Right About Now with Ryan Alford - Turning Followers into Brand Ambassadors with Luke Yarnton
Episode Date: July 22, 2025Right About Now with Ryan AlfordJoin media personality and marketing expert Ryan Alford as he dives into dynamic conversations with top entrepreneurs, marketers, and influencers. "Right About... Now" brings you actionable insights on business, marketing, and personal branding, helping you stay ahead in today's fast-paced digital world. Whether it's exploring how character and charisma can make millions or unveiling the strategies behind viral success, Ryan delivers a fresh perspective with every episode. Perfect for anyone looking to elevate their business game and unlock their full potential.Resources:Right About Now NewsletterFree Podcast Monetization CourseJoin The NetworkFollow Us On InstagramSubscribe To Our Youtube ChannelVibe Science MediaSUMMARYIn this episode of "Right About Now," host Ryan Alford and guest Luke Yarnton, co-founder of The Rave, explore the evolution of influencer marketing. They discuss the shift from relying on big-name influencers to leveraging micro and nano influencers—often existing customers—for authentic brand advocacy. Luke shares strategies for building “ambassador armies,” engaging customers through simple, rewarding tasks, and fostering community. The conversation highlights the importance of authenticity, effective tracking, and gamification, while predicting a future where influencer and affiliate marketing are democratized and accessible to all.TAKEAWAYSEvolution of influencer marketing over the past decadeShift from large influencers to micro and nano influencersImportance of trust and authenticity in influencer endorsementsBuilding an "ambassador army" of genuine brand advocatesStrategies for identifying and engaging potential brand ambassadorsThe role of community management in fostering brand loyaltyBalancing performance marketing with brand marketing through influencer partnershipsUtilizing gamification to motivate micro and nano influencersThe impact of demographic factors on influencer effectivenessFuture trends in decentralized and democratized influencer marketingSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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10 years ago, the default approach to influencer marketing was,
I'm going to find the biggest influencer that kind of is in my segment or my sector,
and I'm going to get them to post about me once with some big splash Instagram post,
and then we're done, and then I move on to the next one.
Whereas now, if you go down that follow account tree,
these micro-influencers and nano-influencers tend to be the ones who have that high level of trust
and high level of to be the ones who have that high level of trust
and high level of credibility within the audiences.
So that's where a lot of brands are shifting towards that activation.
This is Right About Now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network production.
We are the number one business show on the planet with over 1 million downloads a month.
Taking the BS out of business for over six years
and over 400 episodes.
You ready to start snapping necks and cashing checks?
Well, it starts right about now.
What's up guys?
Welcome to Right About Now.
We're always talking about how
to get your business right today.
This isn't about last year, next year.
This is about what works right about now.
That's why we're going to talk about
one of my favorite topics,
because it gets kicked around so much.
You see it, it's a buzzword,
but it is becoming the here, the now,
and how brands, marketers, business people, coaches,
whoever you are, need to be thinking about
leveraging influencer marketing to grow their
business and to grow the awareness of whatever they're doing. That's why, hey, go to the source.
Luke Yarnsson, he is one of the founders of The Rave. What's up, Luke?
Hey, how's it going? Excited to be here today, Ryan.
Me too, man. Selfishly, I was like, we get asked, we get a lot of requests and I was looking at your stuff
and, you know, I'm on a soapbox here recently with, you know, with influencer marketing
both internally and externally with my companies about how to leverage it. And I'm like, you
know, this will be an education course for me. I think I know most of it, but I don't
know it all. And I think our audience can learn a lot from it.
I know you're a firm believer in it, right?
Absolutely.
It's a very quickly changing space at the moment as well.
What it means to be an influencer,
and how to capture that, and the ways to capture it,
changing it week by week.
And so I'm excited to dive deep on that with you today, Ryan.
I think it's going to be a fun chat.
Yeah, man.
And let's start right there.
I mean, what has been the change?
