When the meal-kit delivery company HelloFresh wanted to promote its latest line of healthful menu items, it made an increasingly popular choice: It hired an Instagram lifestyle influencer. Jenna Kutcher is a Minnesota-based mother of two who has more than a million followers, and as part of a 21-day challenge, she and 15 other influencers hired by the brand posted recipes and photos of meals they made using HelloFresh, each tagged #RefreshWithHelloFresh. The campaign produced 461 influencer posts and generated 5.5 million impressions, with 20% of the influencers’ followers mentioning HelloFresh on Instagram—a clear success.
Should Your Brand Hire a Virtual Influencer?
Relying on AI-generated personalities can be a low-risk, high-engagement strategy.
From the Magazine (May–June 2024)
· Long read
Summary.
Followers respond more favorably to sponsored posts by virtual influencers versus those by humans, costs are lower, and creating an influencer from scratch allows marketers to introduce more diversity.
A version of this article appeared in the May–June 2024 issue of Harvard Business Review.
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