Influencer Marketing: The Ultimate Guide

  

As marketers, we know the value of a good influencer. Influencer marketing helps you gain reach in a targeted audience or niche. Using it as part of your social media strategy can drive campaign performance to increase brand awareness, generate leads and boost sales.

Working with influencers means your brand can benefit from their creativity and authenticity. Influencers are creative individuals with a skill for making content that their audience will love, and their voices can be valuable to your brand.

The figures for influencer marketing are impressive. Fortune Business Insights reports that the global influencer marketing platform market size was valued at $17.40 billion in 2023. 

 By 2032, that figure is expected to reach $71 billion.

Influencers can also allow you to gain traction on platforms where you may not yet have a presence; creators on TikTok, for example, are experts at making promotional content that fits in seamlessly with their organic content and entertains their audience.

Plus as marketers look to scale up their influencer marketing activities, artificial intelligence (AI) can help improve performance, reduce risk, and boost productivity.

But influencer marketing can be tricky. It’s not just about finding someone with a lot of followers, it’s about finding the right influencer and making the most of that collaboration. Ultimately, it’s about being clever with your influencer marketing strategy from the start and learning how to work with brands.

This comprehensive influencer marketing guide covers:

  • What is influencer marketing?
  • Key influencer marketing statistics
  • What are the types of influencers?
  • What’s the difference between influencers and creators?
  • What are the types of influencer collaborations?
  • How to build an effective influencer marketing campaign
  • Top influencer marketing tools
  • Influencer marketing and AI
  • Influencer marketing do’s and don'ts
  • Influencer red flags 
  • Regulations around influencer marketing

Let’s get started!

What is influencer marketing?

Let’s start at the beginning, what is the definition of influencer marketing? In a nutshell, influencer marketing is about product placement or endorsement on social media networks through an influencer. An influencer is a person with a social following and who focuses on a particular niche.

Just think about some of the biggest social media influencers such as Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez, and Addison Rae along with digital marketing experts like Gary Vaynerchuk and Rand Fishkin. 

But they’re not the only ones. In recent years, there has been a rise in smaller influencers that are having an impact. 

Key influencer marketing statistics

By 2025, there will be over 4 billion social media users globally according to Statista. That’s a huge amount of people active across social networks with an appetite for content. So what networks are they active on?

Statista

Let’s dig into some influencer marketing statistics to give you an idea of how you can capitalize on this growing social media usage.

  • The influencer marketing industry is set to grow to approximately $24 billion in 2024 - Influencer Marketing Benchmark Report
  • The average ad spend per user in the influencer advertising market is estimated to be $5.60 in 2024 - Statista
  • Most marketers who have an influencer program work with a small number, between one and ten - 2024 State of Social Media report
  • 31% of social media users prefer to find out about new products through an influencer they follow as opposed to any other format or channel - HubSpot
  • There is a strong preference for working with nano (44%) and micro (26%) influencers ahead of expensive macro-influencers (17%) and celebrities (13%) - Influencer Marketing Benchmark Report
  • 59% of marketers who use influencer marketing plan to increase budgets during 2025 - Influencer Marketing Hub’s 2024 Benchmark report
  • TikTok is the most popular influencer marketing channel (used by 69% of brands), followed by Instagram (47%), YouTube (33%) and Facebook (28%) - Influencer Marketing Benchmark Report

Check out our blog ‘20 Influencer Marketing Statistics that Will Surprise You’ for more insights.

What are the types of influencers?

There’s more than just one category of influencers, and they all offer different exposure opportunities.

Working with any of them can turbo-charge your marketing campaign by dramatically increasing the reach of your messaging. However, you need to ensure you choose the right type of influencer. 

These are classified according to their follower count as nano (up to 1,000), micro (5,000 to 100,000) and macro (100,000 to 1 million). 

                                                      Chart showing 4 types of influencers

Influencer Marketing: The Ultimate Guide

What’s the difference between influencers and creators?

While there is an overlap between influencers and content creators, they help to achieve different marketing objectives. 

