Skip to main content

Twitter claims users trust social media influencers as much as their own friends

twitter influencers purchasing habits zoella yt
Social media sensation Zoella Image used with permission by copyright holder
Who needs friends when you’ve got social media influencers? At least that’s the conclusion Twitter has reached following a study into the clout wielded by the web’s most popular stars when it comes to driving users’ purchasing habits.

The research conducted jointly with analytics firm Annalect found that 40 percent of respondents confirmed that they’d bought an item online having seen it being used by a social media influencer on the likes of Instagram, Vine, Twitter, or YouTube.

That momentous selling power is driving a diverse range of brands to work with native stars on the platforms in question in an effort to reach more mobile consumers. Twitter VP of market research Jeffrey Graham has a term for the smartphone celebs: “handheld names,” a spin on the household names brands once used to sell their wares on television and radio.

The study also found that 20 percent of respondents shared what influencers were promoting online, and one third of millennials claimed they followed a creator on Twitter or Vine. Most importantly for advertisers, 49 percent of the 300 people surveyed as part of the study stated that they rely on product recommendations from popular social media users.

“People are looking at their phones, they’re reading what influencers say and then they’re telling their friends,” Graham told Adweek.

As more brands scramble to sponsor influencers with ever-inflating advertising deals, the lure of becoming an online creator has also increased exponentially. The Twitter-owned talent agency Niche revealed that the pool of influencers available to brands has grown from 6,000 to over 25,000 in a year.

“I think what this is telling us is that you don’t have to be a mass media star or a household name to be influential and actually drive people to buy stuff,” Graham said of the findings.

Editors' Recommendations

Saqib Shah
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Saqib Shah is a Twitter addict and film fan with an obsessive interest in pop culture trends. In his spare time he can be…
Searches for health topics on YouTube now highlights personal stories
The red and white YouTube logo on a phone screen. The phone is on a white background.

Google and TikTok aren't the only places people look for information on health issues. YouTube is another resource people look to for educating themselves on health-related topics. Now, YouTube has launched a new feature in an attempt to further support those queries in a different way.

On Wednesday, the video-sharing website announced its latest feature via a blog post. Known as a Personal Stories shelf, the new search-related feature will yield a "shelf" of personal story videos about the health topics users search for. Essentially, if you search for a health topic, a Personal Stories shelf may appear in your search results and it will be populated with YouTube videos that feature personal stories about people who have experienced the health issue you searched for.

Read more
This beloved TikTok feature is coming to YouTube Shorts
Two mobile devices showing two people dancing in YouTube Shorts videos.

YouTube Shorts, the video-sharing website's answer to TikTok videos, is getting a new comment reply feature and with it, looks more like its wildly popular competitor.

On Thursday, the new feature was announced via an update to a YouTube Help thread titled "New Features and Updates for Shorts Viewers & Creators." The announcement was posted by a TeamYouTube community manager.

Read more
More Twitter users will soon see fact-check notes on tweets
The Twitter app on the Sony XPeria 5 II.

Birdwatch, Twitter's community fact-checking pilot program, is expanding and getting a few updates. And for users in the U.S. that means more of them will be seeing a few tweets in their timelines that feature notes which add context to the tweets themselves.

On Wednesday, the official Twitter account for the bird app's Birdwatch program posted a series of tweets announcing its expansion.

Read more