The Impact of Micro-influencers Marketing on the Cosmetics Sector
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Abstract
This study investigates the role of micro-influencers (1,000–100,000 followers) in
shaping consumer trust and purchase behavior within Ireland’s €1.2 billion cosmetics
market, characterized by 95% internet penetration and high social media engagement
(Central Statistics Office, 2024). Through a mixed-methods approach, combining
quantitative surveys (40 female consumers) and qualitative interviews (six), the
research examines how authenticity, transparency, and storytelling strategies
influence Customer Journey Mapping (CJM) and The Elaboration Likehood Model
(ELM) frameworks in analyzing micro-influencer efficacy within Ireland’s unique
regulatory and cultural context touchpoints across pre-purchase, purchase, and postpurchase stages (Lemon & Verhoef, 2016).
Findings reveal that 47.5% of respondents perceive micro-influencers as authentic
(mean score: 3.45/5), while 95% emphasize transparency (e.g., #ad disclosures) as
critical to credibility (Kay et al., 2020). Instagram (60% preference) dominates
purchase intent through tutorials, whereas TikTok (35%) drives discovery via
algorithmic "For You Page" content (Haenlein et al., 2020). Thematic analysis
highlights relatability and para-social relationships as key drivers of loyalty (H4),
particularly among 18–24-year-olds.
The study contributes to academic literature by bridging gaps in localized CJM
applications for niche markets and offers practical strategies for Irish brands (e.g.,
Kash Beauty, Flormar Ireland) to optimize micro-influencer collaborations. Limitations
include sample size and gender bias, suggesting future research into male consumers
and nano-influencers (<1,000 followers).