How to Find the Right Influencers for Your Campaign in 2024

We can only estimate how many influencers there are today – it’s probably somewhere between 3.2 and 37.8 MILLION.

And it’s safe to say that only a tiny fraction of them will be exactly right for your brand and your campaign.

Then how do you separate the wheat from the chaff? How do you find those influencers who can help propel your business forward?

It’s important to answer this question. While we firmly believe in the power of this booming branch of marketing – and the data proves it – we do acknowledge that a lot can go wrong in influencer marketing as well.

So, we created this guide to help you avoid common pitfalls and hire exactly the right influencers for the job. We want you to create awareness for your brand, grow your business, and create great experiences for your fans with influencer marketing – reliably and safely

You do this by choosing the best influencers to represent you.

Here’s how to do it, step-by-step.

To Find the Right Influencers, Do These 3 Important Steps First

If you want to find the best influencer for your campaign, you have to build your foundation properly first. This will help you clarify what kind of influencer (or influencers) you are actually looking for. 

The three steps below will help you lay a great foundation for your influencer marketing campaign

1. Set exact goals for your campaign

Not all campaigns must have the same goal. Each campaign can aim to achieve different metrics, and each can feed into different parts of your brand’s funnel.

The main goals that businesses usually have for their influencer marketing efforts are:

  • Improve the general visibility of your brand and create awareness
  • Gain social media followers and boost engagement
  • Generate leads for your business
  • Increase traffic to your company website or/and build backlinks
  • Conversions, such as email sign-ups
  • Improve your brand’s reputation
  • Generate revenue and social selling

Determining your main goals is an important prerequisite to developing a strategy for your campaign. It will then be much easier for you to pick the influencers who best fit into that strategy.

2. Determine your target platforms & campaign formats 

Establishing goals in step one will help you determine which platforms make the most sense for you to have influencers make content for. This step will help you find those influencers who are most aligned with your planned campaign – because they’re naturals at the platform you’ll be using.

Here’s a quick breakdown of which type of audience you will find on each of the social media platforms:

TikTok: Particularly popular with Gen Z (other age groups are definitely on the rise though)

Instagram: A high percentage of Millenials are on IG

Facebook: Great if you want to target the older, wealthier Gen X population

The right influencer for your campaign will already be successful on the platform you’re targeting. If your brand appeals to a wider, more diverse audience, it might make sense to seek influencers who are active on multiple platforms – or hire one for each.

Also consider how you’d like to collaborate with and incentivize your chosen influencers. There are many ways of working with an influencer. Let’s look at a few different ones:

  • The influencer becomes an affiliate marketer for your brand, often combined with giving out discount codes to their followers
  • They host giveaways of your products for their audience
  • They present products that you’ve given them for free
  • They make their usual posts advertised as “sponsored by” your brand
  • They take over your company’s account for a day
  • They enter into a long-term contract with you and become ambassadors for your brand

The right kind of influencer will be able to accommodate you in the exact formats you choose.

3. Establish your messages & themes

Next, get clear on what kinds of messages you want to send in your influencer campaign and what themes they will fall under.

We divide these into four different content pillars which will make your messaging diverse and impactful.

  1. The Brand Pillar

Your brand is the focus. This pillar has content that revolves around your brand, whether the posts are high level, informative, funny, or inspirational.

  1. The Product Pillar

This type of content features a specific product – or line of products – such as a fashion brand’s new spring line. This could be done in an interactive Q&A or tutorial, for example.

  1. The Experience Pillar

This is where you highlight people experiencing your brand, such as influencers shopping in the store or cooking with your cookware.

  1. The Moment Pillar

Celebrating special dates, from birthdays to holidays and anniversaries. You could feature a virtual and/or physical Easter egg hunt, or show influencers receiving customized birthday packages.

You need someone who can make these messages and themes come to life in the way that you want – and once you’re crystal clear on them, you’re much more likely to pick the right influencer for the job!

Now that you know your strategy for your campaign that the influencer must be able to carry out… 

Let’s dive into relevancy: How much does the influencer align with the niche and the topics surrounding your brand?

 

How to Pick the Most Relevant Influencers for Your Campaign

To do this, it’s helpful if you’ve already created your ideal influencer persona: The perfect person who would be the best fit for your audience and your campaign. 

Vlog von Influencerin

They:

  • Are of the right age to fit your target audience
  • Possess the correct kind and amount of knowledge around your brand’s niche
  • Are the right size for your budget and for maximum impact
  • Have the right personality and level of charisma for what you want to communicate
  • Dress and behave in ways that fit your brand
  • Make content that’s already in line with your brand values

In short, they should represent your brand identity very well – as if they were a natural part of it!

