The important thing to understand about influencer marketing, however, is that celebrities are just one
piece of the puzzle – and a small piece at that. We saw a huge uptake in influencer marketing in
2020. One obvious reason for this was lockdown and the move to remote working. With people
spending more time online, marketing naturally shifted to online platforms. However, there’s another
reason that influencer marketing is experiencing such growth – it’s authentic, built on trust, and has
moved into the realm of micro and nano-influencers. These are four key trends shaping influencer
marketing today:
1. The rise of the trust economy
Sure, Michael Jordan is synonymous with Nike, but when you’re choosing a new pair of running
shoes for your weekend trail runs, you’re not turning to him for advice. You’re going to ask your
friends and family which shoes they’ve had the best experiences with, you’ll probably do some
research online, and you’ll be interested to see which shoes the trail runners you follow on Instagram
are using. That’s influencer marketing, all the way from celebrity endorsements right down to personal
Facebook, Instagram and TikTok accounts where ordinary people are sharing their lives. The key to
these personal accounts is that they’re real. They’re another form of word-of-mouth marketing
because they don’t only tell you about all the good things associated with a product, but rather how
that product fits into the influencer’s specific lifestyle.
This doesn’t mean that celebrity and macro influencers are going anywhere. It’s a strategy that’s
worked for decades. While big names give brands recognition, we make purchasing decisions based
on direct referrals, which is where online trust and conversations have become so important: the type
of content that moves the needle come from the photographer who highlights which camera housing
and lens she used for a shot; or the iron man contender who shares which supplements he uses for
training and competing.
2. The shift from macro-influencers to nano-influencers
Celebrities are associated with a certain lifestyle that fascinates consumers. However, as much as we
love our celebs, trust levels remain low when it comes to products because we know they are being
paid (and in most cases, paid well) to partner with brands. Macro-influencers are not at celebrity
status, but they are still well-known and have large numbers of social media followers. The same
rules apply though – their followers are interested in their lives and what they have to say, but they
understand that any endorsements made by macro-influencers are paid for, and so trust levels remain
low.
Micro-influencers have been the real gamechanger in influencer marketing. They have loyal followers
which subscribe to them because they create great content. They are entertaining, authentic and tend
to be experts in their fields. If you follow a micro-influencer, it’s because you care about their opinions,
which means you’re naturally inclined to trust them. Nano-influencers niche this down even further.
Their circles of influence are even smaller than micro-influencers, but they are incredibly strong.
In 2015, influencer marketing was worth $1.5 billion, and it was dominated by celebrities and macro-
influencers with huge followings. Within the next few years, we expect the market to grow to $20
billion, and it will be dominated by nano-influencers. This shift highlights the important role that micro-
and nano-influencers play within their online communities.
3. The power of authentic content
The key to all of this is authentic content, however. Influencer content always outperforms brand
content. Once brands experience this, they tend to become increasingly comfortable with the
authenticity of influencers. Think of your own social media habits as a consumer. We trust micro- and
nano-influencers because they create their own content. It’s not slick, production quality content – it’s
social media content that is interesting, educational or entertaining. If it’s exceptional content, it’s all
three. There are many ways for brands to tap into this. The first is simply to ask their customers to
photograph or video themselves using a specific product and then to tag the post. Trust levels are
extremely high because this is someone who has already chosen to spend money on that product,
and so we’re going to listen to them.
The second is to partner with micro- and nano-influencers whose lifestyle suits a product. For
example, a cycling brand connects with a mountain biker who then creates their own content to
promote the product. The key to success with any influencer marketing, however, is that the content
must be authentic, which means brands need to give influencers latitude to do what they do – this is
the influencer’s personal brand, not the look and feel of the advertiser.
4. Organic reach versus paid reach
Technology is what makes influencer marketing possible. Previously, word-of-mouth referrals were
made in person. Now, influencers have a microphone. But paid content is where we’ve seen the most
success. Social media algorithms limit the organic reach of a post. This means that a macro-
influencer might have 3 million followers, but only 300 000 of them will see a post. Micro and nano-
influencers offer a different opportunity. It’s far more affordable for brands – big and small – to partner
with them and seed multiple posts of authentic content into the market. The best-performing content
can then be boosted through paid advertising, reaching users that suit a specific buying persona but
are not necessarily followers of the influencer. Trust remains the same because even if content is paid
for, influencers do not sell products, they showcase them in their own lives, and the brand’s reach is
extended.
Pulling it all together
Anyone can be an influencer, which is changing the way brands engage with consumers. When we
launched Webfluential, we wanted to connect social media influencers with brands in a smart, simple
way that meant brands could find the influencers who were already embedded in their consumers’
social media feeds. With these trends accelerating, what we’ve found is that more and more the
conversation is moving into the hands of micro- and nano-influencers. The brands that understand
where these conversations and engagements are happening will be best positioned to leverage the
rise of the nano-influencer.
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