A New Marketing Royalty: Why Digital Influencers Are on the Rise
As online
platforms become cluttered with ads, marketers are challenged to find new ways
to connect with their customers. One rising trend they should pay attention to
is “influencer marketing,” or using the power of popular people to reach your
target market, according to this opinion piece by Aprajita Jain, a brand
marketing evangelist at Google.
You are in your mid-30s, single, sipping a coffee at your
favorite coffee shop. Suddenly a stranger approaches your table and asks if he
can sit with you. Instinctively drawing your purse a little closer, you make an
excuse and leave. A month later your best friend tells you about someone she
wants you to meet and gives you a very unbiased opinion on his virtues and
vices. Knowing your friend has the best of intentions, you agree to meeting
this person. As you walk into the restaurant you see the coffee shop guy
sitting at a table waiting for you! This time your guard is down because you
have the endorsement of someone you deeply trust.
Brands are learning from this real-life psychological hack.
Instead of getting in your face with their own message about their greatness
they are letting ‘influencers’ — people you trust — tell you why you should pay
attention to their products and services through a voice that sounds far more
authentic. The influencer is that mutual friend between a brand and their
consumers. Influencers are well-connected. They are authoritative. They have
active minds and they are trendsetters.
Why are influencers so much more effective for marketing than
self-promotion by a company? Let’s examine the trifecta of good influencer
marketing:
Attention equals currency.
Influencer marketing allows targeted exposure to the right kind
of consumer, one who is already interested in a category that you operate in
and will likely pay attention. In a world where TV ads have become background
noise and consumers are becoming immune to traditional digital advertising,
being on-target is crucial. Just take a look at the rampant rise of ad blockers
— last year alone, usage surged by 30% globally. Only 6% of display ads are
ever clicked on. Further proliferation of mobile phones, video content and
social media, are turning influencers into constant companions of your
audience. To get their attention, brands have to work with the people they
listen to.
Creativity and organic content has become the
expectation.
Remember Jared Fogle, the ‘the Subway guy?’ He served as the
brand’s spokesperson for 15 years until his fall from grace. Today, it is no
longer enough to hire a spokesperson and have them endorse your brand. While
there is some overlap between celebrity endorsements and influencer marketing
campaigns, the latter are designed to speak to an existing community of highly
engaged followers. Influencers are the masters of their niches, and have
established a high level of trust and two-way communication with their
followers. They know how to incorporate a brand’s products and services into
content people are watching and they do it very seamlessly, instead of taking
away attention from what they really want to watch. The reason their followers
keep coming back to them is because they regularly offer new and creative
content to them. Followers have come to expect that. Over are the days of
hammering the same message into your consumers’ heads for months, maybe even
years.
Social media has no prime time window — it is
prime time.
Any consumer behavior study worth its ink will tell you that
consumers are shifting towards social at the cost of TV. While marketers chased
prime time spots on TV in the past, social is prime time 24/7. The truth is,
when a social media personality you follow day in and day out wears something,
drinks something, shows you something, you pay attention to it. And the key
word here is attention. How to win your customer’s attention is quickly
changing, and the brands that fail to adapt are going to get left in the dust
by their competitors.
In God we trust. Everyone else bring data.
Why should you believe me when I say that influencer marketing
is on the rise and more effective than many other popular marketing channels?
·
A poll conducted
by Tomoson found that 59% of marketers are planning to increase their
influencer marketing budgets year-over-year. It is also the most cost-effective
and fastest-growing online customer acquisition channel, outpacing organic
search, paid search and email marketing.
·
In an advertising landscape where returns on ad spend (ROAS) of
$2 for every $1 spent are considered a success, influencer marketing delivers
an average return of $6.50, with the top 13% of marketers making $20 or more.
·
It’s not just about the quantity, quality matters too — 51% of
marketers believe customers acquired through influencer marketing are of better
quality because they spend more money and are more likely to spread the word to
family and friends.
·
According to a Think with Google study, 70% of teenage YouTube
subscribers say they relate to YouTubers more than to traditional celebrities —
and you can bet that is not just happening on YouTube.
