Influencer Marketing 101.

Influencer Marketing 101.

Influencer marketing is the oldest idea in advertising, a trusted voice recommending a product, running on the newest infrastructure. The channel rewards brands that understand how it actually works and punishes the ones that treat it as cheap reach.

Influencer marketing is the oldest idea in advertising, a trusted voice recommending a product, running on the newest infrastructure. The channel rewards brands that understand how it actually works and punishes the ones that treat it as cheap reach.

Illustration for Foundation..
Illustration for Foundation..

The channel, explained.

The channel, explained.

What It Is

Influencer marketing is a brand paying a creator to put a product in front of the audience that creator has built. The audience’s trust in the creator is the asset being rented. That single fact explains everything else about the channel: why authenticity outperforms scripts, why disclosure matters, and why the wrong partnership costs more than it saves.

How It Works

The mechanics are simple: a brand defines a goal, finds creators whose audience matches its customer, agrees on deliverables and price, and the creator produces and posts the content. The craft is in the fit. A small creator whose audience is exactly your customer beats a celebrity whose audience merely includes them.

The Formats

Sponsored posts, dedicated videos, product integrations, affiliate arrangements, and content licensing, where the brand runs creator-made content in its own advertising. Each format buys something different: awareness, endorsement, conversion, or production. Programs mature by matching format to goal instead of buying whatever the last campaign bought.

What It Costs

Rates run from free product for nano creators to six figures for celebrity tiers, and no universal rate card exists. Pricing is production plus audience plus usage rights, explained in How to Hire Creators. Budget honestly: the channel is not cheap reach, it is trusted reach, and trust carries a fair market price.

Measuring What Matters

Match the metric to the goal set before the campaign: reach and view-through for awareness, engagement quality for affinity, tracked links and codes for conversion. Vanity metrics flatter every campaign; predetermined metrics tell the truth. And measure the content’s second life, licensed creator content often outperforms brand-made ads at lower production cost.

Building a Program

The brands that win the channel graduate from one-off deals to a program: a roster of vetted creators, standing briefs and templates, disclosure built in by default, and relationships that compound. Start with the playbook at Working With Creators, run the process twice, and the third campaign runs itself.

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