After an eight week hiatus, #G2Fireside Twitter Chat is back and better than ever.
Beautifully redesigned branding full of sleek graphics and animations kicked off our return, alongside a strategic new strategy and an impressive roster of very special guests.
This week’s topic of choice is influencer marketing, and our diverse group of participants engaged by discussing tips, best practices, and thoughtful opinions on the subject matter.
Stay up to date with #G2Fireside by reading up on our past Twitter Chats that covered Social Media + Tech, Chatbots + Artificial Intelligence, and Content + Data!
I had the privilege to lead this week’s Twitter Chat on influencer marketing and was joined by my colleague Stephanie Graham and our very special guest Cathy McPhillips! Cathy is the VP of Marketing at Content Marketing Institute, so we were all very excited to hear her take on the subject matter.
The three of us enjoyed answering each question and engaging with the participants. Let’s now dive into the insights and learn what everyone had to say about influencer marketing.
Q1:
We started with the basics for the first question. Influencer marketing can spark quite the debate when discussing its value, so we were interested to learn where our participants stand.
Christian Lowery of Gigonomy shared a graph that showcases the Law of Diffusion and how it relates to the trust influencers can invoke in customers:
A1 #G2Fireside
Influencers speed up the Law of Diffusion.
Customers typically in the “late majority” or “laggards” can become early adapters simply because someone they trust tried the product/service for them. pic.twitter.com/DWEN3XaWLd
— Christian Lowery (@clowerycontent) October 10, 2019
G2’s Amy Lecza argued that influencer marketing has many benefits:
A1: Increased brand awareness, showcasing your product/service to a new (and hopefully engaged!) audience, but most of all – building a mutually beneficial relationship with an influencer for future campaigns, too. Your audience notices this! #G2Fireside
— Amy Lecza (@amylecza) October 10, 2019
Victor Immanuel Oloo of Dignited spoke to the importance of user-generated content:
A1
Influencers create user-generated content about a brand that can then be used on your the brand platforms. They also have an active audience that listens to them so a brand can easily tap into it#G2Fireside
— Victor Immanuel Oloo (@ImmanuelOloo) October 10, 2019
Cristina Maria of Commusoft explained how personalities of each influencer help the brand with identity:
A1 #G2Fireside An influencer with a good fit will lend their personality to the brand and vice versa. Qualities that people hadn’t associated with the brand before could emerge, more often than not that they’re approachable and “just like us”.
— Cristina Maria (@Cristin47632668) October 10, 2019
Q2:
Next, we wanted to know how our audience uses influencer marketing and where they have found the most success.
G2’s Derek Doeing speaks to the immense popularity that Instagram has:
A2: I think @instagram has proven itself to be the place for influencer marketing. I know there’s been a number of times where someone I’ve followed shares a product that I have purchased on their IG recommendation #g2fireside
— Derek @ G2 (@DerekDoeingG2) October 10, 2019
Jordie Black of Copy and Check argues that there is no clear winner and that it all depends:
In terms of social media – there’s no clear winner. Different social networks will work depending on the brand and audience. However, when scaling influencer marketing, using an end-to-end solution like @ZINECO_Official is great to keep all your influencer activities organised.
— Jordie Black 🚀 (@jordieiam) October 10, 2019
Tamara of Freckle agreed with Jordie. She says it’s all about your brand’s niche:
A2: It depends on your niche. Twitter is a great platform for influencer partnerships in business, marketing, and tech, for example. Whereas IG is great for health, beauty, travel, etc. #G2Fireside
— Tamara 🎃 (@itstamaragt) October 10, 2019
Q3:
The next question was all about what to look for when choosing the perfect influencers to work with.
Julia Rose of Ledgeview was certain that quality reigns supreme:
A3: Quality. You don’t want someone who’s overdoing it. Find someone who’s as excited about your niche as your brand is – not influencers who will take ANY campaign or product for compensation. That’s not the authentic relationship your customers want to see. #G2Fireside
— Julia Rose (@Missjflar) October 10, 2019
Christian Lowery chimed back in and spoke about the importance of engagement!
A3 #G2Fireside
I look for conversation.
Are they responding to comments?
Are they asking for feedback?
Are they igniting passion?Tons of likes and many followers are just smoke and mirrors if the conversations aren’t there.