How to Guarantee That You’ll Find the Best Influencers

As vital as the issue of how relevant the influencer is to your brand, is the question: Do they have authority? Both online and in your company’s niche.

Pick an authority in their field and your campaign will have a great impact. But if you fail to vet their authority first, you can run into all sorts of potential problems.

How do you pick the most authoritative influencers?

By taking the following steps, you can rest assured you’ve made a good choice working with this person and your campaign will be successful.

They have a quality audience

A quality audience is committed to the creator – they engage readily with each of their posts, and their content is a part of their life that they take quite seriously! Also, a quality audience is not composed of people who are just there for entertainment and would never support the influencer financially … but they’re actually in a position to buy the products that he or she might recommend, and would do so happily.

Social media manager Jason Francis, of Social Media Samurai, says that “Quality trumps all. I know people with 30,000 followers struggling to raise $500 in a GoFundMe campaign, while people with 2,000 to 3,000 followers can move and influence them to the tune of $25,000.”

They make quality content

In today’s day and age on social media, it’s not enough to only post selfies with some meaningless text. A “sponsored post” shouldn’t consist of just a random shout-out to your brand or the mindless placement of your product. 

In fact, it’s quite the opposite – the best influencers are consistently creating content that’s captivating, creative, and authentic

What does this mean?

It means they care enough about their audience to craft pieces of media and messages that really resonate. The content hits on their followers’ dreams and desires, addresses things they’ve recently had on their minds often, it can even shock, fascinate, and pull them out of boredom or sadness.

Making creative content means finding new connections, inventing new ways to get a message across, combining different forms of media, and injecting novelty by collaborating with different people in their niche.

Above all, they have to stay authentic while doing it. Their loyal followers want to feel like they’re “one of them” – that they’re a close, trusted friend. A good influencer will achieve this by speaking in a common tone of voice, keeping their content relatable, caring about and engaging with the audience, and generally staying humble in spite of their success, fame, and status.

Social Media Content

How do you vet these things?

First of all, you can obviously check out their social media profiles and study the posts they’ve been publishing so far. 

Secondly, see if they have a media kit available that shows off their best work and gives a good impression of both the “vibe” and the quality of their content.

Their influence is real

Fake followers are a real problem on social media. What good is it if the influencer you’re working with has 100k followers, but most of them have been bought from some shady service? Not much good at all, apart from having a nice big number in their profile.

Yes, social media outlets have been cracking down on these things, but fake followers are still common on all platforms.

How do you spot fake followers?

1. Manually go through their list of followers

Potential red flags you should look for are profiles with weird or unrealistic-sounding names, many profiles that are not followed by anyone, and profiles with no user image or something that looks like a stock photo.

Additionally, if the majority of their followers appear to be from non-English-speaking countries, although their content is English, that might be a sign that the followers are not real.

2. Check the engagement on their posts

A real engagement rate for social media is between 2-3.5%. So if you see a profile with an audience of 100k, but their engagement is consistently low, their followers may have been bought. They should realistically be getting thousands of likes per post and hundreds of comments.

3. Use a tool to check for fake followers

In addition to doing the “common sense check” we outlined above, you can use one of many influencer credibility tools such as grin.co, inbeat.co, and modash.io to let a fraud-finding algorithm confirm what you’ve observed by looking through their profiles yourself.

Their reputation and background are flawless

You want to carefully vet the influencer’s background. Make sure they’ve had no reputation-destroying scandals, shady business connections, or even a criminal history.

A simple way to do this is to search for “influencer name + scandal,” “name + controversy,” or “name + convicted” on Google.

Could they be damaging to your brand?

Do they have business dealings that might interfere with your campaign or potentially damage your brand’s reputation?

It’s important to check for this because the costs of falling for a fraudulent influencer could be very high.

Obviously, these things are unacceptable and any sign of these issues will quickly make you rule out ever working with that particular influencer. 

Ideally you’ll want to find someone whose ethics and values are impeccable – in line with your brand.

Where to Find the Right Influencers – Platforms & Tools

Look for influencers in-house and among your fans

Most likely, many of your employees are already publicly advocating for your brand. You should look to channel and grow that enthusiasm! After all, who better to showcase what your brand stands for and be the credible faces of it than the people who built it?

Also, your leadership team is part of the face of your brand. Their role as social influencers is becoming increasingly important. One way to help senior executives successfully pick up this role is through personal branding.

