NAB
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/creator-versus-influencer-whats-the-difference/
We all know what we mean by the terms “influencer” and
“content creator,” right? Content creators create. They are artistic,
entrepreneurial and righteous. Whereas influencers have sold their soul but at
least aren’t shy about it.
Let’s pause and rewind because the two aren’t mutually
exclusive. Both influencers and creators involve the independent, serial
production of content for social media platforms. They are both renumerated in
similar ways, through a mix of platform revenue-sharing schemes, sponsorships,
and fan-funded models. Why, then, are they made to sound like different things?
Sophie Bishop, a lecturer in the Department of Digital
Humanities at King’s College London, has written a brilliant article for tech
mag Real Life challenging our preconceptions of influencer culture.
Within digital culture, she writes, the term influencer
typically connotes someone specializing in advertorial, with an ability to
persuade audiences to buy things. Creator, by contrast, evokes someone making
art, motivated by their vocation rather than the likelihood that their content
will attract sponsorship.
This distinction is also sexist. Bishop quotes a 2019 Wired article
by Emma Grey Ellis, who argued that women are more likely to be called
influencers and men are more likely to be called creators.
Influencers, Ellis argues, are often derided in popular
culture and dismissed as frivolous because they use self-representations in
part to sell products; detractors thus accuse them of being vain and
narcissistic. They sit below creators within the value hierarchy of online
culture, yet creators too feature themselves in their work and make money
through advertorial content.
“Influencers are seen as trading in the calculated depiction
of an ‘authentic lifestyle,’ while ‘creators’ are held to a different standard
of realness in representations, affording them flexibility and more
opportunities,” Bishop says.
In the history of the consumer and consumption, it is women
who have been seen as more commercially aligned — less rational and taken less
seriously as proper economic actors. This may be where the gendered distinction
between influencers and creators first comes from.
Another commentator takes issue with this arguing that the
gender division is too simplistic. In an article for The Atlantic, Taylor
Lorenz says the influencer/creator divide is not political but a matter of
corporate branding.
Lorenz points out that it was YouTube which grew its
“partner program” a decade ago by calling its user generated content producers
“creators.” It led to a Creator Support Team, as well as a Creator Monthly
newsletter that spotlights Creators on the Rise.
YouTube’s astonishing success led other platforms to co-opt
the term creator to describe the burgeoning group of bloggers who were
gathering scores of followers on the sites.
In Lorenz’s view influencer stands against creator as a
“platform agnostic” term that is applied to newer, up-and-coming content
producers with less experience, less early-adopter cache, and thus less
legitimacy. That is, it helps “creators” distinguish themselves from their
emerging competitors even as it ties them to platforms and separates them from
celebrities in film, music, and television.
Social media platforms also avoid the term influencer and
are heavily invested in the creator label. Instagram features a Creators tab on
its support page, TikTok runs a “creator marketplace,” Twitter offers a
“Twitter pro tips for creators” page.
“On none of these platforms is there any official mention of
‘influencers.’ It’s as if they don’t exist,” Bishop says.
“In many ways, the distinction between influencer and
creator is the product of longstanding critical divisions between art (seen as
organically created) and mass culture (seen as manufactured and dangerous).
Influencer suggests a mode of distracting and sedating the public, creating
generations of docile consumers. Creator reaches into a different tradition.”
Bishop is not blind to the fact that certain types of
company revel in the term influencer. Talent agents, for one. Bishop notes that
M&C Saatchi’s talent management arm manage “social influencers.” The United
Talent Agency doesn’t distinguish between talent/creators or
celebrities/influencers in its latest reports — aware perhaps that star talent
likes to be seen as influential (and in many ways their opinions do swing
votes).
Ultimately, different people invested in these industries
choose to use terms like influencer or creator because they are trying to say
something about the work that they do or the work that they hope to do.
“Monopolistic social media hope to obfuscate their
exploitative reputations through celebrating the productive creativity of those
whom they ‘platform,’” Bishop says. “Producers avoid terms like influencer in
audience-facing content because they want to be considered authentic and
unsponsored. Talent agencies and marketers manage the commercial relationships
that influencers want to avoid publicly managing.”
Influencer and creator are two sides of the same coin. Which
term appears depends on which face they want to show us.
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