Tree Hut CMO Luis Garcia featured their creator community in their Super Bowl ad, not traditional celebrities. For a brand built on social media, these creators are the real stars to their audience. This approach maintains authenticity, energizes the core community, and generates powerful organic amplification.
Instead of using traditional celebrity endorsements, Square's 'See You in the Neighborhood' campaign heroes its actual customers. This approach treats local business owners as influential figures in their own right, lending unparalleled authenticity and relevance to the campaign's storytelling.
To achieve authentic, word-of-mouth growth, Olipop's social media strategy intentionally relies on real customers. A full 70% of its content creators are first-timers, not professional influencers. This ensures the brand's messaging feels genuine and resonates with its audience, fostering high brand affinity.
Unlike awareness, which can be purchased, true authenticity is unattainable for most brands directly. The most effective use of influencers is tapping into their pre-built, genuine communities to gain credibility and trust. This allows a brand to "borrow" the equity of authenticity from creators who have already earned it.
To achieve genuine endorsements, brands must trust creators. Instead of providing rigid scripts, give them key message points and the freedom to tell the story in their own voice. This creative liberty results in more authentic advertising that resonates with the creator's audience.
Instead of traditional corporate social media, video software company TLDV hired TikTok creators known for their satirical content aimed at product managers. These creators became the brand's personality on social media, proving that B2B company pages can be engaging when they stop acting like a logo and start acting like a person.
The traditional "one-to-many" broadcast model no longer delivers sufficient reach or engagement. Unilever now uses a "many-to-many" approach: the brand develops multiple message expressions, then activates creators to communicate them authentically to their respective audiences.
Co-founder Sarah Foster reveals that micro-influencers with authentic, engaged audiences have been far more effective at driving sales than celebrities with millions of followers. This highlights the superior ROI of niche creators who have built genuine trust within their communities, proving reach doesn't always equal results.
Simply adding a celebrity to an ad provides no average lift in effectiveness. Instead, marketers should treat the brand’s own distinctive assets—like logos, sounds, or product truths—as the true 'celebrities' of the campaign. This builds stronger, more memorable brand linkage and long-term equity.
Digitas CEO Amy Lanzi avoids the term "influencer" because it implies a transactional ad buy that audiences reject. Instead, she advocates treating "creators" as a "brand's best friend." They should be integrated into the marketing org to co-create authentically and use their community to feed the product development pipeline.
Paying large sums for single placements with mega-influencers is a high-risk gamble. A more effective, scalable strategy is to focus on generating authentic content with nano- and micro-creators. This approach leverages social platform algorithms for distribution and builds more trust.