A growing army of YouTube stars is finding instant fame and wealth thanks to millions of subscribers to their pages. Personalities such as video-gamer PewDiePie, with 54.1 million subscribers and Germán Garmendia, Latin America’s biggest star on the video-sharing site with over 31.2 million subscribers, have become the rock stars of a modern, digital world. The top YouTubers in the world are fast becoming as influential, and in some case more so than mainstream actors and musicians, earning millions of dollars in YouTube revenue and product endorsement deals.
According to a study by MediKix, global spending on Instagram influencer marketing alone is projected to reach as much as $10 billion by 2020. Celebrities and socialites, eager to get in on the action, have taken to social media to promote various high-end products and brands on their various social media accounts, even demanding free stuff and payment for blog write-ups. Part of these deals is that the personalities post videos and images promoting a product or service in exchange for brands gaining access to their millions of followers, who would be more likely to buy a product used by their favourite personality.
As brands seek out new ways of forming more meaningful connections with their global communities, influencer marketing is becoming an increasingly important part of the marketing mix.
But this comes at a cost, with top influencers in the U.S demanding as much as R3.5 million per post, while a famous name in South Africa can make R250 000 – still big money by any standard.
Too often, however, a personality who is otherwise very popular and exciting, will have little knowledge of the brand but will publish posts purely for the money. The danger with this is that the promotion feels insincere and is diluted by the other brands they promote, often in the same product category.
Another worrying practice is that of buying followers, particularly on Instagram. It is still entirely legal, and for less than the price of coffee a person can buy 500 Instagram followers. Although there are multiple tools available such as FollowerCheck, which can help determine fake followers, these still don’t answer the question of who the real influencers are.
Flawed thinking leads brands to see influencer marketing as an effort to make paid-for connections and content look like they have been earned, but, due to the algorithms on social networks, most followers don’t even get to see the content from paid-for online influencers. The result is an “unnatural” fit which proves expensive, inauthentic and, in the long run, only marginally better than traditional advertising.
Organic influencers
True influencers should be defined based on three criteria: reach, resonance and relevance. Most companies measure reach only, but resonance and relevance are probably more important as these determine an influencer’s ability to drive action among their peers and network. The secret to making influencer marketing work to its best potential is in understanding where to look for influencers. Existing followers who have voluntarily signed themselves up to learn more about the brand and associate themselves with it, go largely unseen. These are the people who want to know what other followers think as well as what special promotions are on offer. They want to know what products are the most popular, which recipes (or usage methods) are the best, and which colours are in season. However, they want to learn these things from people they trust.
Every brand with a strong social media presence has a horde of brand influencers, whose collective reach outweighs that of any individual’s. While some of them might not be as famous as celebrity ‘influencers’, these people represent the heart and soul of the brand. Their passion and genuine interest makes them easier to engage with over the long-term, not to mention much more cost efficient.
So, why spend huge budgets trying to force an inauthentic relationship with a celebrity who most likely wasn’t even using the product anyway? Why not tap into the rich pool of influencers already in the online community? Artificial intelligence technology and big data analytics tools are emerging that can cut through the celebrity fluff and fake followers to provide precise information about thousands of real fans and followers across a spectrum of social media platforms. Continuon, a powerful personalized marketing and social intelligence platform looks past the overutilised realm of paid-for influencers and micro-influencers by using proprietary artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms to analyse brands’ social media communities.
This enables companies to identify authentic brand influencers who drive the velocity of conversation within their communities. Rather than looking on the surface of follower numbers, Continuon can see the velocity of conversation, its relevance and resonance, identifying the drivers and leaders. It also filters out the “noise” – those who look like they might be influencers, as they engage with the content and may have large networks, but whose engagements have zero impact.
The output of the Continuon algorithm is a list of the brand’s true influencers – members of the online community who are highly engaged with the content, drive others to engage with it, and make a measurable impact.
So, while ambitious socialites and bloggers will only come onto the scene in greater numbers, brands can use their budgets more wisely by identifying, engaging and nurturing the real influencers in their networks every time.