Finally, your consumers can become a form of influencers as well. User-generated content (UGC) from brand fans and advocates can be very valuable and boost community engagement.

Each of these groups can be powerful brand advocates, but when combined effectively, the result is synergistic, delivering a massive impact.

Manually search on web platforms

Who’s already interacting with your brand?

Some of your top followers might have sizable, related audiences themselves. If they’re already liking, commenting on, and sharing your brand’s posts, they might be a perfect fit for a collaboration. If you see your brand mentioned without it being sponsored content, that’s a great initial sign!

Think about your industry’s icons

It could be a good idea to check out the most well-known influential people in your niche – yes, they’re more expensive to work with than others, but they also have the biggest reach and authority.

Set up a Google Alert

It’s possible to create an alert in Google so that anytime your brand, a topic related to your niche, or the industry in general is mentioned, you get notified. This is a valuable option for finding those people who are immersed in your field, are always talking about it, and are ‘hip’ to the latest trends. These might be influencers you’d want to work with.

Looking for Hashtags

Hashtags

By searching hashtags on different social media platforms, especially Instagram, you can find people in your niche and those who are already working as influencers. 

Do this by searching trending hashtags, hashtags about aspects of your field, and hashtags like #sponsored or #ad that tell you someone is working with brands.

Speakers at events

Usually, the most influential and authoritative people in your industry are paid to speak at industry events. Become familiar with the speakers on the list at conventions and other events and see who you could imagine working with for an influencer marketing campaign.

Look for blogs and niche authority sites

Search for websites and blogs that are written by influencers in your niche. Do this by typing in keywords related to your brand into Google and adding the word “blog.” There are also tools that automate this task, as we’ll address later.

Followers of other brands in your space

By doing a bit of competitive analysis, you can also find good influencers for your brand. Check out who is most engaged on other brand’s profiles and who has a good audience themselves. These influencers show they are invested in and proactive about marketing – which will be great if they’re working with you!

Find influencers with a similar audience as you

If you know your target audience, you know what other topics they’re interested in and which influencers in those niches they follow. For example, if your company sells popcorn, your audience might be interested in other related things, like watching movies. It might make sense to partner up with influencers in the movie space, so you can reach your audience in another sphere.

Set up a contact page for prospective influencers on your company’s website

If any influencers are browsing your website, they will see that you’re open to working with them and contact you. You just need to create the page on your site and provide a contact form – and they’ll do the outreach themselves!

Browse LinkedIn 

Some influencers also have active LinkedIn profiles. To find them, look for the job description of “content creator.”

Search forums in your niche

In some niches, there are good online forums where the latest in your industry is being discussed. Look for those people who are constantly discussing and providing value, and who seem to have authority and influence within the community. Reach out to those people to become part of your influencer marketing campaign.

If you’ve gone the manual route and are not yet satisfied with your results – or if you’d rather not do all that work yourself – there are two other ways to find the right influencers for your campaign:

You can use influencer-finding tools or hire an influencer marketing agency.

Use influencer-finding tools

Alexa’s Audience Overlap Tool

This is a tool to find competitor sites that your audience also likes to visit. These could be run by influencers you could potentially hire.

Influencity

Influencity is an “Influencer Relationship Management” tool. It allows you to find, analyze, and organize influencers, as well as manage campaigns and forecast and measure the results of those campaigns.

Upfluence

Another full-scale influencer marketing platform, Upfluence offers campaign management, product placement outreach, influencer event management, and payment and transaction services. 

Post For Rent

Post For Rent call themselves the “one-stop-shop for influencer marketing.” Their services include influencer search, an influencer marketplace, the NEXT business manager, and managed service.

Hype Auditor

With Hype Auditor, you get influencer analytics, influencer discovery, campaign management, media plans, trends and rankings, and analysis of competitors and the market landscape on social media.

Followerwonk

Created for finding influencers specifically on Twitter, Followerwonk lets you connect with those authoritative power users on the platform. It can not only search Twitter bios globally, but also analyze and compare accounts to find the right influencers.

Respona

Respona lets you find bloggers who are active in your niche. They will monitor for brand and competitor mentions and automate your influencer outreach.

Hire an influencer marketing agency

If this whole process of finding influencers, vetting them, and reaching out is something you’d rather not do yourself right now – influencer marketing agencies do all of it for you.

