Influencer marketing, where businesses pay celebrities or accounts with large followings to promote their products or services, should be considered as part of utility-based marketing strategies to advance transportation electrification. This $16.4B industry has experienced explosive growth in the last decade and is no longer solely the domain of people “famous for being famous” hawking beauty supplies. Just ask heat pump manufacturers like Mr. Cool and electric vehicle (EV) manufacturers like Tesla, Rivian, Harley-Davidson, Bosch eBike Systems, and others.
Influencer marketing is commonly activated on social media, but it can also support traditional paid or earned media campaigns and events as well.
Don’t panic, but that means social media and influencer marketing are likely going to be necessary to drive success in transportation electrification campaigns. The good news is that it’s less risky and more affordable, targetable, and accessible than you might think.
Despite Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s claims that he “hates advertising” and that “Tesla doesn’t use marketing,” he’s an influencer in his own right who has, for better or worse, created a personal connection to the brand. Celebrities and influencers in the US and China have been critical to Tesla’s success. And it’s estimated it only took 50 of them to help Tesla earn the majority share of voice when it announced its Series 3 car. Some were big name celebrities, others regular people who generated good, relevant content and had large followings. Ultimately, influencer marketing created a 500,000-unit backlog for Tesla, and at the time, nobody could even test drive the car. Let that sink in for a minute.
Likewise, Harley-Davidson LiveWires and Rivian R1Ts supported a three-month trip across 13,000 miles of challenging terrain, elevation, and weather in support of Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman’s Long Way Up series on Apple TV, which I wrote about here. While it looked like traditional product placement, this was influencer marketing. The brands selected actors and an adventure aligned with their missions and used it to accelerate learning and demand for their EVs. Rivian paired it with public relations to promote charging along their Adventure Network, which includes National Parks.
Smaller brands with smaller budgets have used influencer marketing to break into the electrification market as well.
Influencer marketing’s ability to help brands develop authentic connections and drive engagement could be important to the utility industry’s electrification evolution. With much of the target market digital natives that regularly use social media, this marketing strategy becomes even more important and timely. To get started, consider the following:
Utilities should consider influencer campaigns to augment more traditional forms of marketing in support of their transportation electrification programs. To drive the transition to widespread electrification, it might be time to try something new.