Hi, this is Amanda Perelli and welcome back to Insider Influencers, our weekly rundown on the business of influencers, creators, and social-media platforms. Sign up for the newsletter here.
In this week’s edition:
Influencers and marketers react to a test by Instagram that removed public “like” counts – for a day
Many users found out what Instagram looks like without "like" counts on Tuesday after the app accidentally widely expanded a test to remove the public displays of the number of likes.
The wide rollout was because of a bug, but signals Instagram is still testing removing like counts.
Sydney Bradley broke down how a change like this could impact the influencer industry:
Seeing the number of likes is a constant source of competition for many creators, influencer Andrea Pion Pierre said.
Influencer Khadijah Lacey-Taylor said removing like counts could be an opportunity for creators to look more holistically at how engaging and enjoyable their content is.
A downside: for emerging creators who've quickly gained a following but aren't on brands' radars yet, their number of likes is one of the few ways to show influence (before sending screenshots of metrics).
Social-media influencers are using text messages to connect with fans and drive affiliate-marketing sales.
Affiliate marketing platform MagicLinks is testing a tool, called Text2Shop, that lets influencers mass send shoppable links to fans.
Sydney and I reported on how influencers are using this new tool:
Text2Shop was created by MagicLinks in partnership with the text-marketing startup Community.
College student Nazjaa Hughson has driven over $15,000 in sales since she started using Text2Shop with an average conversion rate of 6%.
Hughson wants her fans to feel like they are getting "exclusive content," different from what's on her social channels. She dedicates time every now and then to directly chat back and forth with her followers.
Creators who are a part of YouTube's Partner Program can monetize their YouTube videos with ads.
Factors like whether a video went viral, or whether the audience that watches their content is valuable to advertisers, will determine what a creator earns per paycheck.
Sydney and I spoke with 17 influencers on how much they'd earned in a month on YouTube, ranging from $82 to $141,356.