A good influencer marketing agency will have:

  • A built-up network and database of relevant and trustworthy influencers
  • A streamlined process for collaborating with brands and influencers
  • A creative eye for which campaigns will have the most impact
  • Proven experience with effective storytelling
  • Seamless campaign management 
  • The expertise and tools to properly analyze campaign metrics
  • An impressive portfolio and positive testimonials from past clients
  • An influencer marketing strategy tailored to your demands and your budget

Obviously, working with an agency will cost more than doing the work yourself. On the other hand, you are free to focus on other tasks in your business and can trust that their proven process will give you a good return on your investment in your influencer marketing campaign.

Conclusion

There you have it: Your guide to finding the right influencers for your campaign this year. If you follow the steps outlined above, we are confident that you will be able to use the proven power of influencer marketing to bring measurable growth to your business.

What is a Social Media Influencer? Full Definition 2024

Table of Contents of a Social Media Influencers Definition article

  • The definition of “Social Media Influencer”
  • Who we could define as the first paid influencer
  • The definition of the modern influencer on social media
  • What qualifies someone as an influencer?
  • What is an example of a social media influencer?
  • The power of social media influencers – defined
  • What exactly does a social media influencer do?
  • Is being a social media influencer defined as a job?
  • Do influencers make a lot of money?
  • How influencers wield their influence: A definition
  • Defining the different categories of influencers
  • Influencers as defined by social media platform
  • Defining the most popular fields influencers work in
  • Conclusion

The term “influencer” is everywhere now, and it seems like every kid (even many adults!) wants to “work as an influencer” today.

But, is there any substance behind that term?

Or is “influencer” just another buzzword from the young generation? 

Let’s get rid of the ambiguity surrounding that word.

We’ll take a deep dive into the definition, what an influencer is, what they do, and how it all works.

Diving in… 

Who is an influencer? Broadly speaking, you’re considered an influencer if you have authority on a given topic. People listen to you and they’ll even emulate you because they respect and look up to you.

The definition of “influential”

What you do when you influence someone is “to cause someone to adopt or change a behavior, belief, or opinion.” 

When you’re an influential person, you can have this effect on a considerable number of people. You could call them your followers.

This influence can be used for many purposes. An influencer can steer his or her followers to take certain actions, start thinking in a certain way, or start taking out their wallets.

You can use influence for good or bad. While many influential people are ethical and responsible, some are not, and they can lead their followers to make bad decisions

Who we could define as the first paid influencer

While influencer marketing has been booming in recent years – its market size shot up from CHF1.7 Billion in 2016 to CHF13.8 Billion in 2021, the concept has been around for a very long time. The first recorded paid celebrity endorsement, what we could call the first case of influencer marketing in modern times, was Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle, who got hired to publicly endorse the Turkish cigarette brand Murad, in the year 1905.

The definition of the modern influencer on social media

The nature of media and celebrity has since transformed – but influencer marketing is going stronger than ever.

Nowadays, it’s no longer just celebrities who are acting as influencers endorsing products to their fans. Today influencers come in all shapes and sizes (as we’ll talk about later). Anyone with a sizable audience on social media who is trusted for their expertise, or even just liked for entertainment value, holds the power to change minds and should be considered an influencer. 

They can steer people’s opinions and buying decisions – because they are liked, and/or have authority in their niche. 

Brands love influencers, because their endorsements are a great way to generate awareness and build trust with an audience they might not otherwise be able to reach as easily and convincingly.

This has opened up great opportunities for those willing to put in the work to become social media influencers. Today, many have the goal of working in this unique type of “job.”

What qualifies someone as an influencer?

Anyone with at least a few hundred followers on social media, whose posts get good engagement from their audience, can be considered an influencer. Also, their content should be focused on a specific topic which they build authority around. 

This way, their audience knows to trust their opinion on this specific topic.

What is an example of a social media influencer?

Every niche has influencers. For example, Taulant aka T-Ronimo on TikTok stands out with over 168k followers. Zeki also focuses on comedy with his Instagram account Swissmeme. On it, he shares typical Swiss situations as memes, causing many laughs among his Swiss community. But other areas are also represented by great Swiss influencers, such as Mimoza in the fashion/beauty category or Martina Bisaz in travel. If you want to get to know more exciting Swiss influencers, you can find an exciting article here.

The power of social media influencers – defined

Influencers can do for a brand what a regular ad can’t do as easily. They can give an authentic endorsement that their audience will actually trust and follow.

“We want to do business with people or brands that we like and have forged a bond with over the years.” – Robert B. Cialdini, author of Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion.

This is why more and more brands are realizing the power of influencer marketing.

Alex Bolen, the chief executive of Oscar De La Renta, said: “It would not be an exaggeration to say that our handbag business has taken off through our engagement with the influencer community. Our production has doubled.”

