
June 9, 2026

Written By Katja Orel
Lead Editor, UGC Marketing

Fact Checked By Sebastian Novin
Co-Founder & COO, Influee
Most influencer outreach gets ignored. Not because the brand is wrong for the influencer, but because the message is generic, the ask is unclear, and the value proposition is buried under two paragraphs of setup. Influencers receive dozens of these every week and learn to recognise the pattern in the subject line.
Good outreach is short, specific, and easy to say yes to. It also starts before the message, with picking the right influencer for the brand and the campaign, not picking the right template.
If you want to skip cold DMs entirely and stop wasting time on ignored emails, Influee flips the model: post a brief, pre-vetted influencers apply to you. More on that at the end.
This guide covers what to do before you reach out, how to write a message that gets a reply, copy-paste templates for every common scenario, and what to do when no one writes back.


Influencer outreach is the process of contacting an influencer to propose a collaboration. The collaboration takes one of four common shapes:
Each shape needs a different outreach message. The mistake most brands make is sending the same template to all four, which is part of why response rates sit where they do.
Influencers also receive a lot of outreach. A mid-tier fitness influencer with 30K followers reads dozens of pitches a week, most of them recycled. The bar for getting a reply is lower than people think, but only if you skip the patterns the inbox already knows.
Most influencer marketing campaigns start with outreach, and the campaign type (one-off content, multi-influencer launch, or ambassador programme) determines which outreach shape fits.

The pattern in ignored outreach is consistent. Five reasons explain almost all of it.
1. The message is generic. "Hi [name], we love your content!" is the line every influencer has seen 200 times. It signals copy-paste before the second sentence. A generic compliment reads as no compliment.
2. The value proposition is unclear. Most outreach buries the ask in the third paragraph or skips it entirely. The influencer has to guess what's in it for them: payment, product, exposure, affiliate. If they have to guess, they don't reply.
3. The brand is reaching the wrong influencer. A skincare brand pitching a fashion influencer with one off-niche post in their feed gets ignored. Niche alignment is binary at the nano and micro tier. Wrong niche, no reply.
4. There's no personalisation. A specific reference to actual content ("your jar-decant trick in the Tuesday matcha reel") signals the brand watched. A vague one ("your content is so authentic") signals the brand didn't. Influencers can tell.
5. The first message asks for too much. A 12-page brief, full deliverables, rates, exclusivity, and timeline all before the first reply. The first message should make it easy to say yes to a conversation, not yes to a contract.
Targeting is the part of outreach that decides the outcome, and the part most brands rush through. Five criteria define a fit.
Niche alignment. The influencer's last 10 posts should sit inside the topic the brand sells into. Adjacent isn't enough at the nano and micro tier. A beauty brand needs a beauty influencer, not a lifestyle account that occasionally posts beauty content.
Engagement rate, not follower count. A nano influencer with 4,000 followers and 7% engagement delivers more replies, comments, and saves per dollar than a 200K account at 0.8%. Follower count alone is a vanity filter.
Audience demographics. The influencer's actual audience needs to match the brand's customer. A US DTC brand reaching a UK-based influencer with 80% Indian audience is paying for the wrong reach. Audience location and age are the first two things to check after engagement.
Content quality. Lighting, sound, framing, captions. Brands sending the same brief to influencers with different quality bars get different output. Set a minimum and shortlist against it.
Past brand collaborations. Look at the last five sponsored posts on the account. If the influencer is sponsoring back-to-back competitors in the same category every week, the audience has already learned to scroll past sponsored content from that account. Spaced collaborations perform better.
For deeper vetting on signs of fake or bot audiences, see fake influencers. For the discovery and vetting tools that surface this data, see influencer marketing tools.

