For years, the influencer economy has traded in visibility- followers, views, and likes forming the currency of creator partnerships. But as brands chase outcomes over optics, a quiet shift is underway: the industry is beginning to ask not who is watching, but who is listening, and more importantly, who is acting.
That’s the shift Hitarth Dadia, CEO and Partner at NOFILTR.GROUP, aims to spotlight through a new white paper that introduces ‘Influence Density’- a redefined metric designed to cut through the clutter of vanity metrics and spotlight the creators who actually move the needle.
Titled ‘Unfollow Followers’, the paper challenges the long-standing reliance on follower counts as a proxy for influence, calling it a flawed standard that confuses potential reach with real impact.
“It’s like judging a restaurant by how many tables it has rather than the quality of its food,” Dadia argues. Instead, Influence Density measures how deeply a creator’s audience trusts and acts on their voice- a shift from size to substance. It’s a concept born out of what Dadia calls the “TO vs. ABOUT” test: are people engaging in real dialogue with the creator, or simply watching from the sidelines?
With data showing that high-density creators drive 2x longer retention, 4x more UGC, and up to 5x higher conversion, the paper positions this metric not just as a theoretical ideal, but as a tangible business framework.
For brands, it offers a smarter way to allocate budgets, moving beyond surface-level engagement to campaigns that yield measurable action. For creators, it suggests a roadmap to build lasting credibility- one rooted in consistency, specificity, and conversation.
Measuring Trust, Not Just Reach
Dadia believes that the gap between attention and action has become too wide to ignore, and that influence density offers a sharper way to close it. The concept reframes creator value not by how many people follow someone, but by how many of them consistently trust, engage, and act.
“Influence density will tell you how many people actually saw the content piece. That’s the gap between marketing theater and actual business impact,” he said.
The difference, in business terms, is meaningful. While follower count has long shaped pricing and planning, it has rarely reflected actual influence. Creators with millions of followers can still underperform. Meanwhile, smaller creators with deep audience relationships often drive far more action. Dadia believes that a shift in value is already underway even if the language around it is still catching up.
“That was the best case scenario it does get. It’s good for the industry if people start following this within 24 months,” Dadia said.
“A lot of people are being sort of forced to follow it. They’re not even aware of the density metric because obviously it’s not a worldwide known thing. It’s just a very small section of us who are now aware of this. But more and more brands are sort of forcing agency partners, brands are forcing marketing departments to do this already,” he added.
Simplicity Over Scoring Systems
Unlike other models that rely on heavy analytics or proprietary metrics, influence density keeps things human. NoFiltr’s method hinges on a basic behavioural test that examines whether followers are engaging with the creator by asking questions, referencing past advice, or just reacting passively.
It’s what the company calls the “TO vs ABOUT” test. The goal isn’t to engineer a new dashboard, it’s to shift focus back to credibility, context, and genuine interaction.
“Honestly, everything doesn’t need to become an AI SaaS-powered monstrosity. You can scroll through the comments and you can make a fair assessment of it all,” Dadia said.
From Admiration to Influence
For creators, this means a return to specificity. Not every post needs to be converted but the creator must stand for something. Audiences don’t need perfection. They need consistency. And brands, increasingly, are placing value on creators with known preferences, visible passion, and repeat trust.
“You don’t need to be a sports creator to sort of do sports campaigns. You can be a lifestyle creator also who is into a lot of different sports and just like the thrill of a team sport,” Dadia said.
This kind of creator doesn’t chase every brief they deepen their own. And that authenticity, Dadia argues, helps creators avoid burnout.
“If you keep being honest to yourself and then by default your audience, you are not going to burn out. Because if you as a creator are constantly talking to the audience and not just addressing them as a one person or whatever, you constantly hear them out, you constantly talk to them, you’re not going to burn out that quickly,” he added.
The Value Shift
The impact of density-first thinking isn’t limited to performance. It’s also reshaping how creators are priced. If trust drives action, then a small but high-influence creator could and should command more than a mega creator with low conversion history. That value realignment could define the next chapter of the creator economy.
At the heart of it, Dadia sees a simple mismatch: brands still treat creators like inventory. He wants that to change.
“Brands need to stop treating creators like models reading a script. “Okay, here’s the script, read from the script and then here’s your money, get out”. It’s never going to work like that,” he pointed out.
Dadia’s point isn’t just about metrics, it’s about mindsets. The creator economy grew on visibility. The next phase, he said, will be built on credibility and influence density as a language, lens, and logic – may be the shift that bridges the two.
“This isn’t just the creator economy, it’s the creative economy,” he added.














