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Fake Influencer & Credibility Tool

Analyze any influencer on TikTok or YouTube

Want to dig into this influencer’s audience? Check out their top followers

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The Impact of Recruiting a Fake Influencer with Fake Followers

By implication, creators using fake followers willingly render themselves to be fake influencers. Creators build their success on a trustworthy reputation. Resorting to fake followers to build one’s brand cannot establish credibility as a creator.

Creator dishonesty can have negative consequences for the brands that partner with them. In most cases, creators using fake followers deceive brands about their ability to convert consumers during a campaign.

Additionally, agencies that supply fake followers will often have those followers like a brand’s social media page. When customers examine a brand’s followers closely and discover that some of them are fake, the brand loses credibility in the eyes of that consumer. Fake followers on a brand’s profile could also keep honest creators from wanting to collaborate.

The end result of partnering with fake influencers is little to no ROI and possibly even a damaged reputation. Against the backdrop of what good creators can do, recruiting wanna-be creators with fake followers can cost a brand thousands of dollars per campaign.

What are Fake Followers?

Fake followers are social media accounts that someone (usually an agency) creates for the sole purpose of boosting follower counts. These profiles do not belong to an active user. In some cases, these fake profiles steal personal information from real social media accounts.

Either way, fake followers are not real people. Agencies that sell “more followers” or “more likes/comments” are most often creating fake followers to boost an aspiring influencer’s numbers. 

Even if the creator has no idea that they’ve paid someone to create fake followers, that creator’s account is still considered dishonest. And those creators will not be able to maintain good brand relationships.

How to Spot Fake Followers

There are several ways to spot fake followers. The first and most obvious tactic is to visit the follower’s page. Many fake followers have just a couple of posts (often none at all) and don’t appear to be very active.

Fake followers usually don’t use pictures of real people in their profile pic or posts. If they do use pictures of people, they’ve taken them from somewhere else. You can perform a Google image search to see if a picture exists elsewhere.

Some suppliers use fake followers to post comments on a creator’s posts. This tactic tries to increase the creator’s engagement rate. However, taking a closer look at those comments usually exposes them for what they are. Fake follower comments are shallow (they might say something like “Awesome!” or “I like that”) and offer no real value. These comments often have glaring spelling or grammar errors due to suppliers not having a command of the native language.

Also, fake followers aren’t consistent. Typical engagement followers interact with creator posts somewhat regularly. But fake followers show a spike in engagement followed by an eerie silence.

How to Recognize Influencers with Fake Followers

Ideally, your influencer marketing team already utilizes a decent vetting process. As you examine possible creators, you should be searching for signs that they have meaningful relationships with their engaged followers.

“This is the number one question to ask [about influencers] – Do they have a connection to their audience?”

Ethan Frame, Senior Manager, Influencer Marketing at MVMT

How to Use This Creator Audit and Fake Follower Check Tool to Recruit Creators

The fake follower audit tool above works on a 0-100 score. Scores closer to 100 indicate that follower activity appears to be normal and healthy. Creators with erratic or suspicious follower behavior will score lower. 

When using the free tool above, remember that the results are not guaranteed. In other words, the check analyzes platform activity common among creators with fake followers. If an influencer you’re interested in scores lower than you expected, you should still examine the creator’s posts closely.

Similarly, just because a creator scored high does not mean that they do not have fake followers. However, you will be able to notice trends among those that score high and low. These trends will help you identify fake influencers for yourself and focus on other creators with strong connections with their audience.

Conclusion: Don’t fall victim to fake influencers. Recruit only the most authentic creators for your program.

In the same way that one great creator could transform your business, one fake influencer could significantly damage your influencer marketing program and reputation online. One of the best things you can for your influencer program is to vet your creators.

Learn to identify authenticity in creator posts and partnerships. Identify audience alignment, and watch how those creators connect with their followers. Taking these steps can help you stay away from fake influencers and partner with only the best. In time, you’ll be able to nurture a thriving creator community of top performers.

Frequently Asked Questions

Fake followers are bots or fraudulent social media accounts that follow people to boost their overall audience count. People can pay services that use these bots to follow them and artificially inflate their audience on social media, leading to potential brand partnerships. Another method of gaining fraudulent followers is participating in follow-for-follow schemes, in which a creator follows a random account if they reciprocate the favor. 

You can determine if a social media profile has fake followers by checking several things, including: 

  • Follower count The number of followers they have on a social media platform. 
  • Engagement rate You can calculate engagement rate with the following equation: (Post Comments + Post Shares) / Number of Influencer Followers = Engagement Rate. 
  • Average likes per comment It’s easy to like a post while not really paying attention to it, but comments require more engagement. Use this to better gauge an audience’s involvement. 

