'Influencers possess less clout'
So says Pollara, a Canadian research firm. Nice headline. Except what the research says is that online influencers (bloggers, social media users, etc) have less clout than real world influencers. And that's in consumer markets.
This is evidence of a vocabulary drift that now equates influencers with bloggers. It's symptomatic of a lack of thought over what influencers are and how they work. The fact that a blog gets a lot of hits has no bearing on its influence. Why? Because influence is subject-specific. Hugh McLeod may have influence in social media, wine and suits, but none (as far as I know) in cars, scotch and pets.
The biggest issue I have in the influence of bloggers is that most bloggers that have any influence at all do so over other bloggers. The area that bloggers have most influence, as a group, is blogging and social media.
Most claims of the influence of social media are generic. They talk about the influence on "products" or "brands" or "services". But this is meaningless when trying to understand the influence on purchase decisions in favour of a specific product or brand or service.
Which is what matters to marketers.
This is evidence of a vocabulary drift that now equates influencers with bloggers. It's symptomatic of a lack of thought over what influencers are and how they work. The fact that a blog gets a lot of hits has no bearing on its influence. Why? Because influence is subject-specific. Hugh McLeod may have influence in social media, wine and suits, but none (as far as I know) in cars, scotch and pets.
The biggest issue I have in the influence of bloggers is that most bloggers that have any influence at all do so over other bloggers. The area that bloggers have most influence, as a group, is blogging and social media.
Most claims of the influence of social media are generic. They talk about the influence on "products" or "brands" or "services". But this is meaningless when trying to understand the influence on purchase decisions in favour of a specific product or brand or service.
Which is what matters to marketers.
Labels: Pollara
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