Outreach that works has five elements, in order.
1. A specific compliment in the subject line or first sentence. Reference real content. "Loved your matcha morning routine on Tuesday" beats "Loved your content." The specificity is the signal the brand actually watched.
2. A clear ask. What you want the influencer to make, how long it should take, where it will be posted, what rights you need. One sentence is enough at the first message. Save the full brief for after they reply.
3. The value proposition, named. Payment in a number. Product in a category. Affiliate in a percent. Don't write "competitive rates" or "exciting opportunity." Write €600, or "starter kit, no payment, just product," or "20% commission." Influencers reverse-engineer your seriousness from the specificity here. Set the number against your influencer marketing budget and don't lowball, because influencers compare offers.
4. An easy next step. One question, not a paragraph of requirements. "Want us to send it over?" beats "Please confirm your rates, deliverables, posting timeline, and exclusivity preference so we can proceed to contract."
5. No brief attached to the first message. A PDF brief in the first email is a red flag at every tier. Save it for after the influencer says "tell me more."
The whole message should fit in 3-5 sentences. Anything longer and the influencer has stopped reading by sentence two.

Micro & nano influencers starting at $84

4.000+ Vetted Creators in Canada
Five templates below: one per outreach shape, plus a follow-up. Adjust the name, the content reference, and the value proposition per influencer. None of these should be sent as-is.
```
Subject: Loved your matcha morning routine on Tuesday
Hi Maya,
Your jar-decant trick in Tuesday's matcha reel was the most useful 8 seconds we've seen on the subject. We're Match., a small ceremonial-grade matcha brand from Berlin.
We'd love to send you our starter kit, no payment, just product. If you're open to one Reel and one Story after you try it, we'll cover shipping. Want us to send it over?
Sasha, Match.
```
```
Subject: Paid partnership, €600 for one Reel, Move.
Hi Jonas,
Your 5-minute home-workout Reels are the format and audience we're trying to reach with Move., our resistance-band brand. We'd like to book a paid collab: one Reel, €600 flat, posted on your account, with 30 days of paid usage rights on our side.
15 minutes on a call this or next week to walk through the brief. Which days are open?
Sasha, Move.
```
```
Subject: Affiliate code, 20% to your audience, 15% to you
Hi Lena,
Your honest take on the SPF50 reel last month was the kind we trust on this app, which is why we wanted to reach out. We run Skinful, a DTC skincare brand.
We'd like to open an affiliate code: 20% off for your audience, 15% commission to you on every sale. No flat fee, no posting requirements. Open to it?
Sasha, Skinful
```
```
Subject: 6-month ambassador role with Trailmark, €4,800 total
Hi Sara,
We've been watching your travel-and-camera content over the last quarter. The way you talk about gear is the way we want Trailmark to sound. We'd like to open a 6-month ambassador role: one piece of content per month, paid monthly, product sent, first dibs on every new release.
Total comp €4,800 over the contract, plus product. Open to a 20-minute intro call?
Sasha, Trailmark
```
```
Subject: re: Loved your matcha morning routine on Tuesday
Hi Maya,
Following up on the gifting offer from last week in case the first one got buried. Same starter kit, same setup, no rush at all. If it's not for you, no worries, just let me know.
Sasha, Match.
```
Each template above stays under 100 words, which is where the reply rate lives. Anything longer and reply rate falls off quickly.

DM and email have different reply curves. At the nano influencer and micro tier, DMs usually pull more replies than cold email. The influencer is already in the app, the message is one tap away, and there's no spam filter to clear. Above the micro influencer tier, paid partnership negotiations move to email because rates, rights, and timeline don't fit a DM.
A few quick rules: keep the DM under 50 words, write in lower-case if the influencer's own DMs are casual, and don't send a follow-up DM if the first one is still unread.

