How to Find a Brand's Influencer Marketing Contact
Where to find the right person for partnership pitches — LinkedIn, org charts, email patterns, and when to use a marketplace instead of cold outreach.
TL;DR
- Target partnerships, influencer marketing, or brand marketing roles — not CEO or info@.
- LinkedIn Sales Navigator or free search: “[brand] influencer marketing manager”.
- Email pattern: firstname.lastname@domain — verify with Hunter.io or similar.
- Smaller brands: founder or head of marketing on Instagram/TikTok DMs (short pitch only).
- If no open role exists, marketplace apply beats guessing inboxes.
Context: How to Find a Brand’s Influencer Marketing Contact
Wrong inbox is the most common reason good pitches die — not creative quality.
Outreach and applications both work when proof and specificity are upfront — generic volume pitching is dead.
Why outreach still matters
Marketplaces and inbound applications are growing, but cold outreach has not died — it has become more selective. Brands still discover creators through DMs and email when a specific creative angle is timely.
The creators who hear back treat outreach as business development, not fan mail. They research, propose a deliverable, attach proof, and make the next step easy.
Outreach volume is down; outreach quality is up. That is good for creators who do the work and bad for copy-paste pitches.
The inbox reality for brand managers
Influencer managers often review 20–50 inbound messages per week during active campaign windows. Most are deleted in under ten seconds. The survivors show audience fit, a concrete idea, and a link to past work.
Live portfolios at app.getlily.ai/creators/@handle outperform PDF attachments because managers can verify quality without downloading files.
The decision is usually made on mobile. If your pitch requires downloading a 12MB PDF to understand your value, you have already lost.
Outreach vs application
Outreach makes sense for dream brands with no open campaign. Application makes sense when terms are pre-set on a marketplace — faster, clearer pay, less ghosting risk. Many creators should do both in parallel.
Treat outreach as top-of-funnel relationship building. Treat applications as bottom-of-funnel deal closing when terms match your rates.
Channel selection
Email — best for formal pitches with attachments and when you have a named contact. LinkedIn — useful for finding the right person; follow with email. Instagram/TikTok DM — acceptable for smaller brands; keep it short. Marketplace apply — best when campaign terms and earn-up-to are visible.
Never pitch the same brand on four channels simultaneously. Pick one primary channel and one follow-up.
Measuring outreach effectiveness
Track: pitches sent, replies, calls booked, deals closed, revenue per hour spent pitching. If reply rate is under 5%, your targeting or message is off — not “the market.”
A/B test subject lines and opening sentences. One specific product reference beats three generic compliments.
Influencer Marketing Hub reports 44% of brands now prefer nano-influencer partnerships — a signal that niche fit beats raw reach in outreach vetting [3].
What the research says
Third-party data helps creators price fairly and meet disclosure expectations brands are under pressure to enforce.
The IAB projects U.S. creator economy ad spend will reach $37 billion in 2025 — up 26% year-over-year and roughly four times faster than overall media industry growth. Nearly half (48%) of creator ad buyers now consider creators a “must buy,” behind only paid search and social media. [1]
Gartner reports that 78% of U.S. consumers surveyed in late 2025 said explicit labelling of AI-generated content is “very important” or “the most important factor” in maintaining trust, and that “trust is now the most valuable asset in influencer marketing.” [2]
Influencer Marketing Hub reports a marked shift toward nano-influencers — 44% of brands now prefer nano-tier partners — while 43% of marketers are redirecting budget toward smaller creators over macro talent. [3]
Influencer Marketing Hub’s 2024 benchmark survey of 3,000+ marketers found the industry on track to exceed $24 billion globally by year-end, with nearly 60% of respondents planning to increase influencer spend and 70% measuring ROI on campaigns. [4]
Where the budget owner sits
Enterprise: Influencer Marketing Manager, Brand Partnerships, Social Lead. Mid-market: Head of Marketing or DTC founder. Agency-held brands: partnerships@agency — slower but valid.
LinkedIn search strings
“[Brand]” AND (“influencer” OR “creator” OR “partnerships”)
Filter by current company. Check if they posted about creator campaigns recently — warm signal.
Email discovery
Company website press/partnerships page. Hunter.io, Apollo, or RocketReach for pattern verification. Never bulk-blast scraped lists — deliverability kills your domain.
When to skip cold email
Brand has an open campaign on a marketplace with visible terms — apply there first. Use email as a follow-up nudge, not the primary channel.
Titles to search
Influencer Marketing Manager, Creator Partnerships, Brand Partnerships, Social Lead, Head of DTC Marketing, Partnerships Coordinator. At agencies: Group Account Director on the brand’s roster.
Summary checklist
Use before your next how to find a brand’s influencer marketing contact decision:
- Where the budget owner sits
- LinkedIn search strings
- Email discovery
- When to skip cold email
- Titles to search
Putting this into practice
Pick one brand or open campaign to target this week. Update your portfolio, customise one pitch or application, and track reply rate. One specific improvement beats rewriting your entire strategy.
Schedule a 30-day review: what worked, what caused revision loops, and what to standardise in your template or checklist for the next campaign.
Questions to ask before you commit
Before accepting a deal: What is the total fee including usage? How many revision rounds? When is payment triggered? Is disclosure required in caption and on-screen? Before filming: Is the SMIT one sentence you can repeat back to the brand?
Compliance: Is the material connection disclosed clearly per platform rules — not only via a buried platform toggle?
Related reading
This article connects to our performance-based influencer marketing guide pillar. See also: pitching brands, building a portfolio, negotiating deals.
Key takeaway
Find the person who already buys creator content — not the busiest executive inbox.
References
Sources cited in this article. Market size and survey statistics reflect the publication year of each report — verify current figures before board or budget submissions.
-
Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) (2025). 2025 Creator Economy Ad Spend & Strategy Report. https://www.iab.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/IAB_Creator_Ad_Spend_and_Strategy_Report_2025.pdf
-
Gartner, Inc. (2026). Gartner Predicts 60% of Brands Will Use Agentic AI to Deliver Streamlined One-to-One Interactions by 2028. https://www.gartner.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/2026-01-15-gartner-predicts-60-percent-of-brands-will-use-agentic-ai-to-deliver-streamlined-one-to-one-interactions-by-2028
-
Influencer Marketing Hub (2024). 35 Influencer Marketing Statistics Shaping 2024. https://influencermarketinghub.com/influencer-marketing-statistics/
-
Influencer Marketing Hub (2024). Influencer Marketing Benchmark Report 2024. https://influencermarketinghub.com/influencer-marketing-benchmark-report/
-
U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) (2019). Disclosures 101 for Social Media Influencers. https://www.ftc.gov/business-guidance/resources/disclosures-101-social-media-influencers
For creators: Claim your @handle and build your portfolio on Lily. Keep 100% of earnings — 0% platform fees.