The Rise of Influencer Marketing 3.0: Authenticity in the Age of AI

Abstract

The rapid growth of the digital culture has introduced a new breed of influencer marketing that can be described as an Influencer Marketing 3.0 when there is a convergence of authenticity, credibility, and technological innovation which turns the way brands are interacting with people into a different form. This literature paper focuses on the use of artificial intelligence in influencer ecosystems and how it is changing it with a particular focus on the perceived authenticity, one of the most important foundations of consumer trust and engagement. Due to the emergence of artificial influencers, prediction errors, and robotized systems recommending products, the traditional measurements of authenticity are being tested. This study examines bargaining among the consumers in an environment where trust is likely to be compromisable because of the presence of influencers that may be partially or solely natural and where the choice of content is highly algorithmic. It is a mixed-method-based paper, encompassing the elements of survey, sentiment analysis, and interviews with experts, to examine the shift in consumer attitudes towards human and AI-based influencers. Findings also show that personalization and the efficiency of AI-based content strategies are appreciated by the audience but the authentic emotional involvement and emotional connection in stories are crucial components of persuasive power. The paper further adds that the openness of AI participation is one of the main determinants of the consumer perception especially among young digital natives who believe in openness and use of data in an ethical way. This study would contribute to the emerging debate of the future of digital influence since it would reveal the conditions under which AI either strengthens, weakens, or re-constructs authenticity. It has also given certain key implications to marketers, including embracing hybrid strategies that will help minimize the effects of technological radicalization and human-oriented narrative-based methods. This study illustrates that Influencer Marketing 3.0 is not the decline of authenticity but the shift of authenticity as the viewers and brands renegotiate the meaning of authenticity in the AI-mediated digital age

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Scriptora International Journal of Research and Innovation (SIJRI)

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Last time updated on 29/01/2026

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