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The influencer industry : the quest for authenticity on social media / Emily Hund.

By: Hund, Emily [author.]Publisher: Princeton, N. J. : Princeton University Press, [2023]Copyright date: �2023Description: 1 online resource (241 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resource001: EBC7110187ISBN: 9780691234076Subject(s): Influence (Psychology) | Social media -- AuthorshipGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Influencer industry : the quest for authenticity on social media.DDC classification: 153.852 LOC classification: BF774 | .H863 2023Online resources: Click to View

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

No detailed description available for "The Influencer Industry".

Description based on print version record.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

CHOICE Review

Over the past 15 years, an entire industry has been built around influencers and content creators. This book by Hund (Annenberg School for Communication, Univ. of Pennsylvania) provides a much-needed history and analysis of this cultural and economic shift. Covering fashion bloggers to lifestyle influencers on Instagram, the book traces how the 2008 recession pushed many young people to social media outlets to establish a platform, amass followers, demonstrate their authenticity, and build their own brands. This moment was the nexus of technological, industrial, economic, and cultural change with advertisers and retail brands pursuing new strategies in an environment that worked quite differently than traditional legacy media. Using extensive interviews and critical analysis, the book gives readers a behind-the-scenes look at the labor of influencers, the agencies and analytics businesses that work with them, and the regulatory environment that is often a step behind. While the book primarily limits its focus to fashion and lifestyle influencers on Instagram and blogs, the lessons learned here can translate into further research quite well. General readers interested in the topic will find this engaging read, and scholars will surely consider this a cornerstone work to draw upon in the future. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers through faculty; professionals. --Shayne Pepper, Northeastern Illinois University

Kirkus Book Review

How the influencer industry grew into a commercial behemoth. One of the strangest aspects of the social media age is the rise of influencers, high-profile content creators who attract astonishing numbers of followers and who can make or break fashions, trends, and products. The value of this book is that it collects and analyzes a range of opinions about the industry, providing critical context as well as a glimpse of the future. Hund is a former journalist who moved into academic research, with a focus on digital culture, and she conducted dozens of interviews with influencers and other industry figures. She found that most influencers began as bloggers in the early days of social media, writing about their lives and opinions, especially in the fashion field. They leveraged their noncorporate status into a base of subscribers, and the emergence of Instagram added a critical visual element. Advertising companies saw the potential and started buying space on sites, and then retailers began to provide free product samples for review. The next step was to sponsor influencers for positive comments. This ran counter to the idea of independence, but the money was too good to ignore. Even when followers realized that influencers were being paid, they did not seem to mind. The role of the influencer, Hund believes, is to convert "uncertainty" into something more "manageable." Most influencers study the metrics carefully and adjust their output accordingly. Indeed, as the author shows, "authenticity" has become something to be researched, designed, and manufactured. Hund is entirely aware of the paradoxes and ironies of the industry, but she also sees positives, especially as an alternative to corporate mass media. In one form or another, the business is likely to remain a key part of the techno-social landscape for a long time to come. A penetrating, well-considered look behind the polished scenes of the influencer industry. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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