Finding your influencers through link listening

Knowing your influencers is a key goal for most companies. However, there is no straight forward formula, or right or wrong way to identify these evangelists. Repeated engagements and metrics such as Klout will help in assessing how engaged and how influential they are in their own merit, but without putting in a lot of manual work, engagements and Klout won’t allow brands to easily spot their influencers. Brands won’t be able to spot trends in the content being shared, where influencers are located, what else they are interested in, and how often they really engage with the content.

Cue link listening. Link Listening is a functionality found in SpiderQube Twitter, Twitter’s listening platform, allowing its users to listen in real-time to ongoing conversations.

Link listening allows users of the platform to listen to tweets which contain a link from a specific site, (say, immediatefuture.co.uk) or even from a particular page (like immediatfuture.co.uk/blog/).

It does this by using a clever Twitter search query that looks for all tweets containing that link.  You may say you can easily do that yourself from inputting that link in the Twitter search bar yourself, but what this platform does for you is categorises those sharing this link in multiple, very useful groups.

Why is this helpful?

When analysing who is sharing a specific link, SpiderQube will spot trends and split the audience by gender, age group, location and also other content they share. With this information readily at hand, brands will be able to find their overall brand evangelists and also pocket of specific influencers – their “micro-communities” of content sharers.

Having access to all of this information will present brands with the opportunity to create content specifically for influencers, send special messages to their micro-communities and grow and harness this community further. Content or promotion customisation will become an easy feat, for example knowing what else these users like allows brands to ensure incentives are targeted to their users. If, for example, a pocket of influencers was also particularly interested in technology products, a giveaway promotion could be one of the latest tech gadgets.

Traffic back to the site, Klout, and overall engagements will only go so far to identifying influencers. But being able to identify, with key measurable data, who influencers are gives brands a whole new level of engagement and content opportunities and build a loyal fan-base going forward.

Latest Posts

How can CMOs stop Q4 paid social costs from spiralling? CMOs cannot change Q4 seasonality, but they can change how exposed they are to it. Instead of leaving all budget in live auctions when CPMs peak, use Meta’s Reservation buying to pre book key Q4 reach at fixed prices, then keep a smaller auction budget for agile tests and trading. Lock creative and plans earlier in the year, use Q2 and Q3 to find winning hooks and formats, and use AI to build CPM and ROAS scenarios. You turn Q4 from a chaotic bidding war into a planned portfolio with clear risk and upside.
Read More
Is it me? Am I the problem? Or did the Christmas ads sneak onto our tellies WAY too quickly!!!? So I guess it’s that time again – the battle of the brands to make us chuckle, and shed a tear. Let’s unwrap this year’s finest festive offerings, shall we? Coca-Cola:…
Read More
Buyers decide early. Your funnel is late. Social Day B2B this year made it crystal clear the rulebook has changed for marketers under pressure to prove growth from social. Session after session, the same message landed from different angles. The funnel you have in your deck is not how buying…
Read More