20 Insights On The Future Of Spokespeople & Influencers

What do mar­keters need to know about brand ambas­sadors in the post-Fogle Era?

Lisa Lacy By Lisa Lacy. Join the discussion » 0 comments

As Sub­way moves for­ward with Ten­nessee Titans quar­ter­back Mar­cus Mar­i­o­ta, its brand face is arguably still heal­ing from the black eye dealt by for­mer spokesman Jared Fogle. While most brand­ing experts agree Fogle won’t sin­gle-hand­ed­ly elim­i­nate the use of spokesper­sons en masse and brands will cer­tain­ly per­form more due dili­gence from this point on, there are plen­ty of oth­er mar­ket­ing lessons that can be derived from the Fogle deba­cle.


Here are 20 insights on the future of spokes­peo­ple and influ­encers.

1. A Paid Spokesperson Can Overshadow Brand Meaning

Per Jon Bai­ley, chief rela­tion­ships offi­cer at mar­ket­ing agency The i.d.e.a. Brand, when a brand pays a spokesper­son to rep­re­sent it, the act deval­ues oth­er com­po­nents of brand mean­ing and it becomes more about the per­son than the com­pa­ny.

That’s the dan­ger with spokes­peo­ple – they become the embod­i­ment of the brand and when you’re charg­ing them with real­ly becom­ing the front face of your brand, that comes with con­se­quences,” Bai­ley said. “For Sub­way, that worked very well for many years, but when [spokes­peo­ple] don’t work, they real­ly don’t work. It’s not like hav­ing a brand ambas­sador that is sort of there because they love your brand and are gen­uine, authen­tic peo­ple. When you pay a spokesper­son to be the front of your brand, there are all kinds of con­se­quences.”

He points to recent exam­ples such as Lance Arm­strong and Tiger Woods, which caused headaches for the brands they rep­re­sent­ed for this very rea­son.

Indeed, Jorge Aguilar, exec­u­tive direc­tor of brand strat­e­gy at brand con­sult­ing firm Lan­dor Asso­ciates, agrees brands should ask them­selves if they need to rely on spokes­peo­ple to begin with and to per­haps instead do some soul search­ing and ques­tion what their brands real­ly stand for.

2. Brands Can’t Have Their Cake And Eat It, Too

Annie Weber, man­ag­ing direc­tor of pub­lic affairs and cor­po­rate com­mu­ni­ca­tions at mar­ket research com­pa­ny GfK, said the Sub­way sit­u­a­tion under­scores that brands must not only find spokes­peo­ple who are real­ly good fits, they will also no longer be able to get away with claim­ing they have a mean­ing­ful rela­tion­ship with some­one who rep­re­sents their val­ues as long as the rela­tion­ship is work­ing and then lat­er claim it was so super­fi­cial it can be sev­ered with a sin­gle tweet.

They can’t both say the rela­tion­ship is mean­ing­ful and not,” Weber said. “I don’t think con­sumers are going to be as open to that kind of an attitude…consumers are hun­gry for authen­tic­i­ty and that you’ve done your due dili­gence, so I think it is going to be part and par­cel that they will have to think close­ly about who they align them­selves with and ensure it’s a real­ly good fit down to the foun­da­tion and val­ues of the com­pa­ny.”

3. Bona Fide Celebrities Have Their Own Reputations That Aren’t Intrinsically Tied To A Given Brand’s

Accord­ing to Bai­ley, the rea­son this par­tic­u­lar case is so unique is because Sub­way made Fogle famous. How­ev­er, if the brand had used a celebri­ty famous in his or her own right with his or her own sphere of influ­ence, Sub­way could have dropped him or her with rel­a­tive­ly lit­tle dam­age to the brand.

In this case, Fogle has become syn­ony­mous with Sub­way over 15 years, so it could only reflect back on the brand – it’s hard to extri­cate the two,” Bai­ley said.

Chad Reid, direc­tor of com­mu­ni­ca­tions at web-based WYSIWYG form builder Jot­Form, agrees Fogle exist­ed in the pub­lic eye only because of Sub­way, which is why the brand took a hard­er hit than Nike did with Woods or Macy’s with Don­ald Trump.

