PART 1
Building Your Community
CHAPTER 1
The Feed
How do you find your voice and create great content?
Being a creator who is looking for brand partnerships is no different than being an employee who is looking for a job. People will google you before deciding to work with you, and they need to be pleased with what they find.
Head on over to Google.com and type in your first and last name. Now take a look at your search results for general, images, videos, and news. All the content on the first page should either be created by you, or provided by you.
If it doesnât look so hot, donât panic. Head on over to google.com/alert and set up an alert with your name in quotations (e.g., âBrittany Hennessyâ). Every time new content with your name is indexed by Google, youâll receive an email to let you know youâre on the right track. Every three months, do a Google search and keep tabs on the progress youâre making. Remember, if youâre not telling your own story, someone else will tell it for you.
Sazan Hendrix (@Sazan) is a great example of someone who has her Google search results on point. Type in her name and the first page will pull up her website, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, and LinkedIn profiles and a few interviews.
On the video tab, youâll see a link to her YouTube channel along with a bunch of videos she created. Head over to the images tab and itâs gorgeous photo after gorgeous photo of Sazan with a few of her husband Stevie sprinkled in. Under news, a bunch of articles and interviews, and under shopping her business, BlessBox.
It really doesnât get better than this, folks. But the only way to dominate your search results is to create, create, create!
WHATâS IN A NAME?
Many of you may already have a name, so youâre probably side-eyeing this section hoping I donât say something that makes you want to pull out your hair and start over. I canât say that I blame you. Naming your brand may be the hardest part of becoming a content creator. Add in the fact that nothing on the Internet is ever really deleted, and the pressure is on. Now is not the time to choose a name that you will regret in six months, a year, or even five years. Vloggers have some of the best names, and by best, I mean the most ridiculous. I am looking at you, @sexypanda89. I wonât name names, because I promised myself I would only call out people anonymously, but you probably can think of a few off the top of your head.
So how do you come up with a killer name? Well, that depends on who you ask. Some people invent entire brands, like Heidi Nazarudin (@theambitionista) and Charlotte Groeneveld (@thefashionguitar) or mashup names, like Brittany Xavier (@thriftsandthreads) and Jade Kendle (@lipstickncurls). Others incorporate their name, like Jessica Franklin (@heygorjess), Alyssa Bossio (@effortlyss) and Courtney Fowler (@colormecourtney). And some keep it super simple, like Iskra Lawrence (@iskra), Rachel Martino (@rachmartino), or Nichole Ciotti (@nicholeciotti).
You can make your name as simple or as complicated as you like as long as itâs easy to promote (that means forget spelling forever like FOREVEERR, dropping the numbers, and leaving the underscores behind) and consistent. If your website is FlyFashionista.com, but your Instagram is @imaflyfashionistaaa and your YouTube is @flyfashionista4lyfe_, audiences and brands alike wonât be able to connect all your profiles to each other. You can get away with having a website name thatâs different than your social media handles, but only if theyâre all consistent.
Teni Panosian is one of my favorite influencers. She is a true professional and is one of the best content creators out there. Her website is Remarques.com, but sheâs @TeniPanosian on every platform. The consistency of her social platforms was key when she changed her site from MissMaven.com to Remarques.com. She could easily set up a landing page to direct people to the new site, but changing her name on her social channels could have had terrible results. If people see an unfamiliar name in their feed, theyâre more likely to unfollow. It also means that any article ever written about her that linked to one of her channels would now point to a page that doesnât exist. But that didnât happen to Teni because Teni is smart. Be like Teni.
OWN IT
The first question people always ask is Do I really need to be on every single platform? and the answer to that is no. While I would recommend securing your preferred username on every platform so someone canât steal it, you should only be active on platforms you have plans on updating. Nothing is worse than finding a great influencer on a platform only to find out she hasnât posted anything new in three months.
That said, everyone should have an account on the big four: Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. Youâll want an Instagram account, because itâs where the majority of influencer marketing campaigns take place. YouTube is also a big market for fashion hauls and beauty tutorials and is also a great way to show advertisers your video presence. You may think you donât need Facebook or Twitter, but you would be wrong. The content you make is usually shared by brands on Facebook and Twitter, and if they canât tag you in it, you just lost a huge opportunity to pick up new followers. The biggest reason to keep an updated Facebook page is because at some point, youâre going to want to get it verified. The little blue check may seem like no big deal, but if a brand youâre working with also has one, Facebook will require that any influencer they work with also be verified. This is why you donât see as many influencer campaigns on Facebook as you do on Instagram, but that is changing, and you want to be ready. If youâre a blogger, especially in food, home decor, and DIY, Pinterest can also be a great way to drive traffic back to your site. Iâve found that most clients donât ask for pins on Pinterest, and wonât pay a lot for them unless you have millions of followers, but itâs a good platform to join if you think you will dedicate the time to make it a success.
