Contents
Table of Contents
Most brands treat gifting as a transaction. Send the product, get the post, move on. Here's why that's leaving most of the value on the table, and what to do instead.
When a gifting campaign goes well, most brands feel relieved and move on to finding the next creator.
That instinct makes sense. You ran the campaign, you got the content, the product is out there. What else is there to do?
Quite a lot, as it turns out.
A creator who genuinely liked your product and posted about it naturally is one of the most valuable things a small brand can have. They already understand what you sell, they've tried it, their audience has seen it, and some of those followers are probably already curious. That warm relationship is far easier to build on than starting cold with someone new every single time.
Most brands never go back. They treat each gifted collab as a one-off, then spend just as much time and energy on the next round of outreach, vetting, and sending, starting from zero again. The brands that grow their creator channels more efficiently are the ones who learn to treat good collaborations as the beginning of something, not the end.
Here's how to do that without a paid retainer, an agency, or a big budget.
Start by identifying which relationships are actually worth building on
Not every gifting collab deserves a follow-up. Some creators were a fine fit for one campaign and nothing more. Before thinking about ongoing relationships, it helps to know which ones are actually worth nurturing.
Look for three things after a campaign wraps:
Did they post without being chased? A creator who posted on time, without multiple follow-ups, is already showing you something about how they work. That reliability matters more than reach when you're thinking long-term.
Did the content feel natural? A post that reads like a genuine recommendation, where the product fits into how they normally talk, is more likely to perform again. If it felt forced the first time, a second collab probably won't fix that.
Did the audience engage? Comments, questions about where to buy, saves, these tell you whether the creator's audience actually cares about the kind of product you sell. High engagement on a post that mentioned your product is a strong signal.
You don't need a spreadsheet with twenty metrics. A creator who posted willingly, made the content feel natural, and got a real response from their audience is worth a follow-up conversation.
The follow-up most brands never send
The simplest thing you can do after a good collab is say thank you, genuinely, specifically, and without immediately asking for something else.
Most brands skip this entirely. They either go quiet after the post goes live, or they jump straight to asking for another collab. Both approaches leave the relationship feeling transactional.
A good follow-up message does three things: it acknowledges what they created, it gives them a specific piece of feedback that shows you actually paid attention, and it leaves the door open without pressure.
What it looks like in practice:
"Hi [Name], just wanted to reach out and say thank you again for the post, we really loved how you talked about [specific detail from their content]. We noticed a few of your followers asking where to buy, which was really great to see. We'd love to stay in touch for future campaigns if you're ever open to it. No pressure at all, just wanted you to know we appreciated it."
That's it. No ask, no brief, no timeline. Just a message that closes the loop and leaves an open door.
This matters more than it sounds. Creators work with a lot of brands. The ones who take thirty seconds to say something genuine are the ones they remember. And when you come back six weeks later with another product, you're not starting cold, you're picking up a conversation.
How to re-engage without it feeling like a cold pitch
When you're ready to work with a creator again, the approach is different from the first outreach. You already have a relationship. The message shouldn't read like you've forgotten that.
The mistake most brands make is sending the same pitch template they'd send to a new creator. It signals that the first campaign didn't mean much to you, and it puts the creator back in the position of evaluating a stranger's offer instead of continuing a collaboration they already said yes to.
A re-engagement message should reference what came before, explain what's new, and make the ask feel like a natural continuation, not a fresh transaction.
A weak re-engagement message:
"Hi [Name], we have a new product launching soon and we'd love to send it to you in exchange for a post. Let me know if you're interested."
A stronger version:
"Hi [Name], we launched something new this month and you were one of the first people we thought of after your post back in [month]. We think it would be a really natural fit for you, it's [brief description]. Would you be open to another collab? Happy to send more details if so."
The difference is small but the effect isn't. One message treats them like a new contact. The other treats them like someone you've already worked with. That shift in tone changes how they read the offer.
What an ongoing relationship actually looks like in practice
Building a small roster of go-to creators doesn't require contracts, retainers, or a formal ambassador programme. For most small brands, it's much simpler than that, it's just consistent, respectful contact over time.
Here's what that can look like across a few months:
After campaign one: Send the thank-you message. Note what worked. Flag them internally as someone worth coming back to.
