Although many of our blog readers will be familiar with influencer marketing, we know that some of you are just embarking on the influencer marketing journey. Perhaps you’ve heard others refer to the power of influencer marketing, or you’ve read about the industry’s incredible success rate. Don’t worry if you are an influencer marketing newbie. We all had to start somewhere. This post is designed for you – our introduction to influencer marketing for beginners.

Most firms that engage influencer marketing find it highly successful. The Influencer Marketing Hub’s State of Influencer Marketing 2019: Benchmark Report gives clear statistics indicating influencer marketing’s success. The Average Earned Media Value (EMV) per dollar spent on influencer marketing was $5.20 in 2018. In other words, the average firm that spends $1 on influencer marketing, generates the exposure that a firm that spends $5.20 on Google Ads does. A few successful firms have an EMV of more than $18. However, a few firms, predominantly those that jump right in without doing their homework, fail to achieve a positive EMV at all.

We will cover the following essential knowledge and tips to help you run a successful influencer marketing campaign:

  • The definition of influencer marketing and influencer.
  • Influencer tiers by follower count.
  • Key social media statistics.
  • The #1 rule in Influencer Marketing
  • Influencer Marketing vs. Traditional Marketing
  • Influencer marketing goals and purchasing funnels.
  • How can influencer marketing help your business?
  • Step 1: Find the Right Influencers for Your Brand
  • Step 2: Effectively Communicate with Influencers
  • Step 3: Execute Your Influencer Marketing Campaign and Measure the Results

What is Influencer Marketing?

Influencer marketing is a mix of word of mouth, traditional and digital marketing.

If you have never heard of influencer marketing, you might just think of it as merely a branch of marketing, perhaps an alternative to television, radio, or newspaper advertising. It truly is more than that. It is a whole new way to think about content distribution, to ensure that your marketing material is seen by as many people as possible. More than that, influencer marketing ensures that your marketing materials are viewed by the right people – those most likely to take an interest in your product or service.

Influencer marketing is a mix of word of mouth, traditional marketing, and digital marketing. It grew out of celebrity endorsement and placed it in a modern digital environment. It recognizes that “influencers” are the celebrities of the online world. These are usually different people to those who made their name in the offline world.

Influencer marketing involves brands building relationships with influencers and working with them to distribute content relating to the brand and its products.

Giving coupon code is one of the marketing strategies when influencers post #sponsored posts. Image Credit: @amazinggraciedoodle

When we talk about influencers, we are referring to people who have built up a reputation online as an expert on some topic. If brands aim to sell products to consumers who have an interest in a particular topic, it makes sense that they work with the experts who specialize in that specific niche.

Who are the influencers?

An influencer is somebody who has built up enough authority in a topic or niche, that people go to them. The person is respected to such a degree that he or she can easily influence the purchasing decisions of others in the field.

Influencers Are Usually Very Popular

Although engagement is usually more critical for success in influencer marketing than reach, most influencers have sizable followings. They have developed a reputation for their knowledge and are often the go-to people in their niche.

The bulk of influencers have built their fame on social media (including video channels on YouTube and similar sites) or their own blogs. We can’t underestimate the importance of the social sphere nowadays.

Influencer Tier by follower count.

We often label influencers by the size of their following. Although definitions vary, a typical set of influencer sizes is:

  • Mega-influencers – 1 million + followers
  • Macroinfluencers – 500,000 – 1 million followers
  • Mid-Tier Influencers – 50,000 – 500,000 followers
  • Micro-influencers – 10,000 – 50,000 followers
  • Nano-influencers – 1,000 – 10,000 followers

You can’t automatically assume that larger influencers are better, though. It all depends on the niche. Many firms find it is more cost effective to work with a series of micro-influencers, rather than a single mega- influencer.

Key Social Media Statistics

People were highly active on social media in 2018, and nothing indicates that anything is slowing in 2019. Some of the more interesting social media statistics from last year include:

  • As of October 2018, Facebook had a little over 2 billion active users
  • Three-quarters of current Facebook users access the platform daily
  • But, Facebook usage among teens is dropping gradually – the number of teenagers claiming to use Facebook has fallen from 71% in 2015 to 51% in 2018
  • The number of monthly active Instagram users has grown to 1 billion
  • Instagram shows almost the inverse of Facebook figures when it comes to teens: 52% of teens claimed to use Instagram in 2015, up to 72% in 2018.
  • Instagram has a median engagement rate of 1.60% per post for brands
  • Instagram users upload more than 100 million photos and videos daily
  • 88% of social advertisers use Twitter
  • Twitter users send out 500 million tweets per day
  • 74% of consumers share video content from brands on social media
  • 21% of consumers would rather message a brand on social media instead of calling up customer service

Yet there is a problem. Brands, as a whole, do not tend to run successful social media accounts. There are a few exceptions, for example, Red Bull, but most brands suffer from having few followers and little engagement.

