Phew Blog
Aug 19, 2025
More B2B brands are not abandoning company pages. They are downgrading them.
That is the real shift.
Over the last year, more teams have started treating page reach as infrastructure and people-powered reach as leverage. The company page still matters for launches, proof, hiring, and brand consistency. But when the goal is attention, trust, and qualified engagement, the stronger bet is increasingly a credible person with something specific to say.
This is not a style preference. It is a distribution reality.
The feed now gives more upside to posts that look authored, informed, and close to the work. That makes people-powered reach more valuable than page reach in the places that actually shape pipeline, reputation, and category understanding.
More B2B brands are betting on people-powered reach because individual experts usually outperform brand pages on three things that matter most.
First, they earn attention faster.
Second, they transfer trust more efficiently.
Third, they can say sharper things without sounding like corporate copy.
Page reach still has a role. It just no longer carries the full distribution burden on its own.
Brand pages have a built-in constraint. They need to sound acceptable to many stakeholders at once.
That usually leads to content that is polished, safe, and structurally fine, but strategically weak.
It announces. It summarizes. It recaps. It rarely interprets.
That matters because B2B buyers are not only looking for information. They are looking for judgment.
When markets change, tools shift, or categories get crowded, people want someone to help them understand what matters, what changed, and what to do differently. A brand page can publish the official message. It is worse at publishing the useful read on the situation.
That gap is exactly why page reach has become less dependable as the main growth surface.
A post lands differently when the reader can immediately tell who is saying it and why that person would know.
That source signal matters in B2B. A founder, operator, product lead, recruiter, or strategist carries context a logo does not. Even before the reader fully agrees, they understand where the perspective comes from.
That makes the content easier to process and easier to trust.
Most brand-page content struggles because it stops at description.
People-powered content can go one level deeper. It can explain what the change means, which tradeoff matters, why a common response is wrong, or how a team should actually adapt.
That layer of interpretation is often the difference between a post that gets seen and a post that gets remembered.
A company page has one voice and one main feed surface.
A business with three or four credible internal voices has multiple distribution points, multiple audience overlaps, and more room for different angles on the same market reality.
That does not mean asking everyone to post. It means recognizing that reach compounds when expertise is distributed across real people instead of compressed into one brand account.
Readers are naturally more skeptical of content that appears engineered to represent the company line.
That skepticism is not irrational. Most readers have learned that brand channels optimize for safety first.
A person can still be self-interested, of course. But a good expert post often feels more candid, more bounded, and more useful. That changes how the reader receives it.
The strongest teams are not choosing people-powered reach instead of page reach in some absolute sense. They are assigning each surface a clearer job.
A cleaner split usually looks like this.
The company page handles:
Internal experts handle:
That allocation works because it matches format to function.
The page is where the company states things.
The people are where the company means things.
A lot of teams understand the shift and still fail to act on it.
Usually the blocker is not belief. It is workflow.
People-powered reach sounds obvious until you try to operationalize it. Then the real problems show up.
Busy experts do not have time to turn half-formed observations into publishable posts.
They do not want to sound generic.
They do not want content demands turning into a second job.
And most teams do not have a reliable system for capturing live insight before it disappears.
That is why the winning move is not just “post from employee profiles more often.” That advice is too shallow.
The real move is building a workflow that helps the right people notice what is worth saying, shape it into something sharp, and publish without flattening their voice.
At Phew, that is the practical line we keep seeing. The challenge is rarely access to ideas. It is converting real expertise into consistent public signal before the moment passes.
If a B2B team wants more people-powered reach, the answer is not to pressure a dozen employees into becoming creators.
A better approach is more selective.
Pick a small number of people with actual pattern recognition.
Give each person a clear topical lane.
Build from recurring source material, not blank pages.
Separate signal capture from final drafting.
Keep the publishing bar high enough that the content still reflects well on the business.
That is a much more durable model than relying on company-page consistency and hoping the algorithm does the rest.
It also produces better content, because the material starts closer to the work.
More B2B brands are betting on people-powered reach instead of page reach because the economics of attention changed.
Brand pages still matter, but they are weaker at carrying perspective, trust, and interpretation on their own. Individual experts are better suited to all three, which is why they now play a larger role in how professional visibility actually works.
The important question is not whether your company page should keep posting.
It is whether the right people inside the business have a credible way to publish the insight only they can provide.
If you are building a workflow that helps busy experts turn real signal into publishable posts without flattening their voice, you can try Phew here.