You know, I think, you know, at its core, when you hear influencer marketing,
it's like, okay, someone who has a big following is promoting a product or
service and like, that's it. But that's not wrong,
but it's evolved into a lot more than that. So why don't you kind of start down
that path for us? Yeah, I think a good place to start is if we look
in the rear vision mirror 10 years in the past
and 10 years ago, the default approach
to influencer marketing was,
I'm gonna find the biggest influencer
that kind of is in my segment or my sector
and I'm gonna get into post about me once
with some big splash Instagram posts
and then we're done and then I move on to the next
one and maybe they would have three or four influencers on their roster throughout the year,
super high touch and it's purely just they want to be associated with this person who has a big
following because you can get a bunch of reach. That's changed a lot now so that's changed for
a bunch of reasons. One of the key reasons that it's changing now is sort of this inverse relationship
with trust and follow account now.
So as follow account increases, trust decreases.
So a lot of that's probably been eroded away
by the fact people realize that in 2015,
people were just getting paid bucket loads of cash
to post about some brand that they've never actually used
or sort of experienced,
and people can see through that pretty clearly.
Whereas now if you go down that follow account tree, these micro influences and nano influences
tend to be the ones who have that high level of trust and high level of credibility within
the audiences. So that's where a lot of brands are shifting towards that activation. And
rather than a one and done approach where it's, I want this micro influencer or an animal influencer
to post about me just one time,
and then we'll move on to the next one.
It's more about creating this always on ambassador army,
where you've got a group of people
who are really closely aligned with your brand.
Ideally, they're genuine users of the brand,
and they're trying to talk about you as much as possible.
It becomes part of their content
and you build a really close relationship
with that influencer, which then gets sort of passed on
through that connection with their really engaged audience.
Yeah, and the micro influencer here a lot though.
Now we got the nano influencer.
Yeah.
We got all of them.
I mean, how many followers does the nano influencer have
versus the micro influencer?
So, at least for us, and there's no scientific agreed consensus on how to classify them,
but we say nano is sort of, we're saying between 2,500 and 10,000 and then 10,000 to 50,000
is where we'd probably call that micro.
Okay.
So those are the bands that we like to operate in. But we, like me personally, and you'll see this come through throughout the chat today, 50,000 is where we'd probably call that micro.
But like me personally, and you'll see this come through throughout the chat today,
I'm a big fan of the nano and the micro.
I love that small end of the influencer spectrum.
I think that's where a lot of the opportunity in the low-hanging fruit is today. see so many of these businesses that we engage with burning hours and burning cash, sort
of chasing the Instagram DMs of these bigger influencers that end up in these campaigns
that turn out to be absolute duds.
So we'll lean into that nano and micro end of the scale today.
Yeah.
That means I'm out.
I'm in the, I got 200 and something.
I guess I'm like, you know, building it for 15 years, eight years for the number one show.
Like I needed to slow down.
I'm becoming irrelevant because my following is growing.
Who knew?
Yeah.
It's a horses for courses approach, right?
Where there are still uses for these larger influences
in specific cases, but it's not the only influences you'd care about
have more than 100,000 followers anymore.
It's about finding the right fit for your brand
for whatever you're trying to achieve
with your influencer marketing.
Well, over time, everything gets improved
and you learn from the targeting
and gets more targeted, right?
So that's what we're doing instead of painting
with a wide brush or getting a,
I don't know, a Kardashian to talk about something that may or may not be that related.
And it's great to get the reach, but how much frequency are you getting and how much relevancy
are you getting to the audience?
So that's what we're going for, right?
Exactly.
I can tell a personal story here that sort of gives some relevance to this as well.
And this is one of the origin stories of what we're doing.
Why are we doing what we do now?
Is that like through COVID time, I tried my hand at being an influencer.
My area of media was I was producing a bunch of slow motion coffee videos.
I'm not sure if you've seen them on your TikTok feed or in Serum Feed.
Set to some music, they'd be like a sexy espresso pulled into a cup.
We'd see the coffee coming out really relaxing. we were in SerumFeed, set to some music, there'd be like a sexy espresso pulled into a cup.
We'd see the coffee coming out, really relaxing.
I got like a couple of thousand followers on my TikTok
and was like pretty active on Reddit as well.
