Picture this: You spend hours writing and rewriting the perfect pitch to your favorite Instagram influencer. You share your background, your company story, your product, and maybe you include a couple of images or a video. You build up the courage to click “send” and wait to hear back. Except you don’t. Crickets. A day goes by, another day, still no response. You start making excuses—they’re probably super busy, maybe they didn’t get the email, maybe they’re on vacation. Let me be real with you for a second…they most likely got that email and opened it, but your pitch just didn’t resonate with them enough to take action. We spoke with some leading lifestyle, fashion, and beauty influencers and persuaded them to share their insights on the top mistakes business owners and brand founders make when pitching influencers, and what to do instead to get a positive response.
Sending a generic, mass-mailed pitch:
Hilary Rowland, the founder of Urbanette Magazine, receives hundreds of brand partnership pitches a week and says it’s easy to spot a mass mailing and it’s a turn-off. “When they profess to be a fan of Urbanette, but it’s clear that it’s just a mass email and they’ve swapped [BLOG NAME] for Urbanette in their generic email.”
Jessica Pallay, co-founder of modern pregnancy and urban parenting site, Well Rounded, adds, “It irritates me to get a pitch that’s addressed to another editor or publication but is carelessly copy and pasted to me, especially when it’s marked exclusive.”
Laura Yazdi, fashion, beauty, and lifestyle blogger for her site, LauraLily, sums it up, “If your pitch seems like a mass email that has gone out to 100 other bloggers, I am not interested.”
We get it, there’s not enough time in the day to get to know each influencer and their blog inside and out. But a little bit of research will go a long way and allow you to form a genuine connection that doesn’t feel like spam.
Takeaway: Get personal! Address the writer, editor, or influencer by name. Make your subject line and copy relatable and customize it to fit the outlet.
Your pitch is too demanding:
Kimmay Caldwell, the founder of body positivity site, HurrayKimmay, and a lingerie expert on “The Rachael Ray Show,” says pitches can often contain really uneven and unrealistic asks. She states, “They’ll ask for a blog post, photos, a due date, links, specific keywords, and a certain number of social posts, all in the first email. Like, let’s talk this through first! I prefer to create relationships with brands, and telling me what you want from me in the first email is like telling me how many kids you want from me on the first date. Slow it down, see if I’m interested, let’s make sure we’re a good fit, then we can discuss specifics… and baby names.”
Takeaway: If you’re hoping for a product placement, keep it simple! You can’t expect to have all your demands met if you’re not offering some sort of payment.
You expect to get things for free:
This leads us to the biggest struggle brand founders and influencers encounter: monetary payment. As a brand founder, you may genuinely feel that your product is awesome, and it may be expensive to produce and ship it. You believe this is a fair compensation to the influencer in exchange for them to feature your product. And sometimes it is. If the product fits nicely with the influencer’s content and image and is a generous offer then the influencer will be more eager to share it.
However, keep in mind that creating content, whether the influencer is in front of or behind the camera, is very time intensive and can be costly. Costs can include hiring a photographer, editor, studio, and paying for props and time is spent planning, styling, producing, editing, and distributing content.
All of our influencers had something to share about this topic, which makes it an often-debated one.
Babba Canales, an award-winning brand marketing professional and the founder of By Babba agency shares, “Nothing upsets me more than pitches where they think it’s a privilege for me to lend my face and time and expertise, without any compensation. It’s unfortunately way too often that companies allocate budgets for production and not for the actual talent, meaning they think it’s okay to pay the photographer and everyone on set, except for the influencer because they assume we just think it’s so fun to be on set that we don’t need payment.”
“If you are asking for a blog post, social media promotion, and images but are only offering me a free t-shirt, why would I take time out of my business for that? What value does that offer my readers? Ask yourself this, ‘Did I come to work for a free t-shirt today?’ No, you probably didn’t,” Yazdi adds.
Takeaway: As a young brand, you may not have the funds to pay an influencer just yet, or maybe you want to test out how a partnership works with them before making the leap into a paid collaboration. That’s okay and totally understandable! But find a way to make it a win-win for both parties and you’ll be on your way to forming long-term relationships with influencers that will benefit you multiple times over.
You don’t offer value:
Rowland shares this tip: “If you want a blogger to do you a favor, then offer something valuable in return, like payment and repeated promotion in the brand’s newsletter and social media feeds. Too many brand representatives expect journalists and bloggers to do work for free while everyone else involved is getting paid.”
Hitha Palepu, a writer for travel and lifestyle blog Hitha On The Go, and author of How to Pack agrees, “I’m really big on a win-win for the brand and the influencer. If a product is a right fit for my community and content, I will happily accept a gifted product and incorporate it in an organic way.” She continues, ”I follow up with the brand with a brief report—clicks, engagement, and conversion. If they were pleased with the results, it’s an opportunity to talk about a sponsorship or paid content. Does it require a little more work on my end? Sure. Is it worth it—for me and my brand partners? Absolutely.”
Takeaway: A better strategy, if you’re hoping for a product placement, is to give a generous product offer to the influencer and focus on just one ask. If the product fits nicely with the blogger’s content, then they’ll be more open to sharing it. But don’t demand them to write or share about your brand or product without a paid partnership.
You pitch an irrelevant service or product:
Fashion blogger Marianne Yip shares, “There’s definitely been several emails that I received from brands that are totally opposite of what I would represent and it amazes me that they think I would work with them since we don’t have the same interests or targeted audiences.”
Pallay concedes, “The worst pitches are the ones that are totally unrelated to what we cover on the site. Our content is generally around pregnancy and postpartum, but I’ve received pitches ranging from nursing home advocacy to alcohol consumption tracking suits to a possible cure for Ebola.”
Takeaway: Do your research and make your pitch targeted to the influencer you are writing. Start by identifying the right influencers for your company and making a spreadsheet with the topics they cover and links to example articles.
Your pitch clogs up their memory space:
Don’t send attachments. Adding them guarantees you won’t get a response. This is one of those things that seems like common sense, but influencers and editors see it time and time again. Across the board, our influencers agreed that this easily fixable mistake makes for a bad pitch.
Takeaway: Embed links or, for multiple photos, link out to your Dropbox or Google Drive file.
Your pitch is plain boring:
What makes a boring pitch? One that is too long, has too many details, and is one uninterrupted chunk of text.
Raven Ishak, a beauty editor at Taste the Style shares a great tip, “I would love a clear, short pitch, imagery included within the post, a subject that is thoughtful, bolded important facts, and things that draw in attention. And use the actual name of the person you’re pitching.” She adds, “Keep it fun and light.”
Takeaway: Break up text, make your copy eye-catching, keep it short and to the point, and tailor your pitch to the influencer.
As a publicist for startup beauty brands, I love working with influencers because of the long-term relationships that can come of it. When I pitch a brand to an influencer, I try to find a common ground between us, and I like to learn about them first by reading their about us page (which usually includes links to some of the influencer’s most popular articles), and read a couple of articles containing similar products or services to what I’m pitching.
Influencer partnerships are exactly that, a partnership. Get to know the influencer a bit first and offer some value. Make it a win-win situation where it’s easy for them to say yes! Ultimately it’ll save you time in the end, and can lead to a budding friendship!
By Aggie Burnett: Aggie Burnett is a public relations and marketing strategist for emerging beauty, wellness, and lifestyle companies, dedicated to helping the underdog get noticed in a sea of lookalike brands with her business, Aggie Burnett Creative.
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