Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

CEO Roger Lynch states that paid influencer marketing feels "fake" to savvy consumers. Blackstone's strategy is to identify and support authentic content creators who already use their product, rather than paying huge sums to influencers who are then easily poached by competitors.

Related Insights

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.

Even when an influencer genuinely loves a product, the "paid partnership" disclosure creates consumer skepticism. This trend diminishes the power of traditional influencers, making authentic user-generated content and genuine testimonials a more trusted source for marketing.

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.

In today's saturated market, one-off influencer posts appear inauthentic. 437's strategy is to build deep relationships with a few creators, ensuring repeated exposure so they become the influencer's "go-to" brand for activewear, establishing genuine credibility.

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.

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.

For a high-trust brand like Thorne, influencer authenticity is non-negotiable. Their paid partnerships are exclusively with athletes who were already using Thorne products due to its NSF certification. This "users first" approach ensures credibility and is a core tenet of their quality-over-quantity strategy.

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.