In a sleek, elegant and minimalist world of design spearheaded by Jony Ive (product), Tom Ford (fashion) and Zaha Hadid (architecture), to name but a few, who would guess that the chunky, clunky and colourful Dr Dre’s Beats headphones would become such a hit?
For a teen target audience, there is also an imaginary world of muscular, good-looking and righteous superheroes and who better than Olympians to become the poster boys and girls of this sonic wearable device that promises you’ll “hear all the music”.
Dr Dre made its mark on the 2012 London Olympics with the idea of sending athletes special versions of his Beats headphones, complete with personalisation and decked out in national colors. Boom! It was as if those headphones were the source of superpowers to those men and women breaking world records while simultaneously looking so stylish.
And, Dre did it again! Days before the beginning of the 2014 Brazil World Cup, the five-minute film ‘The game before the game’ (TGBTG) was released, featuring Brazil’s Neymar, Germany’s Götze and Holland’s Van Persie, among other soccer stars.
Celebrity status, however, could be facing the beginning of the end of its mystique and appeal. Andy Warhol’s prophecy has been fulfilled and nowadays literally anyone can be a public figure, contributing to the commoditisation of this ‘influencer’s class’. What follows, as it could not be different, is disruption.
An article published by the Australian Financial Review, recently, stated that independent bloggers overtook celebrities as key social media influencers. This finding came from Brand Data – a new daily ranking index of digital and social media identities and 5000 brands – that revealed that, “Australia’s top six bloggers now have a larger combined audience than the highest-selling magazine, newspaper and TV program collectively”.
Brand Data CEO Georgie Summerhayes notes that, “many bloggers now have significantly higher audience engagement levels than celebrities”. For those working in medialand and especially in a PR or search function or division, blogger outreach campaigns have never been so hot! Clients crave for authentic connections to their audiences and bloggers look and feel more like everyday people.
Besides that, blogger talent has improved dramatically which, added to their cost-effectiveness, becomes a more compelling investment than the very costly and unpredictable world of celebrity management. Moreover, by using effective research and data analysis it’s possible to deploy blogger outreach strategies targeting larger audiences with more relevant content and delivering campaigns with higher engagement without the costs associated with celebrity endorsement.
But what are the rules we should use to maximise bloggers’ influence? Just having a high number of followers is just not enough. According to Ipsos KMG Ad Watch Analysis, 10 out of 15 of the most recalled and liked ads were supported by an endorser that was well-aligned to a brand. But choosing the right personality is no easy task.
Under this new reality of producing and influencing through content, there should be a mix of casting (the process used to select celebrities) and recruiting (the process used to select bloggers) because beyond producing their own blog content, superstar bloggers may also be required to act, speak in public as well as engage with other influencers to cross-sell their sway to bigger audiences.
A few of those rules could be defined by:
1. Credibility
The endorsers’ ability to transfer a certain degree of expertise and trustworthiness; ensure your blogger is a proven expert.
2. Attractiveness
When the endorser conveys a sense of affinity, popularity and likeability; reading a blog should ideally feel like catching up with a friend.
3. Value transfer
Happens when meaning is offered via personality and lifestyles; ideally the blogger should be part of the lifestyle he/she is blogging about to ensure audiences are neither being patronized nor underrepresented.
4. Flexibility
The capability of acting consistently across different media and interactions, leveraging the brand holistically. From static blogs to live tweets or live streams a blogger should be able to perform consistently.
5. Data-led
While celebrities represent projections of a social unconscious, search data can ensure bloggers actively play a part on the reality they blog about. By understanding what people are searching for it is possible to define what ‘type’ of blogger one should reach and by filtering your blogger shortlist against highest scoring domain authority ensures impact goes beyond existing consumers, attracting new ones.
An endorser’s appropriateness to leverage a brand will be a result of the above factors. Traditional partnerships like Nike and Michael Jordan, George Clooney and Nespresso or even Omega and James Bond still are valuable but this model is gradually being disrupted by a more cost-effective alternative. The more focused, tech savvy and less expensive professional bloggers have emerged to become 21st century’s merchants of influence.
*This post was originally published on Marketing Magazine.