Jewish Influencer – What You Need To Know

Mazal tov to me; I’m officially a Jewish influencer! I just connected with a Fiver freelance who promised to get me 100,000 Instagram followers in ten days. That makes me a Jewish influencer, right? Not so fast.

If only it was that easy. Sometimes brands actually can fall for that or, worse, simply not see the ROI on Jewish influencer marketing. Here are three tips on how to find, select and track the ROI on Jewish influencers.

First, buying a follower base does not make me a Jewish influencer in the least. In fact, I’m probably even LESS influential now because there’s a major crackdown on “fake followers” across Facebook, Twitter and other social mediums.

So then what does that mean for every other brand influencer out there with thousands of followers? Who’s real, who’s fake, who’s influencing and who’s not?

It goes deeper than just my $5 purchase on Fiverr.

Remember the “Can You Hear Me Now?” guy, Paul Marcarelli, from Verizon? He recently switched to Sprint, bringing his unique brand image to a fast growing competitor.

Perhaps you recall the wildly popular Dos Equis spokesperson, Jonathan Goldsmith, who, as the new voice for Astral Tequila, clearly “doesn’t always drink beer.” Jonathan switched brands, bringing his unique influence to an entirely new spirits drinker.

The Jewish Influencer - What You Need to Know | Jewish Marketing 101

So in 2020 Jewish marketing world, where any individual with a few thousand followers (paid or unpaid) can be deemed a Jewish influencer, how do you strategically and methodically build your brand using brand influencers?

Here’s three methods we use to help our Jewish brands strategically select Jewish influencers and ambassadors.

Is Your Brand Strong Enough to Influence?

My mother always used to tell me “if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything.” Sage advice and certainly relevant here; if you are  brand that doesn’t have anything worth influencing, then don’t engage in influencer marketing. (Thanks for the advice, Mom…here’s a shout out to you!)

The Jewish Influencer - What You Need to Know | Jewish Marketing 101

To leverage influencer marketing successfully, you should have a strong brand strategy, clear mission & vision and distinct voice in the marketplace. In 2020, influencer marketing strategies will be on authenticity.

If your brand is lacking in any of those areas, you risk having an influencer act as a misguided ambassador, highlighting negative, non-influencing areas to their entire follower base. In fact, the optimal influencer would be someone who truly believes in your brand, not just a hired gun who needs to pay the bills.

Focus on creating a strong brand strategy before you attempt to hire someone to influence for it.

Consumers are not fools; they can easily detect influencers that seem forced and cheesy (as shown, most memorably, in this Scott Disick Instagram oops), turning them off from the influencer AND the brand.

And authenticity in your marketing starts with authenticity in your brand.

Jewish Influencer vs. Advertiser

We knew a brand influencer in the Kosher market that was dynamic, vivacious and loud, the type of influencer that attracts notice.

We looked the other way for our clients, though, because he was simply just an “advertiser.”

The Jewish Influencer - What You Need to Know | Jewish Marketing 101

 

Combining our brand knowledge with research on the influencer’s engagement metrics, we saw that this influencer was simply not a good representation nor prudent investment for our client.

Here’s why: those influencers were simply “digital ad salesmen” with little experience in their field, hawking a non-loyal list of followers, instead of the niche-market influencers with a uniquely engaged segmentation of on-target customers.

Pretty thorough, right? We think so.

Seems simple? Nope, not that simple.

Ask yourself this: what’s more valuable – 10,000 people from your area or 1,000 people with a genuine interest and need for your product? Seems like the 1,000 people are more valuable. You can have a million views of your video; how do you know if it’s your audience or simply just a bunch of bots from India?

You can have 4,000 click throughs to your website; how do you know if they’re your core customer? And after you actually go through that checklist, do you have a strategy in place to turn those likes/follows/visitors into customers?

In many cases, hiring a brand influencer is a lot like placing print ads in newspapers; they may claim to have a high loyal readership but you’ll never truly know if you’re reaching valuable people.

Even now during COVID-19, influencers as struggling to show ROI because the investment was never challenged… until a crisis hits.

Any individual can deem themselves an “influencer” when, in reality, they simply have a bunch of friends. Knowing the difference between an influencer and a social butterfly is what will turn your influencer marketing into a marketing investment.

Establish Mutual KPI’s

Brand influencers, for the most part, are not marketers. Driving revenue for your company using modern influencer-marketing strategies means less to them than growing their base of follower to influence.

Jewish instagrammers and Youtubers have a follower base that they want to maintain and not alienate, so they’re focused on engaging, maintaining and growing their base. If their goal is to grow their base and your goal is to grow your business, well, you can already see how the two goals don’t align.

The Jewish Influencer - What You Need to Know | Jewish Marketing 101

Large Kosher brands hire niche ad agencies to oversee the Kosher brand influencers they engage with for two main reasons – to oversee the brand-influencer messaging and ensure clear, unbiased metrics of success.

As a business owner, it’s very easy to get caught up in a world of social media popularity and easily blow through your marketing budget on video’s, photo’s and other influencer-marketing strategies that yield low ROI.

A Jewish marketing agency will ensure your brand stays focused on S.M.A.R.T. goals: measurable ROI above all.

In fact, 67% of marketers actually don’t use influencers for their voice, look and messaging; they actually use them for their segmented audience.

Through segmentation, you can spend less yet gain higher ROI… but only if you’re tracking your investment correctly. Take the time to establish clear KPI’s (key performance indicators) for what you expect from influencer-marketing (be it views, engagement, conversions, or other) and determine if it’s worth the investment or not.


TO SUM IT UP: Before you throw dollars at a Jewish, Kosher and Israel influencer, make sure you 1) have a brand worth influencing, 2) an influencer who is authentically passionate about your brand and 3) clear KPI’s to measure influencer performance. Let’s get it done together.


 Isaac and Yaakov  |  Henry Isaacs Marketing  |  646.833.8604  |  info@henryisaacs.net