
Correction: An earlier version of this article inaccurately stated that “Teigen might want to get with the program and accept disclosure requirements.” The line has been changed to “Teigen thinks that the FTC guidelines should go across the board.”
Chrissy Teigen is not just a supermodel. She’s also an influencer, and she isn’t shy about telling brands and even government regulators how the nascent corner of the marketing industry should evolve.
Today, Teigen went on a Twitter rant about how she works with brands, what works and what doesn’t. Some lessons:
When you are endorsing a brand, make sure to coordinate with its marketing team.
https://twitter.com/chrissyteigen/status/778996850560946176
While this is common practice, it may not be the best one. “Ideally a brand is working to educate the influencer on its product, positioning and guidelines, but then turns the creative expression over to the individual to use their own voice,” said Brian Zuercher, CEO and founder for agency Seen.
Maybe the FTC should mind its own business.
https://twitter.com/chrissyteigen/status/778988581293436928
https://twitter.com/chrissyteigen/status/778992048451883008
The FTC requires that social followers need to know the relationship between the influencer and the brand. Teigen thinks that the FTC guidelines should go across the board.
“Since influencer marketing is still in the early stages, the FTC guidelines are evolving,” said Mike Heller, CEO and founder of talent agency Talent Resources. “Although meaningful enforcement has not occurred yet in most cases, we believe that the FTC will increasingly hold non-conforming brands responsible.”
If you don’t follow the FTC disclosure guidelines…
https://twitter.com/chrissyteigen/status/778994151564021760
If the contract with the influencer states that there is a requirement to apply the rules, the brand is able to sue the individual and other consequences would be laid out, Zuercher explained.
And Zuercher applauded Teigen’s rant on Twitter. “The reality of the industry today is that the FTC will not have the bandwidth to police everything, thus the more public and aware the more likely to be monitored,” he said. “Teigen should feel some flattery that the brands she works with take their work seriously.”
Images via Teigen’s Instagram.
More in Marketing

Consumer sentiment heading into the holidays is low, but that could mislead marketers
Consumer sentiment’s low going into the holiday season, but marketers shouldn’t take it as a sign to retreat from the fray.

When CMOs pay for agents not agencies: S4 Capital’s AI gambit
S4 Capital execs say the quiet part out loud: AI is eating the ad industry.

Ferrero’s Danielle Sporkin breaks down the reality behind retail media’s full-funnel promise
The brand exec shared how Ferrero is rethinking retail media as a full-funnel tool — but challenges remain — at the Retail Media Advertising Strategies event in New York City.