When brands struggle to find good creators, the problem usually isnât volume. Itâs vision.
There are millions of incredible creators out there â with even more popping up every day.
But if youâre looking for a shopping list of criteria, and only filtering for product-match (people who are already in your niche, or talking about products like yours) â youâre going to hit a wall.
We call it overfitting. We (shamelessly stole) borrowed đ the concept from mathematics, and it means when youâre interpreting data too literally to be able to account for outliers or predict the future.
In laymanâs terms, it means your influencer search criteria is too strict, and you need to chill out.
Enter, storyfit influencers. Theyâre those misfit influencers who donât work on paper but perform surprisingly well.
Iâm going to go deeper into what overfitting really looks like, how it affects your influencer search, and teach you how to find those storyfit influencers who are going to help you tell your brand story.
What is overfitting?
Overfitting boils down to just being too strict about what an influencer needs to have to be considered a âgood brand fit.â
Itâs when youâre looking for:
- Only female influencers between the ages of 29.5 and 31 and three months
- Who need to have an engagement rate between 2-5%
- Who need an audience in the Orne region of Normandy, France
- Who also need to talk about specifically tax filing software,
- Who have a blood type O positive, andâŚ
The list goes on.
By overfitting your influencers, you are:
- Reducing opportunities: Youâre narrowing your pool of potential influencers â you wonât be able to scale and amplify your reach.
- Boring your audience: With stagnant reach, youâll suffer from audience-fatigue, and your target will just scroll on past. Not to mention, your content will likely look like everyone elseâs â meaning you wonât create the noise you want to.
- Increasing competition: Youâre looking for The Obvious Choiceâ˘, which means youâll also be competing with your competitors who also want to work with The Obvious Choiceâ˘.
- Paying more: Influencers who are in high demand will have higher fees â meaning a collaboration may not make sense for you.
For example, letâs say you sell protein bars. If your entire search strategy revolves around âpeople who review protein bars,â youâre going to be competing in a tiny niche, with every other company that sells protein bars.
Not to mention, you might even end up competing with larger brands who have bigger budgets, more products, and deeper relationships with the creators in that tiny niche.
Youâll fight and scrape and claw for the tiniest crumb of your audienceâs attention â who have âseen it all before,â and will instantly compare you to everyone else also selling protein bars, asking themselves, âRight, but why should I care about your bars specifically?â
Theyâve already heard your talking points, your brand angles, and the promised outcomes your products provide. Theyâve just heard it from your competitor instead.
After all â how many ways can you really sell a protein bar?
Enter, the storyfit influencer.
What is a storyfit influencer?
A storyfit influencer is a creator who can tell your brandâs story in a way that feels authentic to them, and will resonate with their (read: your) audience.
There are three different ways to go about this:
- You can tap into category entry points
- You can base this off of an influencerâs identity
- You can look for a particular format of content
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Category entry points:
Category entry points (or CEPs) are those real-life triggers that make someone think âI could use something like that.â
Theyâre moments in time where your product is super relevant and timely. They give your brand emotional and contextual relevance â even if the creator hasnât talked about your product niche before.
Leading with those emotional triggers dramatically opens up the people who are suddenly âa brand fit.â
Letâs circle back to protein bars. Youâre not looking for just âpeople who review protein bars.â Youâre not even just looking for âfitness influencers.â
- Youâre looking for âpeople who are training for a marathon.â
- Youâre looking for âpeople who are losing weight by managing their macros.â
These arenât markets â theyâre moments. And theyâre moments that you can use to make your audience the hero of your story, and your product is what they need to complete that story.
Identity:
Identity refers to creators who represent your customerâs values, lifestyle, or goals â even if theyâre not in your particular niche. The idea is to look for an influencer who is your ideal customer profile (ICP).
So, for example, circling back to the protein bar example, a fitness influencer ends up being The Obvious Choiceâ˘.
Instead, who needs your product? What are their goals and aspirations?
- Youâre looking for âa mom who is looking to get back in shape after having her first kid.â
- Youâre looking for âan older person looking to stay active and healthy.â
- Youâre looking for âvegetarians and vegans who need to supplement their protein intake.â
The idea is that you want an influencer in whom the audience sees themselves. Identity is powerful â because when you make something, or someone part of your identity, that is a hard bond to break.
