Influencers should be imperfect

Transcriber: Denise Andréia
Reviewer: omar idmassaoud

One of the richest people in the world
isn’t a top leader in STEM,

a CEO of a Fortune 500 company,

a pop singer currently
on the Billboard 500

or even a high-ranking political figure.

Do you think that you can guess
who this person may be?

Well, probably not.

Because this person
just happens to be a child.

Meet Ryan, an eight-year-old

who remains Youtube’s top earner
for his second year in a row,

with his channel entitled Ryan’s World.

According to the Forbes annual list
of influencers, back in 2019,

Ryan received his own show on Nickelodeon,
got his own clothing line,

earned a deal with the popular
streaming service Hulu,

amassed nearly 23 million subscribers,

and raked in 26 million
dollars in that year alone.

As a broke college student

who still struggles

to find enough money
to do laundry each week,

one of the only things
I remember receiving in 2019

was a bill notifying me
of my impending student loan debt.

But once I read that a child
is annually making more money

than I potentially ever will
in my entire lifetime,

by simply posting videos
of himself unboxing toys,

I did what any rational person would do.
I began to question my life choices.

All of them.

But then I decided to look even further
into this new culture

that our generation has created
for ourselves: influencer culture.

To no one’s surprise, nearly
three-quarters of Gen Z and millennials

follow influencers on social media.

But our generation is no longer
just following influencers.

No, we’re becoming them, too.

According to the annual influencer
report, back in 2019.

fifty-four percent
of Gen Z and millennials

said that they would drop
everything right now

to become an influencer
if given the chance.

And to be honest, after hearing
about Ryan’s story,

it isn’t hard to imagine why.

I mean, between earning upwards

250,000 thousand dollars
per sponsored post on social media,

collaborating with luxury brands,

and even potentially earning your
own reality TV show, I mean,

I would become an influencer, too,
if given the chance.

And it is undeniable

that influencers are currently ruling
modern-day media and marketing.

But aside from all the money,
the fame, and glamour of it all,

what can we gauge from this information?

What do these numbers actually tell us?

Well, they tell us that our generation
learns how to hold a vlog camera

before we learn how
to hold up our self-esteem

They tell us that we are programmed
to like the good in someone else

before first learning how to love the bad
in ourselves, and yet we keep scrolling.

We keep subscribing, we keep searching
for the right words to say,

the entrance to where,
what caused us to stay woke about,

what fits we should be buying,
what TikTok dances we should be trying,

and ultimately, who we should be
in the identity of someone else.

They tell us that we’re the generation
that claims to be influencers,

when it looks like the rest of the world
seems to be influencing us more.

We are the generation that is influencing
while being influenced.

Nowadays, the word influencer has become
a buzzword for most of us.

When you may think of the word influencer,
an image of James Charles,

Charli D’ Amelio
or Logan Paul might pop up.

And I’m just going to go ahead
and apologize in advance,

If any of these three people were canceled

in the last few minutes of me talking,
I’m sorry for including them in here,

but I was not made aware.

But at the root of it, what does
the word influencer originally mean?

Well, according to the Merriam
Webster’s Dictionary,

the word influencer refers to a person

who inspires or guides
the actions of others.

This is me at the age of 10.

I’d just gone home and I was in the middle
of telling my mom that I was just elected

the president of the National Junior
Honor Society at my school.

And as you can tell from this picture,
I was really excited.

I mean, I was going to pop out
of my head excited.

But at that time, becoming president
of that organization

and maybe even the United States one day

was my definition of what
it meant to be an influencer.

Before that, my definition
of being an influencer

was becoming Michael Jackson

or the equivalent of the queen
of Pop, if you will.

And before that, my definition
of being an influencer

was becoming a rapper, like Jay-Z.

But I don’t like to talk about
that portion of my life for too long,

for obvious reasons.

But now, at the age of 18,
I’m the host of my own podcast,

the founder of my own
public speaking organization,

have been interviewed on
Good Morning America and USA Today,

have been flown down to
the Essence magazine headquarters,

and I’ve spoken on stages
all across the country.

And yet I still do not know if I can
truly call myself an influencer.