Woods was already a pub­lic fig­ure whose rep­u­ta­tion wasn’t nec­es­sar­i­ly tied to Nike’s,” Reid said. “Jared’s per­son­al life was made pub­lic by way of Sub­way. It cre­at­ed a much hard­er fall for the com­pa­ny.”

Andy Fer­gu­son, free­lance writer and cre­ative direc­tor, con­curs that by shin­ing a spot­light on this anony­mous man, Sub­way cre­at­ed Jared the Sub­way Guy and gave him influ­encer sta­tus.

Up until this point, you can’t do much bet­ter than cre­at­ing a spokesman/character who goes from total­ly unknown to glob­al influ­encer. The only equi­ty Jared has to the world at large is his asso­ci­a­tion with Sub­way,” Fer­gu­son said. “He’s not an ath­lete or musi­cian or actor who has been paid to say nice things about the brand. He’s a bona fide brand enthu­si­ast whose sto­ry inspired mil­lions.”

4. Human Beings Will Screw Up

Paige Arnof-Fenn, CEO of mar­ket­ing net­work Mavens & Moguls, notes there is risk in attach­ing a brand to a human being, who is inher­ent­ly flawed.

Humans make mis­takes,” she said.

In fact, Bian­ca Lee, founder of White Rose Mar­ket­ing Solu­tions, goes as far as say­ing human spokes­peo­ple are a bad idea in this day and age.

It was per­fect­ly fine back in the days of the Marl­boro man, but he did­n’t get caught sex­ting or lick­ing donuts or hump­ing the Nic­ki Minaj wax sculp­ture at Madame Tus­sauds or what­ev­er else because there was­n’t an always-on social media cul­ture,” Lee said. “In 2015, if you hire an ath­lete, artist or any oth­er celebri­ty and plan to have them as the face of your brand for a long peri­od of time, you are going to be dis­ap­point­ed because they are human. It is only a mat­ter of when and how bad­ly.”

5. There Are Infinite Ways To Get Caught

With omnipresent mobile devices, Kyle Reyes, cre­ative direc­tor and pres­i­dent of bou­tique agency The Silent Part­ner Mar­ket­ing, said every com­pa­ny is bound to have some kind of a faux pas in the dig­i­tal age.

And Ralph Leg­ni­ni, senior cre­ative strate­gist at dig­i­tal mar­ket­ing ser­vices and con­sult­ing agency Drag­on­Search, points to a not-so-dis­tant future full of drones in which it will be even eas­i­er to get gotcha footage of bad behav­ior, which is, and will remain, big news online and in social media.

6. Variety Is The Spice Of Life

For this part, Aguilar said the Jared deba­cle is real­ly some­thing that can only exist in this always-on dig­i­tal age, which under­scores why brands shouldn’t rely on a sin­gle spokesper­son. (And, to be fair, Sub­way has diver­si­fied its efforts with ath­letes like Mike Trout and Nas­tia Liukin, but Fogle remained a brand face for many years.)

Liam Brown, CEO of busi­ness coach­ing firm Side­step Coach­ing, goes as far as call­ing it “incred­i­bly stu­pid and risky” for a brand to tie itself to a sin­gle spokesper­son and said it’s unlike­ly we’ll see this again, using brands like Jen­ny Craig, Proac­tiv and Nike as exam­ples of those that cycle through spokesper­sons, nev­er hang­ing on to one for too long.

That way when one of their influ­encers goes side­ways with the public…the over­all hit to the rep­u­ta­tion and cred­i­bil­i­ty of the brand is some­what safe­guard­ed,” he adds.

The down­side is that these brands have to mon­i­tor mul­ti­ple influ­encers’ behav­ior, but it’s a nec­es­sary evil, Brown adds.

7. Don’t Rely On Any One Spokesperson For Too Long

Lee said Sub­way should have got­ten rid of Fogle long ago and held a con­test to replace him, rins­ing and repeat­ing over the years.

Had they done this, the Sub­way brand could stand for health in the same way Wheaties stands for cham­pi­ons,” she said. “The mis­take Sub­way made was depend­ing on a sin­gle human being to be the rep­re­sen­ta­tive for their brand in an era where rep­u­ta­tions can be ruined with one tap of a smartphone…and the vari­a­tion strat­e­gy engages many more peo­ple in a way that can dri­ve deep­er rel­e­vance for the brand.”