But in that time, even with such a small influence,
I generated probably more than $10,000 worth
of transactions for the brands and the equipment
that I was using because people would reach out and say,
oh my God, what is that grinder?
It's such a cool grinder or that is a beautiful machine. I want that machine. that I was using because people would reach out and say,
that in any way, shape, or form. I didn't get any free shit. I was just me plotting away with my iPhone 13 making some pretty average content. And now that's completely
changed, right? Where people would now take a little bit more notice about what I'm doing
and try to activate that in a way that's beneficial to their brand.
Have we lost the appreciation for amazingly produced high-end content? Because now, you
know, everything's on the phone and everybody likes organic but like is there appetite still for influencers or
people that produce content sharing like really well produced stuff? I think the
question is not to the quality of the content at least the way I view it is is
is it still authentic? You can find really highly produced, really authentic
content and you can find low quality authentic content. I think the reason people, at least
we're going through this wave at the moment of content shot on an iPhone in the way that
their friends and family would produce it, because this is how me as an audience, I'm
used to consuming media from my friends, it feels a little bit more authentic and I feel a better connection, but the style of content comes in waves, right? We'll see it change time and time again.
This authenticity that makes the...
Exactly.
That makes sense. So you paint that brush across it. And that's probably back to like if it's just, you know,
when you think back to the, I don't know, what I think of is the cringey
stuff is just okay. The 21 year old in a high
polished Ferrari video that's like, it just screams, I don't know, inauthentic.
Exactly. Yeah.
I think that's kind of what we're saying a little bit. No, that's an extreme example,
but I don't know. I just, I love it. And like being a content creator and owning an agency
and working on large brands in the past,
I love just high produced, high end content.
That storytelling, you know, obviously has a narrative
and things like that.
And I'm like, I just hope we haven't lost the appreciation
of that on some level.
I think it's a short term hack is that like,
and you see a lot of these bigger brands doing it now,
they want to be trusted and to tap into that authenticity and making it look like something that your
friend might produce can, at least for now, give that illusion.
Whether that's a long-term strategy or not, we'll check back in 12 months from now and
have a look at that.
How do I build an ambassador army?
You know, like, how is this done?
Excellent question.
So that's something that I've spent a lot of time
and energy trying to unpack and work out
how to do it time and time again.
That's the main way that we at the rave
help businesses unlock goals.
There's a couple of key steps to building an Ambassador Army
and by Ambassador Army, we mean a group of ambassadors
that will talk about a brand that they love
time and time again and ideally can have some positive outcome. So typically what that means is let's find a bunch
of these sort of micro creators or creators influences, or even just everyday shoppers that
have the ability to impact sales or whatever outcome you want, whether that's clicks or
transactions, and do that consistently. The way we typically work with brands is we break it down
into three key steps.
So first of all, you need to make sure you've got the right
people coming in the top of the funnel.
And the way we do that, or the easiest way we do that,
is that we've got a piece of technology that can go through
a brand's email list or be actively monitoring
their checkout.
And every single time we see a customer profile that we can
match against an influencer profile.
So we've got access to about 15 million
creator and influencer profiles around the world.
As soon as we see an exact match,
we flag that and we update the SCRM
or update a notification channel for them saying,
hey, this influencer here, this guy Ryan,
he's got 250K followers, he just purchased some socks.
Maybe you wanna reach out to him. So first things first, let's go through all followers, he just purchased some socks, maybe you want to reach out to
him.
So first things first, let's go through all of the previous people who have shopped and
identify who has this outsized chance to be a great influencer and ambassador for your
brand.
And I love that because I oftentimes, there are certain things.
Look, I'm a consumer like everybody else.
You know, I have a big following.
We've had luck.
We've been blessed to have a good show with
loyal listeners and all that. So we have influence. And there's stuff that I buy like everybody
else, the grocery store and all that. And I don't go, man, I should be paid to buy this.
No. But there are a handful of things that I buy that I'm like, I should not be buying
this because, not because I earned it, but I did build audience and have influence.
This brand should be paying me to buy this or buying it for me and then I should be promoting
it because I'm a firm believer in it. It's like right down their demo.
