Heads In Beds Show - The TRUTH About How To Leverage Influencers In Your Vacation Rental Marketing
Episode Date: December 7, 2022⭐️ Links & Show NotesPaul Manzey Conrad O'Connellhttps://about.fb.com/news/2022/11/facebook-widely-viewed-content-report-q3-2022/https://www.searchenginejournal.com/new-era-google-se...arch/466631/#closehttps://share.cleanshot.com/4IZ4W9🔗 Connect With BuildUp BookingsWebsiteFacebook PageInstagramTwitter🚀 About BuildUp BookingsBuildUp Bookings is a team of creative, problem solvers made to drive you more traffic, direct bookings and results for your accommodations brand. Reach out to us for help on search, social and email marketing for your vacation rental brand.
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Welcome to the Heads and Beds show where we teach you how to get more properties, earn
more revenue per property, and increase your occupancy.
I'm your co-host Conrad.
And I'm your co-host Paul.
Hey there, Paul.
How's it going today?
Great, Conrad.
How are you doing today?
Doing awesome.
It's our first post-Thanksgiving recording here.
We had a little friendly wager. Should we say it publicly?
I think that's fine.
Yeah, go ahead. Go ahead and gloat for a second. So what happened on Thursday night?
So on Thursday night, for those non-football fans out there,
I happened to text Conrad saying we should probably put a little juice on the Vikings-Patriots game.
We are both diehard fans for both of those teams.
You know, my team, the Vikings, did end up making my Thanksgiving,
whatever we're going to go there.
But really, serving up a great Thanksgiving dessert for me
is all I've got to say on that matter.
So we will.
We'll have maybe a little money change in hands here,
but certainly we'll have a little Vikings apparel for Conrad
on one of our future recordings.
So that's really all that matters to me in the grand scheme of things.
Yeah, just brutal.
I mean, I'm not one of these sour grapes people.
Like there was bad calls that didn't benefit the Patriots.
But the Patriots have won games in which bad calls benefited them
or good calls from my perspective.
So that's just life.
That's watching football.
But yeah, just not enough.
I would say that it's a good lesson in like marketing and competing and the world that we live in which is that sometimes the other team
is just better and you just gotta your hat or nod to them and say yep you got us fair and square on
this in this case because patriots had two chances to come down and win the game and they didn't even
mount an attempt a solid attempt at either one of them so that was what i did text paul after the
game which is that ultimately we can hem and haw about this call or that call, but whether in business or in life or in sports or
whatever, when the ball's in your hand, when it's your responsibility to go and fix the problem and
correct it and you fall flat on your face, you don't really deserve to win. So that's my takeaway.
Speaking of companies that actually do win though, maybe we can get into a quick marketing minute.
And I had one that kind of caught my eye. So Facebook just released last week, or maybe it was two weeks ago, the most widely viewed content report,
which they've abbreviated WVCR. I'll put a link to this in the show notes. I thought it was kind
of interesting. And they give all these different examples of things that they perceive to be high
quality content and things that Facebook perceives based on what's actually viewed the most on
Facebook organically, what they perceive to be low quality content. And I saw two things that caught my eye that I think are actionable for folks that listen to the show. Number one, the group's reach has gone up significantly in the past 18 months, 24 months, right? So I used to be kind of on the fence about doing a group. And I've had some clients recently that have built a group. And the group will be something like this. It'll be like friends of Myrtle Beach or fans of Myrtle Beach. It'll be something to that effect.
And they are actually the admins and the creator of the group.
They link it to their page, but they say, hey, if you have questions, come into this
group, ask us about your favorite restaurants, your favorite things to do, blah, blah, blah.
And yeah, if you want to know a place to stay, of course, they can then drop links to their
particular vacation rental company.
But Facebook was saying this side of this report that this can be a legitimate content
strategy that you can actually use groups to your advantage because people engage with and they have an affinity towards going in and leaving comments, asking questions inside of a group versus just seeing your page where it does feel like typically more of a one way conversation.
So that's one thing that caught my eye.
If you haven't done a group and you have the bandwidth to do so.
To be clear, I think this is something that you do once you've mastered other areas of your like ongoing marketing.
I don't think this is like the most important thing for you to be doing.
But if you're on social or if you have a social budget or a social team and you have the ability
to have folks on your team, maybe even who work for you, especially local folks, maybe
someone in the reservations department or something, be the kind of admin or the local
resource in that group.
