Industry Trends

5 Important Influencer Marketing Trends in 2025

Track 5 influencer marketing trends shaping 2026—from creator partnerships to long-form content and regulatory changes impacting your strategy.

CCreatorDB Team 6 min read
5 Important Influencer Marketing Trends in 2025

With 2024 turning to 2025, it is the perfect time to review the last twelve months and forecast the state of the influencer marketing arena in the next year.

Influencer marketing is expected to reach $24 billion by the end of the year, a 13% increase from the previous year, maintaining its upward trajectory. Supporting this data, marketing departments have reported increasing their spending on influencers and externally generated content. 

In general, 2024 saw the consolidation of trends that had started previously, like the move out of prominent, expensive influencers into micro-influencers that cater to specific niches. 

2025 will follow with many previous trends consolidating and influencers becoming an integral part of marketing planning. 

1. Marketers and Creators will be More Connected

In 2025, influencers will take on an even more central role in shaping brand campaigns and strategies. They won’t just execute pre-designed plans—they’ll help co-create impactful and relevant initiatives. Marketers increasingly recognize that the true value of influencers goes beyond their audience sizes and engagement rates.

To avoid coming across as stiff or out of touch, brands are incorporating influencers into trend-based campaigns, leveraging their understanding of audience dynamics and changing tastes. Creators keep a close eye on their communities, offering insights that marketers often struggle to capture.

It is expected to see more campaigns designed collaboratively with influencers, seamlessly blending with their content or aligning with their organic goals. Forward-thinking brands will move past a narrow focus on direct sales to harness the broader potential of influencer marketing, collaborating with creators of all sizes to build authentic, trend-driven campaigns.

Key Takeaways:

2. Long Content Format is Back

After a few years in which everyone went crazy over 15-second TikTok videos, Reels under a minute, and general Brain Rot (word of the year), YouTube long videos are still a considerable part of the influencer landscape. Creators like Hbomberguy, F.D. Signifier, Jenny Nicholson, and Eddy Burback are examples of very different types of content formats that often stretch well over an hour, all obtaining millions of views. We are assisting many creators in deciding to decouple from the idea of constant content production in favor of a few highly researched and curated pieces of content that delve into topics dear to them. And the audience is loving it. 

For brands and advertisers, this is an opportunity to stand out as the ones who make this kind of content possible and allow many creators to avoid being slaves to the algorithm. 

While this resurgence in long-form content is happening, it will not cancel out the shorts and the time we all waste watching skits and rage bait. Each brand should decide how to spread its marketing budget to cover all the bases, considering they are all there. 

Key Takeaways:

3. Regulator to Focus on Cleaning the Space

Influencer marketing is decoupling from the lawless environment that it used to be. More prominent creators are caught engaging in shady practices in promotion and advertising, so the audiences are calling for a more transparent and trustworthy environment. There is little to no incentive to change for many established names, but the up-and-coming creators are guaranteed to come up with a unique eye to keep their names clean and reliable. 

Concurrently, many institutions are creating and applying more transparent and more stringent regulations regarding sponsorship disclosure and liabilities. 

Brands must pay extra attention to who they partner with to keep a clean and trustworthy image.

Key Takeaways:

4. Content Ownership at the Center of Debate

Whether it is a renowned content creator or a UGC professional, when dealing with brands, they want to be clear about how often and where their sponsored content will be used. On the other hand, brands realize that influencer-generated content is very flexible and doesn’t necessarily only live on social media platforms.

With both parties aware of this new bargaining chip, many new deals will include specific clauses, and content creators can ask for different rates based on the usage rights for each piece of content.

Key Takeaways:

5. All Along the Customer Journey

Long gone are the days when influencers were only evaluated on direct sales. It is increasingly evident to content creators and brands how influencer content impacts purchase decisions throughout the funnel. Often, niche influencers are at the forefront of new product developments or trends. They can introduce their audience to new ideas and concepts, making for perfect support for discovering your product. Other audience members turn to influencers to learn about their experience with certain products and find recommendations that can apply to their needs. 

Savvy marketers will treasure this approach and craft multilayered strategies with various influencers to cover all the needs and provide in-depth market exposure to the product.

Key Takeaways:

The influencer space remains one of the most active and dynamic parts of the whole marketing panorama. And while it is gaining much favor among marketers and brands, influencer marketing still has a long way to go before showing all its true potential.
But each year, the gap closes further. Influencers and brands are creating the foundations for truly effective influencer marketing by trying different combinations and levels of cooperation and involvement with each other to see how to maximize campaign impact. As part of this discovery process, regulatory and content ownership issues had to be discussed too, and need to be sorted out to create a safe and fair environment for influencers, brands, and consumers. 

In 2025, we can expect many of these issues to be brought to the forefront of the discussion, and we look forward to seeing the creative solutions that will be proposed.

Work with CreatorDB

Put this into
practice.

Talk to our Asia agency team about applying these ideas to a real creator campaign — or open the CreatorDB app and start building your shortlist now.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions.

What will influencer marketing spending look like in 2025?

Influencer marketing is expected to reach $24 billion by end of 2025, a 13% increase from 2024, continuing its growth trajectory. Marketing departments are increasing budget allocations toward influencers and externally generated content. This growth reflects brands' recognition that influencers drive value beyond direct sales—particularly through trend-based campaigns and authentic co-creation with creators.

Why are brands shifting away from mega-influencers to micro-influencers?

Micro-influencers deliver niche-specific audiences with higher trust and engagement than mega-influencers. Creators' understanding of their communities and changing audience tastes outpaces what brands can capture internally. Forward-thinking brands now collaborate with creators of all sizes to build trend-driven campaigns that feel authentic rather than heavily produced or out of touch.

Is short-form content still effective for influencer marketing in 2025?

Short-form content remains part of the influencer landscape but is consolidating with long-form content's resurgence. Audiences increasingly view short content as interchangeable and low-commitment, while long-form creators (hour-plus videos on YouTube) build deeper trust and loyalty. Brands should allocate budget across both formats rather than assume shorts alone drive results.

What compliance steps must brands take with influencer partnerships?

Brands must ensure proper disclosure tagging on all sponsored content, verify campaign models comply with local regulations (especially sweepstakes and contests in Asia markets), and maintain detailed records of collaborations and deal terms. Regulatory scrutiny is tightening as audiences demand transparency. Partnering with creators who maintain clean sponsorship histories protects your brand reputation.

How should influencer marketing results be measured in 2025?

Results and direct sales are decoupling from influencer marketing effectiveness. Brands should measure impact beyond revenue—including brand awareness, audience sentiment, trend participation, and campaign authenticity. Collaborating with creators on trend-based initiatives and long-form content requires evaluating qualitative engagement and cultural relevance, not just conversion metrics.