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Instead of cold-pitching influencers, Buy Rosie Jane identifies creators who already organically love and post about their products. They then approach these authentic fans to either license existing content or collaborate on new paid projects, ensuring genuine enthusiasm and audience trust.
The effectiveness of large-scale influencer marketing is waning as audiences recognize inauthentic paid promotions. A better strategy is to identify smaller creators, or 'trust brokers,' with high engagement and genuine community trust. Focus on building real, long-term, mutually beneficial relationships rather than transactional one-off posts.
Brands mistakenly buy single posts from influencers, which yields poor results. The effective approach is to form long-term, integrated partnerships with creators who have built a network (events, newsletters, social), treating it as a strategic investment rather than a one-time transaction.
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.
Finding existing influencer databases ineffective, Lemlist built their network manually. A key tactic was running outreach campaigns targeting creators that their current, trusted influencers already follow themselves. This 'friend of a friend' approach surfaced more relevant micro-influencers.
Gymshark's initial influencer success wasn't a calculated campaign. It was born from genuine fandom; they sent products to YouTubers they personally admired. This authentic, non-transactional approach built real community trust long before influencer marketing became a formalized, paid industry.
To achieve authentic endorsements, brands must simulate a long-term relationship before a big deal. This involves seeding product, buying smaller media like podcast ad reads, and confirming genuine usage first. This manufactured history makes the eventual large-scale partnership believable to the creator's audience, as it doesn't appear out of nowhere.
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.
In B2B marketing, one-off influencer posts for launches are ineffective and a waste of money. Brands should instead pursue long-term, integrated partnerships with creators who have built entire networks (events, newsletters, social). This approach treats the collaboration as a strategic investment in 'world building' rather than a tactical play.
A powerful first move for a new brand is leveraging community-driven affiliate platforms. By getting the product into the hands of engaged creators in relevant communities, a brand can build authentic word-of-mouth and generate multi-million dollar revenue before ever investing in traditional CRM or paid media channels.
Gamma’s founder personally onboarded early influencers, walking them through the product and brainstorming hooks. This investment treats influencers as extensions of the team, not just a media buy, fostering genuine understanding and authentic promotion in their own voice.