Influencer Marketing Is Dead: Long Live Creator Marketing

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the ultimate guide to creator marketing

As it turns out, audiences are smarter than they’re often given credit for. They can sense when an influencer’s recommendation is more about the paycheck than the product. 

Authenticity has become the cornerstone of consumer trust. As audiences increasingly crave genuine connections and transparent recommendations, the old tactics of influencer marketing just don’t cut it anymore. 

No longer are viewers willing to be passive consumers of content that jars with an influencer’s established persona or niche. When a health guru suddenly promotes fast food or a travel vlogger breaks stride to sell insurance, the incongruity doesn’t just induce eye rolls; it incites skepticism.

The evolved, more authentic cousin of influencer marketing is creator marketing. This paradigm shift is not just about changing titles or rebranding; it’s about transforming how brands engage with personalities online. But what sets it apart? And why should businesses pay attention?

The Problem with Creative Control

As more companies dove into influencer marketing, audiences increasingly felt put off by veiled attempts to replicate natural recommendations. This is because audiences can tell when ad placements are inauthentic, regardless of how familiar they are with an influencer and their content. These paid ads are obvious because they feel clunky and scripted while also lacking the personal touch that established the influencer’s platform in the first place. 

A significant contributing factor to the downfall of influencer marketing is the brand’s excessive control over the creative aspect of the content. With brand managers dictating the messaging, tone, and even aesthetic, posts often stuck out like a sore thumb against the influencer’s usual content. It was advertising masquerading as an authentic endorsement, and audiences, increasingly attuned to such tactics, were not buying it—literally and figuratively.

What is Creator Marketing?

Creator marketing is about developing a collaborative environment where the influencer—now more appropriately termed “creator”—actively contributes to the narrative and presentation of the brand message. 

Why is this approach so revolutionary?

Because it aligns perfectly with what modern audiences crave: authenticity. In creator marketing, brand messages don’t feel like intrusions; they feel like natural extensions of the creator’s own content. 

Take, for instance, our campaign for the mobile app Cooking Fever, where we worked with a YouTube creator. The result? A staggering 20 million views and pennies on the dollar for customer acquisition costs.

In our Cooking Fever digital campaign, we partnered with high-profile personalities like Khloé Kardashian and Rachel Levin, both of whom have massive, loyal followings. Instead of being just another restaurant-themed mobile game, it became the game that featured Khloé Kardashian and Rachel Levin.

The How Matters More Than The Who

While some argue that “creators” are those exclusively dedicated to creating content, we contest that it’s more about how a brand engages with an individual rather than their professional designation. A creator can be a chef, a fashion blogger, or even a physicist—what matters is the synergy between the creator’s authentic voice and the brand’s message.

Practical Steps for Transitioning to Creator Marketing

Adding creator marketing to your strategy begins by understanding what creators can bring to your brand’s table, leveraging each other’s strengths and filling in any gaps where necessary. Are you trying to access a specific market? Is a single viral hit more important than a stable cadence of content distribution? What is the influencer hoping to achieve through this partnership?

To achieve your B2B marketing goals, you need to identify what makes the influencer connect with their audience and find ways to tap into those skills while also remaining flexible and open to their ideas.

Assess Your Current Strategy

How do we transition from influencer to creator marketing effectively? The first step is introspection. Audit your existing influencer relationships and campaigns. Are they delivering the ROI you expected? Are audiences engaging in a meaningful way? If the answers lean towards ‘no,’ you’ve got your work cut out for you.

Pivot, Don’t Overhaul

Don’t think of this transition as a complete overhaul but rather as a pivot. You’ve already built relationships with influencers; now it’s time to deepen those relationships by empowering them as creators. Provide them with the creative freedom to integrate your brand in a way that feels authentic to their audience. This doesn’t mean you need to give up complete control. You still want to ensure your brand’s message and goals are at the center of the campaign, so set some ground rules before you begin. 

Let creators know what you like about their content and ask them to use their creative liberty to highlight those elements. As you work through the campaign, encourage frequent communication, establish guidelines, allow space for revisions, and work together to achieve a final product you’re both happy to share. Remember, the best brand stories are co-authored, not dictated.

Metrics that Matter

Moving to a creator-centric model doesn’t mean throwing your KPIs out the window. It means recalibrating them to better align with the new objectives. Are you looking for engagement? Focus on metrics like shares, comments, and qualitative audience feedback. Is your aim to lower customer acquisition costs? Then, closely monitor the efficacy of your creator collaborations in bringing in new consumers at a lower price point.

Like any emerging trend, creator marketing comes with its share of risks. The increased creative freedom for creators could potentially lead to brand messages that miss the mark. But the potential rewards—higher engagement rates, lower CAC, and, most importantly, greater trust between brands and audiences—far outweigh the risks. 

