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By Marilyn Stone

Researchers from LUISS Guido Carli University have published a new study that examines whether and how subtle shifts in language arousal might shape consumer engagement and the way it affects perceptions of influencers’ trustworthiness.

The study, published in the Journal of Marketing, is titled “How High-Arousal Language Shapes Micro Versus Macro Influencers’ Impact” and is authored by Giovanni Luca Cascio Rizzo, Francisco Villarroel Ordenes, Rumen Pozharliev, Matteo De Angelis, and Michele Costabile.

Companies increasingly turn to popular personalities to promote their brands, products, and services. The influencer marketing economy was valued at $21.1 billion in 2023, and more than 90% of brands enlist influencers with a small audience (micro) or with massive reach (macro) to connect with consumers and achieve a variety of marketing goals, from creating awareness to increasing sales.

Influencers have the potential to diffuse marketing messages and drive actions, but it is unclear why some of their posts get a lot of engagement while others do not. One possibility is that consumers are increasingly aware that influencers get paid to promote products, raising questions about their motives. Additionally, anecdotal evidence suggests that when influencers use high-arousal language (e.g., “it’s totally amazing!”), it leads to questions about their trustworthiness, which in turn leads consumers to engage less with the content.

Micro vs. macro influencers

Consumers typically see micro influencers as regular people, so if they say something like “this shake is AMAZING!” consumers believe they really are excited about that shake and just want to share this discovery with their friends and followers. This belief in their sincerity increases consumers’ trust in micro influencers.

However, macro influencers do not seem like regular people. Consumers know these influencers receive substantial sums to say positive things about products, so they judge their posts as an attempt to persuade, just like any other form of advertising. Believing that someone has manipulative intentions tends to decrease trust. Yet the negative effect of high arousal posts by macro influencers could be mitigated if their posts offer more informative (vs. commercial) content or if the messages are more balanced.

The researchers collaborated with an influencer marketing agency to acquire a sample of 20,923 Instagram-sponsored posts across industries from 1,376 U.S. influencers. They measured engagement as the sum of likes and comments that a post receives. To measure language arousal, they combine a words-based lexicon (including terms like “hectic,” “amazing,” and “sensational”) with paralanguage (i.e., exclamation marks, capitalization, and emojis).

They used 100,000 followers as the cut-off to classify micro versus macro influencers. To measure how informative the post goal would be, they validated a dictionary with words like “explore,” “read,” and “watch.” Finally, more than 100 controls were employed, including details about the influencer, the text and images shared, and so forth. Combining the field data and controlled experiments led to some compelling results.

The researchers note, “For micro influencers, we find that a 10% increase in arousal is associated with a 5.4% increase in engagement, on average. Recommending a product by saying, ‘It’s superb’ rather than ‘It’s great,’ for example, would attract 49 additional likes or comments. However, our findings raise concerns for macro influencers. If macro influencers increase arousal in their posts by 10%, it reduces consumer engagement by 8.4%, on average.”

However, macro influencers are not completely forbidden to express excitement. Since signalling an informative goal is associated with a 1.8% increase in engagement, they can share informative rather than commercial posts. Also, admitting some concerns or noting some negative aspects of the promoted product can help macro influencers seem more genuine, which also increases engagement.

Finally, macro influencers can use high-arousal language if they also include words that signal trustworthiness (e.g., “learn,” “help”). Thus, brands and macro influencers should collaborate to make sure their posts include phrases like “that’s what I learned about this incredible product” rather than “that’s how to use this incredible product.”

From Instagram to TikTok

These findings are not limited to Instagram. The study provides evidence that language arousal also plays a role in TikTok, with relevant influences on its young target market. “We gauge influencers’ vocal cues and the level of pitch in their voices as proxies for arousal. A higher pitched voice can signal greater arousal, and in line with our Instagram study, we determine that a higher pitch, and higher arousal, voice exerts a negative effect for macro influencers,” the researchers say.

This research underscores the importance of aligning social media posts and language arousal strategies depending on the type of influencer. For micro influencers, using high-arousal language authentically can enhance , but macro should focus more on informative content to maintain their trustworthiness.

Exploring the impact of arousal on emerging platforms like TikTok is especially crucial when it comes to targeting young, savvy consumer audiences effectively. This research could be extended to politicians, scientists, and other high-profile individuals and the statements they issue.

