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Influencer marketing trends: Brands willing to pay YouTubers £67,000+ per video

UK marketers are willing to pay YouTube influencers up to and in excess of £67,000 per video, rising to £75,000 for a celebrity influencer Facebook post, according to new research.

The study, by Rakuten Marketing, found that the majority of marketers express uncertainty around how fees should be calculated and most don’t know if the posts they’re paying for are driving sales

Other key findings include:

• Marketers are now prepared to pay Snapchat stars as much as £53,000 per Snap.

• Despite the amount of money being shelled out 86% of marketers admit they aren’t entirely sure how influencer fees are calculated and 38% cannot tell whether a particular campaign drives sales.

However this does not mean a slowing down in influencer spending anytime soon: 75% of respondents anticipate their spending on such influencer campaigns to rise over the next year and over a third (35%) expect it will increase by more than 50%.

The findings unveil the unprecedented value premium brand marketers now associate with celebrity influencers who carry over one million followers. In the case of premium fashion marketers, the payable fee per post rises to over £160,000, highlighting the perceived importance of social media by professionals working for high-end retailers.

Post for post, marketers are prepared to pay celebrity influencers on Facebook more than their renowned YouTube peers by 12% on average, offering YouTubers £67,000 per video that mentions their brand. While ranked fifth among the major social platforms including Twitter and Instagram, marketers are now prepared to pay Snapchat stars as much as £53,000 per Snap.

In contrast to the staggering fees celebrity influencers are able to charge, 86% of marketers admit they aren’t entirely sure how influencer fees are calculated and 38% cannot tell whether a particular campaign drives sales.

Despite this, three-quarters (75%) of respondents anticipate their spending on such influencer campaigns to rise over the next year and over a third (35%) expect it will increase by more than 50%.

Big barriers to micro-influencers

For micro-influencers with up to 10,000 followers, the average upper limit marketers are prepared to pay is £1,500 on Facebook. The overall highest paid are YouTubers, where technology marketers will pay up to and above £3,000 for a positive review, unboxing video or demo.

Measuring success based on follower numbers may well explain drastic differences in what marketers are willing to pay micro-influencers. Over half of marketers (54%) demonstrate the impact of influencer marketing by tracking brand reach; the number of followers and engagements (shares, likes etc.) Only 20% of marketers claim they are able to demonstrate the impact of influencers through indirectly influenced sales.

Who holds the power?

While 59% of marketers state the influencers they work with will take guidance from them around best practice, 56% of premium fashion marketers admit to a situation in which influencers hold all of the power. For example, only 20% of marketers state influencers are prepared to follow their lead when it comes to guidance around billing.

Less than a third (29%) believe that the influencers they work with are entirely concerned whether their content drives sales for the brand.

Interestingly, when asked what would encourage marketers to invest more in an influencer programme, greater transparency and better reporting of influencer contribution to sales now rank as the highest factor (50%).

James Collins, Rakuten Marketing’s SVP/managing director, global attribution, comments, “Influencer marketing can be hugely effective but marketers are commissioning expensive posts without understanding the real impact on the purchase journey. It’s essential that marketers question influencer fees and use attribution tools to measure the effect of this activity in order to create strong, value-driven relationships between brands and influencers.”

Calculating credit where it’s due

Current reliance on brand reach to determine the impact of influencers appears to be rooted in the low adoption of more advanced attribution models. 60% admit they don’t currently use an attribution model to assign credit for influencer sales

Of those who are using attributed reporting, 21% admit to using last click, with a further 24% relying purely on first click. The most popular model for influencer marketing is linear, or equal credit (26%), whereby all touchpoints are rewarded the same each time. More advanced systems are scarce, only 11% of marketers have adopted the time decay model which uses the touchpoint closest to sale and the same proportion now use position-based models, whereby 40% of the credit is assigned to first and last interactions.

Collins concludes, “Many influencer campaigns are about awareness and brand positioning. Here, working with brand-relevant influencers that offer the potential of long-term partnerships and ambassadorship is key. Awareness has always been tricky to measure but things are getting more sophisticated. Tools now exist to help brands measure how awareness impacts sales, and to reward them on that basis, taking the understanding of performance beyond simple ‘reach’. Ultimately, creating value-based relationships between brands and influencers – that benefit both parties – means long-lasting and fruitful partnerships.”

Methodology

Rakuten Marketing conducted research with Morar Research in July 2017 among 200 marketers across the UK working directly on influencer programmes. The research categorised respondents by industry including Premium Fashion, Mainstream Fashion, Premium Beauty, Mainstream Beauty, Homewares, Other Retail, Electronics, Travel, FMCG.

Source: http://rakutenmarketing.com.

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