
The Rise of Influencer Impersonation Scams
Digital impersonation has become one of the fastest-growing threats facing influencers and public figures.
Across TikTok, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, fake accounts are being created daily using the names, photos, and reputations of legitimate creators. These accounts often funnel followers and fans toward private groups on encrypted messaging platforms, where scams ranging from crypto schemes to fake mentorship programs are commonplace.
For creators and their management teams this activity is usually invisible. That is, until followers reach out to ask why they were told to “invest” in something that was never offered in the first place.
Given the scale and reach that influencers now command from the popularity of social media, impersonation scams are no longer isolated incidents. They are structured and repeatable models used by fraud networks who understand how digital trust ecosystems operate.
Why Influencers are Prime Targets
1. Trust is Monetisable
Creators use social media to share their work, and therefore to build relationships at scale. If you’re anything like me, you feel a strong personal connection to the hosts of your favourite podcast, musician, or YouTuber – almost akin to a friendship. This is particularly relevant in niches like music, health, self-development, finance and spirituality. That trust becomes an asset that creators use to sell albums, books, courses and the like, and it is the same asset that cyber criminals exploit.
An influencer impersonation scam is effective because the audience already believes in the creator. The scammer thus doesn’t need to build credibility from scratch, they just “borrow” it.
2. A Public List of Potential Victims
Unlike traditional phishing and scam campaigns that rely on fake advertising and random targeting, fake social media accounts targeting influencers have immediate and full access to an engaged and identifiable audience.
Scammers will often:
• Follow the influencers real followers
• Comment under popular posts
• Send direct messages to engaged followers
• Reply to comments pretending to be private or backup accounts.
Not needing to purchase domain names or to run advertising campaigns results in this scam only needing a small percentage of followers to engage to generate meaningful returns.
3. Social Media Platforms make Replication Easy
Creating a convincing fake account requires very little effort:
• Copy the profile photo
• Slightly modify the username (e.g. add a full stop, underscore, or number)
• Mirror the bio
• Repost content
Social media platforms will often not require verification and use finely tuned algorithms such that content spreads extremely quickly, letting impersonation accounts gain traction before anyone notices (especially those who aren’t looking for them).
Inside an Influencer Scam Operation
While tactics vary creator to creator, most influencer impersonation campaigns follow a consistent structure.
Step 1: Clone the Public Profile
The scammer creates a fake TikTok or Instagram account that closely resembles the real creator. The differences are often subtle:
• @creator.official vs @creator_official
• @creator_1 vs @creatorl (lowercase L instead of I)
To the average follower, these distinctions are easily missed at first glance.
Step 2: Create an Illusion of Legitimacy
To build credibility, scammers may:
• Purchase fake followers
• Use bots to generate comments/engagement
• Post recycled content from the official account
• Reply publicly to followers claiming to offer exclusive opportunities.
They will also often comment under the real creator’s posts saying things like:
“Message my private account for investment guidance”
This public visibility drives followers into direct conversations.
Step 3: Redirect to Encrypted Messaging Platforms
The next stage typically involves moving the conversation to platforms like Telegram.
So why Telegram?
• Easy to create private groups
• Conversations are harder for platforms to monitor
• Large audiences can be managed anonymously
• Diversifying across multiple platforms leaves scammers unphased if their Instagram or TikTok account gets banned/deleted.
A Telegram scam using an influencer’s name often includes:
• “VIP Investment Groups”
• Fake crypto trading signals
• Early NFT access
• Exclusive mentorship programs
• Health or wellness products
Once inside the group, victims are persuaded into transferring funds – usually cryptocurrency.
Step 4: Extract Funds and Disappear
After collecting deposits, scammers may:
• Delete the Telegram group
• Block victims
• Rebrand and repeat the process under a different influencer’s identity
Because the scam is operated using the creator’s identity, reputational damage often lands back on the legitimate influencer.
The Impact on Creators
While tactics vary creator to creator, most influencer impersonation campaigns follow a consistent structure.
Revenue Theft
For creators who sell:
• Books
• Online courses
• Merchandise
• Events
• Investment education
Impersonation scams steal legitimate demand that has been built over years (or even decades). Followers who lose money to fake offers and schemes might never return.
Reputational Damage
After being scammed under an influencer’s name, a victims first reaction will often be betrayal or anger. The association can stick even if the account was fake.
Creators may begin receiving:
• Angry direct messages
• Public accusations
• Demands for refunds
• Negative comments
Just like personal relationships, building trust as a creator takes significantly longer than losing it.
Exploitation of Vulnerable Communities
Creators will often serve particularly vulnerable audiences – including people managing chronic illnesses, financial hardship or personal development challenges. In these cases, impersonation becomes an issue of emotional damage alongside financial damage.
Scammers understand this dynamic, deliberately targeting audiences and communities built on trust and support.
Why Reporting Isn’t Enough
All the previously mentioned social media platforms provide mechanisms for reporting fake accounts. However, influencer impersonation scams are difficult to manage reactively for several reasons:
• Accounts can be recreated in minutes (and for free)
• New variations of usernames appear continuously
• Telegram groups operate outside of the originating platform
• Creators often discover scams after victims speak up
By the time a fake TikTok account is reported and removed, it may have already redirected hundreds of fans elsewhere.
Additionally, monitoring for impersonation manually is time consuming and rarely feasible. Influencers and management teams are focused on content creation, partnerships and growth, rather than daily threat hunting.
Unlike banks, retailers, or other large corporations, the chances of an influencer having their own security operations centre or cyber defence team running scripts to detect scams are…low.
This asymmetry allows scammers to ride the coat tails of a creator’s popularity, while their chances of disruption remain significantly lower when compared to traditional phishing campaigns targeting global organisations.
Shifting to Proactive Brand Protection
As influencer scams become more structured, many creators and talent management agencies are now including scam prevention as part of their broader brand management strategies, including:
• Monitoring for username variations
• Detecting fake accounts as soon as they’re created
• Identifying Telegram groups using a creator’s identity
• Removing impersonating accounts before they scale
The same systems that allow creators to reach millions of followers, now also enable bad actors to replicate them in a matter of minutes.
Understanding how influencer scams operate can empower creators to work towards reducing their impact. Building a brand centred on your values and principles often takes years of dedication and continued trust, and is therefore worth protecting.
Influence brings visibility, visibility brings opportunity – both legitimate and malicious.
If you are an influencer, celebrity, or public figure concerned about impersonation and scam activity, proactive monitoring and enforcement can significantly reduce risk.
Learn more about our Brand Protection for Influencers, Celebrities & Public Figures.
About brandsec
brandsec is a team of highly experienced domain name management and online brand protection experts. We provide corporate domain name management and brand enforcement services, helping brands eliminate phishing platforms across the internet. Supporting some of the largest brands in the region, we offer innovative solutions to combat threats across multiple industries.
Felix Stuart
Account Executive
Felix is a brand protection and domain name specialist within Brandsec’s commercial team. He works closely with clients to design and implement tailored domain management and brand protection strategies that align with their business goals.