Influencers, on the other hand, are experts at running their social accounts – that’s how they became influencers in the first place. Remember, influencers influence the purchasing decisions of their followers. This is much harder for brands to do themselves.

The Number 1 Rule in Influencer Marketing

The most essential rule in influencer marketing is to let your influencer tailor marketing content to match their channel styles. The firms that fail with influencer marketing tend to be prescriptive and controlling. They have become used to giving approval of every step of their marketing in the past, and struggle to accept that successful influencers need their independence.

Influencer marketing is not like traditional marketing. The influencer is the most crucial person in the equation – not your brand. People come to an influencer’s site or channel because they are interested in content form the influencer – not because they are interested in your brand. An influencer can build up interest in your brand – but only if they are authentic in their posting and keep real to their existing style.

Influencer Marketing vs. Traditional Marketing

Traditional marketing is very brand and marketing-led. The marketing team of a brand (possibly assisted by an advertising agency) designs a campaign on their marketing medium of choice – television, radio, newspaper, magazine, billboard, or perhaps a mix of these media. Consumers cannot easily escape from these ads, unless they make a deliberate choice, for example changing their tv channel or radio station. Most people sit through these ads passively, accepting the ads that the marketers serve them.

Online marketing is different, though. People actively avoid online ads. They have built up such an aversion to banners that there is even a name given to it – banner blindness. Many people, particularly Millennials and Generation Z just look thorough banner ads as if they aren’t there. More recently, ad blockers have become a reality, An IAB Study shows that 26% of desktop users and 15% of mobile consumers run ad blockers – there’s no need to ignore ads if you use an ad blocker, you simply don’t see them.

Influencer marketing is much more subtle, however. Consumers accept these posts, even though they often come with a #sponsored or #ad tag to indicate that they are a marketing message. The reason why consumers accept these messages, but not more traditional posts or more in-your-face online marketing, is that they trust influencers. They believe in their influencers’ messages. Sure, an influencer is promoting something. But if the person they trust is promoting it, they believe it must be good.

Influencer Marketing, Goals and the Purchasing Funnel

Influencer marketing is not a one-size-fits-all proposition. Like all other forms of marketing, you will be pitching to people at different stages of the purchasing funnel. The types of influencers and the nature of their posts will differ depending on which stage of the purchasing funnel you wish to target.

Although there are many variations of the purchasing funnel model, all involve you pitching your marketing at people in four or five different stages of making a purchase. Your marketing needs to change, depending on which stage of the funnel you are targeting.

the purchasing funnel 

One model has four levels. Most people are at the top of the funnel. The more they learn about your product the further they go down the funnel. The steps in this mode are:

  1. Awareness – your influencers’ posts here need to make people initially aware of the existence of your product, perhaps with a few of the benefits your product will give them
  2. Consideration – these people are already aware of your product and have displayed an interest in buying the type of product you sell. In this case, your influencers provide their followers with enough information so that they can compare products (hopefully finding your product the best)
  3. Purchase – these people are close to making a purchase. Your influencers here will help them make their decision in your favor
  4. Loyalty – once somebody has bought a product, you want them to keep coming back. You can use influencers to reward loyal customers and suggest other ways you can help them

When you undertake influencer marketing, you will usually begin by targeting the largest group – Awareness. As your influencers succeed at pushing people down the funnel, you can start new campaigns, focusing on the lower parts of the funnel.

It is vital, therefore that you set specific goals for every influencer campaign. Each campaign will be different, and if you know your goal, it makes it much easier to measure your progress towards meeting it.

How Can Influencers Help Your Business?

Some of the ways that influencers can help your business include:

  • They create an article, blog post, visual post, or video that emphasizes your product or service.
  • They promote your social accounts or blog on their social accounts. This has the effect of increasing the reach of the business accounts.
  • They may let you write a guest post to go on their page/site (or a guest video to go on their video channel).
  • They use your product and demonstrate this use, for example, Ryan ToysReview shows a young boy, Ryan, reviewing his favorite toys. The numerous YouTube unboxing channels, e.g.  UrAvgConsumer, follow a similar principle.
Ryan ToysReview regularly post review and unboxing videos of toys.

Step 1: Find the Right Influencers for Your Brand

4 Key Metrics to Find Influencers that Deliver Results

1.Influencers Relevant to Your Brands

The first step is making sure that the influencer is closely related to your product so that the target audience will see your product. Try with different keywords related to your product and industry to find influencers who have the potential to reach your target customer.

The easiest and most straightforward method of determining the usefulness of an influencer is finding their account on SocialBook and looking at their profile, especially audience demographics. Find influencers whose audience demographics are a good match to your target audience profile.

