In the fast-evolving influencer-marketing landscape across Southeast Asia, brands are turning their attention away from big-name creators and instead embracing micro (10K–100K followers) and nano (1K–10K followers) influencers. The reason? These smaller creators deliver cost-effective reach, stronger engagement, and increased market trust.
1. Cost-efficiency & scalability
Rather than investing heavily in one large influencer, brands can engage multiple smaller creators. This allows coverage across different segments and communities, while keeping budgets manageable.
2. Higher engagement and deeper connections
Data shows smaller-follower creators tend to have higher engagement rates:
3. Many voices build trust
When a brand uses many smaller influencers, the audience sees multiple people recommending the brand/product—this multiplicity amplifies social proof. Smaller creators often feel more relatable and less “commercial,” making their endorsements more credible.
In 2025, the influencer game in Southeast Asia isn’t about who has the highest follower count. It’s about who has the most relevant, engaged, trusted audience. Micro and nano influencers are no longer “just small players”—they are becoming essential for brands that want real engagement, genuine recommendations, and cost-efficient scalability.
Brands and MCNs that embrace this paradigm—by activating many smaller creators, focusing on trust and community, and measuring meaningful metrics—will lead the way.
Malaysia