According to Deloitte’s ‘The creator economy in 3D’ report, three out of five consumers are likely to positively engage with a brand with the right creator’s recommendation. So what’s the real difference? 

Brands can leverage creators to:

  • Generate higher audience engagement
  • Be more relevant with niche communities
  • Help drive middle and bottom funnel behavior 

Influencers are more suited to help brands to: 

  • Drive top and middle funnel consumer behavior
  • Be relevant to a more diverse audience
  • Generate higher brand visibility and awareness

Creators tend to develop and produce their own content that appeals to small communities - for example someone sharing vegan recipes. While influencers are more like mini-celebrities with their own personal brand that companies can leverage.

“Creators want to build a career with brands, they don't want to just get paid $200 bucks. So I think the more you bring them to the table as a partner of a campaign or effort the better. It's good for both parties and could be more affordable for the brand,” said Nikki Lindgren, Founder of digital agency ⁠Pennock⁠ on a DMI podcast. 

Top tip: TikTok One is a creative platform from TikTok with tools to create effective campaigns. It gives brands the opportunity to reach out to millions of creators, connect with production partners, and uncover insights. It’s currently free to use in certain regions, so agencies and brands can see if they can use it to augment and modify creative assets at a different level than they were before.

What are the types of influencer collaborations?

There are multiple ways for a brand or organization to engage and collaborate with an influencer. Here are some ideas.

1. Event coverage

Event marketing is a perfect opportunity to engage influencers. If your event is aimed at people in a particular location or with specific interests, influencers who operate within those areas or niches are ideal for getting your event in front of your target audience.

Get them on board early to build up excitement, and allow them to conduct live coverage on the day. Here are some tips for making your virtual event a success if this is something you’re thinking about. One example is TikTok movie guy Straw Hat Goofy.

Straw Hat Goofy

2. Gifting

69% of consumers trust influencers, friends and family over information coming directly from a brand according to Matter Communications. Gifting is your opportunity to capitalize on this. 

Gifting involves seeking brand exposure for the price of your product or service. Send a sample or offer them a free experience, and include information about you and your product to make it easy for them to promote you. Here’s an example from Instagram food influencer Carolina Gelen, in partnership with a feta dip brand.

Screenshot from Carolina Gelen Instagram profile

3. Video

A video collaboration could involve engaging an influencer to star in a campaign video or video series. 

Video content can be easily repurposed and re-distributed and you can make quality videos - long and short-form - without hiring a professional, like this partnership between micro influencer Steph Bohrer and Hourglass cosmetics.

4. Giveaway

If you are planning a giveaway, you could engage an influencer to host the giveaway for you on their platforms, creating the visual to promote the giveaway and driving their audience to your profile.

See the example below from beauty subscription service, IPSY with Clarrisa Ruiz to celebrate her reaching 4,000 followers.

5. Takeovers

This involves engaging an influencer to ‘take over’ your social channels for a period of time, allowing them to post content directly to your story, or host a live video. 

Make sure you and the influencer promote the takeover in advance and they cross-promote on their channels on the day. The example below is a takeover by publisher Little, Brown and Company that uses Instagram takeovers to promote new titles. In this example, the company coordinated a takeover event with Anna Pitoniak (author) to promote the release of her book, Necessary People.

Little Brown IG post

6. Signal boosting

This is an example of a short-term activation that’s particularly great if you have a timely message, charitable cause or social issue you want to boost, like a new helpline or a charity event. For this initiative, it works to contact a targeted list of influencers of various sizes, ask them to boost your message and give them options – this could be as simple as sharing your post to their story.

A great example is the National Adult Literacy Agency in the UK which used Instagram influencers to promote its free distance learning services.

Influencer Marketing: The Ultimate Guide

If you work in this sector, listen to our podcast ‘Marketing for Nonprofits’ to find out more.

How to build an effective influencer marketing campaign

So, now that you know more about influencer marketing, how do you build an influencer marketing campaign? Check out our influencer marketing brief to help figure out what you want from an influencer collaboration.  