You can also use GRIN’s Fake Influencer & Credibility tool to determine the authenticity of a creator’s audience with little to no effort.

A 2018 report from The Information showed that bots comprised roughly 10% of all Instagram accounts.  

There are a few key things to look for when evaluating whether or not a follower is real, including: 

  • How many friends/followers/subscribers they have and how many accounts they follow in return. Many fake profiles use a follow-for-follow scheme to inflate their audience artificially. If their following is roughly the same size as the number of accounts they follow, they may be a bot. On the other hand, if they have almost no followers but follow a ton of profiles, that’s also a red flag. 
  • Their profile information. If their username is a string of random characters, they’re missing a profile photo, or they only have a handful of posts, they are probably a fake account. 
  • Their posts. If they only share content from others and don’t post any original content, they may be fake. 
  • Their comments on posts. If most of their comments are spammy, irrelevant, nonsensical, or in a different language than the majority of their content, they may be a bot. 
  • The age of their account. If they have a significant following and their profile is only a few weeks or months old, this can be a sign they’re a fake account. 

If you want to determine the authenticity of an Instagram influencer’s followers, do the following: 

  • Click into a follower’s profile, and look around. Do they have a profile pic, a bio, and a legitimate-sounding handle? Do they have a reasonable number of posts, and if so, were they shared at regular intervals or within a short period? 
  • Check their tagged photos. If they don’t have any tagged images or their tagged photos seem spammy, they’re probably a bot. 
  • Do steps 1 and 2 with several of the influencer’s followers. If a significant number of accounts seem fake, their audience is probably not very credible. 
  • Head back to the influencer’s account and check their engagement rate. You can do this by dividing the number of engagements by their number of followers. If the engagement rate seems way too high or way too low, they might have a significant number of bots following them. Learn more about reasonable engagement rates

You can also tell if an Instagram influencer has many fraudulent followers using GRIN’s Fake Influencer & Credibility tool. 

While it isn’t illegal to have fake followers, it is against most major social platforms’ community guidelines. Repercussions for purchasing fraudulent followers or participating in follow-for-follow schemes can include reduced capabilities on the platforms and losing your account entirely. 

You can take a manual approach to searching through a creator’s audience and evaluating their followers’ credibility, but that can take a significant amount of time, especially when considering mega or celebrity influencers. 

Instead, save your time and use GRIN’s Fake Influencer & Credibility tool to determine the authenticity of a person’s audience in seconds. 

Meta, Instagram’s parent company, announced in May 2022 that it had removed billions of fraudulent profiles from Facebook, another one of its social platforms. While the company did not provide news about deleting fake accounts from Instagram, we can assume it is launching the same efforts across all platforms, including Instagram and WhatsApp. 

Bots are one type of fake follower, but there are also follow-for-follow or share-for-share schemes where people will agree to interact with random profiles if they reciprocate the favor. These followers are also fake since they don’t have a genuine interest in a creator’s content. 

You can manually audit an influencer’s followers to see how many of them seem authentic, but this can be prone to human error and take a ton of time. Instead, use GRIN’s Fake Influencer and Credibility tool to get a credibility score in seconds. 

We don’t recommend working with an influencer with fraudulent followers for two main reasons. These are: 

  • Weaker ROI When you pay an influencer to share your brand story with their audience, you want to be sure it’s being seen by real people who will remember your company and make purchases. Fake followers have no interest in listening to creators or supporting the businesses they promote. 
  • Lack of trust When you’re building a business relationship with a creator, you want to be able to trust them. If they artificially inflate their follower count to land brand deals, they probably won’t make an ideal partner. 

While there’s no way to be certain whether someone is buying followers on social media, you can determine their audience credibility and make assumptions from there. Here’s how to do it: 

  • Use GRIN’s Fake Influencer & Audience Credibility tool. Copy and paste a link to a person’s social media profile and click “Check.”
  • Analyze the credibility score. The closer the score is to 100, the more authentic their audience is. 

When gauging the authenticity of an Instagram follower, they are likely real if: 

  • They have several posts spaced out over time. Some bots have very few posts, while others may have a ton posted within a very short period. Also, check for original-looking content. If all the account does is RT or share other people’s content, it may be fake. 
  • They have tagged photos of themselves. If they aren’t tagged in pictures or their tagged photos seem spammy, they may be a bot. 
  • They have authentic interactions with other users. Are they leaving thoughtful comments on posts? If so, they’re probably real. If they’re posting irrelevant, confusing, or extremely vague comments, they’re probably fake. 
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