I do think it's something that might make a lot of sense for you to consider given the
trends that Facebook shared in this report.
That was one thing that caught my eye.
The second thing, which is that in many cases, Facebook was talking about organic content
being posted with links in it.
And they were admitting basically that we killed the organic reach or links inside of
content just kills the organic reach of whatever you're trying to do on Facebook.
So if you didn't already know, we've been saying this for two years, probably three
years at this point, it feels like, but if you didn't already know, just having a Facebook
page that's full of a photo and
a link or a link post constantly all the time, it's just going to take your reach down to
low 1%, half of 1%.
It's just going to make the, you may have 100,000 fans and 500 of them might see your
link post.
So I just don't think you can go in that direction.
Again, I felt this way for a while, but it was good to like get it straight from the
horse's mouth, if you will, with this most widely viewed content report.
So again, I'll put this into this link into the show notes. You can check out the report for
yourself. It's from Facebook. So it's all kind of legit, not a third party. And then a few other
things caught your eye. So I think you had to do, what was your perspective? Any other marketing
minute headlines that you had on your side, Paul? Yeah. So what I mean, and mine was kind of a,
wasn't exactly the first one was in the news piece, but on the Facebook trend as well,
while we were building out some partner campaigns and partner ads, we actually saw an offer to do Facebook's offering
a hundred dollar credit to do some AB testing, which not a whole lot of, not a whole lot of actual
items you have to do. I mean, all you have to do is create an AB test. So, you know,
whether that's at the ad set level, campaign level, ad level.
But it looks like I would assume usually when Facebook is trying to push people to test A-B testing, it means that they're trying to roll out some new enhancements or some
optimizations in those areas. I mean, it always feels like when Google or Facebook is asking you
to do something and paying you, compensating you to do something, it's because they're trying to
get more data. They're trying to push more people into a beta
or do something like that. So when you can get $100 in ad credit, I'm usually pretty happy to
take care of that or at least to sign up and figure out if it's worth our time. So for $100,
if you are running Facebook ads right now, certainly if you're running with Conrad,
if you're running with Vintori on the owner side, or if you're just running generally Facebook ads,
run with Conrad, if you run with Vintori on the owner side, or if you're just running generally Facebook ads, take a look, try to maybe create a new campaign, see if you're directed into
that same offer, because certainly that $100 goes a lot further in Facebook than it might in Google
or some other channels there. And then on the other side of things, Google started to release
some new updates. We'll say they're calling it a new version of search. Well, every day there's a
new version of search. Let's just day there's a new version of search.
Let's just call it a spade and say that the algorithm is changing every day.
We are just at the whim and whimsy of whatever Google wants to do there.
But some of the most recent things that Google seems to be really pressing on with this new
article that we'll put in the show notes as well is talking about new dynamic features,
new enhancements
within the results, adding more images. They're certainly doing some testing behind the scenes
and just the overall organic results. But ultimately, I still think this goes back to
really the basic principles of the ETH algorithmic update, which goes back to 19 or 20, even 2021,
when we're getting some more of the refinements there. But it's all about that expertise, authority, and trustworthiness. And if we don't, I think that's still the key is that
making sure that you are writing for people. All of your content is written for people. All of
your images are this, it's for the people. And by continuing to put quality, consistent content
and I think getting that trustworthiness,
getting that expertise, getting that authority,
certainly built a lot on link building as well,
something we've talked about.
And it is, it's following those best practices.
If you continue to follow the best practices
that we talk about on the show,
and that's why we talk about them
because we've seen that consistently in articles
and when Google makes these updates,
when Facebook makes these updates,
they want people to be using the best practices. So it is, it's putting that consistent content
up there, getting those links, coming back to it, and really establishing yourself as an authority
in your vertical. And Google will give you the necessary, I would say, platitudes by increasing
your placement in the rankings there. So certainly it is. I think that's an article that we will touch on more and more because it is in depth. And I think we're only in this marketing
minute, we're touching it at a high level, but I do think it's something that it's worth a read
for anybody who really wants to understand the next updates that are happening with Google.
So certainly worth a read if you've got a few minutes there.
Yeah, we'll put both links in the show notes as well as a link to the widely viewed constant report and the people can kind of check it out.
And what both those examples are, which is that what is the platform incentivizing?
So if you're trying to swim with the tide, not against the tide, right?
