Influencer Marketing Manager
Kestra Technologies
Kestra Technologies
Your missions
1. Source and qualify creators → Map YouTube creators, newsletter authors, podcasters, community figures whose audiences are platform engineers, DevOps leads, infra builders, data teams, technical founders. → Build a scoring system: audience relevance, engagement quality, growth trajectory, content fit. Maintain a ranked prospect pipeline. → Tools: Social Blade, Passionfroot, GitHub/Discord/Twitter signals, internal recs. → Monitor who other infra/dev tools companies sponsor. What's working, what gaps exist.
2. Negotiate, structure, and close deals → Own end-to-end: first contact, rate negotiation, contract, invoicing (net-30), follow-up. → Build and maintain a CPM pricing model benchmarking fair value by channel size, engagement, and placement type. Update quarterly with real deal data. → Formats: pre-roll, mid-roll, end-roll, integrations, dedicated tutorials, multi-video packages. → Request examples of previous ad reads before committing. Quality of the read matters as much as the audience.
3. Brief creators and manage delivery → Develop a modular messaging kit: what Kestra is, what it solves, who it's for, how to start. Not a script, a toolkit creators actually want to use. → Maintain a library of video assets, product demos, in-app recordings for B-roll. → Set up unique UTM links per creator/campaign Enforce: link in top 3 lines, verbal CTA mentioning Kestra on sign-up. → Align placement timing with Product Marketing: launches, feature pushes, competitive moments. → Review every placement within 48h of going live. Flag issues, track delivery against brief.
4. Manage the relationship lifecycle → Active recording of all creator relationships deal history, performance, comms log, renewal dates. → Move top performers into recurring deals: quarterly packages, ambassador programs, co-created series. → Handle underperformers directly: renegotiate, adjust format, or end the partnership. Clear and professional.
5. Expand adjacent channels → Test technical newsletters, dev podcasts, sponsored community content beyond YouTube. → Explore co-marketing: joint webinars, live coding sessions, "build with Kestra" series. → Feed creator conversation insights back into Product and Marketing, what resonates, what confuses, what competitors are doing.
6. Build the playbook → Document everything: sourcing criteria, outreach templates, negotiation frameworks, briefing kits, dashboards, reporting cadences. → Build a self-serve onboarding flow so new partnerships spin up fast.
How we measure results You own a dashboard. These are the numbers on it: CPM (Cost per 1,000 views): Negotiate rates, pick efficient channels, cut underperformers. Sessions (Unique visits from UTM links Link placement): CTA quality, audience relevance. Sign-ups (Accounts via UTM or self-reported mention): Messaging quality, audience fit, creator authenticity. Conversion (Sessions → sign-ups %): Brief quality, landing page, targeting. Budget ROI (Spend vs. pipeline influenced): Portfolio mix, negotiation, doubling down on. winners Repeat rate (% of creators who renew): Relationship quality, fair dealing, good briefs.
Who you are Not a generic marketing hire. We're looking for a specific type of person.
Background — one or more of these: → Agency vet: you ran influencer campaigns for tech or SaaS clients at a talent, media, or creator-focused agency. You know how to manage 20 partnerships at once and keep quality high. → Creator platform alumni:You understand the mechanics from the platform side and want to operate from the brand side. → Tech influencer world native: you were a creator yourself, managed creators, or worked in DevRel running sponsorship programs. → Dev tools operator: you did influencer or developer marketing at an open-source or dev tools company and saw what works firsthand.
Skills and instincts: → You know the dev/tech influencer landscape cold. → You think in funnels, not impressions. Views are nice, sign-ups are the point. → You're organized. CRM, budget tracker, content calendar, reporting template. → You write briefs that creators actually want to read. Clear, short, no jargon. → Comfortable async in a distributed international team. You don't need to be managed day-to-day.
Bonus: → You've used orchestration, CI/CD, or infra tools. Don't need to be a data engineer, but can hold a conversation with one. → Existing network of tech creators or creator managers. → Experience with PostHog, Dub, Hubspot, Common Room, Google Analytics and attribution tools. Originally