Or if I can call any of my peers

or the people I look up to
influencers, for that matter.

People who inspire and guide
the actions of others.

So, attempting to find a better word

for what myself, you, and thousands
of others do on a daily basis,

I began searching for what words are
synonymous with the word influencing.

Strangely enough, one of the first words
that popped up was mirroring,

the act of unconsciously imitating

the gesture, speech, attitude,
and pattern of another.

To illustrate this picture,
a two-sided mirror.

On one side, a person is able to see
a reflection of themselves.

However, if they walk over
to the other side,

the person would only see
a reflection of somebody else

standing on the side
from which they came.

In an attempt to become
the highest trending,

most relevant, most widely known,

we have started to place
our originality and relatability

in looking, sounding, and acting
like everyone else.

So we buy the same fits,
we vibe to the same music,

we use the same filters,
we maintain the same themes on our feed,

we lose weight to feel more whole,
we act more cute or more tough to pass,

we’re being straight and we lose ourselves
at the cost of becoming someone else.

And it doesn’t just stop at mirroring, no,
instead of influencing,

we are also flipping, changing one state,
position, or subject to another.

We are increasingly shifting
people’s bodies, their values,

and their feelings of self-worth.

We are increasingly causing what is
psychologically known as paradigm shifts,

when one way of thinking is replaced by
a slightly different perspective.

And fittingly enough,

these paradigm shifts can be
illustrated with a literal dime.

From up-close, a person is able to tell
that the coin holds two distinct sides.

One heads and one tails.

However, at a distance,

one would only be able
to see a coin and no sides.

Taking this visual and applying it
to the concept of influencing,

we can start to see how easy
it is to take one story, one coin,

and have two distinctly
different perspectives for sides.

We disowned family members and friends

for who they voted for
in the last election.

We hate others for their love of religion,

and we cancel people out of an entire
society for being ignorant,

when, to be honest, some of us
only know about global concerns

because of our morning scroll
through our Instagram feeds.

And I’m talking to you.

I’m coming to your house,

your school, your home,

wherever you’re listening
to this right now

because even though we’re two
sides of the same coin,

we flip the script and we flip out when
someone else can’t follow our narrative.

Instead of influencing,
we are hiding.

Hiding.

Isn’t this something that we’ve
all collectively felt?

In fact, it’s something that some of us
are doing right now. Hiding.

We hide behind our accomplishments,
our followers, and even our screens.

We hide who we are in order to be
widely known and accepted,

instead of seen and risk getting rejected.

As a member of this generation,
I’m not going to stand here

and point fingers at you,

when probably just moments before this,

I was using them
to scroll through my feed myself.

However, I do think it’s time for
our generation to power down our screens,

keep this one on though,

to power down our screens
and open up our eyes

just long enough to realize what
our generation is truly made of.

I mean, they tell us all the time
that our youth is the future of tomorrow.

And yet today, our generation

has been defined by mirroring,
flipping, and hiding who we are,

all in the name of being perfect.

This message right here of exploring

the intersectionality influencing
has with imperfection

has stayed on my heart
for quite some time.

But after opening up my laptop

and staring at a blank screen
for over two hours,

I realized that my difficulty
in coming up with a takeaway for this talk

lied in the fact that I am an 18-year-old
who is the host of my own podcast,

but is too scared to release
more than three episodes

in fear of no one actually listening.

That I am the founder of my own
public speaking organization,

but I have not publicly promoted it

because I think the website
that I designed isn’t good enough.

My difficulty in coming up
with a takeaway for this talk

lied in the fact that even though

I have been interviewed

on more segments than anyone

cares to remember,
including myself,

and spoken on stages
all across the country,

I constantly battle with
anxiety and stuttering.

I constantly battle with
tripping over my words,

watching my pride fall to the floor,

holding the pieces of my pride
in my trembling hands

just long enough to piece
together a broken smile.

My difficulty in coming up
with a takeaway for this talk

lies in the fact that I was, I am,
and always will be

imperfect.

This is what is so interesting,
and yet this is what is so daunting.

How do we influence without needing to
have a perfect image?

On the contrary, how do we
become influencers

because of and through our imperfection?