And Facebook, it's about gauging, right?
It's about having valuable information on Facebook, not letting people leave Facebook other than what it makes sense to do so at that very bottom of the conversion process, right?
In the case of Google, it's all about this quality information. How do I make myself seem more knowledgeable and more detailed about my destination when I go to create
content on my website? So if you look at what they're incentivizing, then you can pretty much,
you don't need to be an expert to figure out, well, if I do more of that over the long term
and make it good, like I'm going to get a good outcome. So I think those are both two really
solid things to button up. Now, I want to switch gears a little bit and head
into our topic of today's episode, which is working with influencers and bloggers to get
more bookings. Now this has to be, I think one of the most misunderstood things that I encounter,
at least on a regular basis. And the trouble I think with it is that there's not really one
source of information and there's not one like metric, there's not one thing that you can point
to like we can with some of our other areas that we talk about on the marketing context.
So for example, with paid search, we could be like, well, what's your ROAS? You're spending X,
what are you getting Y? With SEO, we can say, okay, what type of content are you creating?
How much organic traffic are you getting? How many clicks do you have in your search console?
With these types of folks, so working with an influencer and a blogger, they'll throw a bunch
of numbers at you and kind of confuse you sometimes.
So every single client that we've worked with, if you have any sort of size
or significance to your operation,
you've gotten the Instagram DM,
you've gotten the email on the contact form on your website.
Hi, I'm an influencer.
I want to stay at your place for free
and you should be thanking your lucky stars
that you woke up today and had God's grace upon you
so that I'm reaching out to you to want to stay for free. So that's like the sarcastic take on it, right? These influencers want stuff
for free. Why? Like, why would they want something for free? What benefits do you get out of it? So
here's my first section that I want to go through, which is that when it makes sense to work with
influencers. So here's my number one question that you should be able to answer when the influencer
reaches out to you, or if you're considering like offering an influencer, someone, you know,
to stay in one of your properties at a reduced cost or free, who do they have influence over?
So that's my first question. So if you're considering working with an influencer,
my first question is who do they have influence over? And I've learned this lesson the hard way.
So I'm telling you now, basically you don't have to go through the pain that I've gone through in
the past of, we've had clients that have given away $10,000 plus value stays a good week or
four nights
at some of their highest and nicest properties.
And we basically learned that the influencer had followers.
And I'll just be very honest about the situation because of the way they looked.
It was an attractive person.
And that's basically the reason that they had followers on Instagram.
It wasn't that they actually had any influence of people who are looking to vacation in the
market that you're in.
It was basically just, they looked a certain way and the people on Instagram followed them
because of that. And that was the benefit they got from it.
So that is my number one question is that when you're going and looking and considering working
with this type of partner, this type, let's say creator, if we're to be more fair, maybe to this
type of individual who's out there doing this kind of stuff, if you're working with a creator of
content, whether that's video or images or written content, bloggers, things like that's my first
question. Like they can splash numbers at you that might sound kind of impressive.
My website gets 50,000 pages a month.
Where?
People on your site, where are they looking to go?
What are they looking to do?
So that's the first thing I think that someone should consider when they're,
and if you can answer that question quickly,
you may actually disqualify 90% of people,
95% of people who reach out in the first place.
If someone has influence because they're popular in, let's say gaming,
let's say they do online gaming and they're reaching out to you, well, then promoting your,
plugging your vacation rental company during a stream of Fortnite is not going to make any
difference to your business whatsoever, even if they had a million people watching it.
Like the chance of those people overlapping with yours are so slim. But if someone is a travel
blogger and they specifically cover, they might have 2000 Instagram followers, but if they
specifically cover everything in Georgia, let's say, and you're a company based in Georgia, that person might be able to deliver you 20, 30 bookings over
the course of a year of having an article on their website, having story Instagram posts on their
feed and things like that. So that is kind of my long, I guess, monologue to get us going here
on working with influencers, asking kind of ultimately what makes the most sense,
what makes sense is who they influence. So maybe even kind of this in the past, Paul,
I don't think we've seen this as much on the owner side.
I don't think people are necessarily going that direction.
Although there are people on the,
I would say like Airbnb,
like we'll teach you how to buy
short-term rental property space
that might be considered influencers in a way.
So these people are out there
and they credential themselves.
But what's your take on the content creator today
and how they have influenced
both positively and negatively
the short-term rental industry?