I love that, but I'm like, man, we need more people discovering these things, right?
Exactly. But you've touched on an interesting point there as well, Ryan,
where obviously we've talked about authenticity and trust.
They want their audience to trust them and listen to what they have to say.
So they would much rather promote a brand that they genuinely love
than have to feign love for some brand that has been hammering their Instagram DMs for a while. So this is why we're saying the influencers and ambassadors
you should be looking to build into this army
are people who already freaking know and love you.
Don't go chasing these people
who've never heard of your brand before
that might be interested and might not.
So first we'll build the cohort of people
that we think are a great fit for promoting your brand.
They're the ambassador army.
The next step, and this is where a lot of people get stuck, is the natural inclination
is how do I get them to love me and join the ambassador army and participate always and
forever and will be in love.
Well, let me ask a question because I think this is a key distinction back for step one.
What if I don't have that list?
What if I'm a startup or early phase and we don't have a 20,000 person list to vet out those
people.
In that case, what I would recommend is let's monitor it in real time.
Every single time a transaction comes through, we'll make sure that we're not missing a single
opportunity of someone who might have a small influence to post about you.
Even the small community you do have, simply putting an ask out there saying, hey, Sawyer made a purchase from us.
We're trying to build an ambassador army.
Here's what's in it for you.
Here's what's in it for us.
Be transparent around sort of how it cuts both ways.
If there's any chance you're interested, let me know.
Opt in.
There'll be some benefits.
Do you help people if, again, it's great if monitoring sales, but is your whole premise around just purely people
that have already are buying or just bought is sort of building that army of those existing
customers?
Is there any amount of yours that's prospecting influencers, whatever it might be?
Yeah, look, we can help brands out with that.
That's a skill that we do have, but we're eagerly, what we're trying to do is help people
realize and we're the best at what we do is helping people find the low hanging fruit
or the golden goose that lives within their, their customer list.
I think that's where the most overlooked value is.
But if it does come to prospecting, you're hidden super fans that also have
influence. Exactly.
But look, when it comes to prospecting and outreach, let's say you're a business that has very few customers and no budget for influencer marketing. have influence. your space, jump into the hashtags and TikTok, jump into the hashtags and in Instagram and the folks you want will have less than 7,500 followers because
those are the ones who are gonna get a likelihood of some response from and
they have that high engagement and you're not gonna piss away hours and
hours and hours trying to to get someone on board who's then gonna want to charge
you $5,000 for a single post. You want those young hungry creators that are willing to believe in what you're doing. Those are the ones who you want
to be connecting with if you're early on the journey.
I love the community thing and the power. I've been late to the game on this. I've known
it. I think I've counseled people, but myself, I'm a practitioner.
The Facebook group, Reddit thing, all that stuff is gold mine.
You've got these conversation groups and things that are happening.
They're having conversations about things, topics in your area.
And the next hire that I would probably make is it's like a growth manager,
but really it's almost like audience finding, community manager, audience or community finding.
There's a balance of like, because it's almost like this balance of managing what you have
is kind of community manager. Finding and nurturing and building and discovering community is
kind of like the secret sauce.
Fostering a community is such an important part of longevity success now. Like you can see
that once you've got a group of people who want to listen to what you have to say and want to
engage with you, that is a forever asset that you can tap into in a million
different ways and it creates so much value.
And the other benefit is it can sort of, once you've got that critical mass, it then can
go on and grow itself and you don't actually have to be monitoring it and putting as much
time and effort into it.
Ideally, you can get these sort of folks who exist within that community themselves, the
type of people who can then go on and
be the champions of the community out of love alone.
Yes. I love it. I love it. So talk to me. Okay. We helped build with step one, we helped
them build their army, either existing, some prospecting, but really mining what's there.
Now what? So the next step is we only want to get them to do one thing.
And that one thing varies brand to brand.
What you don't want to do is try and onboard them
to be part of the ambassador army straight away.
That you get a lot of friction there,
you get a lot of drop off, timing might not be right,
and then you'll burn a lot of opportunities.
So the key thing here is once you've got them
to do one simple task for you,
the likelihood of them doing a subsequent task is significantly higher.
