“The pandemic has played a major role in driving wider adoption of influencer marketing,” said Jasmine Enberg, eMarketer senior analyst at Insider Intelligence and author of our latest report, “Influencer Monetization 2021.” “After an initial pause in spending in H1 2020, marketers quickly resumed and even increased spending, as budgetary constraints and studio closures curtailed traditional ad production.”
Between April 2020 and June 2020, the average monthly number of sponsored posts was down by 42.9% year over year (YoY), according to an analysis of 3.5 million Instagram posts by visual marketing platform Later and influencer marketing company Fohr. By December, however, that figure had bounced back as the number of sponsored posts that month grew by over 20% YoY.
This turnaround is in part thanks to many long-term shifts within the social media landscape that the pandemic accelerated, affecting social commerce, livestreaming, short-form video, and newcomer social audio.
“Social commerce in particular has made influencers very powerful,” said Stacy DeBroff, founder and CEO of influencer marketing platform Influence Central. “Then there are the new platforms, like Clubhouse or TikTok. They haven’t figured out their ad strategy yet, so brands are realizing that influencers are their best conduits for reaching those audiences.”
In a March 2021 survey by influencer marketing platform Linqia, 68% of US marketers said they were planning to use TikTok for influencer marketing, up from just 16% in February 2020. That made TikTok the third most popular format measured, behind only Instagram (93%) and Instagram Stories (83%). The share of marketers who planned to use Twitch also more than doubled, going from 5% to 13% in the same time frame.