It is.
I mean, I think for me, my, I would say, objection to the influencer marketing, and you kind
of touched on it already, is you don't really see what you're actually getting in return.
And I think that is a lot of it has to do with the follower numbers.
And for me, that's like the cost per
click for ppc it's it's kind of a vanity metric i mean i can get just penny on the dollar clicks
but are they going to be quality for you and i think it's kind of ties back to what you're
talking about there as well is that if they've got a million followers that's great a million
people's awesome but it is it gets down to is the audience the right people? We didn't, we weren't working with a whole lot of influencers.
I think they were kind of growing as we were growing as well on the traveler side of things.
But what we saw most frequently was reaching out to those bloggers and really trying to
find out, okay, can we hit a home run with X content piece or this and that?
I think it was, we were effective in finding some
of the right people, but you're right. It wasn't always about the people with the most followers.
It was about the people with the right followers. We had a lot of luck with mom bloggers or family
bloggers, travel bloggers, actually not as much, which was kind of funny there. But just because
I think the ask from the blogger or the influencer in this or the content creator, whatever, was too much for the value we were going to give back.
So I think I'm guessing that's on your list as well, but making sure that the commensurate value of what you're getting as you're using that influencer or that content creator, whatever that is, is right coming back for you.
But it's something that on the owner side, fortunately, we don't deal
with as much. Now, if we found the right person who had the right reach or was able to find the
right subset of people, yeah, certainly I would entertain it. But I do. I think that as far as
the messaging that a influencer or a content creator is typically going to use,
I think it is more driven towards the traveler side.
They're going to be able to really highlight maybe the images or the experience that they had at a property as opposed to,
I feel like it's difficult to put content out there
for the return you're getting on your home or your second home
or something like that that you're getting on your home or your second home or something like that
that you're having someone manage.
So, and it is, I mean, what are your thoughts on,
if you would see, if you would think that
it would be effective on the owner side
or just where it has been effective for you
as you've used it or leveraged it for other partners?
I think it's mostly just a trends thing, right?
There's people who are creating videos
and a lot of short form video people. There's people who are creating videos and a lot
of short form video people. There's people on TikTok I know that I've actually had the chance
to collaborate with through a client that I've worked with. And they are these influencer type
folks on that platform. And they're basically encouraging people, hey, this is a great way for
you to invest your money and go buy a short term rental and you can let someone manage it and it's
more hands off. So I've seen that kind of content out there. I think a lot of it is very aspirational. How many people can actually afford a premium vacation rental in a top 20
market? I think the answer is a lot less than most people think. To buy, this is a short,
I guess, a diversion here from the actual topic, but to actually buy a vacation rental in most top
20 markets, you need like $100,000 in cash between the actual purchase of the property itself,
the down payment, the furniture, any updates or things like the property needs so that not many people in america like have
a hundred thousand dollars cash laying around that they're okay just investing into a thing
that might or may or not work so i guess that's the trouble typically there's a small percentage
of people that can actually even afford to purchase a vacation rental home never mind a
nice vacation rental home in a top tier market so that's like probably why you don't see the
influencers flocking there there's just you're sifting through a lot of hay to find those five
or six needles in the haystack. So that's kind of my assessment there. Now on the guest side,
the reason that they want that, I think, is that they're looking for that. They're looking for
people to actually reach out to them and they feel like they have this broad influence. They
feel like they can take someone sitting on their couch at home and turn them into a guest. So you
touched on it, but I think this is the next section may be highlighting how much an influencer might ask to get paid. And if it's
worth it, how would we evaluate this influencer and what they're asking for, whether it's free
stay or whether it's money or both in some cases, and if it's worth it. And it might go back to some
of our digital advertising conversations that we had a few minutes ago. So if an influencer is
saying, I will come stay in your place, ideally the most ideal scenario, I think for a lot of our clients is that you might stay in the shoulder season. So you still kind of
reflect a positive light into the actual property itself and what it's like to be there in that
particular season. Like going to the ski market during the mud season probably isn't a good idea,
even though you probably have a lot of openings because they can't really experience the resort
and things like that, or going to a beach market and they're sitting on the beach in a winter coat,
probably also not ideal to kind of promote the messaging of what you're really trying to do. But if you can find
an influencer that can work on a shoulder season and ultimately work with low notice, so you can
ultimately put them into a vacant property that's not going to get a booking, I think that's the
most ideal scenario. And some can't plan their travel around that. And that's understandable.