Casey Neistat versus Jennifer Aniston for
Emirates.
This is the story of a brand that had a few hit videos last year
— Emirates Airline. It launched a campaign to show off the airline’s luxurious
amenities and decided to spend $5 million of their total $20 million budget to
hire Hollywood actress Jennifer Aniston to play the part of world traveler. The
company made a series of short ads for YouTube with her that did quite
well. Here is one of the videos they made together, which debuted
last October. To date, this video has more than 6 million views. Not bad at
less than $1 per view.
However, let us compare the Aniston spot to the video in which an incredibly smart person over at the Emirates marketing team
decided to give mega-YouTuber/influencer Casey Neistat premiere status on their
airline, for free. They didn’t ask anything in return but hoped that if he
enjoyed his flight he would share it with his fans. And he did. Twice, in fact.
In addition to this first video, he also (of his own accord) created a second video that to date has another 11.5 million views — 52
million views — for free. Find me a marketer who doesn’t love free advertising.
Casey caters to a younger audience but he is also a technology
startup founder followed by many entrepreneurs aspiring to be the
next Mark Zuckerberg or (Snap CEO) Evan Spiegel. While it’s hard to
immediately measure the direct ROAS on a splashy campaign like this, Emirates
had its brand featured in best-in-class media outlets such as GQ, Maxim, Adweek,
Mashable and the Huffington Post. In addition to all the free press, the brand
also got amplified on social media through Casey’s posts that received
thousands of likes and retweets. Not only did Emirates raise awareness
among a new demographic and received lots of free PR, they positioned
their brand as forward-thinking and digital-first.
Pretty Little Thing, a fashion company built on pop-culture,
created a global clothing and accessories brand mimicking what influencers and
celebrities are wearing. In fact, while they closely work with influencers,
they essentially have taken the influencer marketing model and flipped it on
its head — which more and more companies are likely to follow. Instead of going
to an influencer and asking them to make a certain piece of clothing popular,
they watch what these influencers are already wearing and then create matching,
cost-effective products. They boast a solid 1.9 million followers on Instagram
and have rapidly expanded from shipping from 20 orders per week four years ago
to more than 20,000 orders per day today. Last December, the founder sold a 66%
stake of his holdings to a larger fashion brand for 3.3 million pounds sterling
with revenue quickly approaching 20 million pounds.
‘My Tales of Whisky’
The most mind-boggling example of influencer success comes from
beverages giant Diageo, the parent company of Scottish whiskey brands
Lagavulin and Oban. One of its video spots was awarded a Shorty
Award for Best Influencer Marketing Campaign for video starring NBC’s “Parks and Recreation” TV sitcom
star Nick Offerman. The one-shot video called “My Tales of Whisky” shows
Offerman sitting by a crackling fireplace — called a yule log according to
European Christmas tradition — ironically in complete silence, staring
broodingly into the camera for 45 minutes, and occasionally savoring a sip of
his drink. Thanks to the simple seasonal premise and Offerman’s unique brand,
the video was a viral hit.
On the day of launch, ‘yule log’ was a trending topic on
Facebook and more than 175 stories were written about it, earning the brand a
lot of free media mentions. As the campaign rapidly gained momentum in social
conversations and got further amplified by streams through Sony, Tumblr and
GoDaddy, the team behind it created a 10-hour loop for holiday gatherings. In
the first two days alone, the video garnered 1.1 million YouTube views, growing
to 2 million in just one week before any paid media was activated. The brand’s
channel subscribers skyrocketed from 5,500 to 23,000.
Adding More Juice
Influencer marketing isn’t just for the big brands. It is quite
popular because companies of any size can benefit from it. Naked Juice, a
smaller juice and smoothie company that started in the 1980s in Santa Monica,
Calif., collaborated with young influencer Beth Norton. They sought her
out on Instagram to promote their juices and smoothies to people on the
go, whether they are running errands or planning projects. They also
entered the beauty, fashion, and health scene on Instagram with help from
lifestyle blogger Kate La Vie, who shares sponsored posts featuring images of
her daily outfits and beauty essentials — including a strategically placed
Naked Juice in the mix.