So typically what we'll do, I'll give you a real life example.
There's a athleisure brand we're working with called Form.
They blew up a couple of years ago because Taylor Swift was seen wearing one of
their sports bras. They do posture correcting athleisure wear.
And they do it really well. They're growing at a rapid pace.
So then what we do is we've got this automation set up plus we're doing the retrospective mining
and we say, hey, so you made a purchase from us, love your content. By the way, if you just want to
or like this is a really low lift ask, If you just want to post a picture of you
in anything from form on your Instagram story,
we'll refund your most recent order.
It's not a big ask, it's pretty easy.
We're not asking them to sell out, no affiliate links,
no anything, it's really just, if you can post
about our brand and just show that we're relevant,
that first ask and then we'll keep our promise
of giving you a refund, that's the first offer.
So that's a really easy offer for a creator of any size,
whether it's 2,500 followers or 50,000 followers.
They're like, I was probably gonna post about this anyway,
now I might post about it a little bit quicker
and I don't have to tag them or do anything gross like that,
it's just showing that this is a brand that I wear
that I paid organically for.
Brilliant.
But then what that also does
is it builds a little bit of trust, right?
So we've come to an agreement
that you're gonna post about us
and then we'll give you a refund.
The refund hits the account.
Magic moment, a little bit of delight.
And then following that,
so that's when we get to stage three,
which is now you've got a group of influencers
or ambassadors, creators that love the brand. Second point is they've actually done something for you
once. And then once they've done a single task for you, that's when they become part of this closed
group of ambassador army. And that's when you can sort of foster that community. And every single
time there's a new drop, anytime there's something interesting happening, they get updated, they feel part of the brand.
And then all of a sudden, through very little effort,
you've got a group of 200-odd micro-creators
consistently posting about this brand
that they feel connected to for very little cost.
I love it.
The first step is always the best.
Because you get them to do that one thing.
I mean, it's slow ask,
like you said. Then they're in and there's some connection and then you build from there.
What's the percentage of like, I don't know, do you have data like the average if they
do that one thing, like that they join the army, so to speak?
Yeah. So it varies a lot segment to segment.
Certain brands that have more like social currency,
and by social currency I mean people want
to naturally talk about it.
Obviously they get higher cut through
than something that's significantly less interesting.
So for every 10,000 shoppers,
we know that about 200 to 250 of them
have more than 2,500 followers.
And then obviously of those,
some of them are gonna be duds.
It'll be like some auto garage
that has a high following count,
or it'll be a dog account.
So let's say that the real amount
is gonna be 200 per 10,000 customers.
Ideally, we'll be able to convince,
to join the group, 30 to 50 of those is a good outcome.
They've got noisy inboxes, it's hard,
but generally speaking, if you can catch them
with a good serendipitous message,
right person, right time, and all you need
is for one of those to turn into a powerhouse
for you to get really, really incredible outcomes.
What industries does this work best for?
We're still relatively new on the journey at the moment.
We've got less than, maybe just over 200 brands
using the platform at the moment, I need to check the numbers, but it's still relatively no.
We're skewing more towards e-comm at the moment. So we're seeing a lot of proof coming out
in the e-comm space and we're dipping our toes into ticketing and we're dipping our
toes into SaaS apps at the moment. We haven't found a segment where it very clearly doesn't
work. What we are finding is that if the average age of the customer is above 40,
the likelihood of us discovering an influencer
is slightly lower, but that specific customer base
are significantly more receptive to these micro-influencer
and nano-influencer people, so the impact is higher.
So it's a little bit more of a grind,
but once you do unlock those customers,
they provide a significantly better impact because the number of creators or influencers that people over the age
of 40 are following is significantly lower than say someone in the Gen Z cohort who's going to
be aware of 200 or 300 creators posting consistently, whereas like my parents probably
know of four influencers or like five maybe.
It's interesting because I talk all the time about performance marketing versus brand marketing.
The marketing that's driving a sale today or as fast as possible at the bottom of the
funnel versus building brand over time.
We all need outcomes and you need business outcomes.