Dana DiT­o­ma­so, part­ner at dig­i­tal mar­ket­ing agency Kick Point, agrees Subway’s big mis­take was high­light­ing Fogle for so long.

They could have come out with mul­ti­ple suc­cess sto­ries, had ads that did­n’t just focus on him — many options that would have tak­en away the spot­light and thus the fall­out would have been a bit eas­i­er to take,” she adds.

8. Characters Are Safer

Instead of flawed human beings, how­ev­er famous and influ­en­tial they may be, mar­keters know pre­cise­ly what they are going to get with ani­mat­ed char­ac­ters like the Geico Gecko, Mr. Clean and Rice Krispies’ Snap, Crack­le and Pop, which they can actu­al­ly con­trol, Lee said.

The ani­mat­ed char­ac­ters can last you for­ev­er with­out scan­dal,” she adds.

Reid agrees fic­tion­al­ized spokes­peo­ple – even human char­ac­ters like Flo from Pro­gres­sive, May­hem from All­state and the Triva­go Guy – are also smart choic­es.

At the end of the day, char­ac­ter spokes­peo­ple can be replaced with­out much hic­cup,” he said. “So in the event of anoth­er cri­sis, it wouldn’t cre­ate the same media fren­zy as a real per­son.”

9. Regular Joes And Janes May Be Easier

While influ­encers are cer­tain­ly pow­er­ful in their own right – and per­haps more authen­tic – and experts antic­i­pate influ­encer mar­ket­ing will con­tin­ue to grow and thrive, DiT­o­ma­so notes these com­pa­ny rep­re­sen­ta­tives may sim­ply be eas­i­er to work with than tra­di­tion­al celebri­ties and ques­tions whether this will spur brands to rely on them more fre­quent­ly as a result.

10. More Niches Are Coming

As tech­nol­o­gy advances, Fer­gu­son said he expects to see more nich­es, which will, in turn, mean more oppor­tu­ni­ties for influ­ence that are even more spe­cif­ic and var­ied.

I think that there’s always going to be ways to reach broad audi­ences on com­mon themes like love, suc­cess, dreams, etc.,” he said. “But there’s going to be more need for brands to con­nect with a wider vari­ety of influ­encers if the brands want to have deep­er, more authen­tic con­nec­tions with the audi­ences they’re hop­ing to reach.”

Fer­gu­son also points to a Vari­ety sur­vey that found the top five influ­encers for teens are YouTube stars.

As tech­nol­o­gy advances, influ­encers are going to emerge from unex­pect­ed places,” he said. “Brands will have to be more engaged in more spe­cif­ic com­mu­ni­ca­tion to cap­ture those audi­ences.”

11. Influencers Are Good Filters

For his part, Dave Wake­man, prin­ci­pal at Wake­man Con­sult­ing Group, points to infor­ma­tion over­load in the dig­i­tal era and said trust­ed resources like influ­encers help con­sumers fil­ter through.

Indeed, Nan­cy Harhut, chief cre­ative offi­cer at dig­i­tal mar­ket­ing firm Wilde Agency, agrees con­sumers are hard­wired to fol­low the lead of peo­ple like them or the peo­ple they like.

Celebri­ties become author­i­ties of a sort when they endorse a prod­uct, even if there’s not an espe­cial­ly close rela­tion­ship between them and the prod­uct they endorse,” she said. “Sim­i­lar­ly, ‘some­one like me’ who uses a prod­uct with favor­able results will always be moti­vat­ing to that pro­duc­t’s tar­get mar­ket. We, as peo­ple, assume that per­son has done the research, or knows some­thing we don’t. It’s the kind of deci­sion-mak­ing short­cut we all rely on.”

12. Due Diligence Is More Than A One-Time Affair

While experts uni­ver­sal­ly agree com­pa­nies will increase due dili­gence at the onset of new rela­tion­ships, Bai­ley said he also expects smart brands will make a point to per­form due dili­gence more fre­quent­ly as well.

