Beauty Influencer
As a beauty influencer, you鈥檒l post regular content on your chosen platform and offer actionable tips about your favorite methods and products.
Startup Costs: Under $2,000
Part Time: Can be operated part-time.
Franchises Available? No
Online Operation? No
THE BRIEF:
In the Information Age, social media is rampant — a found that nearly three-quarters of U.S. adults use YouTube, 68 percent are on Facebook and 35 percent use Instagram. When you isolate younger demographics, even larger swaths use the platforms — for example, 94 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds use YouTube. And that鈥檚 part of why beauty influencers are so popular. Countless makeup artists and beauty gurus have risen to fame via growing followings on their chosen platform — take (more than 37 million followers on Instagram at time of writing) and (over 11 million YouTube subscribers), for example. As a beauty influencer, you鈥檒l post regular content on your chosen platform, offer actionable tips about your favorite methods and products and interact with your audience by asking for input and answering questions. Some advantages to this business: You can build your following from anywhere, it鈥檚 a job for a people-person and most influencers advise being genuine and sticking to what you love.
ASK THE PROS:
How much money can you make?
Influencers with small but can make around $1,000 per post. At the upper end of the influencer spectrum, Kylie Jenner reportedly charges , while beauty influencers like Huda Kattan charge upwards of $30,000.
What kind of experience do you need to have?
鈥淭he first thing I would say is not to get caught up in all the intricacies and just start. Pick up the phone, the camera, whatever you have in front of you. Get in front of a window, go outside if you need to, and just start and get comfortable. Posting that first video is the first hurdle to get over. If you just start, don鈥檛 overthink, don鈥檛 be strategic about it and see where it takes you, you鈥檒l figure out your style, your rhythm.鈥 –Deepica Mutyala, Tinted
What鈥檚 the most important thing to know about this business?
鈥淵ou have to be okay with knowing that you probably aren’t going to make money for a long time鈥 You have a lot of eyes to compete for鈥 [And] don鈥檛 be surprised if something that works for someone else does not work for you. There’s no way to actually estimate, like, 鈥業n six months, if I do this type of content, I’ll grow this much.鈥 You don’t know what will catch on. You don’t know what people will get sick of. It’s trial and error. And then if something works, you work the hell out of it for as long as you can — and then when people get sick of it, you鈥檇 better find something else.鈥 –Jackie Aina, YouTube personality