HOME IS WHERE YOUR BLOG IS
Blogging has come a long way from its early days of anonymous diary entries, and because it was the first medium to produce influencers, advertisers have had more time to become comfortable spending money on sponsored posts. They also love that they can easily provide feedback/edits on the content, unlike a YouTube video, and can give the influencer tracking links to see if anyone has clicked on the content or made a purchase.
Since a blog is pretty easy to set up and maintain, itâs great for aspiring influencers who are testing the waters. Unlike a YouTube channel, you donât need video equipment or editing skills, and unlike Instagram you donât necessarily need to shoot your own photos. I have seen many beautiful and highly clicked on blog posts that are made with some text, a brand-provided video, and photos found on the Internet. Given how easy it is to get started it always surprises me how many vloggers are not also bloggers. Granted, creating and editing videos may leave you with little time to do anything else, but youâre losing out on so many opportunities when you donât have a blog, because so many advertisers want influencers to create blog posts. Think about it: When you google a product or service, what comes up? Reviews on peopleâs blogs. Sure, you may also see a sponsored YouTube video or a sponsored Instagram post, but advertisers can track how many people came to their site because of a specific blog post, and advertisers love things they can track.
You should also create a blog because you want to establish your home base on something you control. Any of these social media platforms can delete your profile at any time without warning, or prohibit you from promoting your other channels, but if audience members know your blog URL, theyâll always know where to find you.
There are many, many resources available to help you set up a blog, but hereâs a crash course:
Step 1: Buy your domain. You can either do this on GoDaddy.com (it usually has coupon codes floating around the Internet) or directly from your host. If youâre not that tech savvy, I would suggest buying your domain through your host to make your life easier.
Step 2: Set up your hosting provider. I use Bluehost.com because itâs the only provider whose dashboard doesnât confuse me. It also has great customer service via chat so thereâs none of this waiting on the phone business when you inevitably break the code on your blog. Back up your blog. Back up your blog. Back up your blog. You will try to experiment with a new theme or plug-in and you will break your code and be shown the white screen of death. There is no reason for that heart attack. Pay the extra handful of dollars each month and let your host automatically back up your blog for you.
Step 3: Install Wordpress. I love Google and all of its products, but why anyone is blogging on a platform that isnât Wordpress is beyond me. Wordpress.com is the free version, but you canât control the back end and customize it to your needs, so I would skip it. Wordpress.org requires a host, but thatâs how you can upload custom themes, plug-ins, and tweak things until they are exactly how youâd like them to be. Your host should have a shortcut for installing Wordpress directly on their server. If youâre not sure, ask them before you sign up.
Step 4: Install a theme and some plug-ins. Wordpress has really stepped up its game; there are tons of free themes that are absolutely gorgeous. Of course, if you find one that you absolutely love that isnât free, by all means, buy it. If youâve seen a blog you like, you can head on over to one of my favorite tools, whatwpthemeisthat.com, to find out what theme the person uses. Itâs also a great resource to find out the plug-ins your favorite bloggers are using, or you can do a quick Google search for the best plug-ins for your type of blog. When youâre buying a theme, you can also check out how many people have downloaded your theme. It is part of your brand and you donât want it to be a carbon copy of someone elseâs site. If you have the funds and can swing it, I would recommend hiring someone to design a theme for you. Itâs not a necessity, but it is definitely nice.
Step 5: Add in your social media accounts. Sometimes I will end up on an influencerâs blog before seeing any of her social channels, and my favorite thing to do is to search high and low for her Instagram and/or YouTube profiles. JUST KIDDING. So many themes come with options to make these front and center. Use them. And make sure you link them to the proper account. This may seem like a no-brainer, but apparently it is not.
DONâT BE THAT GIRL
I was working on an event and I needed to find influencers to promote it. I found this one influencer who was great, so I went to check out her Instagram and got hit with the âPage Not Foundâ message. I went back to her blog and clicked on a different Instagram icon and got hit with the same message. I told her about it, and she told me she had changed her Instagram name but forgotten to update it, and that was the end of me trying to work with her. If you canât even manage the links on your own website, thereâs no way Iâm going to trust you to manage a campaign. It sounds harsh, but there are millions of dollars at play here every day, and you need to always remember to put your best foot forward.
When looking at themes, the type of layout you choose really depends on your personal preference and how often you think youâll be posting. Just make sure your site looks modern. Wordpress has come a long way, and anyone can make their site look like a million bucks, so why people insist on having their sites look like they were created with duct tape and a dream is b...