Whether you’re a start-up aiming to make a splash or an established enterprise looking to refresh your engagement strategy, the principles apply across the board. Welcome creators as extensions of your team with their own unique skill sets rather than brushing them off as third-party contributors. This will unlock their full potential and help you deliver an organic partnership that resonates with both audiences to authentically fit each other’s content, build brand trust and awareness, and enhance your brand goals. 

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Day 6: How to Stay Relevant on Dark Social (Extra Credit)

Ready for some extra credit? I’m about to throw you some jaw-dropping stats.

In today’s B2B landscape, thought leadership content is more important than ever.

But B2B brands aren’t going all in. Why?

It isn’t as easy to track as other initiatives.

Here’s the thing, though: 

Even if it’s hard to measure, it’s still meaningful.

According to the 2024 Edelman-LinkedIn B2B Thought Leadership Impact Report, 52% of decision-makers and 54% of C-level executives spend over an hour a week consuming thought leadership content. 73% report trusting this content more than marketing materials.

And they don’t leave comments. They don’t hit the like button. 

They share it on dark social, privately. 

The impact is undeniable.

75% of decision-makers have explored a product or service they weren’t considering after consuming thought leadership content, and 60% realized their organization was missing an opportunity thanks to it.

If you thought those numbers sounded impressive, wait until you read this: 

90% are more receptive to sales outreach from companies that share consistent, high-quality thought leadership.

86% are more likely to include these companies in the RFP process (seat at the table, anyone?), and 60% are willing to pay a premium to work with them. 

You can’t make this up!

As long as B2Bs continue to choose the merely measurable over the meaningful, they’ll keep missing golden opportunities. Now that you know, you can stop your brand from falling into this trap. Stay vigilant by frequently asking yourself these 4 questions: 

Question 1: How does our thought leadership content support our overall business goals and objectives?

Action: Ensure that your thought leadership content strategy is aligned with your company’s overarching business objectives, such as increasing market share, driving revenue growth, or establishing your brand as an industry leader.

Result: Ensure alignment with business objectives.

Question 2: Does our thought leadership content address the most pressing challenges, questions, and aspirations of our target audience?

Action: Conduct thorough research to understand the needs, preferences, and pain points of your target audience. Develop thought leadership content that provides valuable insights, solutions, and perspectives that resonate with their specific challenges and goals.

Result: Stay focused on customer needs.

Question 3: How can we track and measure the engagement and impact of our thought leadership content, even if it’s not as straightforward as other marketing metrics?

Action: Implement a comprehensive measurement framework that goes beyond simple metrics like likes and comments. Track indicators such as time spent on page, scroll depth, content downloads, newsletter sign-ups, and referral traffic. Use surveys and feedback loops to gather qualitative insights from your audience on how your content has influenced their perceptions and decisions.

Result: Accurately track engagement and impact.

Question 4: How can we ensure that our thought leadership content is effectively integrated with our sales and marketing efforts?

Action: Collaborate closely with your sales and marketing teams to develop a cohesive content strategy that supports the entire customer journey. Use thought leadership content to nurture leads, support sales conversations, and establish your brand as a trusted resource. Provide your sales team with the tools and training they need to leverage thought leadership content effectively in their outreach and interactions with prospects.

Result: Synergistic integration with sales and marketing.

And that’s a wrap! You’ve reached the final email of the 5-Day MBA in PR. Congratulations!

You now know more about earned media and PR than the majority of business leaders out there.

Over the past week, you’ve seriously leveled up your knowledge and your game.

On Day 1, you explored different types of PR and learned how to choose what makes sense for you.

On Day 2, you discovered why a strategic distribution plan is vital to the success of earned media efforts.

On Day 3, you identified a crucial media reframe needed for maximizing visibility.

On Day 4, you figured out how to leverage contemporary events to your advantage. 

On Day 5, you connected the dots between PR and sales. 

And today, you learned why thought leadership content is critical—even if it isn’t as easily directly measurable as other initiatives.

This is enough to make you a very savvy business leader when it comes to PR. You should be able to ask the right questions and start driving results! 

And if you found this e-Course helpful, send it to a colleague! It would be the ultimate compliment. 

But the truth is, I can only go so deep in an email course.

So, if you’re wondering how I can work in a deeper capacity with you, there are a few ways I can be of service: 

  1. I can come speak to your company or industry—not just on earned media but on how to actually stay RELEVANT in a world that is changing at the speed of your feed. I’ve spoken for everyone from NASA to Marriott. You can check my availability here.
  2. You can hire my awesome team at Zen Media to execute on behalf of your brand. Day 1 to Day 5 and then some. Here’s what clients have to say about working with us.

I genuinely hope this has been useful for you in your journey.

This isn’t goodbye, but more of an I’ll see you later!

All the best, 

Shama