In order to answer those questions,

we must completely redefine
what influencing means,

what an influencer is,
and how to become one.

Starting with the word imperfection.

Is imperfection a lack of wholeness

or rather is imperfection simply
our “in progress” stage?

And since progress has no finite end,

we can’t possibly enforce our imperfect
identities on someone else. Why?

Because we still have a need that we
cannot supply to someone else.

Influencers fill a need.

Whether that need be entertainment,
business engagement or escapism.

According to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs,

a psychological theory that depicts
what humans need to survive

after the tiers of physiological needs,
which is water, food, shelter;

and safety needs, health, employment,
and resources have been met,

only three remaining tiers of need remain.

And ironically, these
three remaining tiers of need

give us an insight on how to meet
the needs of external influencing

through our internal imperfection.

First, we all need love and belonging.

Through family, relationships
and friendships,

and even our community.

One truth is that influencing provides us
with a sense of connection.

However, that connection comes with
a prerequisite of gaining attention.

On most social media apps
like Twitter and Instagram,

a person must gain one thousand followers
before getting to collaborate with brands,

making them a nano influencer
or an influencer on a small scale.

If we take this concept of needing to have
one thousand people or followers

in order to influence others
into the real world,

we start to see how truly
damaging that lie is.

Not only does it prevent us
from influencing the people

that are already in our circle,

but it preaches that in order to receive
love and perfection,

and belonging and connection,

we must first pretend to have
relationships with people

who half the time we don’t even know
and who do not truly know us.

However, imperfection teaches us

that we shouldn’t strive to earn
people’s love and affection.

Rather, we should strive to extend
that love and that belonging to others,

so that they can be inspired
and guided to do the same.

Imperfection teaches us that influencing
starts with love and belonging,

and it starts by extending that
rather than looking to receive it.

Second, all humans need
to have self-esteem,

the feeling of being respected,
appreciated, and to feel important.

Influencing teaches us
that that self-esteem

comes through the prerequisite
of needing validation.

Research shows that receiving
a like on social media

incites the same chemical brain activity
as seen when gambling,

when doing drug use, and
when going through addiction.

Simply put, receiving a like on social
media makes us like ourselves more.

And in essence, our generation is
inherently addicted to validation.

On the other hand, imperfection teaches us

that we shouldn’t be striving
to be validated.

Rather, there’s something
far grater out there

that can fulfill us more and
not leave us hungry with the void.

That thing is affirmation.

Affirmation that we are not alone
in experiencing our own flaws

through seeing them in someone else.

Affirmation that in a perfect world,
an imperfect timeline can exist.

By embracing our insecurities and flaws,

we can give people
the permission to do the same.

Influencing starts with imperfection,

which then continues through affirming
others rather than validating.

And lastly, all humans need
self-actualization.

We need to maximize our potential.

We need to reach the goals
we have set for ourselves.

However, influencing culture teaches us

that the way to do this is
through comparison.

And instead of leaving us with a maximized
potential to want to grow

and a motivation to be better, comparison
always leaves us feeling more empty.

Perfectionism, while influencing,

teaches us that the way
to finding ourselves

is by looking on the pages
of everyone else

and by minimizing our accomplishments
that will never match up to someone else.

However, by embracing our imperfection,

it gives us the shortcut on
our journey to self-actualization.

And who doesn’t love a good shortcut?

I know that I do.
Listen closely. Lean in.

The key to possessing
self-actualization through influencing

is actually being yourself.

Imperfection teaches us
that real influencing

ends with maximizing our truth
and our authenticity

in order to reach our full potential.

Rather than influencing while
being influenced,

we should all be striving to be
influencing while being imperfect.

Before, an influencer was defined
as being a person

who inspires or guides
the actions of others

through mirroring, flipping, or hiding.

Now, an influencer is someone
who inspires the actions of others

and guides the actions of others

through extending, affirming,
and exposing who they really are.

This is a definition that we can create.

This is a definition that
we should hold ourselves to.

A definition that preaches
that it is better

to be deeply known than widely known.

A definition that preaches
that you are not nothing

just because you don’t have everything.

A definition that preaches you are still
loved even without the like.