Believe it or not, no matter what these performance marketers
have tried to tell us, you have to actually create
awareness and intent before they buy,
which there is a funnel or a cycle that is still there.
One ad or one influence or whatever insert ad like object
doesn't always drive a sale that day. And so I'm building to a question here, Luke, or one influence or whatever,
insert ad like object doesn't always drive a sale that day.
And so I'm building to a question here, Luke,
is I see this as beneficial both for the top and the bottom of the funnel.
So that's an interesting point. is a performance element to this where often it is paired with affiliate based marketing. We've got a fully fleshed out affiliate marketing tool and ours is built around this idea that
affiliate and influencer marketing will be completely democratized within 10 years.
So I'm speaking often set opposite. There'll be a brand market, a head of influence and
a performance marketer when I'm having sort of these higher level discussions
we give away as a commission to that affiliate creator or influencer for making that. And it's going to be a right balance, right?
Where for certain brands, that discount that's attached to an affiliate link is a really
effective lever to get people purchasing.
For other brands, they'll rather have like a super low or even just 0% discount, but
they'll heavily incentivize the affiliate or the influencer for posting about it.
So they might go up to 30% commission.
And so the performance marketer is thinking, how do I optimize this?
How do we A-B test this?
And how do I make sure that we get as high a conversion rate or a third shopper versus
a standard shopper that's arrived to the site on their own?
Yeah.
Because I mean, ideally, you know, the outcomes for me would just be more trial of the show.
And if we're doing our job, it translates to more subscribers at some percentage level.
But being able to track, if we build the ambassador army for any given podcast, then tracking
the downloads that they drive for individual episodes.
And those are the sort of sales for this approach.
Exactly, look, you can shoot them all.
All that can be done.
They get their own unique link with a specific UTM.
You can see who's actually effective
at driving traffic to your site and who's not.
Yes, the now army.
Game try in a way.
Honestly, that's one of the biggest hacks we've found
as well.
This is like a little secret
that I'll share with the audience.
Oh yes, high secrets for the show Luke.
I like it.
A lot of these, at least what I've found so far,
a lot of these micro influences and sort of nano influences,
they are natively very competitive people.
They like to win.
They like to, they're often very metric obsessed.
If you can have a,
sneak a little bit of a leaderboard
in there or some sort of competitive element to it,
that's a good way to get a squeeze a little bit
of extra juice out of it, let's say that.
I'll get a little bit more excited about it.
Whoever can drive the most clicks to the site,
transparent leaderboard by the end of the month,
you get something that is of the appropriate value.
They're now army.
That's what I need, the now Army.
And they're who's driving the most downloads
or audience for the show, and they get the winning badge.
Exactly.
I'll creatively come up with that.
We'll have merch, everything else.
I can make it cool, like Alwamart.
Yeah, they can get one of those big wrestling belts that's set in front of you
right now.
Oh, hey, I can.
We'll send him a belt just like this.
Now champion of the world.
And now, the now army.
I like it.
See?
You know, I mean, you got it.
But see, I did say whenever someone overtakes me as the number one marketing and business
show, they come get the belt.
Now I'm 652.60.
You might have to wrestle me for it, but the
numbers back it up as I drive my sponsor drink. Yeah, but yes, it's fun. I'm liking it. I'm liking
it. And we're brainstorming here selfishly, but it applies to any business is the point.
You can use influencers community and again, gamifying it a bit, which I like. People love
that.
But it's also such a human thing to want to be a part of a community.
You want to be involved in something.
You want to be collaborative and co-create something with your peers.
If you just provide that structure for them
and provide a little bit of incentive to get them moving,
it is just something native to human nature
that people want to be a part of something.
Yes.
Influencer marketing is like, it's the now version of spokesperson.
Back in the day and even now, brands use spokespersons.
I mean, if you watch the Super Bowl, every ad has a celebrity in it and you had spokesperson
marketing.
So you have Michael Jordan or you have Michael Phelps if you're a swimmer. Like whatever it might be, Olympian actor Tom Cruise and they're the spokesperson for
the brand. Influencer marketing is like the evolution of that on some level, but then
it's the more authentic version because it's everyday people, right?