We've done influencer work in the past where they say, Hey, look, I need to plan three months in
advance so I can ultimately figure out the path that makes the most sense for me. And that's okay. We'll just have to plan that
far in advance. We have to block out a week and it's just like an owner week. You block it out
far in advance and that's the week that you get them. So how much is that costing you? That's
an interesting conversation. If that week was going to book that the answer is that might've
cost you a few hundred dollars in commission. It could have cost you a few thousand dollars
in commission, depending on the type of home that you manage, the value, how likely that was to book and so on.
Maybe you're eating the cleaning fee.
That could be a few hundred dollars that you're having to just eat the cleaning fee itself.
So you still have to pay to get the property clean before the next guest comes in.
So working with an influencer may cost you, let's say from a few hundred to a few thousand
on the property itself and either lost commission or lost rent to the homeowner
if they are getting it for free.
So I would, if I was paying that cost and I was
advising someone, one of our clients on that, I would say, okay, what are we getting out of it?
What's the short-term benefit we might get? And what's the long-term benefit we might get?
So the short-term benefit that the influencers typically will lean into is social media
impressions, right? I'm going to go on Instagram and post your story or post your property multiple
times. I'll tag you, I'll take a picture, et cetera. I'm okay with that. There's value,
I think, in brand building happening there. Again, especially if you've vetted them and proven that
they are influencing the people that you care about. So now I would say, okay, let's assume
that they have 10,000 followers, roughly 20% of people maybe might see that content in their feed,
2,000 impressions. So am I okay paying $500 or $1,000 for basically 2,000 impressions? Well,
my CPM in that scenario is several hundred dollars, right? We can go buy ads on Google all day long of our website visitors for $20 CPMs, $30 CPMs. So you're paying
a huge premium. So my logic would be, okay, what's the long-term benefit that I'm going to get?
And that's where I think when you can actually pair it with written content, I think there
typically is, I'm a lot more driven or drawn to that influencer who can do that as well.
The social thing is like a burst, right? It's like a star that just burns brightly
and then it tails out very quickly.
Very few people are gonna go to that influencer's content
a week later after their stay
or two weeks later or two months later after their stay
and come back and reference and be like,
oh, where did Paul and his family stay?
These content creator people I follow.
Four months ago, it's very unlikely to occur.
So if you get any bookings,
you're almost gonna know right away.
Like, did this actually produce anything?
You're gonna know within the first like three or four days of them actually posting content on social media. Especially if you get any bookings, you're almost going to know right away. Like, did this actually produce anything? You're going to know within the first like three or four days of them
actually posting content on social media, especially if you say, Hey, give them a promo
code or give them something with a track, then you can kind of evaluate it from there.
But if they write an article and that article is something akin to things to do in a market,
and then they mentioned you there, but things to do in Destin, Florida, and then they mentioned
your company. Oh, when we were in Destin, we stayed with company XYZ. Or what are the best places to stay?
Or they do a review of your company, a review of property management company X.
And then they talk about your company.
Those are things I think that have a lot more long lasting value.
Like we have clients who have done influencer type stays in the past where they get that
content actually over time tends to rank better in search.
It tends to get more traffic over time.
We've had clients that have worked with influencers that used to be huge on Pinterest and they would be sending thousands of clicks to
property detail pages if they featured it on like a certain board. And even though it would get a
very low conversion rate, it was profitable because they were getting a 0.01% conversion
rate, but they sent so much volume that it actually ended up turning profitable for them.
So that's the thing that I would look for. If I'm looking for the ideal influencer for any client
that we work with, it's someone who has a reasonable ask, shoulder season, maybe a shorter stay, three days, four days. You're not losing a booking because of it. Someone who can have a quick turnaround time. They're going to get social content out quickly. They're going to get written content out quickly. And someone that doesn't just have a little burst, a little shark tooth of activity or a shark fin of activity, and then it just falls down to nothing two weeks later.
And then it just falls down to nothing two weeks later. Someone that's, yeah, I'm going to go and I'm going to write this article on the site and I'm going to promote that article. And then over time, you're going to see traffic, continual traffic referring to your site for the next year or two years because of the stay that I had last year. So those are some of the parameters that I would look for. I don't know if you have some different criteria that you would also consider, but those are things that I've thought of covering the bigger ones there, the most important ones, especially.