Micro & nano influencers starting at $84

4.000+ Vetted Creators in Canada
```
hi maya, saw your matcha routine on tuesday, loved the jar-decant trick. we make match., a small berlin matcha brand. open to a gifted collab? one reel + one story, full kit on us. let me know if you want me to send.
```
```
hey! we make match., small matcha brand from berlin. saw your morning routine, the jar-decant bit got me. we'd love a paid collab: €300 for one TikTok this month, full kit included. reply if you want details.
```
DMs convert when the brand sounds like a person, not a brand account. The matching test: read the DM out loud, then read the influencer's own captions out loud. If the energy matches, it works. If it doesn't, the DM gets opened and forgotten.

Micro & nano influencers starting at $84

4.000+ Vetted Creators in Canada
One follow-up. That's the rule. Send it 5-7 days after the first message, keep it short, then drop it.
The follow-up should reference the original offer, not repeat it in full. Two sentences, maximum. "Following up on the gifting offer from last week, in case the first one got buried" is the shape. Don't reattach the brief, don't add new urgency, don't change the offer mid-thread to sweeten it.
A second follow-up reads as pushy. A third reads as desperate. Influencers talk inside niche communities. DMs between nano and micro influencers are common, and brands with a reputation for sending five follow-up emails to the same address get filtered before they ever reach the inbox.
If the follow-up gets no reply, move on. The next influencer on the shortlist is a better use of your time than the seventh email to the one who didn't respond.
Before sending products, contracts, or payment terms to a creator through an unfamiliar link or landing page, it helps to know how to check if a website is safe so your outreach process does not introduce unnecessary security risks.

The whole outreach process exists because brands don't know which influencers want to work with them. Cold email and cold DMs are the workaround for that information gap.
Influee closes the gap from the other direction. Brands post a campaign brief on the influencer marketing platform, and pre-vetted nano and micro influencers across 23+ countries apply to work on the campaign. No cold emails. No chased replies. No deleted DMs.
Every influencer on the platform has cleared a strict vetting process, with the top 2% of applicants approved, covering audience quality, engagement, content quality, and account credibility. Within hours of posting the brief, the dashboard fills with applicants who already match the campaign's audience, tier, and category. Pick the ones you want, send the full brief, get content back.
The model also fixes the upstream problem cold outreach can't solve: influencer-brand fit. Cold outreach forces brands to guess which influencer will say yes. The inbound model surfaces only influencers who already saw the brief and decided to opt in. The fit question is answered before the conversation starts.

Content rights belong to brands by default. Revisions are unlimited on every campaign. If no influencer on the platform matches the brief, the campaign is refunded under Influee's money-back guarantee. The whole stack of outreach problems, wrong influencer, ignored reply, no rights, broken delivery, is gone in one move.

Micro & nano influencers starting at $84

4.000+ Vetted Creators in Canada
Influencer outreach is the process of contacting influencers to propose a collaboration: paid, gifted, affiliate, or ambassador. It works when the message is short, the value proposition is clear, and the brand has picked the right influencer for the campaign before writing a single sentence.
An influencer outreach email needs five things: a specific compliment referencing real content, a clear one-sentence ask, the value proposition stated in a number, an easy next step, and no attached brief in the first message. Keep the whole email to 3-5 sentences.
The best way to contact influencers depends on the size of the ask. DMs work better for nano and micro influencers and gifting offers; email works better for paid partnerships above €500 and ambassador programmes. Pick the channel that matches the shape of the deal, not your inbox preference.
Send one follow-up only, 5-7 days after the first message. A second follow-up reads as pushy and damages the brand inside influencer communities, where nano and micro influencers compare notes on outreach quality.
A good influencer outreach response rate sits in the 10-30% range for well-targeted, personalised messages and falls below 5% for templated mass-sends. The biggest lever on response rate is targeting, not the template. Picking the right influencer matters more than the wording.
TL;DR
What is influencer outreach?
Why most influencer outreach fails
How to find the right influencers before you reach out
How to write an influencer outreach message that gets a reply
Influencer outreach email templates, copy and paste
Influencer outreach on Instagram and TikTok DMs
How to follow up without being annoying
Skip cold outreach entirely: how Influee works
FAQ

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