Unilever stopped buying creator posts and started building creator infrastructure. According to Digiday, the company's "creator force" operates as a permanent marketing mode, not a transactional media channel. Instead of campaign-by-campaign influencer deals, Unilever embedded creator capacity directly into its operating system.
The shift is structural. Unilever built internal systems to source, onboard, brief, and manage creators as ongoing partners rather than one-off media buys. Creators work across multiple product lines and campaigns, integrated into the planning calendar the same way a packaging supplier or agency retainer would be. The infrastructure treats creator output as a repeatable, scalable input, not a special project.
This works because it solves the two problems that kill most brand-creator programs: inconsistent quality and unsustainable transaction costs. When you buy influencer posts campaign by campaign, every new launch requires sourcing, negotiating, contracting, briefing, and reconciling. The overhead eats the margin. Quality varies wildly because you never build institutional knowledge about which creators understand your product category or can actually move purchase intent. Unilever's model inverts this. By maintaining a standing creator force, the company amortizes onboarding costs across multiple activations and builds a performance dataset that tells them which partnerships actually deliver.
The mechanism is simple: treat creators the way you treat any other production vendor. You don't re-negotiate your packaging printer every time you run a new SKU. You establish terms, build a relationship, and pull capacity when you need it. Unilever applied that logic to content production. The result is faster turnaround, lower per-asset cost, and creators who understand the brand's voice and product specs without a six-week briefing cycle.
A small physical-product brand can run the same play at micro scale. Start by identifying three to five creators in your category who already post about products like yours, have engaged audiences under 50,000 followers, and produce content that looks native to the platform. Reach out with a standing quarterly retainer, not a one-off campaign offer. Structure it as two posts per month for three months, paid upfront, with a six-week renewal option if both sides want to continue. Total outlay: $1,500 to $3,000 depending on follower count and platform. The key is the retainer structure. You're buying ongoing access and the right to brief multiple products without re-negotiating every time.
In the onboarding call, share your product roadmap for the next six months and ask which items they'd naturally post about anyway. Give them early access to new SKUs so they can test and film before launch. Set a simple brief template: product name, one to three key features, any claims you need them to include for compliance, and the hashtags or URLs to tag. Then let them write the copy and shoot the content. Your job is consistency and speed, not creative control. If a creator posts twice a month for three months and drives even 20 qualified site visits per post, you've built a repeatable acquisition channel for less than the cost of a single Facebook ad test.
The broader pattern is treating attention as infrastructure, not inventory. Media inventory depletes. Infrastructure compounds. When you pay for a single Instagram post, you get one asset and one audience exposure. When you pay for ongoing creator access, you get a content production line, platform-specific creative that you can repurpose, and a partner who learns your product over time. Unilever built this at portfolio scale. You can build it with three retainers and a shared Google Doc.
The takeaway
Replace one-off influencer buys with standing creator retainers — faster, cheaper, and the creative gets better every cycle.
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