And again, being able to quantify it back to different channels and make that comparison.
Is this the right channel? Are there better options to getting people at a cost-effective?
I mean, not just looking at the dollars and cents of it, but is it going to make my brand stick in people's mind long-term?
Yeah, I think that it's certainly something that that is difficult to measure. And I like those analytics behind it. So that's something where
if you're predicting, trying to put those numbers out there, I think that's certainly it is. I think
you've covered the big points there. Now, my question would be, is it and I think this is
something that we see more people doing in the vacation rental space is kind of developing their own personal brands. And I think, I mean,
we're trying to develop our personal brands. Is that, is it some, is it something where,
and this is, we've recently talked to Amber Erickson. She does a lot of this with personal
branding as well, but are there people in the space right now that you would recommend for
another property manager to be able to be able to say, Hey, this is someone that you'd want to partner with. Maybe not direct influencer,
but is there a network in the vacation rental space that you think there are some influencers
out there that are of value to your partners or to other partners or other managers who are looking
for that additional exposure? Yeah, that's a good question. I don't know if I can point to
any specific thing where I look at it and say, oh, this person is going to be the person that can move the needle significantly for you. Because it might be market by market, right? One person might have a decent amount of influence in market ABC, but none in DEF. So I think that ultimately, it's something you probably have to evaluate on a per person basis. And what might be gold to someone else might really not move the needle for a different person. So yeah, nothing really sticks out to me in that respect, to be honest with you.
But maybe that brings up the next point, which, you know, that I had listed, which is that
what are some red flags that you should consider when you're looking to work with an influencer?
We've danced around some of them, but what are some things to come to mind for you?
What would be, if you had a partner approaching you or a client approaching you saying,
hey, I'm working, I'm considering working with this person.
What might you see early on that would indicate to you that they might not be a good fit for
working with? I mean, it's, I think the clearest is that just their audience isn't a right fit for
what you're actually looking to sell your product to or anything. I think it's really about the
demographics that they're presenting. Or here's the other, I mean, if you're, let's, my hope is
that you're taking the time to consider what influencer you're using.
So in doing that, you're reviewing their metrics.
You're reviewing their followers.
You're reviewing this.
If you're seeing major fluctuations in numbers of followers and stuff like that, you know, more recently on as the social media channels shift and give different value or add users or take users off or suspend or take all that good stuff.
If there are wild fluctuations in people's followings, ask about it.
Like, what did you do to do?
What action did you take that had this wild fluctuation that brought you from that you lost 5,000 followers for a thousand followers for?
Like if you're seeing and it's the same thing for big gains.
It's not just big losses, but anything that looks a little suspicious,
take that into consideration because, yeah,
this person has gained a lot of, has gained a following.
How did they do that?
Did they buy that following?
Are they actively posting and doing all this?
I would hope that they're actively
engaged on the channel but if there's a lot of fluctuation in who's following them the types
of accounts that are following them kind of if you can dig in a little more i think it's a value to
really understand how that following shifts too because if they're going to say something that's
going to i mean again if you're if they're making big statements that are getting those big changes, are they going to
go off the cuff? Are they going to kind of go a little wild? Are they going to independent on the
bit? So I guess that would be a huge red flag for me is understanding how they got the following and
any shifts that happen. What about you? Yeah, I think those are good ones. I mean,
maybe it doesn't, maybe it needs to be stated very clearly, which is that people can buy followers
very easily, you know, to your point, right? Like there are Instagram bot accounts that will follow
your account and for us to take an account. And if we didn't care at all about the quality of the
follower, we could sit here today, build a 10,000 follower account in a month or something like that,
make it look a certain, but to your point, I think the follow-up there is go look at the
accounts engagement, right? So go look, click into the most 10 recent posts, see the type of comments,
see the type of feedback that they're getting on the post. If they claim they have 10,000 followers
and yet they're getting two likes a post, well then there's obviously some disconnect there,
right? People don't even care about the content that they're posting. So what percent of people
are even seeing their post? And that's one thing that usually is a pretty red flag disqualifier
for me is in just lying, straight up lying things that I can easily verify on my side of things, especially on
the website side of things.
Oh, we get 10,000 visitors a month from Google.
And then I popped them in Ahrefs and I see like two keywords ranking.
And I'm like, really on what site?
