A new study by Canadian research firm Pollara has surfaced data indicating that Malcolm Gladwell's popular theory about key influencers moving markets may not be valid. Gladwell's arguments in the 2000 book The Tipping Point had reached levels of cliche approaching The Wisdom of Crowds, in large part because of its seductiveness to marketers.
A number of thinkers (thanks for the link commenter felix) and now the Pollara study have been arguing that large numbers of people do not make decisions based on the advice of a small number of powerful influencers. The new data from Pollara does say that people use online social networks to make buying decisions, but they trust the advice of their friends and family on those networks far more than they do high-profile bloggers. There are a number of things about blogging that may facilitate this, as well.
From MediaPost today:
Of more than 1,100 adults polled in December, nearly 80% said they were very or somewhat more likely to consider buying products recommended by real-world friends and family, while only 23% reported being very or somewhat likely to consider a product pushed by "well-known bloggers.""This shows that popularity doesn't always equate to credibility," said Robert Hutton, executive vice president and general manager at Pollara. "Marketers might have to reconsider who the real influencers are out there."
There are a couple of things we'd suggest need to be taken into consideration here, however.
Times are changing and the connection between technology and social relations is one that many people are watching closely. Facebook's theory that friend activity/endorsement is the best advertisement may be supported by this data. Dr. Pepper's hiring Tay "Chocolate Rain" Zonday to record a TV commercial may look even more ridiculous than it did on face.
The rise of the power-blogger as super-influencer makes a fun story, especially when the mainstream media profiles them as individuals - but in reality bloggers are probably playing a different roll than that of tipping point influencer. That's what we'd suggest that you think about the matter, at least!