Site icon Jason Falls

Onalytica Redefines Influencer Categories, Moves Industry Forward

Just a few days after my Winfluence interview with Onalytica’s Alistair Wheate, his company announced the first major philosophical advancement in influencer marketing in years. Onalytica playfully announced on its blog that it is bidding farewell to influencer lists. But the real news of the announcement was the company will no longer simply look at influencers as influencers alone, but as one of six different subsegments of influential people.

While the sexy, “Top 10 influencers in the X industry” blog posts are link-bait magic (here’s Onalytica’s list of health and fitness influencers), they cater to the lowest-common denominator thinking of most people looking for influencers to target. There has forever been flaws in that thinking. Onalytica will now categorize influential people in its databases in one of six categories:

This genre’d look at influence is a refreshing take on not only how we identify influencers but how we think about leveraging them. My guess is that too few brands and agencies using influence marketing strategies have dissected the intent (influence) into channels (events, publications, content creators and social influencers) to see how each may play a role in their programming.

The fact that Onalytica is bringing to its platform a more distinct separation of these influencer types again illustrates the company’s forward thinking for the industry. Whether other tools or agencies agree with this approach of segmentation, it won’t be long before smart brands and marketers are asking them to think this way, too.

It’s just smart.

Tomorrow Onalytica will publish its first Who’s Who report on the Industrial Internet of Things. I, for one, am excited to see it, just to witness the evolution of the top-X list into something more meaningful.

Kudos Onalytica. We were all ready for this.

Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash

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