— Christian Lowery (@clowerycontent) October 10, 2019
G2’s Lauren Pope shared how important brand alignment is:
A3: The brand alignment has to be there. Customers are smart enough to sniff out a self-serving promo when they see one. The best partnerships are the ones a customer don’t even realize are paid for in the first place. They’re that natural! #G2Fireside #Influencers
— Lauren @ G2 (@G2Lauren) October 10, 2019
Michelle Garrett of MichelleGarrett.com brought up how important doing research on your candidates is:
A3: One thing brands need to look out for when evaluating influencers is red flags – SO many brands have made missteps by not doing their research on what influencers have posted in the past. 😱 #G2Fireside
— Michelle Garrett (@PRisUs) October 10, 2019
Q4:
Next up, we wanted to know the best ways to source top influencer talent.
Content creator, Sharanya Manola talks about the ease of engaging with people who already love your brand:
A4: How about approaching someone who’s already your follower? Think micro-influencer, if that’s what you’re looking for. They know what you do + are your fan. Wouldn’t take much time onboarding them.
Of course, there are tools that make your search easy.#G2Fireside
— Sharanya (@sharanyamanola) October 10, 2019
G2’s Research Specialist, Stephanie Graham shared some important statistics on the matter:
A4b. We’ve seen steady growth in the #InfluencerMarketing category on @g2dotcom, with traffic ⬆️35% since last year. These tools help brands discover & reach out to influencers, manage influencer marketing programs & measure results ⬇️ https://t.co/UoyD8oJODW #G2Fireside
— stephanie graham (@grahamcrackers) October 10, 2019
Julia Rose spoke up about doing your homework on competitors:
A4: Do your homework – research competitors. See who follows them and engages with them the most, then see who those followers follow. Make the connections that make sense, and go from there. A little awareness creates a world of possibilities for brands! #G2Fireside
— Julia Rose (@Missjflar) October 10, 2019
I wanted to share my past experiences on the matter as well:
A4: If you’re looking for larger influencers, then working with an agency is probably your best bet to help source and manage them. If you prefer micro-influencers, platforms like @aspireIQ are fantastic! You can be very hands-on with each influencer this way! #G2Fireside
— Hannah Tow (@hannah_tow) October 10, 2019
Q5:
This next question on how best to compensate influencers triggered a great conversation.
Cristina Maria stated her opinion matter of factly. Influencers should be compensated with money:
A5 #G2Fireside: Compensation for influencers. It’s a job, at the end of the day. But always have a means to track return on investment so that you know exactly how many customers they’re sending your way. This is why discount codes are great for brands and for the consumer.
— Cristina Maria (@Cristin47632668) October 10, 2019
Jordie Black wasn’t sure if there is a right answer for all and that working within your budget is best:
#G2Fireside There are so many ways to work with influencers: one-off payment, gifting, affiliate, brand ambassadors, event attendance. All can work well with the right strategy behind it. Ask: “what’s our budget?” then: “How can we make the most impact with the budget we have?”
— Jordie Black 🚀 (@jordieiam) October 10, 2019
The influencer marketing company, ZINE reminds us that there are so many important factors that go into making the decision:
Both @ZINECO_Official Influencers should be compensated, but the form of compensation depends heavily on the brands content requirements, expectations and so many other variables #G2Fireside
— ZINE (@ZINECO_Official) October 10, 2019
G2’s Derek Doeing brings up great points about the importance of monetary compensation:
A5: monetary compensation is extremely important for it to feel like a true partnership I believe. but also ensuring the relationship isn’t just a one-off post through discounts and exclusive tests of new products. Influencers should also be your biggest fans #g2fireside
— Derek @ G2 (@DerekDoeingG2) October 10, 2019
Q6:
It’s now time to talk about success. The next question is all about ROI.
Sharanya Manola has a short and simple answer to this question that Cathy McPhillips loved:
Exactly! Don’t overthink the measurement. Go back to your objectives. And set up the metrics ahead of time that you want to track. #G2Fireside
— Cathy McPhillips (@cmcphillips) October 10, 2019
Consultant, VishnuPriya Mishra has a few answers to the question:
A6: Listing in order of priority: Increase in Brand awareness and engagement rate, Increase in share of voice, and then perhaps follower count and leads #G2FiresideChat
— VishnuPriya Mishra 💫⭐️💙 (@vpmishra01) October 10, 2019
Christian Lowery argued about the importance of sales:
A6 #G2Fireside
Sales. Sales. Sales.
