An Army of Lovers: The Surprising New Stars of Influencer Marketing

Article
Robin Bresnark
Director of Client Success
Buyapowa

Once a function of PR, but now very much embedded within everyone's marketing strategies, influencer marketing is the biggest game in town.

But are marketers focusing too much of their time and budgets on the low-return / high-effort superstars at the top of the influencer pyramid to the detriment of the thousands of smaller - but exponentially more influential - voices further down? And, if so, how can that kind of scale possibly be managed?

We explore the future of influencer marketing, and take a look at the technology that's helping marketers do exactly that.

The internet was supposed to save us from marketing bunkum. Gone were the days of super-expensive creative, plastered over billboards and magazines and televisions with nebulous impact. This was a new dawn, where everything was measurable, where scale kept prices down and where campaigns could be tweaked or switched in a heartbeat.

Then the internet broke.

Ad-blockers went all ad-blocky and blocked all the ads, leaving the field clear for giants like Facebook and Google to scoff up all the scale and inflate their prices accordingly. And the interweaving of customer-service with social meant that people were far more likely to respond to a sponsored post by grumbling about the last thing they bought from you than they ever were to go and buy anything else.

So, along came mega-influencers: the Chiara Ferragnis, the Leandra Medines, the Zoe 'Zoella' Suggses. In a world where users could now switch off ads with just a couple of clicks, the smart money threw itself at the feet of ‘real people’ who could cleverly shuffle a sales pitch into everyday conversations instead. It was both modern (such Insta! so Snapchat!) and as old as the hills - a digital version of Victorian Avon parties, where local ladies would cooingly gather at the home of someone with fewer wrinkles to have her sell them the latest potions and lotions.

And, at the end of the day, who are you going to listen to? The faceless corporation with their YouTube pre-rolls and that greyed out button promising that you can skip this ad in 5, 4, 3, 2… god, I hate this brand! Let me click it NOW! Or the hot, new mega-influencer whose video you’re desperate to get to, Wizard of Ozing her way behind the curtain: all-knowing, all-healing, all-solving (but, actually, just a teenager from Chertsey with a cheap set of lights she bought off eBay)?

Would that it were so simple. Sadly, just like the advertising of old, mega-influencer marketing quickly became painfully expensive, impossible to scale and the results continued to be entirely dubious. How expensive? Well, a new study from Rakuten Marketing suggests that the going rate for a mega-influencer Snap is now £53,000, YouTube will set you back £67,000, Facebook’s gonna cost you £75,000 and, if you’re in the premium fashion world, it doesn’t matter which channel your influencer-of-choice posts on - it’s still gonna burn to the tune of £160,000 or more. And that’s a hell of a lot of money to pay someone for pimping your parkas five minutes before she appears in her next video wearing something by a rival brand.

So, inevitably, the money started to trickle down, away from the super-expensive tip of the iceberg - where the mega-influencers preen and pose in their penguin suits - to the massive potential below the waterline: the macro- and micro-influencers who may have a significantly smaller reach but also have infinitely closer relationships with their audiences - and way more credibility. They might be a nightmare to identify and manage, and it’s often trickier to control the message, but the truth is that the smaller the influencer, the more people tend listen to them. In fact, macro-influencers (those with fewer than a million followers) and micro-influencers (those with fewer than 10,000 followers) get up to ten times more engagement per follower than mega-influencers, and marketers have started to switch their attention (and their budgets) accordingly:

“You can attain the same or larger reach when spread across a handful of micro-influencers for a fraction of the cost, while adding a more diverse, yet targeted, audience.”

Troy Osinoff, Head of Customer Acquisition, Buzzfeed.

But reach is meaningless unless you can prove that it leads to sales, and that’s where the problem continues to lie. 60% of marketers who commission campaigns with influencers (regardless of their reach) have no attribution model in place to help them assign credit for generated sales, while over two-thirds of them don’t believe that the influencers they work with care whether or not their content drives sales for the brand. Well gee, guys. Thanks.

And yet all of this is growing. Boy, is it growing. Over a third of marketers expect their spend on influencers to grow by more than 50% over the coming year, while the number of platforms and agencies dedicated to identifying and engaging influencers grew from a sizeable 190 in 2015 to an eye-watering 420 this year.

Someone’s getting rich out of this. And it isn't the brands.

Thankfully, there’s another level still. Beyond the celebrities, the mega-influencers, the macro-influencers and even the micro-influencers. We could call them the 'nano-influencers'. Or, to use the old-fashioned term, we could just call them 'your customers'.

influencer chart

That’s right. Your customers are the best influencers you could ever hope to activate, and their influence is proportionately way greater than the people currently cashing all those marketing cheques. Better still, you can instantly track every sale they generate (and only reward them when they do), they already love your brand and, in a fraction of the time it takes to put together a single campaign with one pay-to-play influencer, you can activate armies of them. How? With technology.

Referral marketing technology. Technology that enables brands and retailers to unleash those armies of customers by rewarding them whenever they get their friends to shop. Technology that facilitates sharing across all kinds of channels, from email to social to mobile messaging apps. Technology that drives sales both online and in-store, and boosts loyalty by getting customers to shop more often and spend more every time they do. Technology that turns an abstract concept like influence into quantifiable events. How many customers engaged? How many shared? How many of their friends paid attention? How many shopped? And, most importantly, how much money did the campaign directly generate?

Put simply, referral delivers all the things that influencer marketing promised but failed to deliver. It’s affordable, it’s easy to scale and the results are endlessly measurable. The only difference is that, instead of betting the farm on one or two golden hens, marketers can use technology to equip and engage enormous numbers of people, most of whom are likely to generate incremental sales and many of whom will generate mega-influencer levels of return.

Referral marketing drove 5,000 direct sales from an influencer no one had even heard of before, and who didn’t cost a penny to recruit.

Take one campaign we powered for a well-known UK mobile phone network here at Buyapowa. By building in gamification - one of the hot new trends in referral - we were able to trigger friendly competition among the network’s customer-base. The customers who got the most friends to join the network stood to receive an eye-catching prize and, within days, several of them had already signed up hundreds, and even thousands, of new customers. In fact, the eventual winner managed to get over 5,000 people to switch mobile network. Five thousand direct sales from an influencer no one had even heard of before, and who didn’t cost a penny to recruit.

No one had to spend months wrangling an rolodex full of agencies, each jostling for the best deals for their influencer clients. No one had to pay an eye-watering fee for a smidgen of an influencer's time and attention. The brand simply plugged in our technology, reached out to its customers and let their natural influence take its course.

And this is something we see every day, across all kinds of clients in all kinds of industries, from fashion and beauty to online gaming and grocery: hundreds of brands and retailers activating an immense number of influencers so disparate and anonymous they could never even have hoped to identify them before. But, thanks to referral technology, those armies of influencers can be identified, engaged and put to work, delivering thousands of additional sales each and every day.

If that’s enough to influence your thinking, visit buyapowa.com.

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