Cause it's not this one.
It's not the one that you sent over in your, in your media deck or whatever the case may
be.
So yeah, don't lie to someone.
Maybe you think maybe you get away with it.
Maybe these folks get away with it.
That's why they do it.
They lie to unsophisticated operators out there and take advantage of them and get free
meals or free stays.
If you're someone out there doing that, I hope you get a paper cut today.
That's brutal.
For someone who's working with an agency that can verify this kind of information in a minute
or two, that's something that would be an instant disqualification.
Even if other things turned up good.
Like if you're lying, I'm just like, I'm automatically like out of it.
Like I don't really want to go in that direction.
So that's fake metrics, fake followers, someone that's not really being completely truthful or whatever. Someone that's not really respectful of you and your business,
someone that sees you as just an asset transactional thing that you can get from it.
A good influencer or a good like content creator will actually talk to you first and be like,
well, what do you want to promote? Like what, you know, what are you struggling with right now?
What are your slow seasons? What are things that if I'm coming here in April and it's a beach market, how could I talk about the things happening in April
in a more positive light that's going to help you get more bookings? Because when you work with a
good content creator, a good influencer, a good blogger, you really notice the difference because
they really do lean into a lot of that type of stuff. They actually want the outcome to be good,
because a lot of the best ones actually will come back and say again, Oh, yeah, let's do a campaign
next year. And it's that reoccurring business. I've had the chance to work with someone like that in the past on kind of some of her SEO
challenges and struggles, and she gets a lot of repeat business. So she's trying to create an
awesome experience for you and a profitable experience for you buying this influence from,
from this particular creator, because she wants to come back next year and say, Oh, let's do a
winter, you know, post, or let's do something about the summer. Let's do, Oh, you have new
homes. Let's go talk about family vacation this time. Or let's do a family reunion piece of content or whatever.
So I think that if you work with the right one, you're going to see the type of questions they
ask and how they approach it. The red flag stuff is I just want a free place to stay there feel
entitled, they feel like they're owed something just because they have certain follower count.
They don't approach it like professional, they're emotional about some things. They're not like,
Oh, here's the business. Here's what I do. Here's how I provide value. And then all the best ones over deliver. So you say,
oh, one post and two social posts and three of this, and they actually give you a little bit
more, right? They give you a little bit more. They go and add your link in a few other places
on their website. They do five stories, even though they said they would do two, right?
So like all the best ones I've worked with typically do over deliver a little bit here
and there. Not saying that they don't take advantage of the people who are kind and
working with you on this type of thing. But the worst ones that I see are the
ones that deliver the under deliver or don't really give you what you're looking for. They
have no long term value they're trying to create because it's literally just turn and burn. They
stay with you, they go try to stay with someone else. And those are typically the not type of
people you want to work with. So yeah, look for more of a partner, not just a one time sort of
relationship, I think is also a way to think about it. Do you consider age, because admittedly, a lot of these influencers are quite young,
do you consider that to be a red flag?
I think it can be because like, if you have someone, again, it goes to the whole audience
piece, right? If you have someone that's a young girl on TikTok, who has a lot of followers on
TikTok, because maybe the way she looks, or she does certain dances or whatever, again,
that may not map to any real world influence of someone who wants to book a vacation rental in Colorado, right? Like if that's where you're located. So
I think that it goes back to the audience question. Why is this person being followed?
What do they have to offer? And to our point from earlier, like the mom blog comment,
I feel like that's maybe turned into like a derogatory term. But like essence of that
is that the families are usually who you're marketing to. So the reason that the mom blogger
stuff can work a lot better, even though the mom blogger might have again,
2000 followers on Instagram, and she only talks about Georgia and Florida, that might be the
perfect person if you're based in Blue Ridge, or if you're based in Destin or something like that,
because people who follow her, the 800 people that actually engage with her content, and respond to
it, this 42 year old woman with three kids or whatever, that might be a much better match for
your actual ideal guest profile. Maybe she doesn't do the same things on TikTok that the young girl
does as far as the dances, but who cares? Are we into the dances or are we into the actual results
of the business? So yeah, I think it's easy to fall into these traps of falling into the numbers
and just, oh, big numbers, that's going to help my business. But that's really not often the case.
