Skip to main content

Three steps to understanding your influence

One of the key challenges brand marketers are currently facing is understanding the ‘why’ behind campaigns. Sure, data and results can tell us how well something performed, but they can’t tell us why. So far we have been relying on human judgement and analysis to fill this gap.

As we advance our knowledge of campaigns, however, we’ve found that this human judgement is not enough. When it comes to understanding why a social media post was more or less influential than another one, we need to go deeper. We need to look at the behavioral science of a post and see how elements such as body language, communication style and even personal values impact your influence.

At Tailify we’ve built an AI tool called Fides to do just that. Fides analyses thousands of data points per influencer to understand how influential they will be for a given brand. But not everyone can access Fides or build their own AI tool, so we’ve broken down three of the most important considerations it takes into account to understand your influence.

You can use these three tools to help scale and improve your campaigns over time.

1. Understand what moves your market

We don’t mean mapping out your target market in terms of demographics. We mean going deep and finding out what motivates your market. What elements of your influencer posts motivate your market to take action? Understanding the impact of the hundreds of individual attributes of your content is the key to wielding this influence.

Take a video that is promoting a sex toy, for example. You may have one account that talks about the performance, battery life and materials, and one that spoke about how she introduced the sex toy into her relationship and opens up about her personal sex life. Interestingly, the latter post performed better and behavioral analysis tells us this is due to the vulnerability of the influencer.

When buying a product so personal, we found that the market valued this honest approach compared to a performance review. For this client, the personal stories that influencers told about their product were the posts that drove the best results.

2. Stop buying attention, start earning trust

The days are gone where you could buy a billboard and shove your brand in your customer’s face to drive sales. It is no longer enough to command our attention, you also need your customer to trust your communication. Only with attention and trust can you create influence.

The influencers you work with have built their audience through years of work and content creation, so they know what resonates with their audience and what performs well. When they recommend a product or service to their audience, they are putting their reputation on the line too as their recommendation creates trust. Respecting this is one of the most important things a brand can do to create influence.

3. Align your values

Understand the relationship between your influencer and their audience. What are their values? What does their audience expect from them? Ensuring that you align with these will create an authentic and valuable long-term relationship.

By creating a profile’s values score that identifies the core values of any one person, you can test how closely your brand aligns with an influencer. Our testing demonstrated that the values congruence between an influencer and a brand is predictive of the performance of collaboration. The more aligned your values, the higher the performance of the influencer.

Now... do this 100,000,000 times.

To truly be able to wield this power requires a sophisticated system that brings together behavioral science data science and data engineering. No human brain can analyze an influencer in the level of detail required at the scale that’s required to find the best one, but hopefully these ideas can help you get started to achieve success.

However, if you would like to try out Fides to analyze your campaigns and better understand your influence, then get in touch with Tailify. We are offering a workshop that is usually reserved for clients to every brand. For your free influence audit we will review over 100+ content topics within our database and analyze areas around influencer topic authority, product-community relevance, salesmanship, credibility, audience buying propensity and integration placement, to name just a few.

You can apply for your influence audit here.

Esme Rice is marketing manager at Tailify.



from News https://ift.tt/3eVO5Qv
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Keala Kanae – Net Worth, Courses, Scam?

Keala Kanae net worth : Keala Kanae is an internet marketer with a net worth of approximately $3 million dollars. Digital marketing seems like a perfect way to make money from home at this time when the world hits a global pandemic. There are tons of internet gurus to teach you how to make a 6-figure income monthly. Take it from Keala Kanae of Fullstaq Marketer – the same guy behind AWOL Academy. At the same time, you’ve heard some reviews from past customers before and would like to know whether diving with Kanae is a good idea. Is it worth the time, effort, and investment with him? Will your expertise and income expand given the tricks mentioned in their books? Keala Kanae Net Worth According to Forbes and Huffpost , Kanae earned his first $1 million in AWOL’s first year. In 2017, his net worth grew to a massive $30 million. Keala Kanae’s net worth is somewhere between $30 million to $50 million. Who is Keala Kanae? Probably you’ve come across his ads on Facebook and YouT...

What is a Local Citation? Local SEO

In simple SEO terms, a local citation refers to any mention of your company online. This could be in a business directory, or on an industry-specific site, a blog or any other local website. Although local citations can help you rank in local search results, they are no longer a major ranking factor . However, they are still worth considering in order to promote your business. Common citations you are likely to already know of include listings on business directory websites such as Yell or Thomson Local . A complete citation should include the name, address and phone number of your business. Local citations do not always include a link to your site although they are more valuable if they do. What do they do? Citations help rank your Google Local Pack listing (this was formerly called Google+ Local map) by providing Google with credible sources of information about your business. Citations tell Google that your business exists, is legitimate and that what you say about it is accur...

The beginner’s guide to semantic search: Examples and tools

Ever since Google’s Hummingbird, the term “semantic search” has been thrown around a lot. Yet, the concept is often misunderstood. What is semantic search and how it helps SEO efforts? When people speak to each other, they understand more than just words. They understand the context, non-verbal cues  (facial expressions, nuances of the voice, etc.) and so much more. It comes naturally, so we don’t really appreciate how difficult it is to explain what is being communicated without the help of all “beyond-words” signals. Factors that make the lives of both Google and SEO so difficult Google is trying (and often struggling) to understand what it is that their users want (without actually seeing or hearing them) SEOs are trying to reverse-engineer what it is that Google managed to understand from their users’ queries and how to build pages that meet those mysterious criteria. As Google’s algorithm is getting more mature, it is becoming even more difficult to decode what...