A serendipitous thing happened while I was researching an article about NIL and branding. I came across the story of a young woman who is changing the way organizations connect, build trust, and drive business success at Deloitte. I learned about how the world’s first and most influential full-time Corporate Influencer, Lara Sophie Bothur, is showing companies how personal branding and visibility are reshaping corporate communication. While much is written about social influencers promoting products, corporate influencers remain largely under the radar. Bothur’s role stands out because she brings the influencer model into the world of business-to-business partnerships, creating a new approach to brand visibility.
What Does A Corporate Influencer Actually Do?
Just as traditional influencers might showcase makeup, fashion, or travel, a corporate influencer highlights relationships between businesses. This can involve attending conferences, creating videos or photos, and sharing them widely on LinkedIn and other professional platforms. Like non-corporate influencers, corporate influencers build a personal following with the purpose of amplifying business collaboration and strengthening visibility.
Bothur’s approach at Deloitte involves humanizing corporate partnerships and putting authentic storytelling at the forefront, driving meaningful engagement instead of relying solely on traditional marketing campaigns. She has become one of Deloitte’s unique advantages compared to other professional services firms, offering a humanized approach to corporate visibility that helps differentiate the brand in a competitive global market.
Why Corporate Influencers Are Emerging As An Alternative To Traditional Advertising
Global advertising costs were estimated at approximately 850 billion dollars in 2023. Contrast that with the reach and impact of corporate influence. In just three years, Bothur organically grew a LinkedIn community of more than 360,000 followers, reaching over 400 million people annually. Her account is now estimated to generate an advertising value of 13 million dollars per year, offering Deloitte a new kind of visibility that would be extremely costly through traditional paid media alone.
Instead of relying only on advertisements, Deloitte and companies like it are investing in authentic voices that build connection. Bothur’s success points to a larger trend where personal visibility can outperform even the most polished brand advertising.
This is a significant benefit. Years ago, while developing a brand publishing course for Forbes, I saw how difficult it was for organizations to connect marketing tools in a way that improved campaign performance. The most common frustration I heard from CMOs was the challenge of delivering personalized messages at scale. That goal seemed out of reach at the time. Today, corporate influencers are helping close that gap by delivering messages that feel direct, relatable, and human, even to large audiences.
Corporate Influencers Build Relationships With The World’s Leading Brands
Corporate influencing not only builds trust, it shapes how industries connect across brands and sectors. Bothur collaborates with some of the biggest technology and innovation brands in the world, including Google, Amazon, SAP, IBM, Meta, Adobe, NVIDIA, Salesforce, ServiceNow, Snowflake, and many others. Her content creation brings visibility to partnerships that drive innovation and business growth.
Another reason companies might want to create a Corporate Influencer role is the reach an individual can achieve. Bothur’s personal LinkedIn profile generates about twenty times higher engagement than Deloitte’s official LinkedIn page, which has more than 18 million followers. This underscores a growing trend: personal accounts often connect more deeply with audiences than corporate marketing channels can.
How Corporate Influencers Differ From Traditional Partnership Roles
While corporate influencers are highly visible, traditional partnership leaders play a critical role behind the scenes. Toni Andres, Director of Partnerships at Dynamic Yield, a Mastercard company, focuses on forging, maintaining, and expanding partnerships through direct relationship-building and operational execution.
Like Bothur, Andres is a master at connection. In her role as Director of Partnerships, she has been instrumental in forging and nurturing strategic alliances that drive business growth and innovation. Her role includes identifying strategic partners, building mutually beneficial collaborations, and ensuring long-term alignment through continuous engagement. Andres’ efforts have significantly expanded her company’s ecosystem, enabling enhanced customer experiences and access to cutting-edge technologies. Andres has built relationships with some of the most recognized brands including Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft, Accenture, Salesforce, Facebook/Meta, WPP, Omnicom Group, and many others
Her experience has taught her the value of connection. “In every startup I have worked for, including Tealium, Fetchback, and Split, building strong partnerships required building trust that led to mutual growth,” Andres told me. “Visibility is just as critical. When clients and partners can see how work is happening, it strengthens confidence, helps establish credibility faster, and opens the door to new collaborations. Public visibility helps make partnerships real, which is important both for winning new clients and expanding existing relationships.”
The success of professionals like Bothur and Andres shows that businesses today benefit from combining public visibility with strategic partnership development. Both play essential roles in building credibility and momentum in a crowded marketplace. While Andres focuses on cultivating the relationships, Bothur enhances them by making those partnerships more visible.
Key Insights For Aspiring Corporate Influencers
Bothur’s strategies have helped her achieve measurable impact on LinkedIn, and she offered valuable guidance for anyone looking to build a personal brand that supports business visibility:
- Consistency Matters: Post five to seven times a week, often at strategic hours to maximize global reach.
- Originality Over Reposting: Content should be original. While it might seem helpful to share other people’s postings, LinkedIn’s algorithm favors original material for broader distribution.
- Quick Engagement Boosts Visibility: Individuals or companies tagged in her posts are encouraged to engage within the first five minutes. LinkedIn may flag posts as potential spam if tagged individuals do not respond quickly. To manage this, she recommends reminding people a day ahead and again five minutes before posting.
- Focused Growth: Building up to 100 new targeted LinkedIn connections per week allows for meaningful expansion without losing quality.
- Align With Platform Patterns: Approximately 2,500 impressions typically generate one follower, and about 40 engagements can lead to another. Maintaining a mix of short videos, impactful photos, and quotes can help drive both reach and follower growth.
- Understand LinkedIn’s Rules: External links should first be placed in the comments and only moved into the post after 90 minutes. Editing a post too soon can reduce visibility because LinkedIn’s system sees early edits as disruptions to distribution.
This advice is worth following, as Bothur’s activities have led to more than 10,000 marketing leads per year directly attributable to her work.
The Future Of Corporate Influencers
Looking ahead, the evolving role of corporate influencers signals broader changes in how organizations communicate and compete. The success of Corporate Influencers and Directors of Partnerships is a sign that audiences demand more authentic communication, and companies are finding new value in empowering individuals to become visible, trusted voices. Traditional marketing is being supplemented, and sometimes even surpassed, by the reach and credibility that corporate influencers can achieve. If not for social media, I would not have met Bothur through her powerful personal brand, or learned about how she invented an entirely new market. Her work shows that when trust, visibility, and authentic storytelling align, it creates business outcomes that traditional channels often struggle to match. When Lara speaks, the business world is listening. Can your organization say that about any of your people?