Absolutely. Yeah. Look, I think at least when I was in college and you learn a little bit
about marketing, there was always that saying that they keep bringing out, which is, your brand is what
they say about you when you're not in the room. I think that's a Jeff Bezos quote.
And I think brands are starting to realize that gone are the days where they have absolute
control of what people are saying about the brand. And they can put words in Michael Jordan's
mouth to assert who they are as a brand.
It's changed now in that the amount of media and the access to media
has been a complete paradigm shift from when that spokesperson style of marketing
was proper and present. So now people are talking about your brand whether you like it or not.
But the key now is not to control what people are saying about it. As a brand, you just need to make sure your product is solid and does what it says on the box.
And then what you do is try and make people talk about it as much as possible.
You just want to be top of mind. You want to be the brand that's getting discussed.
And if you've built the right product and you can facilitate getting people talking about it,
at scale, that's how you win in 2025.
I think that's well said, Luke.
As we close out here, where you see the company evolving to anything on the horizon, we're
talking about what's working now, where this whole influencer market craze is going and
all those things, and then some of the calls to action of where to find you guys.
Yeah. going and all those things and then some of the calls to action of where to find you guys. Yeah, so I think where we see, or at least the direction to which we're building, is that I'm a
firm believer that affiliate marketing and influencer marketing is going to be completely
democratized and decentralized within the next 10 years. And by that, I mean, gone are the days of
brands picking influencers who are going to represent them. And instead, the opportunity
should be available for anyone who wants to promote a brand to
be able to participate in the rewards that that go alongside
that. So that's why we're building in this space here,
we're building a tool that can analyze influencers in real
time, and be a really, really simple tool that will allow any
single customer, whether they have a following or not, to
refer a friend, family,
follower, and get a Venmo reward or a PayPal reward for doing so
in a way that's completely seamless.
We believe that gone are the days of traditional influencer
and affiliate marketing, and in a world where search is changing,
advertising on method and traditional platforms are becoming more difficult.
We see no reason that relying on customers
who know and love your brand,
that should be a very meaningful growth channel
for every brand going forward.
And I think that's a smart place for brands
to start investing their time and energy.
So that's the direction we're building,
and we're gonna keep going in that direction,
foot to the floor,
and continue to unlock a bunch of benefit
for the brands that we like to work with.
If you're interested, obviously you can find me, thereave.co, find me on LinkedIn, Luke
Yantin, Y-A-R-N-T-O-N, like a ton of yarn, and maybe in the show notes here.
Yes, we will have it, of course, in the show notes.
It's fascinating, think as you were talking about it, removing the boundaries and the stages
of it now, it's both the democratization and just, it's almost like we're making purchase
decisions every day and allowing and empowering consumers to get just commission immediately
from the word of mouth that they're naturally doing anyway.
And unlocking that in a very easy way.
Because even now, the affiliate stuff, I don't do many affiliate deals with our sponsors
because it's just a pain in the ass to keep up with.
And all this stuff, and I'm like, just look, I'm going to have a low fee leverage the audience
if I believe in the product. But if we can bring down sort of the, I don't know, the walls that are the complexities,
the more this really takes off.
Exactly.
I think the key is making it seamless, making it easy, making it transparent.
And I think this is the way that you can engage people at scale.
Removing friction from influencer marketing and everything else in this whole realm.
Luke, it's been a pleasure having you on the show.
I really appreciate it.
Luke Fiesen Ryan, this has been super fun.
It's been a blast.
Even got to do some real life brainstorming mid-show, which is always a little bit of
fun.
Ryan Johnson I know.
I would like to pick your brain some more on that.
We'll do a follow up.
Hey guys, you know where to find me.
Ryanisright.com.
We'll find all the highlight clips, the full episode,
and the links to the rave.
Everything that all of Luke's personal profiles,
all that will be in the show notes and on the website.
You are going to find us on Instagram.
Right About Now Show, it's got that blue check.
Yeah, Ryan Alford on Instagram. Shoot me a DM
We're building that now army. We'll see you next time. All right about now
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