Four to six weeks later: If you have something new, a product update, a new launch, a seasonal push, reach out with a re-engagement message that references the first campaign. Keep the bar low. A story, a mention, a quick reel. Don't overload the ask just because you've worked together before.
Ongoing: Follow their content. Engage occasionally, a genuine comment, a reply to a story. Not to be strategic, but because you're now a brand they actually know. That low-level visibility keeps the relationship warm between campaigns without requiring anything formal.
Periodically: Let them know what's coming before it launches. Creators who feel like they're getting early access to something, rather than being contacted at the last minute, tend to be more enthusiastic and produce better content.
None of this requires a CRM or a dedicated community manager. For a small brand working with five to ten creators, a simple spreadsheet and a bit of attention is enough to maintain relationships that would otherwise go cold.
The practical side: what to track
You don't need to over-engineer this, but a basic record of each creator relationship saves a lot of time when you're ready to run the next campaign.
For each creator you want to stay in touch with, keep track of:
- What product you gifted them and when
- A link to the content they created
- A note on how the campaign went (what worked, what didn't)
- The date of your last message to them
- Whether they've agreed to stay in touch for future campaigns
That's five fields. It takes a few minutes to fill in and means that next time you have a new product, you're not trying to remember who posted what and when โ you can just open the list and start from there.
If you're managing campaigns through Social Cat, a lot of this tracking happens inside the platform automatically, which makes it easier to see your full history with a creator without digging through emails.
When to consider something more formal
For most small brands, informal ongoing gifting is enough. You don't need to pay a creator a monthly fee or sign them to an ambassador deal to keep the relationship alive. A consistent, respectful presence and a product they genuinely like is often sufficient.
But there are a few signals that it might be worth having a more formal conversation:
Their audience is responding consistently. If a creator's posts about your product reliably generate comments, questions, or traffic, that's a relationship with real commercial value. It's worth talking about what a longer-term arrangement could look like.
They're already talking about you unprompted. If a creator mentions your brand in their own content without a collab attached, a story mention, a reference in a comment, they've moved past creator and into something closer to advocate. That's rare and worth nurturing.
You're going back to them every cycle. If you've gifted the same creator three or four times and it's always gone well, a light structure, a small monthly fee, a first-look arrangement, or a commission setup, probably makes sense for both sides. It gives them a reason to prioritise your content and gives you more predictability.
Understanding what different types of influencer arrangements look like can help you figure out what's appropriate for where you are as a brand, and what to propose when the time is right.
Why this approach works better than constant new outreach
Running new outreach every campaign is expensive in ways that don't always show up obviously. There's the time spent vetting new creators, the energy of writing cold pitches, the uncertainty of working with someone whose content you haven't seen perform for your product, and the real possibility that the collab doesn't go as well as the last one.
None of that is wasted when it leads to a good new relationship. But when you already have good relationships and you're not building on them, you're doing unnecessary work.
A small roster of creators who genuinely like what you sell, know how to talk about it, and already have a relationship with you is more reliable than a larger pool of one-time collabs. The content tends to be better because they've used the product. The outreach is faster because you're not starting from scratch. And over time, some of those creators will mention you without being asked, which is the closest thing to free marketing a small brand can get.
The first gifting campaign is the hardest part. Once someone has tried your product and liked it, everything that comes after is easier, as long as you don't let the relationship go cold.
A simple checklist for after your next campaign
Use this after any gifting campaign where the creator delivered and the content felt right.
- Send a specific, genuine thank-you message within a few days of the post going live
- Note the creator in your tracking sheet with a "worth following up" flag
- Follow their account if you don't already
- Engage naturally with their content over the next few weeks
- Plan a re-engagement message for your next launch or seasonal campaign
- When you reach out again, reference the first collab in the message
- If you've worked together three or more times, consider whether a more formal arrangement makes sense
You don't need all seven every time. But doing even a few of them consistently will put you ahead of the vast majority of brands who never follow up at all.
If you're running gifting campaigns and want to make it easier to find creators worth building on, Social Cat's influencer marketplace lets you search by niche, platform, and engagement, so the first collab starts with a strong enough fit that a second one actually makes sense.

Written by
Stefan A.
Stefan is a Growth Marketer turned founder with a background in customer acquisition, Influencer Marketing, and early-stage startups. At Social Cat, Stefan drives day-to-day operations and growth, helping small brands connect with the right influencers to scale their reach and impact.




