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When internal processes are too slow for timely social content, partnering with creators offers a strategic advantage. Brands are often struck by the speed at which influencers can ideate, script, and produce content. This agility is a key benefit beyond just reach and relevance.
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.
If you lack video production skills, use Meta's Creator Marketplace to hire influencers. They provide built-in trust and scroll-stopping power, serving as a 'cheat code' for high-performing ad creative.
The primary value of working with smaller creators is not their audience reach, but their ability to produce authentic content at scale. This content can then fuel paid media campaigns, which is the biggest driver of growth in the influencer marketing industry today.
Brands typically focus on mega-influencers due to the high administrative cost of managing many small creators. BitCast automates the entire campaign process, removing this friction. This allows brands to efficiently tap into the "99%" of smaller creators, who often have higher trust and engagement with their audiences.
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.
In today's algorithm-driven landscape, excellent content is the price of entry. When starting a social team, prioritize hiring a skilled content creator over a social media manager. You can build a strategy around great content, but a great strategy can't save mediocre content that won't get seen.
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.
Brands struggling with the bandwidth to manage creators should shift their mindset. Viewing creators as human partners, rather than fungible "media units" or "affiliate links," is crucial. This requires both technology that empowers them and dedicated support to build authentic relationships.
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.
Involve creators early by giving them exclusive previews. This makes them feel like valued partners, not just hired talent, generating genuine excitement that translates into more authentic and powerful promotional content for their audience. It's a key step to improving results.