Influencers get people to act – namely, to pull out their wallets in good faith. And that makes them very powerful. Even if they only have a modest-sized following.

What exactly does a social media influencer do?

It might look easy from the outside. Just take selfies with some products and rake in the money! Right? 

But there’s a lot that has to happen behind the scenes when you’re an influencer:

  • They create and manage their personal brand and their accounts
  • They craft their strategy and plan content
  • They prepare for shooting video and images – clothes, make-up, lighting, choosing the right locations and angles
  • They’re constantly engaging with their audience
  • They deal with existing brand partners and acquire new ones
  • In short: They run a legitimate, full-time business, often with multiple employees

Is being a social media influencer defined as a job?

If we’re being precise, influencers are not employees, but rather entrepreneurs. They are their own small, or in some cases, mid-sized, business. They themselves are responsible for creating everything surrounding their brand, managing it, and growing it. 

Even if they’re working with an agency or in a long-term contract with a brand, they have more responsibilities than many traditional employees. 

In this case, they are acting as a business that is contracting with another. 

Do influencers make a lot of money?

In many cases, yes. Typically, different-sized influencers make between CHF 200 and CHF 100,000 per post. A-list celebrities can even make up to CHF1 Million for one social media post! 

How much exactly they make depends on the niche, audience size, the influencer’s likeability and ability to sell, content quality and frequency, and what kinds of contracts they manage to get from brands.

Four ways influencers can make money

1. Doing affiliate marketing

The influencer endorses a product in their content, and they receive a percentage of any resulting sales.

This type of commission-based marketing is also performance-based.

The more sales the influencer drives, the more they earn for themselves. This is often done through giving out promo codes to their followers that they can enter to get a discount with a brand. The sale is then tied to the influencer’s affiliate account. 

Another way to do this is by providing a special link for the audience, but this works better on some social media platforms than others.

2. Getting money for each post

Content that is published as a collaboration between brands and influencers must be declared as a sponsored post for the transparency. The brand tells influencers which products/services they should talk about and how they should present their product. To ensure that the content is received by the target group, it is important that the influencer is given enough freedom in the creative design so that they can ensure that the posts fit into their feed and come across as authentic. The influencer is paid for the published content, which has been created in collaboration with a brand. How much an influencer earns depends on various factors, e.g. reach, Swiss Reach, content format, etc.

3. Entering into long-term contracts with brands

These relationships can last a year or more. 

The influencer agrees on a certain number of campaigns, pieces of content, mentions etc. and receives payments in return for the duration of the contract

This can be a nice stable income, which in many cases is quite welcome for the influencer who has to always be hustling for next week’s deal.

4. Receiving free products

One of the perks of the social media influencer lifestyle: 

You often get free products to try out and possibly recommend to your followers. In most cases, these products will be yours to keep.

How influencers wield their influence: A definition

Here’s how an influencer’s influence actually plays out in the real world:

Influencers are connectors

They are like nodes in a network that bring together their followers, fellow influencers, and brands.

Because they are experts and leaders in their industry, their power to connect others is immense

This comes with a lot of responsibility on the part of the influencer, by the way. If they start burning the people who trust them by repeatedly giving bad recommendations, their status as an influencer could become permanently damaged.

Influencers are informers

It’s what the internet has been all about since the beginning – efficiently spreading relevant information. 

Today, social media influencers play an important role in spreading information: They keep their fans up to date with new items, developments, and even breaking news. Usually the information being spread by individual influencers is organic and more trustworthy than corporate sources. 

According to a recent survey, influencers are the most trusted source of information and the most influential in the decision-making process, even more so than trade exhibitions or word-of-mouth recommendations.

Moreover, they curate information from different sources to make it more digestible for their audience.

And so, these influencers play a key role in spreading information and relevant messages!

Influencers shape opinions

Lifestyle Influencerin mit Kaffee

While engaging and informing are vital aspects of an influencer’s job, ultimately wielding power is about influencing people’s opinions. And influencers are great at it. They’re charismatic, authoritative, and persuasive. 

Their influence on the audience’s opinions can be immense, particularly if they stay timely, knowledgeable and relevant, make good content, and are careful to not misuse their followers’ trust.

Defining the different categories of influencers

Nano-influencer: Under 5000 followers

You can be a nano-influencer with some hundred social media followers, without much celebrity status. 

These influencers are still a welcome business partner for certain brands, because they don’t command high payouts, or are happy just to receive free products in return for endorsements. This means they can hire many nano-influencers for the price of one macro-influencer.

