8 Ways to Grow Your Personal Brand, According to an Influencer With 1M Instagram Followers
Have you always wanted to know what it’s like to be an influencer and grow a business out of your influence? We know you’re all craving insight on how to grow a brand and ramp up your social media presence right now so when we came across influencer and co-founder of Summer Fridays, Marianna Hewitt dishing her career advice and social media tips on Instagram stories, we had to screenshot it all and share it with you here.
Hewitt asked her Instagram audience—she has 1 M(!!!), followers—to send in their questions on all things business, social, and #influencerlife. Whether you’re an aspiring influencer, a brand trying to grow, or need some major inspiration, Hewitt’s insight is golden. She pulls back the curtain to share all the realness.
You asked, she answered. Scroll on for major tips, then don’t forget to grab your tickets to the Money Moves Digital Summit to see Hewitt speak on all things, money, career, business, and more!
How do you come up with fresh content so that your followers don’t get bored?
I just ask! Whenever I need new ideas I ask what the followers want to see. I have a document saved with all the answers and then I note what gets the most requests and do those.
Being a beginner, how do you grab a brands’ attention?
I think picking a niche at the beginning helps soooo much. You become the go-to expert on that subject! Creating beautiful content helps to get reposted or for brands to notice you. I
f you want to work with a brand, buy their products and use them and share them organically to show the brands what kind of content you would create for them and how your audience responded to you sharing it.
Also, not every brand has a budget to work with influencers and if they do it could only be at certain times for particular campaigns or launches that they would have budgets. So keep it in mind that brands don’t just freely have money all the time. But by posting and sharing them organically, hopefully, they will help keep you top of mind when opportunities do come up.
How did you grow your following?
“I just did a podcast interview and talked about this, you can find that here.”
Do you think it’s too late to become an influencer because it’s so saturated?
“Not at all! But that’s why having a niche is important when first starting so that you can build a micro-community who comes to you as an expert on one thing. I don’t think you need to be niche forever, but when you start, I think it helps so much.”
How do you build relationships with other influencers?
“Follow them. Like and comment on their posts.”
Can you grow your Instagram without using a lot of hashtags? How did you grow yours?
“I don’t really know if hashtags are that relevant. I don’t think you need them to grow your page. I think you’re better off tagging brands and getting reshared. And following people in your niche and engaging with their content and hope they follow back and do the same.”
What are some things you wish you knew before starting your influencer journey?
“It’s a lot of work. Most of the work you do is for free and you don’t get paid. Because you’re creating organic content every single day that isn’t sponsored. Let’s say 10% of your content is sponsored. Then 90% of your work you do for free. So you have to be okay with doing a lot of work to hopefully get paid opportunities. You can also make money through affiliate links.
When you are an influencer you are:
The model
Photographer
Videographer (if you do IGTV or YouTube)
Editor (for video)
Social media manager
Community manager
Writer (captions or if you have a blog)
Stylist (if you post fashion content)
Makeup artist (if you post makeup content)
And so many more things! Being an influencer is so many jobs rolled into one.
How do you keep your feed cohesive without a filter?
Take photos with similar colors. So you’ll notice there’s no black in my photos right now. So if I took a picture on a black wall or with a dark outfit, it wouldn’t match. So just take pics of things that go together.
Does the grid matter?
I do think your feed matters to new followers. When a new person comes to your page they see the first nine to 12 photos so it should get their attention and make them want to follow and have an idea of what kind of content they’ll be getting from you. I don’t think feed matters as much to existing followers because they likely just see the new posts but not as frequently go to your profile.
How do you find your niche?
Your niche should be your “thing” so it should be easy to narrow down based on what you are passionate about or an expert in. I like to think of content pillars and posting mostly those topics; so a few things that you like. You can post a few things and see what’s resonating most with your followers and getting the most engagement. Then post more of that.
How do you establish your first partnership if you’re just starting out and don’t have high follower numbers?
I would ask yourself:
Why would this brand work with me?
What am I bringing to the table?
And pitch them your strengths:
Did you post them before and convert a lot of sales?
Do you have data to show that?
Do you create beautiful content, and can you work with them to create assets for their socials?
How do you decide which platform to post your content? Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, or blog?
Instagram:
Photos
Stories/daily posts in the moment and more quick content
YouTube:
Longer videos
Content I want to live longer or videos that are searched for
Blog:
More writing than what would fit in an IG caption
Lots of shopping links and roundups of items
How do you keep motivated to post stories every day?
I genuinely love to create content and share. So I never feel like I “have” to do it. I *want* to do it. On the days I don’t want to, I just don’t. Like for my feed right now I don’t have a pic to post next and haven’t felt like getting ready so I just didn’t post on my feed yesterday or today.
How long did it take for you to get a substantial follower base?
I started Instagram very early on in 2013 when it was much easier to gain followers than it is now. I gained a large audience by 2014 but then continued to grow it. I was at 500k in 2016 (it took me from 2013 to 2016) and hit 1M in 2020. So it took me four years to reach my second 500k.”
What is the biggest struggle with being an influencer?
“There is zero job security and you have no benefits. At any time (like now) brands could all cut their budget for sponsored content and what would your job be? How will you make an income? There are no sick days. There are no days off. There is no maternity leave. All the pressure is on you.
Since you are the influencer and face of the “brand” you cannot delegate things to other people. You are the one in the photos, in the stories, etc. There are a lot of benefits though and it’s an amazing opportunity to do this full time but there are so many risks so you just have to be okay with that!”
For fashion content: Do you think a blog is necessary or can someone be successful only using Instagram?
“If you want to be a blogger then yes you need to have a blog. But if you want to be a social media influencer or content creator, no you do not need a blog. Think of some of your fave influencers, they probably don’t have a site!
Do you use a professional photographer for full body shots?
No, I’ve been shooting all my content at home on my iPhone. I generally only shoot with a photographer for sponsored content because I want the highest quality photos for the brands.
How do you pay your agency for managing you? Do they take a percentage on your earnings?
Yes, they make a percentage of the deals they bring in for me. Then the percent I get for myself, I pay taxes on (because we don’t get paychecks so our taxes are taken from the money we bring in) and then pay out employees, creatives, etc.
Like what you see? Catch Marianna Hewitt at the Money Moves Summit, May 2nd, live from your couch!