In the old days, about 2014, a travel influencer was a blogger with a decent set of numbers on their website and social media.
Such a blogger was very happy to be considered an influencer, and gladly accepted free trips to places like Canada, Spain and Austria, which they would write about and everybody was happy.
Then some bloggers thought ‘Hang on a minute’ and realized they could ask for money for their time and audience. Some video bloggers did too.
OK, said the destinations and brands. But in return, we want this much content, this message spread and oh, by the way, we want the content spread on your channels but we want to own it.
By now, word had spread that you could get paid to blog, tweet and Snapchat and so Tom, Dick and Harry joined the party, leaving many established bloggers/vloggers more than a little disillusioned.
Disillusioned because A) the market was flooded with amateurs, B) the ever-increasing demands of clients C) the constant shifting of goalposts by social platforms resulting in less engagement and D) loss of status as project creators and transition into content creators.
On Facebook last month, Budget Traveller Kash Bhattacharya wrote: “I lament how boring the whole nature of destination and brand marketing has becoming. There is a distinct lack of risk and willingness to try new ideas.”
He’s not the only one to miss 2014. But brands have moved on from general coverage to focus on niche – be it platforms like Instagram, product like video or a particular slice of the customer market.
Visit England, for example, is currently focussing on the millennials, the Generation Y late teen/early 20 somethings who have taken far fewer holidays at home in recent years.
Its policy is to work with five bloggers representing a lifestyle – including fashion and food as well as travel – that fits that market: no more general content there for a while.
James Street, co-founder of Whalar – a marketing agency that works with influencers, confirms the move away from general travel content. “The way that influencers work is twisting and turning all the time,” he says.
“We used to say that if you didn’t have audiences, we weren’t interested. Now we are also looking for good content creators.”
That is mostly on Instagram. So now Whalar will often be receptive to brilliant photography, or video creators without audiences, that it can offer to brands after a certain market, or type of traveller. In many ways, it’s the rebirth of the media professional.
Whalar is not the only agency to revive old skills and truisms in marketing. Brighton digital agency Qubist has also moved away from the ‘old’ school of influencers, says head of content Mark Henshall.
“We’ve had success with influencers and micro-influencers – we’ve also had mixed results – but what’s been consistent through the years has been the power of customer and employee advocates for brands,” he says.
“These advocate groups within influencer marketing reframe the idea of what influence can be and in this sense it isn’t really anything new – it’s word-of-mouth marketing, arguably the oldest kind of marketing in the book.”
Crikey: dusting down photographers and word-of-mouth marketing?! Whatever happened to the cutting edge marketing of 2014 through social? And whatever next: bringing back Polaroid cameras?!
Oh hang on a minute… Polaroid (yes, that Polaroid) now has four new camera drones