By going for creators whose identities fit your ICP, youâre integrating your brand into that identity.
Format:
This one can be a little harder to pin down. It refers to the influencerâs style of content â which could be their humor, drama, chaos, etc.
The idea is reframing your product in a fresh, resonant way. These are those unique content creators that just got it. That âIt Factorâ is what makes their audiences stop, watch, absorb, and engage â every time.
So again, instead of going for The Obvious Choiceâ˘:
- Youâre looking for âthat one ultra buff gym bro that makes satirical content about how ridiculous gym-bro content is.â
- Youâre looking for âchaotic ADHDÂ content creators who make neurodivergant comedy content about forgetting to eat.â
- Youâre looking for âthat mom who makes lifestyle content about parenting, sneaking a chocolate protein bar as her âhealthy me-timeâ from the pantry of her kitchen because otherwise her kids will want âcandyâ too.â
For these creators, youâre pretty much just cutting them loose. They have the creativity to present your product and brand in a way thatâs going to resonate with their audiences.
This means less time briefing for youâŻâ because youâre just letting the influencer take the reins. And chances are, theyâre going to be the best captain of that collaboration.
Developing a storyfit strategy means youâll reach more creators, and get better, more unique content than simply going for the same creators everyone else is going for.
They may not be in as high-demand as The Obvious Choiceâ˘, and if theyâre not already working with your competitors, chances are your product and brand will feel more fresh and resonant with their audiences.
How to vet a storyfit influencer
Donât confuse reach with resonance.
Too many marketers get burned because they pick creators based on numbers or vibesâŻâ but not both.
You donât need the biggest name, or the trendiest format. You need someone who moves people, and moves the right people. Thatâs what vetting really comes down to.
Finding an interesting influencer is only half the battle. Vetting is where you transform your strategy into success.
Put away those criteria shopping lists. They have no power here.
Instead, weâre going to ask ourselves 3 main questions about any influencer:
- Do they have reach (and are they actually engaging anyone)?
- Do they have relevance (are they speaking to the right people)?
- Do they have resonance (will their message land emotionally)?
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These are the three-layer fit test of storyfit.
Think of this like a tripod. A tripod is only upright with a solid foundation. If you remove any of the three legs, it all gets wobbly.
But, if all three are present, even imperfectly, youâve got a solid bet. And your job as an influencer marketer is to make solid bets again and again and again.
Do they have reach (and are they engaging anyone)?
This is your quantitative layer. You want to measure the actual attention your products might get.
Hereâs what you check:
- Engagement rate: which needs to be proportionate to the size of the influencer. A 3.7% engagement rate is extraordinary for a 3M-follower account. On a 3K-follower account? Itâs just fine. Always compare to creators of a similar size to benchmark engagement.
- Average views: This is especially important on video-first platforms. Are their videos actually seen?
- Platform breakdown: Which platform is their strongest? Does it correspond to the platform youâre prioritizing?
- Content formats: Where are they strongest? Is it Reels, Stories, Voiceovers? Do they shine when talking to the camera? Does this format fit your goals?
Do they have relevance (are they reaching the right people)?
This is the qualitative layer â where the context of a creator's content and targeting matter the most.
Hereâs what you check:
- Audience demographics: Age, gender, location, interests, etc. Does this match your ideal customer?
- Audience authenticity: Are these real people? Or is it a ghost town of bots and fake engagement? Are they reaching average Joes, or is it a sea of other influencers?
- Follower geography: Are they popular in a region you sell to? (Most influencers will reach people across several countries â but the majority should fall where you operate)
- Past brand collaborations: Who have they already worked with? Are they over-saturated, or would your product feel fresh? Are they mostly working with niche brands or big players?
Most of the time â an audience is going to make or break a collaboration. If theyâre not going to move relevant people, whatâs the point?
(Unless youâre that one guy from our survey who targeted the wrong audience location, but ended up promoting the influencerâs content as an ad in the right locationâŻâ but that feels messy)
Do they have resonance (do they move people)?
This is the emotional layer â itâs where that gut feeling comes in.
