top of page

Creator marketing FAQs and best practices for brands in 2025

  • Exverus Staff
  • Jun 16
  • 6 min read

Influencers, or content creators, are your go-to partners for media performance in the digital age


tablet, hat, and sunglasses on beach chair
Photo Credit: Perfecto Capucine

Think quick: I bet you can name your favorite influencer faster than your favorite celebrity endorsement. 


The global creator industry is projected to reach some $480 billion in size by 2027, nearly doubling in three years, according to Goldman Sachs.


And just in the US, EMARKETER forecasts influencer marketing to grow 14.2% in 2025 to $9.29 billion—not including paid media amplification or spend outside social media. We all see this trend in our feeds every day!


As Exverus Senior Media Planner Lorus Samo explained to AdAge,

“Social platforms allow consumers to share products with friends, leave reviews and engage in the process of discovery in a more personal way than clicking Google search links.”

And the right creator can do more than just recite your product’s features; they can demonstrate to an audience how to use your product in real life and instantly show its effects. 


For example, when we won a 2024 WARC Effectiveness Award for our work with Premier Protein on Amazon Prime Days, it wasn't for product-based ads listing the ingredients and health benefits. Instead, we partnered with fun, aspirational health influencers that made videos demonstrating how they use Premier Protein in their daily morning routines. This helped the audience visualize themselves using the product and increases the chance of a buy.


Let's answer some FAQs about creator marketing in 2025:


What's the difference between an influencer and a creator?


We often use these terms interchangeably, but there are some subtle differences:


Influencers are primarily defined by their ability to influence purchasing decisions and drive audience behavior. Follower count is traditionally the key metric for success.


Creators emphasize content quality, storytelling, production value, and longer collaborations. They're usually positioned as experts with specialized skills, rather than merely people with large followings. Creators typically diversify their revenue streams, going beyond product sponsorships to subscriptions, courses, speaking opportunities, or their own product launches.


woman showing off sunglasses in a mobile video
Photo by Anna Nekrashevich

How do we identify the right niche creators and local influencers?


Bigger isn’t always better.


In the past, larger influencers were thought of as better for brand awareness and broad reach, while micro- or nano-influencers were more likely to drive sales conversions for their trustworthiness and relatability.


But today, that's not always the case. Algorithmic social feeds are now highly astute at feeding the right content to the right consumer at the right time, making follower count just one of many factors determining placement.


The key to identifying the right niche creators for your project is precise targeting based on deep insights about your audience. Establish:


  • Demographics and psychographics

  • Campaign objectives

  • Budget parameters

  • Geographic scope

  • Content format preferences


These will help you narrow down your search to make the most of every influencer dollar you spend.


professional woman sitting at desk recording a video
Photo by RDNE Stock project

Should I hire an influencer marketing agency or use a self-serve platform?


This depends upon a few factors like your campaign budget, your in-house manpower, the length and complexity of the campaign, and the level of control and oversight you want to maintain.


Agencies are excellent for managing complex or long-term partnerships, especially if you have limited time and resources to do the legwork in-house, but they can cost more.


Choosing a self-serve creator marketing platform can be daunting, as the available options are ever-growing. But platforms like CreatorIQ and Captiv8 have been building out their tech capabilities to better automate creator vetting, brand safety management, customer service, and reporting.


In short: More budget, less time? Agency. More time, less budget? Platform.


woman in leopard coat taking pictures with phone
Photo by MART PRODUCTION

What's the relationship between UGC and creator marketing?


User-generated content (UGC) is a highly effective type of content, which can come in the form of photos, videos, reviews, or text created by people, rather than brands. UGC can be:


  • Organic, in which actual customers voluntarily create content for free. This type is the cheapest and most authentic but hard to scale and control.


  • Paid, in which creators make content for a brand's channels that looks like organic UGC. It's cheaper than a full influencer partnership.


93% of marketers report that UGC performs better than branded content, according to Hootsuite.