Even if your immediate goal is awareness or leads, those are meant to lead to sales.
Make sure you track the campaign to future sales. I.e. did a 10% increase in leads generate a 10% increase in sales months later?
— Christian Lowery (@clowerycontent) October 10, 2019
Stephanie Graham reminded us all of certain tools that help track ROI:
A6. It depends on the original goal of the campaign: awareness measured by views/reach, engagement measured by clicks/likes, and sales measured by… well, sales! Tools like @aspireIQ @Influencer_DB and @traackr help brands analyze & measure ROI on influencer campaigns #G2Fireside
— stephanie graham (@grahamcrackers) October 10, 2019
Q7:
The next question asks about the trust influencers have with their followers. We wanted to know if consumers trust influencers?
Julia Rose brings up a great point. She says consumers are very smart, so don’t underestimate them:
A7: Consumers are smart – they see through what’s not authentic. It’s hard to “craft” something that is organic and natural. I think the best way nowadays is to pair with an influencer that has the same values as your co. You want a shared mission. That’s authentic! #G2Fireside
— Julia Rose (@Missjflar) October 10, 2019
G2’s Mara Cavello says she has a hard time with trust even if it’s with those she has been following forever:
A7: I trust the ones I’ve followed for years. But even when they label something as “ad” I get suspicious. #G2Fireside pic.twitter.com/hmwv5B3Hjw
— Mara (@G2Mara_C) October 10, 2019
Jordie Black makes a great point about micro-influencer and why they are gaining popularity:
I think as influence marketing becomes more mainstream, consumers are quick to spot when something is a clear fake-endorsement.
This probably correlates with the rise we’re seeing in micro influencers who have a much closer connection to their audience. #G2Fireside
— Jordie Black 🚀 (@jordieiam) October 10, 2019
Tony Christensen of Tony Does Ads says that it all depends on the influencer:
A7) It depends on the influencer…
– Some influencers obviously take any deal thrown at them, which hurts their credibility and brand, while others ensure to ONLY promote products that they can stand by.
– Sometimes the consumer can see this, sometimes they can’t.#G2Fireside— Tony Christensen (@tonydoesads) October 10, 2019
Q8:
Our final question of this week’s Twitter chat asked the audience for their favorite influencer marketing campaigns they’ve seen.
Here’s what impressed everyone:
Jordie Black loves Gymshark:
I think @Gymshark long-term strategy has been amazing. Since the beginning their focus has been on growing a brand and not just sales. Definitely worked given their $100M valuation #G2Fireside
— Jordie Black 🚀 (@jordieiam) October 10, 2019
Stephanie, Cathy, and I have all been very impressed with Glossier:
A8. @Diageo_News partnership w/@Nick_Offerman on the brand’s 44-min Yule Log video is everything that’s great about influencer marketing. Aside from that, I ❤️ what beauty brands like @glossier & @oVertoneColor are doing with micro-influencers. #G2Fireside https://t.co/OJWc5ErDvT
— stephanie graham (@grahamcrackers) October 10, 2019
A8: @glossier is SO impressive to me! I love what they are doing with their influencers. #G2Fireside
— Hannah Tow (@hannah_tow) October 10, 2019
And who could forget the Fyre Festival Campaign? Tony Christensen thought it was particularly brilliant:
A8: Can I say the Fyre Festival campaign? haha
In terms of raising awareness and execution, it was brilliant!
The influencers, the mystery with the orange squares, the content…
Although, we all know how that ended. 😭#G2Fireside pic.twitter.com/F1FhtM2JTG— Tony Christensen (@tonydoesads) October 10, 2019
That’s the latest on influencer marketing!
Join in on the conversation every other Thursday!
On behalf of the entire G2 Content Marketing team, thank you to every single person who joined our #G2Fireside Twitter Chat on influencer marketing.
If you loved this discussion, you definitely won’t want to miss out on our next one all about design and branding! It will be hosted by G2’s very own Daniella Alscher on October 24th. We can’t wait to chat with you again!
If you want to keep the conversation going, or you just want to share ideas, you can find me on Twitter and LinkedIn.