- Original Poster
- #1
Hello,
We are looking to work with influencers in the UK to help us market our product*.
As far as I can tell there seems to be two commercial models such a relationship can take. Either a simple payment from the brand to the influencer for an agreed number of posts. Any terms etc can be applied. Alternatively the second model seems to be an affiliate one where the influencer gets paid on the number of sales their posts generate either through the use of discount codes that track this or similarly an affiliate link that embeds a cookie and tracks it.
Both of these approaches seem to have issues. The cash up front option puts all the risk onto the brand, and the second puts this risk, and the risk of non tracking, onto the influencer.
I wanted to ask anyone with experience in this area whether they thought influencers might be open to work on a different basis. On a % of total sales basis. i.e. where we, the brand, agreed to give a small % of sales to the influencer on a long term agreement. We would look to do this with a small number of influencers each within different areas. Each influencer would get a small % share of total sales.
This approach has obvious issues (not least influencers free riding off of others, scalability etc). However, I feel am aware of these and instead I would love to hear from people experienced in working with influencers (in particular those on Instagram) in the 40k - 400k follower sort of range as to whether they thought influencers might be interested in such an arrangement.
Any insight / thoughts appreciated.
*The Brickle is a unit of furniture for children that sorts and stores their LEGO collection. (Brickle.co). It is a high end product made in Wales.
We are looking to work with influencers in the UK to help us market our product*.
As far as I can tell there seems to be two commercial models such a relationship can take. Either a simple payment from the brand to the influencer for an agreed number of posts. Any terms etc can be applied. Alternatively the second model seems to be an affiliate one where the influencer gets paid on the number of sales their posts generate either through the use of discount codes that track this or similarly an affiliate link that embeds a cookie and tracks it.
Both of these approaches seem to have issues. The cash up front option puts all the risk onto the brand, and the second puts this risk, and the risk of non tracking, onto the influencer.
I wanted to ask anyone with experience in this area whether they thought influencers might be open to work on a different basis. On a % of total sales basis. i.e. where we, the brand, agreed to give a small % of sales to the influencer on a long term agreement. We would look to do this with a small number of influencers each within different areas. Each influencer would get a small % share of total sales.
This approach has obvious issues (not least influencers free riding off of others, scalability etc). However, I feel am aware of these and instead I would love to hear from people experienced in working with influencers (in particular those on Instagram) in the 40k - 400k follower sort of range as to whether they thought influencers might be interested in such an arrangement.
Any insight / thoughts appreciated.
*The Brickle is a unit of furniture for children that sorts and stores their LEGO collection. (Brickle.co). It is a high end product made in Wales.
