The Grading of the Social Web and Its Impact on Influence

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Where now for influence marketing

Last month, Twitter published an article on their developer blog, about new metadata being added to the Twitter API. There were two additions – one to help identify the language of a tweet, while the other was the ability to allow developers to “rank” tweets.

This second addition is of particular interest when it comes to influence marketing, and how we identify influencers, since it offers the potential to further dilute the ability to truly connect relevant influencers and advocates to the brands that are looking to work with them.

Now, in fairness, Twitter hasn’t divulged exactly how the ranking ability may work, apart from the option to possibly gauge tweets by a “none”, “low”, “medium” and “high” rank. It may be there’s a lot more context to the way the API will identify these tweets.

However, in the meantime, the worry is that true influence, yet again, is being demoted to nothing more than an algorithmic rank with no real context behind it. When this happens, it takes us back to the “influencer elite” I’ve talked about previously on the Influence Marketing blog.

Which begs the question, can the everyday influencer still exist?

The Grading of the Social Web

It’s not just Twitter that’s taking this approach. Take a look at Google and the importance they’re placing on their Authorship Markup algorithm. Or Facebook with its ever-changing algorithm that places more emphasis on paying for a Sponsored Story to have your content seen versus organic appearance in a feed.

There’s no doubt that the social web is becoming an arena of rank and perceived import – yet questions remain as to the validity of the import when it’s based on how well you play with a platform’s rules.

For example, let’s say you don’t have Google Authorship enabled on your blog or website, yet you write a fantastic white paper on the origins of mankind that challenges everything we’ve believed until now.

When someone searches for “the origins of mankind” on Google, your expertise would (should) probably be the one that people should read. Yet because someone with less expertise utilizes the Authorship Markup script, they actually appear more reverential than you for that particular search.

The same goes with Twitter’s new API. Let’s say they base their authority score on the amount of retweets and engagement a tweet receives. While this is a good starting point, it lacks the more important aspects of context, perception and situation at the time.

This is particularly true when large events are happening.

Let’s say someone uses the hashtag for the Oscars to post an asinine comment about the price of popcorn at their local 7-Eleven. It gets 1,000 reweets and 500 favourites. That may appear as a high scoring tweet based on the new API.

But does it have the context of an Empire Magazine journalist in the UK only getting 20-30 retweets as he/she live-tweets about the event from the UK? Doesn’t their expertise in the movie arena make them more authority-driven?

This is the problem with grading importance based on reactions versus instilling a true action – the sign of an influential impact. It also changes the very fabric of influence – no bad thing on its own, but when it comes to trying to clear the muddied waters of the last few years, it can add to the confusion.

Which brings us back to the topic of this post.

The Everyday Influencer and Where They Fit Today

One of the criticisms levied at influence marketing today is the lack of results for brands using the medium. And that’s a fair criticism.

This can be attributed to several things – generic social scores with no real relevance to the brand in question; lack of understanding and education on the brand’s behalf; and the gamification of social media channels to be seen as someone of influence.

Whatever the reason, influence has undergone some drastic changes in the last few years when compared to Carnegie’s principle, and not always for the better. The biggest impact this has had is in nullifying true individual influence, the kind that brands really want – and need – to connect with.

Activity and popularity online has led to people being seen as influencers, while the true influencers – the ones not worried about social scoring and perceived ranking – are the ones that should be identified.

These “everyday influencers” are finding themselves marginalized because they’re not playing to a computational score; nor are their hands being tied by a search engine’s goal of making you use all their products to be seen as relevant.

The problem is, these are exactly the people brands should be connecting with. They’re the advocates; the consumer marketers; the people who truly have the ear of those that make a difference when it comes to the purchase cycle of their friends, colleagues and peers.

As public scoring and authority plays continue to evolve and find bigger footholds across the web, the question becomes:

Can the everyday influencer still exist, when the games being played to “be” one nullify results based on much deeper questions?

My co-author on Influence Marketing Sam Fiorella and I believe so. In the next few weeks, we’ll show you why and, more importantly, how.

A version of this post originally appeared on the official Influence Marketing blog. Subscribe today and stay up-to-date with the latest innovations and future trends in influence marketing.

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About Danny

Danny Brown is Chief Technologist at ArCompany and an award-winning marketer and blogger. His blog is recognized as the #1 marketing blog in the world by HubSpot. Danny is also co-author of Influence Marketing: How to Create, Manage and Measure Brand Influencers in Social Media Marketing.

32 comments
Lasser
Lasser

Social websites have bad influence in many of the kids becuase it makes them stay indoor always, bad for their health

Howie Goldfarb
Howie Goldfarb like.author.displayName 1 Like

I love when you write these posts. I know I beat Chobani like a dead horse as an example. But I think so few Brands take the time and effort that they do to know people and find the real believers and supports and nurture those relationships. I bet I can say they do not look for Klout scores or people as Yogurt topic experts. 

And this stuff takes real effort. We have so many tools to identify the people talking about subjects. The only real way to approach finding who is the best influencers is to talk to these people directly...and not with one tweet but sustained discussion and research.

Danny Brown
Danny Brown moderator

@HowieG Agreed, mate. It's why the current (popular) solutions can't offer the depth of detail needed for this, and why the PeerIndex guy was upfront about their information being best for identifying large-scale numbers, but the legwork still has to be done to identify the true micro influencers that make a bigger, more substantiated difference.