And hopefully this can be some tips and things like that we can share with folks. One last thing
I had here was the idea of sharing cost of the influencer between companies like other companies or even
Chamber of Commerce. Like I know the local Chamber of Commerce here, even been talked to them about
it or seen them post about it, but I just look through their backlinks sometimes. And I can
literally see that they're constantly out there promoting and working with influencer content
creator folks, because I can see they referenced the top of the article, this day was sponsored by
and then the name of the chamber, they're doing that. So that might
be something to consider, which is that you don't have to share the complete burden or cost yourself.
If you're out there in the marketplace, and you're considering doing this type of more
advanced marketing campaign, look to other companies, could the restaurant ship in a
little bit of that cleaning fee, let's say, if that influencer agrees to go eat at that restaurant
mentioned and a piece of content they create, could they do a tour, an attraction, or an activity that maybe during their stay,
they could also mention an article and they could do an awesome R72 hours in Destin, Florida,
and they could write up three or four or five different businesses of which you were one
core part of their experience. But is there other business that you can partner with?
And then go to your chamber. Could your chamber who might already be hosting people,
as is the case here locally, at least with where I'm at in my neck of the woods, if they're already hosting influencers, perhaps they need to put that
influencer up somewhere. And maybe they could feature your particular type of accommodation,
your resort, your vacation rental, your condo, your home, whatever you have to offer as part
of that influencer stay. And maybe again, there'd be a much lower cost to you to actually deliver
that thing. So that's one other thing, which is that because there's no like standardized set of protocols to follow in these scenarios, you can go wherever you want with
it. Sometimes the best thing to do is to come up with maybe more creative solutions, share cost,
look for the right type of person. And then ultimately that person can be an asset to you.
I think if you do it the right way. So yeah, anything else that you want to add, or does that
give us a decent overview into this idea? Did we hopefully break down the scary mythical person
that is an influencer or a content creator? Maybe a little bit? I think we did. I mean, I think just to
piggyback on the every travel experience is an experience. They're not just going to go to your
property. They're not just going to stay in the rental. They're not just going to stay in one spot.
Probably. They're going to go and enjoy the area. So I think that idea of really giving people that
experience, it is. it's going to ultimately give
better content for any of your users down the road. So recommending that I think would be a
good idea. And then if you can split some of those costs, I think it's a perfect way to just
get that experiential idea through. So yeah, I mean, I think that's on the experiential side,
that's where influencers can be helpful, can be important, can share that experience with their end users, with their followers.
And hopefully they'll be so excited by it that they'll want to come to.
I think that's a great way to put a bow on it, which is that these people can be an asset to you if you manage and have the right expectations.
And you realize that this is mostly a brand building activity with a small amount of direct response that might occur on the back end of it.
So if you think of it that way, I think you can have a good outcome.
Some of these influencers are out to get you.
They offer no value.
Bet them.
Trust.
I think we said two weeks ago, trust but verify.
I would say the influencers don't trust and verify.
You just don't trust what they say.
Verify everything they do and then you're probably more likely to have a more positive
outcome.
So that puts a bow on it for this week.
Thanks so much, Paul, for your time as always.
Hopping on here to the Heads of Med show. I think we broke down a pretty interesting
topic that's come up many times in the past for me. I can now send this episode to folks.
We're trying to gather more reviews. We're here. It's November of 2022. I would love if we had
maybe, what do you think, 25 reviews by the end of the year? I think we're maybe a half dozen
short. So if you leave a review, please do leave a review. And when you do so, email me. Maybe we
can send you some kind of thank you as your effort of leaving us a review helps us
a ton, get more people to check out the show. So it's the cheapest gift, cheapest Christmas
gift you all can give us. And you know, maybe we can find a way to little, give a little Christmas
gift in return. So I, there's the push for us, a little, little Christmas gift to Paul and Conrad,
and maybe we can get you something out there in return. Okay, this maybe will be my clip then.
All right, so what we want for Christmas,
what Paul and I want for Christmas
is for you to go on iTunes and leave us a review.
That's it.
You don't have to buy us any gifts,
nothing in our stocking, nothing like that.
Just leave us a review.
We appreciate it a lot.
That'll help us done.
All right, that's a good ask.
So if you do that for us, we appreciate it.
Next week, we're coming back,
I think with two, maybe two awesome episodes.
We're going to talk more
about kind of an advanced marketing plan.
So stay tuned for those.
Those are going to be awesome.
But thanks, Paul.
We will talk again next week.
And thanks again for everybody who listens.