Influencer marketing

Influencer marketing (also influence marketing) is a form of marketing in which focus is placed on specific key individuals (or types of individual) rather than the target market as a whole. It identifies the individuals that have influence over potential buyers, and orients marketing activities around these influencers.[1]

Influencer content may be framed as testimonial advertising where they play the role of a potential buyer themselves, or they may be third parties. These third parties exist either in the supply chain (retailers, manufacturers, etc.) or may be so-called value-added influencers (such as journalists, academics, industry analysts, professional advisers, and so on).[2]

The first approach to that theory comes from a communication classic, The People´s Choice (Lazarsfeld and Katz), a 1940 study on political communication that was also known as Multistep flow model, that claims that the majority of people are influenced by secondhand information and opinion leaders.

Influence

Most discussion on the generic topic of social influence centres on compliance and persuasion in a social environment, as exemplified in Robert Cialdini’s book Influence: Science and Practice.[3] In the context of Influencer Marketing, influence is less about argument and coercion to a particular point of view, and more about loose interactions between various parties in a community. Influence is often equated to advocacy, but may also be negative, and is thus related to concepts of promoters and detractors.[4]

Payment of influencers

Influencer marketing tends to be broken into two sub-practices: earned influencer marketing and paid influencer marketing. Earned marketing stems from unpaid or preexisting relationships with influencers or third party content that is promoted by the influencer to further their own personal social growth. Paid influencer marketing campaigns can take the form of sponsorship, pre-roll advertising or testimonial messaging and can appear at any point in the content. Budgets vary widely and are usually based on audience reach.[5]

Applications

Some marketers use influencer marketing to establish credibility in the market, others to create social conversations around their brand, others yet to drive online or in-store sales of their products. The influencer marketer can also take to marketing diversified products and services leveraging, leveraging upon the credibility earned over time. Therefore, the value that influencer marketing creates can be measured in multiple ways. Some marketers measure Earned Media Value (EMV), others track impressions, and others track Cost Per Action (CPA).

Influencer marketing derives its value from 3 sources:

  1. Social reach: Influencers are able to reach millions of consumers through their social channels and blogs.
  2. Original content: Influencers produce original, and oftentimes effective, marketing content for the brand.
  3. Consumer trust: Influencers maintain strong relationships with their audience, who have a certain level of trust in the influencer’s opinions.

Methods of marketing

Influencer Marketing, as increasingly practiced in a commercial context, comprises four main activities:

Influencer Marketing is enhanced by a continual evaluation activity that sits alongside the four main activities.

Influencer Marketing is not synonymous with word of mouth marketing (WOM), but influence may be transmitted in this manner. Thus WOM is a core part of the mechanics of Influencer Marketing.[2]

There are substantial differences in the definition of what an influencer is. Peck defines influencers as "a range of third parties who exercise influence over the organization and its potential customers".[6] Similarly, Brown and Hayes define an influencer as "a third party who significantly shapes the customer's purchasing decision, but may never be accountable for it.".[2] Keller and Berry note that influencers are activists, are well-connected, have impact, have active minds, and are trendsetters,[7] though this set of attributes is aligned specifically to consumer markets.

Exactly what is included in Influencer Marketing depends on the context (retail or B2B) and the medium of influence transmission (online or offline, or both). But it is increasingly accepted that companies are keen to identify and engage with influencers. As Keller and Berry note, "Business is working harder and paying more to pursue people who are trying to watch and listen less to its messages." Targeting influencers is seen as a means of amplifying marketing messages, in order to counteract the growing tendency of prospective customers to ignore marketing.

