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Dark Social is Changing Hospitality B2B Sales – Here’s How to Keep Up
Dark Social is Changing Hospitality B2B Sales – Here’s How to Keep Up
Attribution used to be simple.
A prospect clicked an ad, landed on a website, and converted. Marketers could draw a straight line from lead to sale.
But today?
That line has turned into a messy, untrackable web of interactions across dark social channels, AI-driven search, and private conversations.
After getting tagged in posts, receiving LinkedIn DMs, and seeing the rise of ‘privatized’ groups, I started wondering—how are we supposed to track leads that never leave a digital breadcrumb?
That’s why I invited Connor DeLaney, Lead Sales Consultant at IMPACT onto the InnSync Show, to see if he could shed some light on this growing challenge and help us navigate the murky waters of dark attribution.
The Hidden Sales Pipeline: Dark Social is Winning Deals Behind Closed Doors
Let’s break down what’s happening, why it’s a problem, and how you can adapt.
Why Traditional Analytics Tools Can’t Track Your Best Leads Anymore
Buyers are researching in places you can’t see. They’re DMing industry peers on LinkedIn. They’re getting product recommendations in Slack communities. They’re running AI-powered searches that don’t require clicking through to a website.
, DeLaney explains.
The kicker?
By the time they do reach out, they’re often 80% through their decision-making process—and you have no idea what influenced them.
By the time they reach out, they’re not looking for a pitch—they’re looking for validation.
Even when dark social tracking tools try to assign credit, they get it wrong.
I’ll see leads come in, and our CRM will say they came from Google Ads… but we don’t even run Google Ads.
Point is, all this focus on attribution could be hindering more than helping.
So what’s the move? Keep chasing attribution ghosts—or adapt to the new reality of buyer behavior?
The Trust Deficit: Why Buyers Avoid Your Sales Team
There’s a bigger issue at play: buyers don’t trust brands like they used to.
, says DeLaney.
This is why dark social (LinkedIn DMs, private channels, organic discussions) has become such a powerful driver of sales—it feels more authentic.
A LinkedIn post from a real person? Trustworthy.
A chatbot message from a corporate account? Not so much.
And yet, companies still hoard information behind gated content and vague pricing pages.
DeLaney calls this “ostrich marketing”—burying your head in the sand and hoping buyers will still come to you.
Spoiler: they won’t.
The Friction Factor: Are You Making It Harder to Buy?
, says DeLaney.
Consider these common mistakes:
If someone has to “book a demo” just to understand what your product does, they’ll go elsewhere.
Instead of forcing buyers to jump through hoops, give them what they need upfront. If they’re well-informed before reaching out, they’ll close faster—and on their terms.
How to Adapt: Controlling the Conversation (Even When You Can’t Track It)
How do you still win business if you can’t track every touchpoint?
The answer isn’t to double down on outdated attribution models—it’s to rethink how you engage with buyers in the spaces where decisions are actually happening via dark social.
DeLaney offers three key strategies:
1. Ask buyers directly—because your CRM won’t tell the full story.
When a prospect finally books a call, they’ve already done the research. The simple act of asking, “How did you find us?” can reveal more about their journey than any tracking software ever could.
, DeLaney says.
While responses won’t be perfect (buyers might only recall their last touchpoint), collecting these insights consistently will help you spot patterns over time.
2. Invest in creating demand, not just capturing it.
Most companies focus on capturing leads already in buying mode—those searching on Google or filling out forms. But the biggest growth opportunities come from creating demand before buyers even know they need you.
Here’s how:
says DeLaney.
3. Make it ridiculously easy to buy.
Want to lose a lead fast? Make them jump through hoops just to get basic information.
Many companies still hide pricing, require a call just to access product details, or bury FAQs behind a gated form—all in an effort to force engagement and track direct traffic. But today’s buyers don’t play that game.
, DeLaney says.
Instead, remove unnecessary barriers:
When buyers can research freely, they come to you already confident in their decision—making the sales process faster, smoother, and far more effective.
DeLaney points out.
The Bottom Line: It’s Not About Attribution—It’s About Trust
Attribution will never be perfect again.
And that’s okay.
The real goal isn’t to track web traffic and every step of the buyer’s journey—it’s to be so visible, so helpful, and so easy to buy from that attribution doesn’t even matter.
And as DeLaney puts it:
At the end of the day, buyers aren’t looking for another marketing campaign to funnel them through. They’re looking for credibility, clarity, and confidence in their decision. The brands that meet them where they are—without forcing them down a rigid, outdated path—will be the ones that win.
So the question isn’t how you track every touchpoint. The question is: Are you showing up where it matters most?
Frustrated that your sales pitches are being ignored? Check this out >>
About Lure Agency
Lure Agency is renowned for its passion for R&R – Relationships and Revenue. This Hospitality B2B marketing agency stands out for its unique “Science and Soul” approach, expertly fusing data-driven strategies with creative flair. Specializing in helping independent resorts, tech companies, and suppliers and vendors in the hospitality industry.
Lure Agency crafts success stories by balancing human connection with tailored strategies. Their work goes beyond mere business transactions; it’s a journey of collaboration and innovation.
Lure Agency is committed to concocting success stories and inviting interested parties to learn more at www.lureagency.com.
Cory Falter
Partner & CEO
Lure Agency
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