Feature Image Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

By Marilyn Stone,

Sourced from PHYS.ORG

By

There’s no other way to say it: If you’re doing influencer marketing in 2019, there’s a decent chance it sucks. And it’s time for an honest conversation. So, let me restate: There is a lot of bad influencer marketing out there. The industry is full of celebrity-level social media personalities who charge a fortune for insincere product endorsements, blatant cash-grab posts that come across like low-budget commercials, and brands that are dazzled by follower counts rather than real engagement. And this is not likely to change unless we get back to what made influencer marketing amazing in the first place.

Back in the early 2000s, the notion of social networks hadn’t taken hold yet. Blogging-specific resources and platforms were on the rise, however, and I was one of many who embraced these emerging technologies in order to share my thoughts and connect with like-minded people online.

Typepad, Diaryland, Diary-X, LiveJournal: We used these platforms to carve out spaces for expressing the joys and frustrations of our daily lives. Many of us were young parents, and blogging was more than a hobby — it was an outlet, a way to access a digital village of support and commiseration. This so-called “mommy blogging” trend eventually paved the way for today’s influencer marketing industry.

There was a sort of magic to those early days of blogging when sharing one’s innermost thoughts with the push of a button was a novelty rather than a given — from swapping war stories, intimate confessions, moments of hilarity — and talking about recent purchases in mind-bending detail.

It doesn’t sound particularly exciting now, but this is when brands started paying attention. Because these conversations were driving sales. Suddenly, a recommendation from a well-read blog could empty a store’s inventory overnight. Because product reviews and recommendations were a natural extension of blogging. And it was fun — fun to try a new moisturizer that a stranger in Iowa loved, or a baby carrier worn in a photo that everyone pounced on (“Wow, who makes that?”). It was fun to discover new things, or even better, solve someone’s problem with a pitch-perfect suggestion.

When did it stop being fun? No question about it: when money got involved. As blogging matured and changed, so, too, did the options for monetization. First came the banner ads, which mostly lurked in website sidebars before creeping into more intrusive locations. In 2006, BlogHer announced its blog ad network at its San Jose conference. It probably sounds crazy now, but that launch was incredibly controversial at the time. Many of the women in attendance felt that monetization was going to kill everything that was special about the community. If I’m being honest, I thought those cynics were being ridiculous. But sure enough, display advertising gave way to sponsorships, and before you knew it every confessional blog post seemed to include an awkward brand segue. Some were pretty lame, too: This sad story about my dying grandma brought to you by ChompsGood Dog Food!

Fast-forward to 2019, in our highly-connected world brimming over with clickbait, #ads and #sponcon. Personal blogging has largely evolved from long-form essays to mobile-friendly listicle posts and image-centric social media content. An entire industry has risen around online personalities promoting products. But this industry is going to suffer the same fate as traditional advertising if we can’t recapture some of the reasons that made it successful in the first place.

These days, consumers are growing weary of endless endorsements and celebrity-level influencers shilling everything from laxative teas to dubious-sounding island music festivals. People are suspicious of influencer fraud, and frankly, we’re tired of seeing Instagram models perched on inflatable swans hawking flavored seltzer water.

It’s time for brands and influencers alike to make influencer marketing fun again. How does this happen?

Step One: Find the passion. Find the passionate people — creators and brands alike — who give a damn about forging real connections and providing actual value to engaged audiences. Find the people who care more about relationships and less about follower numbers.

Step Two: Forge partnerships that actually make sense. Look, if you’re Pepsi and you want to work with Kendall Jenner, fine. (Just maybe don’t trivialize a serious social and political movement while doing so.) But most brands should be looking for influencers whose interests and values align with their own.

Step Three: Stop the BS. Stop the flat tummy product shout-outs, the poor (or missing) FTC disclosures, the cringingly overly-staged photos, and the accounts that are more about advertising and less about authenticity.

Influencer marketing doesn’t have to be one more bummer byproduct of an overly-commercialized internet. Just like the old days, influencer-shared recommendations and brand messaging can be a natural, enjoyable part of our content consumption rather than yet another disruptive, shallow ad experience. Make audiences the priority and deliver something of value, and the money will follow.

Feature Image Credit: Getty

By

Founder and CEO of Sway Group, an influencer marketing agency in the SF Bay Area.

Sourced from Forbes