More importantly, their audience, often made up of mostly their close friends and family, are extremely engaged and trust their opinion greatly. When they recommend something, it holds a lot of weight!

Micro-influencer: 5k-100k followers

We know that bigger isn’t better with influencer marketing, and working with a micro-influencer is a sweet spot between authenticity and affordability on one side and popularity and reach on the other. 

Also, these small types of influencers are usually more available. While most of them do get a fair number of offers, they are usually not overwhelmed with brand deals flooding their inboxes. 

Micro-influencers are the definition of niche authorities. They are experts in their topic of choice and educate their modest following on everything surrounding it. Again, engagement is very high with these micro-influencers, because their audience feels more like a family than a huge disjointed crowd, as big celebrity accounts often do.

Macro-influencer: 100k-1m followers

This is where we get into the territory of massive reach. If a macro-influencer recommends your product, you can be sure that it’ll hit hundreds of thousands of eyeballs. Accordingly, macro-influencers have higher prices, less availability, and higher standards than smaller accounts.

But, crafting the right campaign with a macro-influencer can drive serious awareness and sales, so – done right – it can be an amazing vehicle for business growth.

Mega-influencer: Over 1 million followers

These are actors, musicians, and other A-list celebrities. 

Celebrities might have a huge audience, but often have less influence than smaller influencers: They appear less authentic and often don’t have as much authority and expertise in niche topics.

They are also picky, often difficult to work with, and very expensive. Many brands therefore prefer to work with multiple smaller influencers instead of one mega-influencer.

Influencers as defined by social media platform

Bloggers

The original online experts. Bloggers go deep on their chosen niche topic, and people rely on them for research and product reviews. Some blogs grow so authoritative that they turn into publishing companies rather than simple websites.

Yet, in the beginning, was the single influencer – the one you go to find out the latest and best information around the topic they’re an expert in.

YouTubers

YouTubers use the visual and auditory channel to do a similar thing to bloggers: Educate and inform their audience. But, YouTube videos also usually have more entertainment value than blogs – and influencers use that power to build huge, loyal followings. YouTube videos are usually longer than videos on TikTok and Instagram.

Brand sponsorship can take different forms: Brands can simply get a shoutout at the start and end of the video. In some cases, the influencer will make an entire video testing a product or incorporating a product into the story of the video. 

There are many opportunities for brands to appear – and they love it!

Podcasters

With podcasts being the longest form of online content, they draw a very interested and loyal audience. Hence, sponsoring a show can be very valuable for brands.

Instagrammers

The advent of Instagram’s platform for sharing images and short-form videos is when influencer marketing really blew up as a business.

Viral Instagram Reels are flashy, fancy, and engaging. A strategic product placement or endorsement by the influencer can do wonders for a brand’s marketing efforts

Sponsored Instagram posts are also a great way for influencers to get paid – often handsomely. 

So today most young people aspire to become influencers themselves because they see the cash and status it can bring.

TikTokers

This is the hot young platform, and home to a lot of up-and-coming social media influencers. While TikTok is a more fast-paced platform, people still grow to love and associate with their favorite creators. This opens the door to brand endorsements and influencer sponsorships, similar to other platforms.

Defining the most popular fields influencers work in

Here are some of the niches that influencers choose – most of these are trending, have a large audience, and can be very profitable to create content around.

1. The Business and Money-Making niche

Many people want to be an influencer in this niche, and their quality and ethics are on a spectrum. You can make a lot of money by teaching others about money. There are endless resources and tools to recommend that you can earn substantial commissions for.

2. The Beauty niche

One of the most popular niches for young, often female content creators to be an influencer in. But also becoming more and more important for male creators.  

3. The Fitness and Health niche

This niche is always going strong. It’s also competitive. Many different people have the goal of being health and fitness influencers. Fitness is also a very visual topic, so is well suited to social media.

4.The Cooking and Food niche

People love to look at recipes and cooking videos online – and influencers will provide! Some of these food and cooking accounts grow to millions of followers.

5. The Tech niche

There are always new and expensive products to review. This niche is quite competitive, but can offer great payouts to influencers.

6. The Travel niche

Travel seems to be an evergreen niche that is coming back in 2024 and beyond. Influencers can partner with tour companies, airlines, hotels, and car rental agencies to turn documenting their travels into a money-making activity.

7. The Fashion niche

Fashion modeling nowadays happens more on social media than it does at fashion shows or in print magazines. Consequently, there is good money to be made for influencers representing luxury clothing brands or as affiliates selling accessories, for example.

