Stop Using Engagement Rate to Judge an Influencer’s Value
In the past year, global brands have massively increased their influencer marketing budgets and it is projected that the global figure for influencer marketing spend will grow to $8.08 billion by the end of 2020. Recent research has also shown that brands now dedicate around 20% of their total digital marketing budget to influencer marketing. After years of relying on vanity metrics such as likes and followers, it’s becoming clear that these are now outdated and do not deliver ROI. Instagram is currently testing out a feature that prevents users from seeing how many ‘likes’ posts have and if this rolls out this could spell the end of one of the most used metrics in the business; engagement rate. This change from Instagram is just part of a wider shift in the social media game. Just because an influencer is savvy about what content to create to harvest those elusive likes, this does not necessarily mean that they will be creating content that aligns with a brand’s objectives. Ultimately likes are an extremely superficial metric and are not a good reference point for the quality of content. Removing the visibility of likes puts a stronger emphasis on campaigns that drive results like brand awareness or click-throughs. This is what we need to be tracking rather than engagement.As brands get more familiar with the concept of influencer marketing, they need to look beyond vanity metrics and dig deeper into what influencer reach really is by looking at geographies, and other performance indicators to judge an influencer’s value.