Accompanied by other marketing channel strategies, this
influencer campaign allowed Naked Juice to defend its position in the premium
juice category by establishing itself in the minds and hearts of their core
audience — known as ‘Bare Believers.’ Naked Juice now commands a market share
of 58%, far ahead of any competitors, and saw an eight-fold increase in consumer
social engagement.
Taking Action
How does one get started in this form of marketing? How do
you find influencers and measure the impact of your efforts?
Eighty-four percent of marketers manually search social media
platforms to find influencers that may be right for their brand. Many rely on
recommendations, social media monitoring tools or attending events and
conferences. It is one of the most challenging and time-consuming steps to take
as you are getting started with this new medium of advertising, but today there
is a plethora of influencer marketplaces that can make this much easier, such
as Famebit by
YouTube. These online platforms can be used to quickly search for influencers
based on specific criteria (follower count, demographics, interests, etc.), to
negotiate deals with them as well as give them a clear brief to stay ‘on
brand.’ A marketplace makes it easier to not only negotiate a fair price but
also find influencers that you may have not heard of before.
First, consider these three criteria when
choosing influencers:
·
Context: Who has the largest
overlap between their followers and your target audience? Keep in mind this is
one of the very few — if not the only — type of advertising that works in an
‘opt-in’ model. Influencers don’t force themselves on their audience. Their audience
actively subscribes to them. As a result, the audience is far more engaged than
on other channels.
·
Reach: How large is their
following? Just like you choose a TV ad spot based on its reach, you can look
at how many followers a certain influencer caters to.
·
Actionability: This
is the influencer’s ability to cause action and likely the most subtle, yet
important, selection criteria to get right. The more skilled an influencer is
at convincing their followers to take action related to your product or service
the higher your conversion rate will be.
Second, decide which pricing model is the best fit for your
brand. The four most common pricing models are:
·
Pay-per-post or flat-rate pricing: This
is the most common method, with 68% of marketers choosing it. The influencer is
paid a flat fee per piece of sponsored content they create, whether it’s a
photo, tweet, pin, video or blog post. Depending on who you are working with,
prices can range from as little as $50 per piece to as much as $250,000 for
top-tier influencers.
·
Product compensation: Some
influencers can be wooed with free products or services. This type of
compensation is commonly used by travel brands as influencers can creatively
endorse their personal travel stories. This model is ideal for smaller
campaigns or for brands looking to establish a brand ambassador group.
·
Pay-per-click: In
this model, influencers are compensated for how well their content performs.
The key metric is number of clicks to a brand’s site. Because influencers rely
a lot more on audience interaction in this performance-based model, they are
motivated to create larger volumes of content.
·
Pay-per-acquisition: Here,
influencers are rewarded for the number of purchases, actions or sign-ups
driven by their content. It is the least common payment model because consumers
rarely purchase or sign up for something the first time they get introduced to
a product or service. Often, repeat exposure is required. The first
introduction usually needs to be followed up by discovery, research and
validation before resulting in a purchase or conversion.
Lastly, know what success means by defining your measurement
criteria. Half of all marketers see sales increases and lead generation as the
top goals of influencer marketing. Forty percent look for brand engagement
such as clicks and social shares. However, success can also be correlated with
spikes in web traffic or higher conversions in concurrent ad campaigns. A
little less measurable, yet very effective, is the value of earned media as you
saw with Emirates. Also, marketers often forget to take into account less
tangible metrics, such as overall brand sentiment. Look at the whole picture
and — as with all things in digital marketing — don’t ignore the cross-channel
impact of influencer marketing on other channels.
Influencer marketing is clearly here to stay. Its impact is
palpable. Brands are using it to establish credibility in the market, create a
social conversation around their brand and drive online and in-store sales. The
brands that make this part of their always-on strategy are the ones that win
the most desired eyeballs
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/new-marketing-royalty-rise-digital-influencers/?utm_source=kw_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2017-09-07
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