Identifying influencers

The first step in influencer marketing is to identify influencers. Influencers are specific to discrete market segments, and are used as conduits to the entire target segment. While there are lists of generic influencers (such as the Time 100) they have limited use in marketing programmes targeted at specific segments. You can use social media tools to find influencers based on keywords or those that belong to specific industry verticals.[8]

Additionally, market research techniques can be used to identify influencers, using pre-defined criteria to determine the extent and type of influence. For example, Keller and Berry propose five attributes of influencers:[7]

In his study of what traits are associated with the top influencers, Barry found 4 archetypes of influencers[9]

Most of the literature on influencers focuses on consumer markets. There is less insight into business-to-business influencers. A key distinction between consumer and business markets is that most of the focus in consumer markets is on consumer influencers themselves. This is because word of mouth communication is prevalent in consumer environments.[2] In business marketing, influencers are people that affect a sale, but are typically removed from the actual purchase decision. Consultants, analysts, journalists, academics, regulators, standards bodies are examples of business influencers.

Not all business influencers are equal. Some have more influence than others, and some mechanism of ranking is required, to distinguish between key influencers and less impactful people. A model for ranking business influencers has been developed by Influencer50, thus:

Several other companies including Ammo Marketing, Liquid Intelligence and DesignKarma Inc. in the US, Agent Wildfire in Canada, SCB Partners in Europe and Vocanic in Asia have developed their own proprietary methodologies for identifying and targeting influencers for a market (or market sector).

Fred Reichheld, a consultant at Bain & Company, has developed a methodology to determine the extent to which firms' growth is influenced by customers' propensity to make referrals to colleagues.[10] Reichheld distills his research down to a single question: how likely is it that you would recommend company X to a friend or colleague? From answers to this question, a Net Promoter Score is determined, which correlates strongly with a firm's growth rate.

Social media

Web services can be used to crawl social media sites for users that exert influence in their respective communities. The social influencer marketing firm then asks those influencers to try client products or services and discuss them on their respective social networks. Clients can then observe, through an enhanced digital dashboard, with metrics that measure the dissemination of brand mentions across numerous web platforms.

There are at least 70 companies offering online influence measurement. Advocates of this online-only approach claim that online activity reflects (or pre-empts) the trends in offline transactions. For example, Razorfish released one of the first social influencer marketing reports, entitled Fluent.[11] The report discusses many theories surrounding social marketing, including the importance of the push/pull dynamic and online consumer empowerment, authenticity and importance of buzz marketing.

In addition, online activity can be a core part of offline decision making, as consumers research products and review sites.[12]

Critics of this online-only approach argue that only researching online sources misses critical influential individuals and inputs.[2] They note that much influential exchange of information occurs in the offline world, and is not captured in online media. Indeed, the majority of consumer exchanges occurs face-to-face, not in an online environment, as evidenced by Carl.[13] He notes that "an overwhelming majority of word-of-mouth (WOM) episodes (nearly 80%) ... occur in face-to-face interpersonal settings, while online WOM accounted for only seven to ten percent of the reported (WOM) episodes."

Carl concludes that "The majority of the WOM action still seems to be happening in the offline world. These findings are especially provocative since they emerge at a time when more and more organizations are paying attention to how their brands are discussed online and recent academic research has focused on online WOM. Thus it is important for organizations to keep both online and offline conversations on their radar screen."

Keller Fay announced in 2007 that "While experts have previously estimated that 80% of marketing-relevant word of mouth takes place “offline” (i.e., face-to-face or via telephone), the new results indicate that this figure is even higher - 92%."

More recently, Nate Elliott at Forrester observed that "the huge majority of users influence each other face to face rather than through social online channels like blogs and social networks."[14]

And the Fluent report, though generally orientated towards online measures admits that "it is necessary to remember the effect that offline social activity has on purchasing decisions." It also notes that survey "respondents trust offline friends most, with 73 percent indicating near or complete trust versus just 33 percent for online friends."

Influencer ecosystem

Sources of influencers can be varied. Marketers traditionally target influencers that are easy to identify, such as press, industry analysts and high profile executives. For most B2C purchases, however, influencers might include people known to the purchaser and the retailer staff. In higher value B2B transactions the community of influencers may be wide and varied, and include consultants, government-backed regulators, financiers and user communities.

