Finding relevant influencers at any time is a challenge. But discovering the best ones during BFCM? When influencers are most in demand? When the ROI expected is much, much higher than business as usual? Thatâs a whole other beast.
In this article, Iâll explain the best strategies marketers shared with us to recruit influencers for BFCM. The wisdom here can be applied throughout the year, though â not just during the peak holiday season.
Why you should lock in your BFCM influencers early (by September at the latest)
If I had to summarize all our findings from our BFCM survey in one phrase, Iâd say: start recruiting your influencers early.
Over a third of participants in our survey said that at least 20-40% of their BFCM influencers are creators theyâve worked with in the past. For over half, that number is closer to 40-80%.

Youâre already a little late to the party if youâre starting testing influencers in September. Hereâs why locking influencers early matters so much:
1: Influencers get booked up months before the onset of BFCM
An influencerâs calendar gets booked like hotcakes during the holiday season. Everyone wants to recruit them. 62.5% of marketers in our survey said they have trouble booking influencers during BFCM. Influencer marketing lead, Lee Drysdale, even equates this phenomenon to the Hunger Games:
2: Influencers hike up their rates during BFCM
Iâm no econ major, but I know what happens when demand surpasses supply: prices skyrocket. 2/3rds of marketers in our survey said influencers increase their prices during the BFCM season. On average, influencers charge 20% more than their usual rate to create BFCM content.
This is where existing long-term partnerships can be extremely useful: influencers might still ask for a rate increase during BFCM to their retainer clients (aka, you), but it wonât be as big a jump.Â
Itâll be rooted in the baseline rates theyâve already established with you (given that you have a good relationship with them). Influencer marketing specialist, Mark Dandy, agrees:
3: You minimize your risk by not testing brand-new influencers
Letâs say you waited and started collaborating with a brand new creator during BFCM. You even agreed to their increased holiday rates. But now you have a new risk to bear: you donât know how this influencer will perform.
You havenât done any type of collaboration with them before and you donât know what would bode well with their audience. Sure, youâve done your research, but you arenât as confident as you wouldâve been with first-hand experience.
Having experience with an influencer will help you understand what works and what doesnât with their audience. Youâll know their strengths and weaknesses and theyâll already be aware of your product. Thatâs a lot of work already done upfront â only if you test influencers for BFCM early.
4: Influencers will be more open to go the extra mile for you
You can expect things to go unexpectedly during BFCM. Thatâs a given. You might switch up your offers, a productâs messaging may need to change, and a whole host of other things will come at you abruptly.
You canât expect a brand new influencer partner to accommodate last-minute requests and changes when things go awry. But a long-term influencer partner that youâve built a great relationship with? They wonât hesitate to go the extra mile for you.
Mark Dandy explains it best with an example:
How to test influencers throughout the year and build solid relationships
Saying âtest influencers early for BFCM! Start asking them to collab with you by Sep!â is easy. But how do you actually do it? How do you build such a solid foundation of influencer relationships that creators say yes to your offer even when theyâre in such high demand? Here are four pro tips to make you a creatorâs favorite brand partner:
1: Have an upfront conversation with your long-term influencer partners about your requirements
Mark Dandy advises having upfront conversations with influencers about booking them for BFCM and other brand requirements.
Letâs say you want exclusivity during the holiday season. Bring that topic up proactively and specify what youâd exactly need. Do you want category exclusivity? Or full exclusivity for a short period?
Laying down your needs and expectations early on will help the influencer plan their workload and book new brand partnerships that adjust to yours.
For example, if youâve asked for a three-day category exclusivity and a competitor reaches out that wants to partner during the same timeline, an influencer has the clarity to offer them alternative dates. Instead of throwing a curveball when BFCM has already arrived, youâre helping influencers prepare their calendar in advance.
Mark says he communicates with influencers about the kind of collaborations he wants to continue with them during BFCM in August.
2: Offer a bump in their usual rates proactively
Why should a creator stick to you if you pay an influencer $200 for a sponsored post during the off-season, and another brand offers them $400 during BFCM? Help your influencer partners avoid losing out on potential income by proactively offering to bump their rates during BFCM. Donât wait for them to bring it up.
Mark Dandy elaborates on how he approaches these conversations:
By offering to increase an influencerâs rates proactively, you not only earn a creatorâs goodwill, but also get the upper hand in negotiating. Youâre proactive, early, and a long-term partner. All those factors would save you money compared to recruiting the same influencer for the first time (or leaving the ball in their court).
Michael Todner (leading influencer marketing at Gear4Music) says you can also offer other incentives to influencers to get in their good books â like an increased affiliate commission on sales.
3: Divide influencers into cohorts and collect deep data on their performance
One of the biggest advantages of testing influencers for BFCM early is you know their strengths and weaknesses. One creator might be great for brand awareness, another might be excellent for capturing customer data (like emails), and then there will be few consistently bringing in the most conversions.
Collect data on every influencer youâre partnering with throughout the testing period. This way, by BFCM, youâll know which influencers are best equipped for what goal. This will also affect how you track and measure the success of your BFCM campaigns. An influencer whoâs great at brand awareness might not be able to get you many customer emails, but you shouldnât be tracking that metric for this creator anyway.
Mark Dandy explains how he divides influencers into various cohorts based on their performance:
For example, you should partner with more âbrand awareness influencersâ in September and October to be front-of-mind when the discounts arrive in BFCM. Then, let your âsales star influencersâ take the reins.
4: Set up workflows and deadlines for influencers
A creatorâs workload increases multifold during BFCM. They need to create much more varied content for different brands with varying needs. On top of that, they must be on their toes for any last-minute changes and requests.
Help creators do their job more easily by being the brand that has everything figured out early on. Share potential deadline ranges (if you canât offer definite deadlines) as soon as possible, prepare them for the offers youâre planning to roll out, and onboard them onto any workflows you need to set up. Alycia Lykins, Influencer Marketing Manager Trixxi Clothing, agrees:
What if youâre a late bloomer?
Thereâs no such thing as fashionably late in BFCM. The earlier you start to find, outreach, test, and lock in creators for the peak holiday season, the better. But what if itâs October and youâre only just starting to plan everything?
First: talk to your highest-performing creator partners over the year. Are they open to collaborating during BFCM? Proactively offer to bump their usual rates, as we discussed earlier. Use whatever data you have on these existing influencer partners to dictate your paid partnerships with them during Black Friday. Old (creator) is gold (creator) for sponsored posts during BFCM.
Then: if you decide to onboard a new set of creators during BFCM, let them be affiliate partners. The collaboration is low-effort and low-cost. It can essentially run itself after the initial push. Plus: the payoff is better for you and the creator.
Lastly: remember BFCM will come again. Get a headstart for next year by starting your Black Friday prep in July-Sep.




.png)
.png)