What are the Main Challenge for Marketers Related to Influencer Marketing?
There are many challenges when it comes to brands and agencies executing successfully when it comes to influencer marketing and the impact of influencer marketing on consumers. The interesting thing about influencer marketing, or at least one interesting thing, is that far too often, brands and agencies have no real idea how to measure the success of influencer relationships. In fact, according to a study on influencer marketing by Linqia, 79 percent of marketers responding to the survey reported their biggest challenge for 2018 is determining ROI, a continuing problem. I believe that not only are marketers challenged by ROI, they are equally, if not more challenged by the idea of developing in campaigns in such a way as to truly be able to measure any kind of significant ROI. What do I mean by ‘significant ROI’ … oh, how about something like sales, how an influencer actually moved a needle in some way, caused a sale or a desired action. Most brands and agencies are still in the dark ages of being wow’ed by ephemeral things like “reach” and seduced by follower numbers that are largely insignificant, so it will be interesting to watch this evolve. Here’s a chart from the Lingui study that shows the other things marketers reported being concerned with, including being able to keep up with social algorithm changes that make reaching customers increasingly difficult, as well as actually finding the right influencers with whom to partner.
Influencer Marketing Delivers Significant ROI for Marketers
While it’s not easy to do well, without question influencer marketing can deliver significant ROI for marketers. People trust the people they trust, and when people they trust tell them to go, do, see, check out, or buy something, often they will. For brands, getting that kind of response is much more difficult than it is for influencers. When you can work with the right influencers, with the right audience, magic can happen. That’s also where it can be dangerous. We have a very large network of influencers with whom we work, and we know the difference between micro influencers with a targeted niche of followers/community (what we like to call “the magic middle”) and influencers with inflated follower rates and inflated fees that go along with those follower rates, who really rarely deliver any significant results. Finding the right influencers, working together to develop a campaign that suits their audience, soliciting feedback from influencers and integrating their suggestions into your campaigns, measuring results, tweaking campaigns along the way—those are all the things that go into making an influencer campaign successful. Even though ROI from influencer marketing can be challenging, when it works, it’s amazing. Here’s a snapshot of an infographic from Social Media Today on the ROI of influencer marketing, highlighting the fact that marketers generally see an 11X return on investment from the impact of influencer marketing on consumers compared to other types of traditional marketing.
Image source: Social Media Today
Reviews Drive Sales, But Influencers Drive Reviews
Customers read reviews before making purchases. All the time. In fact, over a third of consumers report relying on reviews before making a purchase. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been ready to hit the “buy” button, but made time first to read reviews, and often decided not to make a purchase as a result. I read reviews on Google, on Yelp, I read reviews on websites and sometimes simply Google “product xyz reviews” to see what I find before making a purchase. That practice has saved me from a lot of mistaken purchases, of that I am certain. This is where the value of working with trusted influencers to try, then review products is especially valuable to brands. Below is a chart from Global Web Index that shows how influential influencers are and what consumer groups are compelled to purchase because of something they’ve seen, read, or heard from an influencer. The impact of influencer marketing on consumers is pretty impressive, no?