UGC can be integrated into social but also CTV campaigns, with shoppable ad formats and interactive features for a smooth path to purchase.


Organic UGC builds authentic community, UGC creators provide scalable authentic content, and influencers reach new audiences. Most successful brands use all three strategically.


Here are 4 basic guidelines for a successful UGC partnership: 


1. Run A/B tests to determine which creative messaging resonates best with your audience

2. Create a natural, relatable vibe that feels more entertaining or educational than promotional

3. Use UGC to retarget people who have already interacted with your brand to reinforce trust and push conversions

4. Integrate UGC onto your product detail pages (PDPs) to reinforce trust & drive conversions


woman sitting at laptop in front of clothes and a plant
Photo by Liza Summer

How does creator marketing fit into an omnichannel media strategy?


Creator content can serve marketing objectives at all levels of the customer journey:


Brand awareness & discovery


As the Premier Protein example above illustrates, social media channels can be a powerful brand discovery source that displays your products and messaging to a wide audience with broad reach.


Purchase consideration


  • Creators can "unbox", review, or give informative tutorials on your products or services

  • Link directly from content to purchase pages through link stickers, tappable buttons, or other interactive features.

  • Creator discount codes & affiliate links drive conversion


Repurpose content


Exverus recently partnered with ad-tech vendor SeenThis to launch a new ad format called Social Reach, which takes vertical videos (brand-made or creator-made) and places them in premium Display slots across the open web. This allows media teams to repurpose creative assets and extend their reach far beyond social media platforms. It's already beating the efficiency of paid Meta ads by 50%!


three mobile phones depicting premier protein ads

Social Reach is just one example of repurposing creator content for multiple channels. Other ways include:

  • Linking to YouTube videos from social posts or blog posts

  • Reusing YouTube videos for CTV ads

  • Building earned media coverage around brand/creator partnerships


The key is keeping the visual vibe and the messaging consistent.


Earned media & organic reach


Trade publications like AdAge and Marketing Dive love to report on a good brand/creator collaboration, so leverage it to earn even more publicity for both parties. Planning a PR strategy around your partnership is a cost-efficient way to multiply the impact on awareness and reach.


Live, experiential events


Think outside the screen! Live, IRL activations with brand reps and creators onsite draw crowds, encourage organic posting, and leave a deeper impact on attendees than a digital ad alone. Get some ideas for experiential marketing activations here.


What mistakes should brands avoid when partnering with professional creators?


Freebies aren't payment


Sending a free product sample is not sufficient payment for a whole day's worth of work packing, commuting, shooting, editing, writing copy, sharing content, and doing internal admin tasks. If you don't have the budget to pay a creator's going rate for a day of labor and supplies, please don't reach out. It's a waste of their time and yours.


Let creators do what they do best


Don't hire a well-known internet personality and then snuff out their whole personality by making them read your scripts and perform your corporate-speak. Let creators do what made their audience love them in the first place. If you can't relinquish that control, then just hire actors for a traditional commercial.


No generic template emails


Lia Haberman, social & creator marketing consultant to Fortune 500 brands and author of the popular ICYMI Substack newsletter, advises:


Don't send out a generic message. Don't address them as "Dear creator" or use their social handle instead of their name. Take the time to do your research. Make the effort, use their name and some acknowledgment of why they're a good fit for this campaign. Personalize the outreach. I've worked with creators who say they don't want to feel like they're just a cog in the wheel and impersonal pitches are a deal breaker for them.

In 2025 and beyond, brands will start looking at influencer marketing as an overall strategy, rather than a silo in their marketing mix. Influencer and creator marketing can elevate, if not lead, every pillar of marketing communication when planned and executed thoughtfully.


To learn more about what the right creator partnership could do for your brand, drop us a line!

This piece originally appeared in our weekly Paid Media Insights newsletter. For more tips, research, and analysis; subscribe for free here.


Comments


bottom of page