
Always-On vs. Campaign-Based Influencer Marketing: Which Strategy Wins?
Should your brand run continuous influencer programs or concentrated campaigns? We break down the pros, cons, and when to use each approach.
The Strategy Question Every Brand Faces
As influencer marketing budgets grow, brands face a fundamental strategic question: should they run always-on programs with ongoing creator partnerships, or concentrate spend into campaign-based bursts tied to product launches, seasons, or events? The answer depends on your objectives, category, and stage of brand building.
Campaign-Based: The Sprint Model
Campaign-based influencer marketing concentrates spend into defined windows — typically 2-6 weeks — with specific goals and measurable KPIs.
Best for:
- Product launches that need concentrated buzz
- Seasonal promotions (Black Friday, back-to-school, holiday)
- Event-driven marketing (festivals, awards shows, sports events)
- Brands with limited budgets that need to maximize impact
Advantages:
- Creates a surge of content that dominates social feeds during the campaign window
- Easier to measure with clear start and end dates
- Generates urgency through concentrated messaging
- Allows for creative themes and coordinated storytelling
Disadvantages:
- Impact fades quickly once the campaign ends
- No sustained relationship with creators or their audiences
- Content can feel forced if timing doesn't align with creators' natural posting
Always-On: The Marathon Model
Always-on programs maintain continuous influencer partnerships throughout the year, with creators posting about the brand regularly as part of their ongoing content.
Best for:
- Brands in competitive categories needing constant share of voice
- Products with ongoing purchase cycles (CPG, beauty, food)
- Brands building long-term awareness and affinity
- Companies with larger influencer budgets
Advantages:
- Builds genuine, believable creator-brand relationships over time
- Audiences see repeated, natural mentions rather than one-off placements
- Provides steady content for brand repurposing
- Creates compounding awareness effects
The Hybrid Approach
The most sophisticated brands use a hybrid model: maintain a core roster of 5-10 always-on creator partners who represent the brand year-round, then layer campaign-based activations with additional creators during key moments. This combines the relationship depth of always-on with the impact spikes of campaigns.
Budget Allocation Framework
For brands adopting the hybrid model, a common budget split is:
- 60% always-on: Ongoing partnerships with core creators
- 30% campaigns: Concentrated bursts for launches and tentpole moments
- 10% experimental: Testing new creators, platforms, or formats
This allocation ensures consistent brand presence while preserving flexibility for high-impact moments.
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