Small business owners in DFW are getting burned by fake influencers demanding free products and services. Here's the playbook and how to protect yourself.
The scam:
- Someone with 10K-50K followers DMs your business offering a "collaboration"
- They want free product/service in exchange for "exposure"
- They receive the product, post a low-effort story that disappears in 24 hours (or nothing at all)
- They move on to the next business
How to spot fake engagement:
- Follower-to-engagement ratio: Real accounts average 1-3% engagement rate. 50K followers with 100 likes per post = purchased followers.
- Comment quality: "Nice!" "Love this!" "Fire" from random accounts = bot comments. Real engagement has specific, detailed comments.
- Growth pattern: Use Social Blade (socialblade.com) to check follower growth. Sudden spikes of thousands = purchased followers.
- Audience location: Ask for their Instagram insights screenshot. If their audience is 80% in Bangladesh and they claim to target DFW — fake.
How to protect your business:
- Never send product without a written agreement (even for "gifting")
- Require deliverables in writing: number of posts, story frames, timeline, usage rights
- Check their content quality and past brand work
- Use HypeAuditor or Social Blade to audit their account
- Start small. One item, not your entire product line.
Legal recourse if they take product and don't deliver:
- Written agreement = breach of contract. Small claims for the product value.
- No written agreement = harder, but theft of services (TPC 31.04) may apply if you can prove intent to deceive
- File with BBB and TX AG if it's a pattern
RECEIPTS REQUIRED: If calling out a fake influencer, include their handle, your agreement (if any), what was promised vs. delivered, and Social Blade data showing fake engagement. DMs, emails, and screenshots.
Sources:
- Social Blade (socialblade.com) — social media analytics
- HypeAuditor — influencer fraud detection
- FTC — 16 CFR Part 255 (endorsement disclosure requirements)
- Texas Penal Code 31.04 — Theft of Service
Get it in writing. No contract, no product. Period.
HypeAuditor flagged a DFW "lifestyle influencer" we were about to work with. 62% fake followers. Saved us $2,000 in product.