“Hey guys, just jumping on here…”
You can almost hear the whiney voice… Hell, they’ve been “jumping on here” for six
years. We get it!
Influencing is the only job where doing nothing somehow
looks exhausting. Every post comes with a sigh, a story, a quiet explanation
about how busy things have been lately, and yet from the outside it’s mostly
the same cycle repeating itself. Wake up, film yourself, talk about it, and
then explain how hard it is to keep up. No one is saying it’s zero effort. It’s
just not what it’s being sold as. Especially when you consider they’ve done
thousands of photos to capture that one shot.
Everything becomes content. Breakfast, a walk, a bad day,
even taking a break gets packaged, explained, and turned into something that
still feeds the algorithm. At some point, it stops being life and starts being
management. You’re not just living anymore, you’re curating, constantly aware
of how everything looks and whether it’s worth posting.
Then there’s the voice. That calm, slightly breathy tone
that suggests something meaningful is about to be shared, when in reality it’s
usually a product you “absolutely love right now,” which conveniently didn’t
exist last week and won’t be mentioned again next week. It’s not
recommendation. It’s rotation.
The relatability angle is where it really stretches. “I’m
just like you.”
No, you’re not. You’re filming yourself being relatable
under good lighting, with multiple takes and a clear sense of what will land.
That’s not real life. That’s performance dressed up as honesty.
And it never stops. There’s no off switch, because
everything has potential value. A normal moment can’t just be a normal moment
anymore. It has to be captured, framed, edited, and shared, otherwise it feels
like it didn’t count.
And maybe that’s the real issue. Not that influencing
exists, but that so much of it is empty and still treated like it’s important…