I guess in a few weeks time, we'll find out how well brands are willing to make the adoption to the more micro-level model.

Latest blog post: The Art of Managing Change

angels510
angels510

@MartinaMcGowan @DannyBrown ~ Dan, this article asks a lot of good questions. Yes, who are really the "TRUE influencers" worth listening to?

DannyBrown
DannyBrown

%s In a few weeks, %s and I will be sharing the answers :) %sz%sw%sktg

angels510
angels510

@DannyBrown ~ I mean credibility of social media (esp Twitter) as an effective business tool. Sometimes I think it's become a joke.

angels510
angels510

@DannyBrown ~ looking forward to it. I'm tired of FALSE highly-rated influencers here. Not good for business nor credibility @samfiorella

DannyBrown
DannyBrown

@angels510 Agreed, and it will oy continue until business value from real influencers\/advocates shown, instead of simple amplification.

bhas
bhas like.author.displayName 1 Like

That point about asinine and snarky comments that are  shared like wildfire and perceived as more influential by Twitter  than meatier content shared less is so true.

I think that one of the challenges influence ranking services will have to take into account is people who actually are influencers might not play by the arbitrary rules of that service. They may be busy doing good shit instead of wasting their time tweeting. Heck, they may be away from Twitter or Facebook for months, and may only use email or telephone to drive million or billion dollar decisions.

How do you identify these true players who fly under the radar?

On a completely different note, new threads on your site, mate

Danny Brown
Danny Brown moderator

@bhas Spot on about the real influencers not even bothering about raising their profile or score, they let their work do that for them, mate. In the book, @SamFiorella and I lay out a clear framework of not only identifying, but how to nurture and work with them to drive the customer sales cycle. We're excited to share. :)

mike_allton
mike_allton like.author.displayName 1 Like

Thanks Danny! I am certainly looking forward to your insights into how genuine influencers can be influential. If Richard Leakey was blogging today, you'd think his commentary would appear at the top of any "Origins of Mankind" Search but as you say, only if he'd taken the time to set up a Google+ profile and markup his blog and other steps. Instead, one of the top results is a YouTube video about alien genetic engineering.

Danny Brown
Danny Brown moderator

@mike_allton See, that makes me sad, mate - when true thought leaders are demoted to also-rans by an algorithm? This is why automation in this instance doesn't work. Hey ho...

DannyBrown
DannyBrown

@sjmonk5 Thankfully brands are getting smarter and new methodologies are breaking through and taking centre stage

DannyBrown
DannyBrown

@DanielGHebert Cheers mate, appreciate share and glad you enjoyed

DanielGHebert
DanielGHebert

@DannyBrown No worries Danny! I think our views on Influence match very closely :) We should have a chat sometime!

DannyBrown
DannyBrown

%s For sure - %s and I chatted about having you on our %s Hangout interview series?

danielghebert
danielghebert like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Great article Danny!

One of the things we're working hard to find at InNetwork are the long-tail influencers, or the "everyday influencer" as you mention. You're right, having these everyday influencers in your roster can really yield results, because they're the ones that focus on smaller communities that are built on trust. They influence friends, peers, family, etc.

If you were to do a search through our database, you will find the most relevant influencers for your brand based on 2 dimensions: The influencer filter, which includes what topics does the influencer usually cover, where they are located, and their sex. The second dimension is your brand/product's target audience profile - who are you searching for? We have filters for gender, age, location, income, and interest categories. Our system then matches the best influencers based on both filter dimensions, and gives you their targeted fit audience (the amount of their audience that fits your target market criteria). You can then see which influencer reaches the most of your target market - those might be the larger influencers, or it could be the everyday influencer. Either way, we have both.

We also have our own score. One major difference with our score is that the majority of it is not automated, like Klout and others. Less than half of the score is about engagement/moving content. The rest of the score is qualitative, entered into our system by our Influencer Relationship Managers. We look at stuff like credibility, quality of conversation, quality of content, quality of web design, etc. Our platform doesn't focus on social scores that can be gamed. I see a lot of the "elite" influencers in our system having lower InNet scores than the everyday influencers, and it makes sense for several reasons.

Like you, we're a strong believer in the everyday influencer. That's where the real magic happens :) Great post!

Danny Brown
Danny Brown moderator like.author.displayName 1 Like

@danielghebert Hey there mate,

I like the fact you're using manual process for your qualitative data - it's very much in the same mindset of @pierreloic from @Traackr. His belief that automation can only do so much, you still need the human element, is something that too many platform developers miss out on.

Would love to test drive the product if possible, and let's get the interview on our @InfluencerMktg Hangout arranged. :)

prosperitygal
prosperitygal like.author.displayName 1 Like

Wouldn't what you are suggesting - the everyday influencer being validated have to do with people rewiring their thinking?  Let's face it most people do not value the everyday person no matter what their contribution.  They have been over looked through out history.  We just have more of an awareness now, because of our social channels to "see them better." ( I feel like red riding hood's wolf saying that last line )

So back to my original point, this seems to go back to people's behaviors and beliefs.  Until that is changed, shifted, morphed, adapted - the actions of others will not evolve.

Danny Brown
Danny Brown moderator

@prosperitygal Completely rewiring their thinking, miss. Currently, we place the influencer at the centre of the marketing circle. But this is the wrong approach, if you're looking to move the customer along the purchase cycle. A new method is needed - and guess what's just a few weeks away..? ;-)


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