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To preserve authenticity, treat the creative brief as the destination (the goal, the key message), but let the creator 'drive.' They know their audience and platform best. Overly prescriptive briefs with scripts or restrictive guardrails kill the authenticity that makes influencer marketing effective, turning the content into a generic ad.

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Don't just pay influencers for a single post. Instead, view them as skilled content creators. Hire them to produce a library of authentic, vlog-style videos that you can then use in your own ad campaigns. This leverages their creative talent for scalable assets, not just a one-off audience blast.

For new product launches, give a cohort of influencers access with no creative brief. Ask them to explore the feature and propose their own content angle. This provides invaluable, unfiltered feedback, revealing which value propositions resonate most authentically with your target audience's trusted experts before you commit to a message.

A B2B influencer manager's role is not just external relationship management. A critical function is acting as an internal 'gatekeeper' and advocate for the creator. This means pushing back against internal teams who want to impose restrictive scripts or creative direction that would harm the content's authenticity and effectiveness.

Forcing brand messaging on an influencer leads to inauthentic content that fails to resonate. A better approach is to educate them on your product and collaborate on an angle that aligns with their established voice and topics. Authenticity drives distribution and engagement, making the partnership more effective than a boilerplate promotion.

Lemlist's influencer philosophy is to never sell a feature directly. Instead, they brief creators to teach a valuable method that solves a real pain. The product is positioned as a tool that makes executing the method easier, but isn't required, which leads to more authentic content.

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.

To get high-performing assets, move beyond simple messaging points in your briefs. Get 'maniacal' with details: specify lighting, shooting style, and even how to engage with the brand's posts. Reference the influencer's own past successful content as a 'North Star' to guide their creative freedom within your brand's guardrails.

Most marketers jump straight to finding influencers. The crucial first step is aligning on what success looks like with all stakeholders (marketing, sales, C-suite). Different departmental goals, like booked demos versus brand awareness, fundamentally change the campaign's strategy and creator selection.

Vector's marketing lead found success by giving influencers high-level messaging points but allowing them to create content in their own voice. The only request was to review the post 24 hours in advance to ensure product accuracy.