8. The Parenting niche

This niche is growing as more people get their information from trusted online influencers than from books or other traditional sources, even on topics such as parenting.

9. The Lifestyle niche

A broad, and popular niche. Creators can pick from a number of topics. Although it takes something special to stand out in this niche. An influencer has to be charismatic, successful, creative, or a combination of those in order to make it in this niche.

10. The Pet niche

It seems like cute kitten pictures and videos have always been the most popular thing on the internet. It now goes so much further. Pets have their own Instagram accounts, dog training gurus are everywhere. The growing pet niche is still a good niche to get into.

Conclusion

We hope this helped clear up the question of what an influencer really is! 
If you’re thinking about becoming an influencer yourself – or you’re a business curious about if using influencer marketing might be a good idea for your business – feel free to check out our other articles on these topics or join the email list to receive the latest news and trends around influencers and influencer marketing.

Author: Megan Bozman, Owner @Boz Content Marketing

Kingfluencers goes OMR

At the beginning of May, we experienced two intense but super exciting and above all inspiring days full of infotainment at #OMR23 in Hamburg. 

70k visitors, 4 expo halls with 500+ exhibitors (including Kingfluencers), 7 stages with 800+ speakers, 240 masterclasses, 100 guided tours, and afterparties…

In case you missed our exclusive newsletter or didn’t follow us along on LinkedIn and Instagram, here’s a short recap with our highlights and learnings:

At our Kingfluencers Booth on-site, we were able to have exciting conversations with our customers as well as new brands, creators, and visitors and test their knowledge with our KF Quiz.

In addition, we met many German creators at the Influencer Brunch at WeCreate, met TikTok to further expand our joint partnership and stay ahead of the trends, had many insightful conversations with other exhibitors, tasted our way through the food mile, and celebrated together with brands, creators, and speakers at the afterparties.

Our Key Takeaways

1. SOCIAL SELLING AND EMPLOYER BRANDING FOCUS

Britta Behrens: «Break with the algorithm, sometimes step out of line but stick to it, use it constantly and regularly.»

Great that we just launched our B2B Influencer Marketing Service, where we also offer Corporate Ambassador and Employer Branding programs for B2B clients. B2B influencers can contribute their expertise to help drive brand awareness and support business development by building trust, credibility, and interest around your brand.

2. GOODBYE CREATOR CLICHÉS: The real influencer marketing

Carmushka: «You are not just born as an influencer. Only with hard work you can build such a large, committed community and make a difference.»

As an influencer, you also carry a great responsibility, because you are a role model for many people and become the face of a brand. Let us help you find out which influencers fit your brand and your values. 

As the link between creators and brand, we feel obligated to advocate for more awareness in social media. That’s why we’re especially proud of our partnership with the Conscious Influence Hub. «We have developed a Code of Conduct for influencers which supports them in acting with respect, empathy and transparency. The Code of Conduct will be a key instrument in encouraging all community members to use their influence consciously.»

3. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IS OMNIPRESENT

Frank Thelen: «It is not AI that will take jobs away from people, but those people who can use and operate AI properly will do so, very soon. Time to jump on the “AI hype” (which will obviously last), otherwise you will miss great opportunities.»

Ryan Broderick«AI will not be the end of social media. However, we must learn to distinguish AI-generated content from real content. Visual content that is fake, for example, reveals itself through the intensity of colours of the added person, the person is always placed in the middle of the picture and there is usually not much to see in the background of the picture.»

Luckily, you have subscribed to our newsletter and follow us on LinkedIn, where we always present the latest trends in the industry.

4. COMMUNITY FOCUS IS KEY

Pamela Reif: «Strong communities are essential and target group-oriented communication is crucial.»

Carsten Maschmeyer: «Networking is a constant taking and, above all, giving, something you have to build up and maintain, whether with clients, partners or creators.»

Whether from a corporate or influencer perspective, it’s important that you engage with your community and offer them the content they want to see. We are happy to help you with your Community Management and are also available for tips & tricks in the form of a workshop.

Moreover, with our TikTok service, we can make anyone an expert, and aim to turn any brand into a TikTok rocket with the workshops we offer!

5. SOME INSPIRING QUOTES

Serena Williams: «Go through life by always pushing your limits, never settling for less and always giving your personal best in everything you do!»

Scooter Braun: «It doesn’t matter what you do in life as long as you are passionate about it and happy at the end of the day.»

We also believe that you should follow your dreams and always believe in yourself because only then, you can achieve anything. Are you ready to go #BeyondInfluence with us? Reach out to us anytime.