It’s pos­si­ble Fogle was squeaky clean at the out­set, but Sub­way should have checked in peri­od­i­cal­ly,” Bai­ley said. “If a com­pa­ny does embark on that kind of rela­tion­ship, they’re going to be more care­ful. Con­tracts will have a short­er dura­tion so they can be reeval­u­at­ed and reis­sued.”

13. Character Counts

Your due dili­gence may explore the essence of who the per­son is.

It’s not enough to have a great smile or an inspi­ra­tional sto­ry, a spokesper­son needs to have more than a good rep­u­ta­tion,” said Andy Beal, CEO of social media mon­i­tor­ing firm Track­ur. “They need to have a great char­ac­ter.”

14. Relatability Is Key

But regard­less of who a brand choos­es, con­sumers must see a bit of them­selves in that per­son in order for the rela­tion­ship to have brand val­ue.

It’s my Har­vey Dent hypoth­e­sis,” Reyes said. “In the movie ‘The Dark Knight’, Bruce Wayne did what he need­ed to do to pro­tect Har­vey Dent when he turned into Two Face. He did it because Bruce Wayne/Batman believed that peo­ple need­ed a hero. They need­ed some­one to look to and to trust. It’s the same with spokes­peo­ple. It’s the same rea­son why Don­ald Trump is crush­ing it in the polls. Peo­ple want some­one they can relate to and some­one who they feel can speak their lan­guage.”

15. Money Talks

The prac­tice of using spokesper­sons and influ­encers will con­tin­ue, sim­ply put, because it works.

Par­al­lel this,” Leg­ni­ni said. “Sports teams con­tin­u­al­ly sign play­ers who have ques­tion­able pasts – because they are renowned in their field and have influ­ence to sell tick­ets. The gam­ble often out­weighs the risk.”

16. Protocols Should Be In Place

Mel Car­son, CEO of con­sul­tan­cy Delight­ful Com­mu­ni­ca­tions, likens the Fogle after­math to the 2008–2009 time­frame “when you had a whole bunch of big social media whoop­sies,” which was fol­lowed by brands putting social media pro­to­cols in place.

This would be a moment for brands to real­ly do the same thing and have a bit of a reset to make sure they are using the right influ­encers and spokes­peo­ple, but also that they have the right process­es in place and they have worked with their PR com­pa­nies and agen­cies to make sure they have a sol­id plan in case any­thing does go wrong,” he said.

Huma Gru­az, pres­i­dent and CEO of Alpay­tac Pub­lic Relations/Marketing Com­mu­ni­ca­tions, agrees brands that imple­ment strate­gic cri­sis com­mu­ni­ca­tion strate­gies in case of an implo­sion can pro­tect their brands and some­times even enhance bonds with cus­tomers.

Case in point, when [Armstrong’s] lies were revealed, every­body felt cheat­ed — not only its spon­sors,” Gru­az said. “In a way, fans of Arm­strong who kept on believ­ing in him and sup­port­ing him com­mis­er­at­ed with the spon­sor brands and shared their dev­as­ta­tion.”

17. Face The Music

But, even if the worst hap­pens, DiT­o­ma­so notes the brands that own their mis­takes and val­ues can min­i­mize over­all dam­age.

18. Memories Are Short

There have been scan­dals of all sorts that hap­pened before the Fogle inci­dent and there will be plen­ty after­wards,” Brown said. “The con­sumer has a very short mem­o­ry.”

19. Think Big Picture

Regard­less of who they work with, brands that employ a spokesper­son as part of an inte­grat­ed mar­ket­ing mix are the ones who are real­ly on to some­thing, Bai­ley not­ed.

20. Don’t Be Scared

Smart brands won’t let the Sub­way exam­ple deter them from using a spokesper­son as part of a larg­er mar­ket­ing strat­e­gy – they will sim­ply be smarter about it, notes Cal­lum Beat­tie, part­ner at brand­ing and com­mu­ni­ca­tions agency Hon­est Agency.


What oth­er lessons do you think mar­keters can glean from this sit­u­a­tion?

Lisa Lacy

Written by Lisa Lacy

Lisa is a senior features writer for Inked. She also previously covered digital marketing for Incisive Media. Her background includes editorial positions at Dow Jones, the Financial Times, the Huffington Post, AOL, Amazon, Hearst, Martha Stewart Living and the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.

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