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The scale of the challenge
Influencer marketing is accounting for a growing share of marketing budgets. Once treated as an experimental channel, it now draws significant investment from media, content, performance, and even commerce media budgets. In the US alone, the IAB projects creator advertising spend will increase from $37bn in 2025 to $44bn in 2026.
But behind the slick creator posts and engagement dashboards, the investment trail can be surprisingly messy. While influencer marketing has matured commercially, many brands still manage creator activity using informal processes designed for speed and experimentation. If influencer marketing is to justify its growing share of budget, leadership needs clearer evidence that enables them to trace spend, verify outcomes, and substantiate growth claims.
Informal control no longer fits influencer marketing
A single influencer programme can involve an agency, talent manager, creator, production partner, platform tool, and paid amplification team, each responsible for a different part of the process. For example, a brand may approve a creator fee through the agency, get usage rights separately through legal, and then activate the same content through a paid amplification team. Unless those decisions are linked, it becomes difficult to confirm whether you paid the right amount, secured the right rights, and measured the full cost of the activity.
Unclear controls across that partner network create a critical governance risk. Your campaign can appear successful on the surface, while fragmented ownership makes it difficult to trace decisions, approvals, spend, and outcomes through a single, auditable chain. Such a system requires strong controls, especially now that small gaps in governance become harder to ignore. Otherwise, brands may be able to show that content ran and delivered results, but struggle to prove that the investment was properly governed and worth repeating.
Spend transparency is critical
At the recent ANA Advertising Financial Management Conference, it was reported that only half of marketers have full visibility into how influencer agency spend is allocated. Agency fees vary enormously, from 10% to more than 50% of total programme budgets. And while a 30/70 split between agency fees and talent payments is a good starting point for a benchmark, the right ratio for you depends on programme complexity and your operating model.
Marketing and finance leaders need a shared basis for challenge to evaluate investment. But our influencer marketing audits often identify weaknesses that get in the way of proper measurement: unclear remuneration terms, weak billing support, and unclear separation between agency fees and pass-through costs. These issues affect working spend and value delivery, and ultimately undermine confidence in both current performance and future budget requests if left unchecked.
What you buy is only part of the investment
The value of your influencer investment depends on more than audience reach and engagement. Rights, approvals, exclusivity, disclosure, licensing, and reuse terms all shape what the brand owns and how content can be used.
Creator activity is exposed because the brand message is delivered through a third party whose credibility depends on perceived authenticity. A missing disclosure or unclear usage rights can become a commercial issue quickly. Platform-licensed music is a particular risk when teams assume it is safe for branded use beyond the platform environment.
FirmDecisions’ audits have found influencer contracts unsigned before campaigns start or a first post is made, alongside too little clarity around intellectual property and client confidentiality. Once content is live, brands have fewer options and less room for course correction. Controls must be in place before brands create and launch a campaign.
Explainable AI matters
Agencies are increasingly using AI to support creator discovery, trend analysis and performance modelling. That can improve speed and consistency, but advertisers still need to understand how recommendations are made. Which data sources were used? What criteria shaped creator selection? Were any creators excluded because of brand safety, audience quality or suitability concerns?
AI-assisted workflows should leave a record that can be reviewed, challenged and explained. Otherwise, they risk adding another layer of opacity to an already fragmented process.
Measuring the commercial impact of creator content
Influencer marketing generates plenty of data, but metrics such as reach, views, and engagement show activity rather than business impact. On their own, they cannot demonstrate contribution to sales, brand growth, profitability or overall marketing effectiveness.
As budgets increase, brands need clear objectives and measurement frameworks that connect creator activity to wider business outcomes. Leaders should distinguish between contracted outputs, such as posts and stories; platform performance, such as views and engagement; and commercial contribution, such as sales, brand lift, customer acquisition or content reuse value.
Creator marketing can no longer sit outside normal controls
Before increasing investment, leaders should be able to answer four critical questions:
- What is the true end-to-end cost of the activity? And how much of the budget reached creators versus being absorbed by agency fees, production, tools or paid amplification?
- Are contracts, approvals, rights and disclosure requirements in place before content goes live?
- Can we verify delivery against contracted outputs and agreed usage rights?
- What evidence links creator activity to commercial outcomes beyond reach, views and engagement?
If those answers are unclear, commercial confidence is at risk. Creator-led activity has matured, so the controls around it now need to do the same. Ebiquity and FirmDecisions help advertisers build that level of governance across their influencer marketing investments.
Are your influencer controls fit for purpose? Reach out to review whether your investment is properly governed.