Do you want more inspiring quotes and exciting talks? Then be sure to check out the recorded live streams on the OMR site.

And according to OMR’s founder, what’s hot?

«The big players for search, cloud, and hardware are still GAFA (Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon), new players have very high market entry barriers. But there is a great fragmentation of the advertising space, everyone wants a piece of the pie, even those who were previously completely active elsewhere. In addition, sports streaming is booming at the moment and one should keep an eye on the climate tech industry; worldwide, 1/4 of venture capital flows into climate tech companies that address the impact of global warming.»

Philipp Westermeyer
founder OMR

OMR's founder. Kingfluencers OMR.

Even though more and more brands are fighting for the scarce resource of their customer’s attention, we help you to stage your perfect ad space with Influencer Marketing and top creators so that your brand stands out from the crowd, for B2C brands from various industries but most recently also for B2B brands.

#OMR23 was a blast!

Exciting talks, inspiring speakers, team building, and a lot of lasting impressions.
See you next year OMR!

Author: Ramona Kälin, Digital Marketing Coordinator @Kingfluencers

Kingfluencers’ Creators Event in Ticino

CIAO TICINO!
KINGFLUENCERS ORGANIZES THE FIRST CREATOR EVENT IN TICINO

The Swiss Digital Influence Agency Kingfluencers points the spotlight at the most important influencers from the Italian-speaking part of Switzerland. To ensure that the creative Ticinesi are not forgotten in other parts of the country, the agency organized a big welcome event for creators from the beautiful Svizzera italiana last week at Lago di Lugano.

Switzerland is more than just Zurich, Bern, or Roger Federer. The Swiss Confederation consists of four beautiful parts of the country. It represents many other languages in addition to the four official ones, which should always be taken into account in national campaigns. The great diversity of little Switzerland is also reflected in the Kingfluencers database; the full-service agency not only employs people from more than ten different countries, but also has influencers from all parts of the country and beyond. In concrete terms, Kingfluencers’ creator database includes over 3,000 creators of various sizes and from a wide range of sectors.

Creator-event in Ticino

In order to draw attention to this diversity, the Digital Influence Agency organized a “Get-together” on October 6, 2022, for around 30 new and familiar Ticino creators. One main aim of the event at the Porto Bello! restaurant in Lugano was to get to know Ticino’s creative influencers and inspiring sides. “The personal exchange with the creators was significant to us,” says the Co-CEO of Kingfluencers, Anja Lapčević. Every artist’s personality is equally valuable, no matter which part of Switzerland the creators come from.

Together with influencers from Italian-speaking Switzerland, such as Yari Copt, Ely Giglio, or Alessandro, the Kingfluencers team wanted to draw attention to the fact that no part of Switzerland should be left out when it comes to campaigns and the entire creator economy. Unfortunately, creators from the “Swiss Sonnenstube” are often forgotten. “The fact that a Swiss agency also takes care of creators from southern Switzerland is not at all self-evident,” says Ticino landscape photographer Daniele Nevano. For the Ticino travel duo, Luke & Martina, such an event in the Southern canton of Switzerland, organized by a Zurich agency, also means a lot: “For us in Ticino, it has always been a bit of a struggle to be considered and respected by the rest of Switzerland,” said Martina and Luke. The Kingfluencers event now shows that the Digital Influence Agency sees a potential market and business perspective in Ticino and trusts the work of the Italian-speaking creators.

More diversity

As part of its six corporate values, Kingfluencers not only wants to draw more attention to creators from the beautiful Svizzera italiana, but also advocates for even more diversity in general. “Diversity is inspiring for everyone,” says Co-CEO Anja Lapčević. Every person is unique and special in their own way and that is what Kingfluencers loves. To inspire is one of the six company values, along with being curious, future-oriented, cooperative, conscious, and multicultural.

«Water Lover Challenge»

The annual internal Kingfluencers team-building event took place one day after the creator event in Ticino. In addition to various workshops, creator Noam Yaron from Western Switzerland was supported in his “Water Lover Challenge“. The whole agency team participated in the extraordinary challenge. “We at Kingfluencers not only try to preach our values but above all try to live them,” says Yoeri Callebaut, Co-CEO about the Kingfluencers’ corporate value of awareness. In collaboration with Biotherm and the Objectif Environment association, the nationwide collection of cigarette ends will take place until October 15, 2022. Kingfluencers has already started the clean-up campaign in Lugano. The result: the largest political municipality in the canton of Ticino is now 1000 cigarette butts cleaner!

Author: Sandra Miletic, Junior Marketing Manager @Kingfluencers