goods or services, and nearly 90% of global buyers report stalled purchase processes. They are forming opinions long before a purchase is imminent. Consistent executive visibility keeps the company present during the long consideration phase, which is exactly when trust is built.

Third, they sound like operators, not advertisers. The strongest executive voices do not push products. They offer perspective: what is changing, what the market is underestimating, what decision-makers should prepare for next. That is what gives the content authority.

Where Most B2B Brands Go Wrong

The most common mistake is treating executive visibility as a content task instead of a communications strategy.

Teams hire a ghostwriter, schedule posts, track likes, and assume the job is done. But if the content is not tied to business priorities, target accounts, or the company’s strategic narrative, it will not create commercial value.

This is where many programs break down:

  • They optimize for engagement instead of influence.

  • They confuse personal branding with business strategy.

  • They fail to connect earned and owned channels.

  • They do not measure what matters.

A post can perform well without reaching the right audience. An executive can build a following without building a pipeline. And a media hit can generate visibility without generating action if it is not reinforced through the rest of the communications ecosystem.

The fix is not more content. It is better orchestration.

The Earned and Owned Integration That Actually Works

Executive visibility is most effective when earned media and owned channels are integrated.

A byline in a trade publication establishes credibility. A LinkedIn post amplifies that credibility to a targeted network. A podcast interview deepens the relationship with listeners who become warm leads. Each channel plays a specific role, but they only work when they're orchestrated, not siloed.

The media professionals who build executive visibility programs that actually impact pipelines understand this integration instinctively. They're not chasing placements for the sake of clips or KPIs. They're building a coherent narrative across channels that positions their executive as the go-to voice on specific challenges.

What Comes Next

There's been a 23% increase in posts from chief executives globally year-on-year and that trend isn't slowing. The executives who started this early have built significant competitive moats. The ones who haven't are running out of time to catch up.

For PR and marketing professionals in Canada, this creates both an opportunity and an imperative. Your clients need executive visibility programs that drive business outcomes, not just awareness. The data now makes the case for you. What you do with it determines whether you're positioning your clients for growth or watching their competitors take the conversation.

The pipeline question isn't hypothetical anymore. It's the first thing your clients should be asking and the first thing you should be ready to answer.

Lastly, When was the last time a CEO’s point of view helped move business forward? If the answer is unclear, that is not a content problem. It is a strategy problem.


About Pheobe Yong:
Founder and President of Magnolia, Phoebe is the spark that ignites the team’s creative energy and the driver that gets deals done. Bold, intense, brutally honest with a wicked sense of humour – this is the person clients want on their side of the table.

And yes, her vocabulary is colourful. With a degree in Communications and an MBA in Marketing, Phoebe has led marketing campaigns with some of the biggest brands in the world – Dell, HP, Microsoft, Vodafone, and Unicom China. Working on everything from shoestring budgets to over $2M ad campaigns, she has also run press tours with the largest and most influential global media outlets. She’s known in the industry for her tenacity, her work ethic, and her passion for getting things done right for her clients.

She’s pulled off product launches on many world stages – Cannes, London, Singapore, New York – and even worked on a wireless demo for Bill Gates.

Phoebe’s vision, business smarts and energy set the stage for achieving nothing less than remarkable results as she rallies the team on each and every campaign.

Favourite saying: Get busy living or get busy dying.

Next
Next

The 2026 Paid Social Playbook, According to SocialNext Toronto Speakers