Here are some important steps to help you plan. 

1. Set your goals and KPIs

Before you kick off any influencer campaign you need to nail down your goals or KPIs for the campaign. Are you looking to raise brand awareness, promote a new product or drive leads?

2. Confirm your budget

At this stage, you need to confirm the budget you will need for the influencer to promote your brand or product. The costs vary depending on the influencer, network and scope of the campaign. Use this media budget planner to keep track. 

3. Choose your network

Make sure you choose the right platform for your audience, sector and campaign type. Is it video content you’re creating, a blog article or imagery? The content type will determine the platform as TikTok or Instagram are great for videos while a blog may do better on X or LinkedIn. 

4. Find your influencer

Choosing the right influencer is essential and there are several areas to consider:

  • Audience type and quality: Are their followers the ideal target audience you are trying to reach or engage?
  • Preferred social network: What social channels do they use effectively? How are these channels used by your audience?
  • Content quality: Do they create content that aligns with your brand values?
  • Authenticity: Do they appear genuine and believable when they promote products?
  • Brand personality: Do their communication style and personality fit with your brand values?
  • Engagement rates and frequency: How much engagement do they typically get from their following? How often will they feature your product? How often do they publish new content?
  • Fees: How do they prefer to be paid (CPA commission, CPC traffic, or flat fees)? Does this work for your budget or goals?

5. Reach out to an influencer

Once you have identified suitable influencers, make contact with them. You can do this via a ‘reach out’ email or social media, but be open, friendly, and honest about what you want and tell them a little about you and your brand.  

Don’t be afraid to include detailed information that will grab their attention and let them know if the collaboration is of interest to them. Once they are engaged, you should establish fees and terms and consider a contract.    

6. Develop your campaign and share with your influencer

This is the fun part as you get to share the campaign assets with your chosen influencer and see what happens online! Make sure to use tracking parameters and relevant hashtags you can monitor and set a timeframe.

7. Monitor performance

With your KPIs and goals in place, you can monitor campaign performance. This can be done on the social platform and also on your website through Google Analytics or your CRM. Your influencer should also be responsible for providing data on performance.    

Top influencer marketing tools

There are some useful influencer marketing tools - including AI-powered ones - that can help in your campaign strategy. These include platforms that can automate influencer discovery, influencer outreach and even run entire campaigns.

Let’s look at the best ones by category.

Social listening tools

Meltwater provides a social media monitoring and engagement software that uses AI-driven analytics to examine millions of posts from social media networks, blogs and news sites to find the content of interest to you and your brand.

Talkwalker offers social listening and also provides visual recognition analysis so it can track imagery and find influencers on platforms like Instagram or Snapchat.

Influencer discovery tools

Upfluence uses software that indexes and updates influencer profiles in real-time and analyzes all their content for reach and engagement. Its Live Capture tool finds the best influencers for your brand.

Followerwonk focuses on X and can help you search profiles, compare accounts, breakout followers and contrast your relationships to find the perfect influencers.

All-in-one influencer platforms

Grin is the all-in-one creator management platform that helps brands build partnerships. It helps discover influencers, reach out and nurture relationships and report and analyze campaigns.

Maverck has platform that finds relevant influencers, manages the campaign and reports on performance. Its ‘Influencer Index’ lists millions of macro and micro-influencers around the globe and across all major social platforms.

Tip: As the network of choice for many influencers, it’s important to know the top influencer marketing tools for Instagram. Grin, Maverck, and Upfluence all track the platform while Aspire focuses on influencer discovery but recently added a feature to track Instagram Stories.

Download our influencer tracker tool to create and manage a list of relevant influencers.

Influencer marketing and AI

Like most aspects of marketing, AI is changing influencer marketing. It can provide tools and solutions that help brands make data-driven decisions and manage influencer relationships.

