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TikTok 91Ƶde-influencers91Ƶ want Gen Z to buy less - and more

At a time when consumers are inundated with so-called social media influencers peddling the latest products online, a slew of TikTok users are leveraging their platforms to tell people what not to buy instead.

At a time when consumers are inundated with so-called social media influencers peddling the latest products online, a slew of TikTok users are leveraging their platforms to tell people what not to buy instead.

The trend, called 91Ƶde-influencing,91Ƶ is a stark contrast to prior ones like .TikTokMadeMeBuyIt, when consumers were showing off products they purchased after seeing them on the social media app.

These days, TikTokers are telling their followers which products aren91Ƶt worth the money, or urging them to resist indulging in trends. Some influencers are sounding off about blushes, mascaras or other beauty and skincare items that made big promises but don91Ƶt deliver. And others are telling their followers to avoid hair stylers and water bottles TikTok itself helped popularize.

All told, clips with the hashtag .deinfluencing have racked up more than 150 million views in just a few months. It91Ƶs not clear how the trend originated, though one of the first TikTok videos came from a former employee for Ulta and Sephora, who listed frequently-returned products at the beauty stores.

Paige Pritchard, 33, said it91Ƶs refreshing to see consumers finally having this conversation. Now a spending coach who shares financial advice on TikTok, Pritchard said she chose her career path after blowing her entire $60,000 salary on clothing, beauty and hair products in the first year after she graduated from college.

At the time, Pritchard was living with her parents to help pay off her student loans. But heeding recommendations from YouTube influencers, who routinely get paid by brands to market products, she regularly went to Nordstrom or J. Crew on her lunch breaks, easily dropping $500 per visit.

91ƵWhen it came time to move out, I realized that I had no money,91Ƶ Pritchard said. 91ƵI could barely afford to move out of my parent91Ƶs house at the end of that year.91Ƶ

She felt embarrassed and ashamed, and characterizes the moment as her 91Ƶbreaking point.91Ƶ

Estefany Teran, 23, said she was inspired to make her 91Ƶde-influencing91Ƶ video after her sister-in-law told her she wanted a Stanley cup 91Ƶ a popular 40-ounce drinking tumbler that recently went viral on TikTok. But it was out of stock.

91ƵI was like, `You can just go to TJ Maxx and get a different cup,91Ƶ91Ƶ Teran said.

TikTok trends come and go, and criticisms of consumerism aren91Ƶt necessarily new. Still, influencers who hop on the de-influencing trend could be seen as more trustworthy and use the opportunity to shore up credibility, said Abhisek Kunar, a marketing lecturer at the University of Essex who has studied how Gen Z interacts with content creators.

A study he did with other academics showed Gen Z shoppers typically ignore influencer campaigns they believe to be controlled by companies. Brand deals and influencers have become almost synonymous over the years, but consumers still crave authenticity and those seen as inauthentic often incur a cost to their reputation.

Most recently, Mikayla Nogueira, a makeup artist with 14.4 million TikTok followers, was accused of wearing fake eyelashes while promoting a L91ƵOreal mascara in a sponsored video by the brand. (Representatives for Nogueira did not reply to a request for comment.)

91ƵInfluencers will still remain relevant, but one of their major weapons 91Ƶ which is source credibility 91Ƶ is slowly getting eroded unless they do something about it,91Ƶ Kunar said.

The temptation to make money, however, can be hard to overcome. Many influencers earn their living from the content they produce, oftentimes in collaboration with brands. Such partnerships have exploded in the past decade, according to Influencer Marketing Hub, which says the influencer marketing industry reached over $16 billion last year, up from $1.6 billion in 2016. At the same time, the number of people who search for products on social media has risen by 43% since 2015, the audience research company GWI said in a recent report.

Compared to other influencer-dominant platforms like Instagram and YouTube, TikTok is fairly new to driving consumer behavior. But traction there has driven sales on many items, including books by Texas-based writer Colleen Hoover as well as products that can supposedly give the skin a glistening and plump finish known as 91Ƶdolphin skin.91Ƶ

Data from the market research company NPD Group also shows purchasing decisions on skincare and fragrance products, in particular, were influenced more by TikTok last year compared with 2021.

De-influencing 91Ƶ much like influencing 91Ƶ sprang from a place of authenticity. But the longer the trend lingers, the more it becomes something of a paradox: The hashtag is being used by some users to pan certain products and then turn around and offer up alternatives 91Ƶ essentially influencing their followers to buy more items, not less.

And there might be money to be made in that as well. For example, some products mentioned in popular TikToker user alyssastephanie91Ƶs de-influencing videos are listed on her Amazon Storefront, a personalized page on the e-commerce site where influencers earn commission from purchases made using affiliate links. TikToker valeriafride, whose de-influencing video got more than a million views, also has recommendations listed on her Storefront.

Fride has a caption that tells viewers to not buy everything mentioned in her video. She told The Associated Press in an emailed response that she hasn91Ƶt made and 91Ƶdidn91Ƶt intend to91Ƶ make money off of the alternative products she recommended, but did not provide further details. TikToker alyssastephanie said in an email that having a Storefront makes it easier for viewers to find items mentioned in a clip.

Mandy Lee, a fashion critic and freelance writer who posted a TikTok video championing the anti-consumption trend, said she would be skeptical of any influencer who is participating in this conversation for the first time because its a trend.

91ƵIt91Ƶs hard for me to trust someone who91Ƶs never done a nuanced take about products before, and suddenly they91Ƶre doing it now,91Ƶ said Lee, who lives in Brooklyn, New York and has another side job consulting companies about fashion trends. 91ƵI would question whether or not it91Ƶs genuine.91Ƶ

By Haleluya Hadero And Ali Swenson

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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