Forrester analyst Michael Speyer notes that, for small and medium-size business, "IT sales are influenced by many parties, including peers, consultants, bloggers, and technology resellers".[15] He advises that "Vendors need to identify and characterize the influencers in their market. This requires a comprehensive influencer identification program and the establishment of criteria for ranking influencer impact on the decision process."

As well as a variety of influencer sources, influencers can play a variety of roles at different times in a decision process. This idea has been developed in Influencer Marketing by Brown & Hayes.[2] They map out how and when particular types of influencer affect the decision process. This then enables marketers to selectively target influencers depending on their individual profile of influence.

The influence of bloggers and other social media users is a topic of much discussion. This is covered in depth in Paul Gillin’s The New Influencers.[16] Brown & Hayes also cover the subject but are less convinced of the importance of the impact of social media, particularly in B2B settings.

Types of influencer marketing companies

There many types of companies offering influencer marketing services and software. The influencer marketing landscape is a fragmented space with 133 providers.[17] The providers can be broken down into 4 distinct types.[18]

  1. Managed campaigns: These are companies that run full-service campaigns. They act as a middleman between buyers (usually agencies or brands) and influencers, although they mostly do not have exclusivity with influencers. They have no proprietary technology and charge a flat fee for the campaign, from which they take a commission fee.
  2. Marketplaces: These companies have a network of influencers that can be hired through their online portals. They have some proprietary technology and charge a commission on each influencer payment.
  3. Software as a Service: These companies provide software for buyers (usually agencies and brands) to manage their own influencer relationships and programs. With SaaS companies, the buyer owns the influencer relationships. These companies charge a software license.
  4. PR Agencies: These are paid versions of influencers targeting brand building through positive advocacy [19]

See also

References

  1. http://www.adweek.com/socialtimes/10-reasons-why-influencer-marketing-is-the-next-big-thing/623407
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Brown, Duncan and Hayes, Nick. Influencer Marketing: Who really influences your customers?, Butterworth-Heinemann, 2008
  3. Cialdini, Robert. Influence: Science and Practice, Allyn and Bacon, 2001
  4. Reichheld, Fred. The Ultimate Question: Driving Good Profits and True Growth, Harvard Business School Press, 2006
  5. http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnhall/2016/04/17/the-influencer-marketing-gold-rush-is-coming-are-you-prepared/#1e6ae60d2964
  6. Peck, Helen, Payne, Adrian, Christopher, Martin and Clark, Moira. Relationship Marketing: Strategy and Implementation, Butterworth-Heinemann, 1999
  7. 1 2 Keller, Ed and Berry, Jon. The Influentials, Free Press, 2003
  8. Russ, Henneberry. "How to Find Influential People With Social Media". Social Media Examiner. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  9. Barry, James (2014). 4 Archetypes of Top Social Media Influencers
  10. Reichheld, Fred. The Ultimate Question: Driving Good Profits and True Growth, Harvard Business School Press, 2006
  11. Razorfish Report
  12. "McKinsey: The Consumer Decision Journey". Mckinseyquarterly.com. 2013-03-13. Retrieved 2013-04-29.
  13. [Carl, W. J. (2006). What’s all the buzz about? Everyday communication and the relational basis of word-of-mouth and buzz marketing practices. Management Communication Quarterly, 19(4), 601-634.]
  14. Elliot, Nate (2009-09-30). "Using Social Media To Create And Amplify Offline Influence". Retrieved 2014-01-30.
  15. Speyer, Michael. Identifying IT Buyers’ Hidden Influencers: Finding And Nurturing Your Brand Presence Beyond Your Formal Channels, Forrester Research, 2007
  16. Gillin, Paul; Moore, Geoffrey A. (2009-05-01). The New Influencers: A Marketer's Guide to the New Social Media. Quill Driver Books, U.S. ISBN 9781884956942.
  17. "Introducing the Influencer Marketing Technology Landscape". Marketing Land. Retrieved 14 July 2016.
  18. "The State of Influencer Marketing" (PDF). Interactive Advertising Bureau. IAB. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
  19. Talavera, Misha. "The Complete Guide to Influencer Marketing". AdWeek. SocialTimes. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
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