Key areas you can use the technology in your influencer marketing activities to improve:

  • Audience segmentation - AI tools such as Audiense, Vista Social, and Hootsuite can help identify and segment your target audience by analyzing data from various sources. 
  • Finding influencers - AI can reduce the time spent trying to find suitable influencers by using a tool like Hype Auditor to analyze interests, demographics, growth rate and authenticity. 
  • Content creation and optimization - Many AI tools exist to help research, create and refine content in text and visual form. ChatGPT, Jasper, ScripAI, and Yarnet are ones to consider.     
  • Performance analytics - An AI-powered influencer marketing platform like HypeAuditor can track engagement, click-through rates, conversion rates, and other key performance indicators to gauge performance. 
  • Virtual influencers - If you can’t find or afford an influencer, then AI will help you make one! L’Oreal’s beauty brand Maybelline created its first digital avatar, named May, to promote a campaign to launch its new Falsies Surreal Extensions Mascara. 

    Maybelline's avatar May

    It’s worth having a look at how AI can help you, especially if you’re time poor, looking to ramp up your influencer marketing activities and need to prove ROI. 

    Influencer marketing do’s and don'ts

    Influencers can give your brand sparkle and credibility that you might struggle to build on your own. However, be sure to choose the right influencers for your brand.

    There are a few top tips you should think about for your influencer marketing campaigns - otherwise known as your influencer marketing do’s and don’ts checklist! 

    • DO re-share and repurpose

    As your collaboration takes off, make sure you amplify it by resharing and cross-posting the content on all of your social channels. And make sure you have a conversation with the influencer about opportunities to repurpose the content they create; for example, you may use a TikTok post created by an influencer as advertising content.

    • DO build relationships

    While it can be tempting to hop from one influencer to the next, building relationships with individual influencers is hugely valuable. Returning to specific influencers for multiple campaigns helps them be even more authentic when talking about your brand, and builds on brand awareness among their audience.

    • DO be present on their channels

    Before reaching out to an influencer, don’t be afraid to actively engage with their content and show your support. While the collaboration is running, be present and active on their channels, and keep it going after the collaboration has ended.

    • DON’T be a control freak

    It’s important to not be overly prescriptive or controlling when working with an influencer. It is, after all, a collaboration and you should be making the most of their creativity, originality, and connection to their audience. While a detailed brief is useful and script approval can be arranged, allow the influencer to contribute ideas and take the lead on things like content scheduling and release details.

    • DON’T be vague when reaching out

    When sending your first outreach email to an influencer, don’t be vague or impersonal. Be very clear about who you, your organization and/or your product are. And don’t forget to state what you like about their content, why you think they would be a good fit for your brand, or call out specific work you admire.

    • DON’T be vague about your KPIs

    You should have a clear idea of your KPIs for your influencer collaboration, and be upfront about them. Be clear about what analytics or stats you expect to be delivered at the end of the campaign. Influencers often provide a general set of analytics, but it’s always worth stating exactly which metrics you want to see from the outset. 

    Influencer red flags

    There are some negatives to watch out for when it comes to choosing an influencer so make sure you are aware of these red flags at the research stage:

    • Imagery: They have no profile image or use stock photos
    • Username: Unusual or offensive usernames
    • Profile: Private or anonymous profiles
    • Followers: Influencer follows more people than follow them
    • Bio: Templated or copied bio
    • Website: No link to a website
    • Content: Little or no original content
    • Recency: The profile is very new

    Regulations around influencer marketing

    It's important to understand official guidelines for working with influencers. Below are some of the regulations currently in place in different countries and regions.

    • ASA and CMA (UK)
    • FTC (US)
    • CCB (Canada)
    • EU and individual countries 
    • AiMCO (Australia)
    • ASCI Social (India)

    Use social media & influencer marketing to attract and engage

    With several popular social media channels to choose from, it’s important to understand the features of each to use them effectively. Our certified Social Media Marketing course explores key social platforms such as Facebook, WhatsApp, LinkedIn, TikTok, X, YouTube, Instagram and Pinterest. You will also learn about social research, social content, social commerce, social strategy and social customer service. Get started today!  


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