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You sent the product. You shared the brief. You waited. And then the post went live, and it’s not what you had in mind. Maybe the caption missed the point, the lighting was bad, or the tone felt completely off-brand. Maybe they didn’t include your key message at all.
It happens. Even with vetted creators and clear briefs, influencer content doesn’t always land the way you expected. The good news is that how you handle it matters far more than the fact that it happened. Here’s a step-by-step guide for small brands navigating this situation, calmly, professionally, and effectively.
1. Pause Before You React
The first thing to do when you see content you don’t like is nothing. Don’t fire off a message. Don’t post a comment. Don’t ask them to delete it immediately. Give yourself a few minutes to separate your gut reaction from a considered response.
Ask yourself: Is this genuinely off-brief, or does it just look different from what I pictured? Is it actually harmful to my brand, or just not exactly what I’d have done myself? These are different problems requiring different responses. A creator’s authentic style will always look slightly different from a perfectly staged brand shoot, and that’s often a feature, not a bug.
2. Check the Brief Before You Check the Creator
Before reaching out to the influencer, go back to the brief you provided. Was the key message clearly stated? Did you include specific must-haves and must-avoids? Did you share reference examples? If the answer to any of these is no, the issue may be rooted in how the collaboration was set up rather than what the creator delivered. A strong brief is your first line of defence against content that misses the mark. If you’re not sure what a thorough brief looks like, Social Cat’s guide to running successful influencer campaigns is a good starting point.
This matters because it shapes how you communicate with the creator. If the brief was vague, own that. If it was detailed and they still missed the mark, you have a stronger position to request changes.
3. Identify What Specifically Needs to Change
Before messaging the creator, get specific. Vague feedback like “this isn’t quite right” puts the creator in an impossible position and usually leads to more back-and-forth. Instead, identify exactly what the issue is:
- Is it the caption — missing a key message, wrong tone, or no CTA?
- Is it the visual — lighting, product placement, or framing?
- Is it a compliance issue — missing #ad disclosure or incorrect product claims?
- Is it a brand safety issue — something in the post that conflicts with your values?
Each of these has a different solution. A caption issue is an easy fix. A brand safety issue is more serious. Knowing what you’re dealing with before you reach out helps you ask for exactly what you need.
4. Reach Out Privately and Professionally
Message the creator directly, not via a comment on the post. Keep your tone constructive and collaborative. Creators are people, and most genuinely want the collaboration to go well. According to Superfiliate’s content approval guide, consolidating feedback into a single clear message, rather than sending multiple requests, dramatically reduces friction and speeds up resolution.
A message that works:
“Hey [name], thanks for posting! We really appreciate you working with us. I just wanted to flag a couple of things, we noticed [specific issue 1] and [specific issue 2] are missing from the post. Would you be able to update the caption to include [X] and add the #ad tag? Happy to send over the exact wording if that helps.”
This approach is direct without being accusatory, and it gives the creator a clear path to resolve the issue.
5. Know What You Can and Can’t Ask For
What you’re entitled to request depends on what was agreed upfront. If your collaboration included a content approval step or a revision clause, you’re on solid ground asking for changes. If it didn’t, you’re relying on goodwill, which most creators will extend, but it’s not guaranteed. This is why having a clear influencer contract in place before any campaign goes live is so important, especially around revision rounds, approval timelines, and FTC disclosure requirements.
As Influencer Marketing Hub notes, top creators typically distinguish between minor edits (caption tweaks, adding a disclosure tag) and major revisions (reshoots), and may charge for the latter if it wasn’t included in the original agreement. Being aware of this distinction helps you ask for what’s reasonable without damaging the relationship.
6. If the Content Is Harmful, Act Quickly
If the content contains something genuinely damaging, incorrect product claims, misleading information, discriminatory language, or a serious brand safety issue, the approach changes. Don’t wait.
- Request that the post be taken down immediately, citing your agreement.
- Document the post by screenshotting it before it’s removed.
- If the creator is unresponsive, report the content to the platform directly.
- Review your contract for breach-of-agreement terms and next steps.
These situations are rare, especially when working with vetted creators through a platform like Social Cat, but knowing what to do when they arise is part of running a professional campaign.
7. Use It to Improve Your Next Campaign
Once the situation is resolved, use it as a learning moment. Every campaign that doesn’t go perfectly is a brief-writing lesson in disguise. Update your template, add a must-avoid section, include reference examples, and if content approval matters to you, make sure it’s built into your campaign setup on Social Cat from the start.
The brands that get the best content consistently aren’t the ones who get lucky with creators, they’re the ones who have refined their briefs, built approval steps into their workflow, and treat influencer relationships as ongoing partnerships rather than one-off transactions.
The Short Version
Getting content you don’t love is frustrating, but it’s rarely a crisis. Pause, assess what specifically went wrong, reach out privately with clear and constructive feedback, and know what your agreement entitles you to ask for. Most creators want to get it right, they just need to know what “right” looks like.
And if you want to reduce the chances of it happening in the first place, start with the right creators. On Social Cat, every influencer is manually vetted before they can apply to your campaigns, so you’re always working with people who take collaborations seriously. Browse our creator community and launch your first campaign here.