Hereâs what youâre looking for:
- Comment section: Are they engaging with their audience? Do people trust them? Do they respond?
- Branded content tone: Are sponsorships integrated naturally? Do they feel forced? How well do they mesh with their organic content? How does the audience respond to branded content?
- Confidence on camera: Can they engage you? Do they capture your attention and keep it? Are they compelling, warm, and/or trustworthy?
- Content tone & delivery: Does their voice align with your brand? Do they feel relatable to your ideal customers?
- Category entry point alignment: Do they talk about the right moments? (Ex: morning routines, moving house, stress relief, personal expression, etc.)
- Values & lifestyle fit: Are they someone who your audience aspires to be â or, at minimum, trusts?
And the most important part:Â Gut check: Are you comfortable with this person representing your brand?
If not, itâs not a fit.
Influencers donât have to be perfect on each of these points â but they absolutely do need to hit these minimum three layers. If so, collaboration might make sense for you.
Maintaining a diverse portfolio
Okay okay â yes. That sounds like some Finance Bro advice. But hear me out.
Influencer marketing is kinda like investing in the sense that nothing is a sure bet. Even an influencer youâve worked with before who overperformed at the time could have a bad week (or get got by the algorithm).
And if youâre only investing in one kind of influencer, and the algorithm does what it does, or if it doesnât land, or insert any other variable that could happen, your campaign is going to fall flat.
Investors have a few safe, but predictable and slow growth investments. They usually take a smaller slice of their capital, and put it into something that has bigger growth, but a little more risk. Then, they take a tiny portion of their money and put it into something very risky, but could turn out huge rewards if it does well.
So, think like an investor: Â
- Have your safe bets: These are the creators with steady performance and great audience alignment.
- Add in a few misfits: These are maybe some smaller creators who are living your category entry points.
- A dash of format specialists: These are your creators who nail Reels or have a cult following on Stories, or who have a specific, creative style.
- A sprinkle of niche voices: These arenât the loudest creators, but they have a deeply engaged specific community.

Each creator will bring you something unique â whether itâs reach, engagement, storytelling style, audience trust, etc.
The point isnât to get every single post to go viral or bring in a ton of revenue. Thatâs not realistic no matter who you work with. But, you want to build a system where enough of the content will perform well enough to drive consistent, scalable results.
So if 70% of your content performs as expected, 20% over delivers, and 10% flops â thatâs completely healthy.
But Whitney, why wouldnât I just put everything in the safe bets and just be reasonably sure that itâll all work?
Because you wonât learn anything. And youâll end up right back where you started, looking for one specific kind of influencer and hitting a wall.
When you diversify your content portfolio, you:
- Reduce risk: Youâre not putting all your eggs in one basket and hoping for chickens come spring. Even if your sure-bets all tank, youâd still have other creators that can still bring in revenue for you.
- Increases learning: You can see if other kinds of content formats, tones, and audiences resonate with your brand and products. This means you can replicate those factors in the future (and maybe even move some of your riskier influencers to sure-bets).
- Supports scaling: A diverse portfolio is scalable. Creator unicorns arenât. When you think like an investor, you donât fold yourself into a box or have issues finding new creators to work with.
- Frees you from perfectionism: You get to bring strategy back into your process, in lieu of obsession. We prefer strategy.
And with a system like that, your overall strategy is stronger, and has a better chance of performing.
Moving forward with storyfit influencers
What Iâve learned from marketers is that a lot of influencer search and vetting is developing and trusting your gut.
And you absolutely should â but also back it up with a system. Youâll want the numbers to verify that an unconventional creator has legs. Donât use it as a replacement shopping list â instead, try to find people that are 75% of the way there.
This is where Modash can help. With Modash, you can search for every influencer with more than 1000 followers â and we do mean all of them.
Youâll also get deep data on each creator, including audience demographics, engagement rates, and youâll even be able to see previously sponsored content â all from the same dashboard. Youâll finally be able to say goodbye to endless scrolling, wondering if this interesting creator even reaches your ideal audience.
But donât take my word for it. Try Modash absolutely free for 14 days (without even getting out your credit card).





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