Influencers are losing their marketing influence.
The ‘pay per shout-out’ influencer model is dying, as marketers lose faith from having only seen highly variable returns and influencers adapt to changes in their revenue streams.
To remove any doubt, I am referring to social media influencers who promote brands to their followers.?
This is not the same as brands launched by celebrities who hold the attention of millions of followers and the media. Personalities who are brands themselves, leveraging their fame to quickly build awareness and secure distribution deals. In fact, this is very different from the influencer / creator model.
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Hats off to those influencers that are creative enough to build an audience that achieves mainstream success. In reality, the rest are influencer wannabes, not really influential and are half gimmick lost in the messy middle of the marketing funnel.
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Many influencers, some dubbed creators due to how they are remunerated by social media networks, were sprayed across media and PR plans because of some idea that they add relevancy or authenticity to brands being in social channels. However, as recently demonstrated in Burst Your Bubble’s “Signalling Strength” study, influencers and creators have relatively low signalling strength due to the discrete nature of their audience.?
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Brands succeed because they become famous. The brand should be top of mind and the thing that’s talked about, not the channel. Most influencers are guns for hire more interested building their profile than that of the brands they represent. But, for influencers that’s where the money is,, or was.
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At best influencers offered a nudge and at worst it was wasted frequency at a low cost. More so at worst, because of how widely it has been used across marketing plans. This type of marketing is suited to some industries more than others (think of travel recommendations versus which washing powder to choose). But, it’s was wrongfully wedged into plans.
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As the old model dwindles, more influencers are following the advertising money flow and becoming pure-play affiliates and/or developing dropshipping income.
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What’s changed to force this change into the market.
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And all this is happening concurrently to a boom in Retail Media and the roll out of shoppable formats.
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The revenue streams are changing, and influencers are realigning behind them. With that, they are becoming a type of pure play affiliate. It’s just another short play.
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Most influencers and brands are missing a great opportunity. Earlier this year IBM released a global study to stated only 9% of consumers were satisfied with in-store experiences. This climbs to 14% for online stores. The move from omni-channel to unified commerce is what’s driving retail success. “Customers think about shopping. They don't see individual channels. They just know the brand they want and want to shop for it. So, the recipe for success is unifying online and offline,” Landor Consulting.?
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The real life in physical store experience helps set the consumers expectations and overcomes the difficulty of stand out. The digital components of this unified experience must connect to the real world experience. And, this is much more sustainable role for Influencers to pivot into than spamming discount codes.
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If the focus is on quality and an understanding, the importance of an influencer could potentially extend beyond this. Simply, they could be a key source of stimulus for the development work of products and creative. But, most will follow the hustle into flogging links, meaning the pool of entertaining and useful influencers remains shallow and that this channel remains difficult to pull insights from.
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Opportunity missed, influence lost.
This article ran in AdWorld earlier this week
International Marketing & Media
2 个月Thanks to Mark Schaefer Recently Seth Godin wrote a post that received a ton of commentary on the social media stream: “The real scam of influencers.” But there is no influencer scam at all. The premise of his article: Seeking popularity on the web is not a sustainable business model. Instead, we should focus on meaningful work instead of signals of personal popularity like “likes.” Highlights from his post: “There are tens of thousands of humans spending their days trying to be popular on Instagram, buying outfits, wearing hats and seeking their version of cute. People from all backgrounds and genders”. “Part of the scam is that the pyramid scheme of attention will somehow pay off for a lot of people. It won’t. It can’t. The math doesn’t hold up. Someone is going to win a lottery, but it probably won’t be us. “And a bigger part is that the things you need to do to be popular (the only metric the platforms share) aren’t the things you’d be doing if you were trying to be effective, or grounded, or proud of the work you’re doing.” The post appeals to our sense of personal pride in believing that meaningful work matters — not these lightweight Instagram stars.
CEO @?Beatly | Speaker ???
7 个月Allow me to add my 2% here. With the risk of sounding preposterous. I’m afraid people are getting influencer marketing wrongly. I will elaborate a bit… It seems to me that your hypothesis falls into a common misconception: 1- Influencer as publishers: Influencer value = efficiency of their own distribution channel. Aka, how many followers, reach, etc. arguments against normally goes like: “algorithm changes, less organic reach, increased partnership frequency = engagement fatigue etc therefore there is a value decay”. I would say, all of that is valid and relevant. Organic distribution algorithms will always evolve and the shift from social to interest graph had a big impact on it - there is an increasing amount of “uncertainty” on expected output IF you see influencer marketing as your “pure organic distribution machine”. This dynamics leads to the next misconception: (Continues in my comment 1/3)
CEO, The Brand Audit | Ex-LinkedIn | LinkedIn Top Voice
7 个月Ian Mc Grath & Dr Grace Kite according to Statistica we’re seeing a massive growth — not decline in overall revenue. The market has doubled since 2020. And there’s a predicted increase slated for this year and next. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1328195/global-influencer-market-value/
Programmer at ABG
7 个月In my opinion, the shift away from the 'pay per shout-out' influencer model signals a necessary evolution in marketing strategies. Companies like Reputation House understand this shift, offering comprehensive solutions for brand management. They've proven their effectiveness, aiding businesses like mine. Interested? Search for Reputation House or message me for details.
Client Director | Supporting the world’s biggest and most ambitious brands to create the most effective advertising.
7 个月Finally