Jun 4, 20201 min

Are Influencers failing us amid CoVid?

Updated: Jun 28, 2020

𝙃𝙀𝙬 #π˜Ύπ™šπ™‘π™šπ™—π™§π™žπ™©π™žπ™šπ™¨ are π™›π™–π™žπ™‘π™žπ™£π™œ π™ͺ𝙨❓ 𝙄𝙨 π™žπ™© 𝙖𝙣 π™šπ™£π™™ 𝙩𝙀 #𝙄𝙣𝙛𝙑π™ͺπ™šπ™£π™˜π™šπ™§ π™ˆπ™–π™§π™ π™šπ™©π™žπ™£π™œβ“

A report by #Nielsen states that 92% of buyers trust individuals over brands. This need for β€œsocial proof” is why #influencermarketing is a burgeoning $10 Billion industry.

However, "tone-deafness" can be a major spoilsport for such marketing efforts. Instagram influencer Jeremy Kost was recently criticized for using California wildfire hashtags with promotional content – a trend called β€˜keyword squatting’ that allows for piggybacking on trending catastrophes. Arielle Charnas is the latest #Covidiot’’ influencer to receive backlash for β€˜flaunting privilege’ & lost hundreds of followers for her brand β€˜Something Navy’.

The future hinges on micro-influencers who prioritize the quality of content over quantity of likes & followers. In these trying times, American stylist Chriselle Lim has garnered a positive response by posting about her WFH reality with kids, a fresh change from insensitive comments by wealthy celebrities. Hence, brands ought to focus on influencer marketing with 3Rs - #Relatable content, #Rational behavior & #Real people.

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