2. Influencers with Real Followers

Make sure to pay attention to the influencer’s follower trend graph! The number of fans helps gauge the popularity of the influencer, but it is important to know whether or not the influencer bought their fans. No one can get millions of fans in a few days. Though some influencers might become very popular very quickly, this is very rare. Even though people who buy followers might appear to have a great fan base, it will not be suitable for promoting your product.

With SocialBook follower trending, you will be able to see real-time data on influencers’ fan growth. Do not waste money on fake followers.

The follower trend graph of Instagrammer showing a follower bump.

3. Follower Base and Impression Potential

The number of fans that an influencer has is a good predictor of the effect that brand mentions will have. But it should be noted that the follower numbers are not the only indicator to decide whether you should start a marketing campaign with an influencer. Along with their coverage, you should also pay attention to the traffic that their posts and homepage gets.

Engagement rate is another key metric to watch. You want real followers who interact with influencers actively.

4. Active Influencers with High Engagement Rate

Try to find active influencers who post regularly. Influencers who create content consistently tends to have a more active follower community. Engagement rate is another key metrics to identify influencers who have real influence and can bring results.

Step 2: Effectively Communicate with Influencers

After you have created a list of right influencers for your business, the next step is to contact these influencers. Some of the top tips to remember when you communicate with influencers:

Be Personal

The ideal way is to check influencer’s channel before contacting them and write personalized email to each of them. To save time, the fundamental way is to add the recipient name in the email or even subject line.

Short and Sweet

Try to use fewer words in the email body and make it clear why you are writing this email. Influencers will quickly lose attention if you write a long email without stressing the key points immediately.

Use short sentences that easy to understand. Avoid using complicated sentences which may confuse.

Clear Format

If you copy and paste sentences from somewhere else, be sure to clear all the formats. Then divide the body into small paragraphs, which has a different point to express. Only bold the keywords that matter. Too much bold text means none. Use bullets and numbered lists to organize if necessary.

Insert CTA

Add clear Call-to-action (CTA) at the end of your email body. For example, ask the influencers to reply to this email if they are interested in the collaboration, or pick up a time for a quick call. You can use some email extensions to insert time spots for influencers to choose for a quick call. Assistant.to is the one I want to recommend. You can connect it with your daily calendar, and the UI is pretty clear.

Create Credibility

Introduce your company and yourself in the beginning. If the influencer is familiar with your company, it would be much easier to start the conversation. If your company is new in the industry, telling influencers something that adds credits. For example, your company has just raised capital recently or has been reported by a well-known media. Insert the article link there so they can check. If some top influencers have created content for your product, share the post links in the email.

Mobile Friendly

Send yourself a test email before sending out mass emails to all your influencer contacts. Check the spells, grammars, and links. View the test email on your mobile device as well, since many influencers are checking emails on mobile. And this is one of the reasons why you have to keep your email subject and body short. The subject line and email body are very likely to be cut off due to the limited screen size of mobile devices.

AB Testing

If you have a long list of influencer contacts and have plenty of time before the marketing campaign deadline, try AB testing with your email outreach! It can help you to increase open and response rate dramatically sometimes. Only test one variable each time. For example, if you want to increase the open rate, use two different subject lines to see which one will attract more open.

Offer Benefits

It is a beneficial strategy to offer a giveaway to influencers in the email outreach, to build up the relationship first. If your product has good quality and is a match to influencer’s channel, the influencer would be very likely to create content about it for free.

Follow up

Follow-up with your influencers is essential. Top influencers’ inbox is always flooded with emails. If your first email is missed out, a series of follow-up emails will increase the possibility the influencers to respond. Apply all the tips above to your follow up emails. Be personal, short and sweet, well-formatted, and add credibility.

If you want to use a tool to send mass emails and track all email activities, you can give SocialBook a try:

Step 3: Execute Your Influencer Marketing Campaign and Measure the Results

One of the vital measures of influencer marketing is direct sales. But what about other KPIs (Key Performance Indicators)? It is often difficult to determine and track the KPI in influencer marketing. It is also hard to track campaign ROI after the finish. According to a survey by Influencer Marketing Hub, more than ⅔ of marketers claim their need for measuring ROI; and 76% suggest that tracking ROI is the most significant influencer marketing challenge.

With SocialBook in-depth influencer profile data, marketers can make decisions in the early stage, on which influencer to collaborate with, and what strategy to apply. When a campaign is on-going, SocialBook campaign management tool can help the marketers to monitor the ROI and generate a campaign report.

As previously mentioned in this article, one of the primary measurement metrics used by the brands is the engagement rate. Other metrics include the quantity and quality of the audience reached, website traffic, sales conversion, and the number of increased brand mentions on social media.

Choose to use different measurement metrics for various marketing purposes is the key to track ROI and have reliable information for future marketing decision.

For instance, if your promotion goal is to get more exposure on YouTube, then view count could be the primary measurement for your campaign results.


Click to download the free ebook at one step.