
The expert network industry has become one of the most consequential infrastructure layers in global business research. What began as a niche service for hedge funds and private equity firms has evolved into a standard research tool across corporate strategy, management consulting, and increasingly, mainstream enterprise decision-making.
The expert network industry hit approximately USD 3 billion in 2025, growing 12% annually between 2023 and 2025 after a quieter stretch. Expert networks are no longer a luxury for high-stakes deals in high finance. Their services are increasingly considered table stakes when running any serious B2B market research.
Understanding this market, what it is, who it serves, and where it is headed, matters for any organization that depends on intelligence to make decisions.
An expert network is a platform that connects organizations with industry practitioners for structured knowledge-sharing sessions. The core transaction is straightforward: a client presents a specific research question, the network identifies a practitioner with direct relevant experience, and the two parties connect for a structured conversation.
The value is in the specificity and the recency of the knowledge being accessed. A market report tells you what happened. An analyst tells you what they think will happen. An expert call connects you directly with someone who has managed through the specific operational reality you are trying to understand, and who has done so recently enough for that knowledge to remain decision-relevant.
The geographic concentration of the market remains weighted toward North America, but this is shifting. The Americas currently hold 42% of the global expert networks market share, followed by Europe at 32% and Asia Pacific at 23%.Asia Pacific is the fastest-growing regional segment, driven by expanding private equity activity, increasing corporate adoption, and the complexity of emerging market research that secondary sources cannot adequately address.
Asia Pacific dominates in terms of future growth, accounting for 47% of total market share projections, with China, India, and the broader region driving adoption through rising ICT spending and increasing internet penetration.
The client base for expert networks spans four primary segments, each with distinct research needs and engagement patterns.
Investment professionals were the original and remain the most intensive users of expert network services. Private equity firms represent approximately 40% of expert network usage globally, with about 1,800 PE firms in the US alone using expert networks for deal diligence and sector analysis.
The use case is specific: investment teams use expert calls to pressure-test assumptions before capital is committed. A thesis that looks strong on paper often looks materially different after a conversation with an operator who has run a business inside the target sector. For deals where the cost of a wrong assumption runs into millions, the cost of expert calls is trivially small relative to the intelligence value they provide.
Hedge funds use expert networks for sector monitoring, portfolio company intelligence, and validating or challenging investment theses on public equities. The information edge that primary intelligence provides relative to published sources is particularly meaningful in competitive markets where all participants have access to the same secondary research.
Consulting firms account for 46% of global expert network application share, representing the largest client segment by revenue.The use case here is supplementary: consulting teams use expert calls to add the practitioner layer to research that desk work and published sources provide at the framework level.
A consulting team advising on a market entry strategy can build the macro picture from reports and industry data. The questions that primary research answers are different: how does distribution actually work in this market, who holds real channel influence, and what have companies that tried this before actually experienced. Those answers come from practitioners, not published sources.
Corporates are now the adoption engine for expert networks, accounting for approximately 45% of clients by number, even as consulting firms remain the spending engine at around 50% of industry revenue.
Corporate strategy and market research teams are the fastest-growing segment of expert network users. This shift reflects the mainstreaming of primary research as a standard tool, not an exceptional one. Teams evaluating market entries, assessing competitive dynamics, and validating product strategies are now regular users of expert call services where five years ago they were occasional ones.
Law firms use expert networks for litigation support, practice area development, and regulatory assessment. Expert witnesses, sector specialists, and regulatory practitioners provide intelligence that supports both client advisory and case preparation.

Three structural factors explain why the expert network market has grown consistently and is projected to continue doing so.
As information volume increases and AI tools become better at synthesizing existing knowledge, the value of knowledge that does not yet exist in documented form increases proportionally. The most decision-relevant intelligence in any complex market is precisely the intelligence that has not been documented. Expert networks access this layer directly.
The research questions that investment teams, consultants, and corporate strategists face are becoming more specific, more cross-border, and more time-sensitive. Published research covers less of what matters at the decision level. Primary intelligence fills the gap.
As capital flows increasingly target emerging markets in Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, the demand for expert intelligence in markets with thin published coverage grows. The number of firms using expert networks grew by approximately 150% between 2022 and 2025. Much of that growth came from markets and sectors that legacy platforms had not previously prioritised.
Southeast Asia is one of the most active growth frontiers for expert network demand. The region's combination of rapid economic growth, complex regulatory environments, and thin published coverage at the market-specific level creates persistent demand for primary intelligence that secondary sources cannot meet.
For teams researching Indonesia's markets or conducting cross-market research across Southeast Asia, the value of expert networks is amplified by the structural characteristics of these markets: information asymmetry is wide, operational reality frequently diverges from published data, and the pace of change means that intelligence from twelve months ago may not reflect current conditions.
Konnect is a global expert network connecting organizations with experienced industry professionals across 500+ sub-verticals to access real-world insights and informed perspectives. With strong expertise across Southeast Asia and global markets, Konnect facilitates structured conversations that help decision-makers better understand industries, market dynamics, and emerging opportunities.
Konnect's positioning within this growing market reflects the industry's shift toward regional specialists with genuine depth in specific geographies, rather than global platforms with broad but thin coverage.

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