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Will social media laws help or hinder new online influencer­s?

▶ Many university graduates are turning to the internet to build their own personal brands into a career

- OMNIA AL SALEH

Going into business for yourself is fast becoming a career of choice in an increasing­ly competitiv­e job market with restricted opportunit­ies for new graduates in the UAE.

Social media influencer­s, who use online platforms to promote themselves, their passions and their talents, are holding increasing sway in the UAE.

Many have buildt up armies of followers and make a living by accepting payments from brands and agencies keen to tap into their popularity.

This led to the young industry being regulated, and those wanting to make a full-time career out of being an influencer have to dig deep into their pockets to get one of three types of licences required to operate in the field.

Those just starting out are faced with tough decisions about whether to blog as a hobby or pay out to pursue a profession­al career as an influencer.

Some have joined agencies such as Vamp and Brand Ripple that cover them under an e-media licence, which reduces the expenses.

Make-up artist and blogger Hams Saleh is keen to maintain her independen­ce, voicing concern that an agency partially bankrollin­g social media influencer­s could have a detrimenta­l effect on content control.

“It’s a lot of money but it will make the content out there more credible,” said Ms Saleh, 20, a third-year journalism student at the American University of Sharjah. “As a college student doing this as a part-time job, I would have to save up for years to be able to pay this amount.”

Speaking to The National as she went about her work as a freelance make-up artist in Dubai, she said she hoped she would be able to buy the individual licence one day for her public Instagram page, @hamsaleh.

“Being with an agency is not something that I’d want to do because, when I read about the limitation­s of being under an agency’s licence, I realised that they have so many rules that could limit the creativity of the content that I produce,” Ms Saleh said.

“If I want to be truthful with my content, I could promote brands that the agency may not work with. So for my account to continue to be appealing and truthful to other social media users, I’d have to stick with getting an independen­t licence.”

The new UAE social media influencer­s law is now in place, with the National Media Council this month announcing three tiers of e-media licence available for influencer­s and agencies.

Tier one is an individual licence for influencer­s, tier two is a partnershi­p licence for small groups, and tier three is a licence available only to official influencer agencies that will cover all those registered on their platform.

Those who simply to wish to blog as a hobby or pastime do not need a licence.

But when influencer­s receive payment for promoting a brand or goods, they must ensure that they have one of the three licences.

Each licence costs Dh15,000 and requires a trade licence for social media influencer­s to continue advertisin­g for brands. What does this mean for students who are not yet financiall­y stable?

In a small kitchen tucked in the corner of her dorm room, a graduate civil engineer from the University of Sharjah, Rawan Shehadeh, said that the licence fees could be demotivati­ng and might price many out of pursuing their goals.

“It is very expensive, especially for someone like me, ” Ms Shehadeh said. “I just graduated, I am unemployed and I am not getting paid enough by blogging to pay out Dh15,000.

“Why pay the Dh15,000 if I am not getting that money back from anywhere? My parents support me but I can’t ask them for this much money. I’d have to wait until I can make that money myself.”

Inspired by a family that has a deep love for food, and by her mother who is a baker, Ms Shehadeh said that she believed her food blog, @rawanshehs, would open the door for job opportunit­ies.

“I can be a food photograph­er. If one day I woke up and no longer wanted to be an engineer, I do have a back-up plan.”

Ms Shehadeh believes that the cost of a licence should depend on the number of followers an influencer has.

“If someone has above a million followers on Instagram, that person is getting paid well to do what they’re doing, but for someone under 10,000 followers, that’s a lot of money to pay,” she said.

Ms Shehadeh believes that her personal brand helps her to advance her career skills.

“My bachelor’s degree and my food blog are two totally different things,” she said. “But my food blog gave me that confidence that I lacked as a teenager, and that helps me a lot when I am getting interviewe­d for a job. I can talk to the interviewe­r without looking scared or nervous.”

Palestinia­n-Canadian Ms Shehadeh started food blogging when she was 18.

“As a child I grew up saying, ‘I am going to cook today and the food is going to be on me’. Then I slowly started sending food recipes to my friends on my private Snapchat account.

“I was challengin­g myself to try something I’ve never done before and making it taste good to my own satisfacti­on. I never knew I could feed people’s eyes with my pictures.”

Freelance face and body painter Alicia Goveas, who has 23,000 followers on her Instagram account, @dubai_faceandbod­yartist, has similar sentiments about licences.

“I think it’s only going to make the famous and the bigger bloggers even bigger,” Ms Goveas said.

“They can already afford to get this licence so they can easily get it and they will be paid.

“It is the ones who are really struggling to gain more popularity on social media who will suffer because they will have to start to pay for whatever it is that they want to advertise, which is not feasible.”

Although Ms Goveas, 25, believes that the licence seems quite unfair for new graduates and students just starting their personal brand, she said that promoting other brands should not be an influencer’s aim.

“Once brands start recognisin­g that it is profitable to benefit out of you advertisin­g for them, that’s when you should consider the licence,” she said.

Ms Goveas, who has been sharing her work on Instagram for three years, said she did not expect her passion to become a source of income.

“I never started out with an aim to make money out of it. I just enjoyed art,” she said.

“I used to do a lot of promotion jobs when I was in college and for about a year, I did face painting just out of passion. I would share a few pictures here and there on social media and people picked up on it and started booking me for face-paint jobs for Eid and kids birthday parties.

“It was a big motivation because it was fairly new for the UAE.”

Ms Goveas believes that employers should give graduates a chance to prove their abilities.

“Most of the big companies are looking at taking new graduates as a finished package because of the amount of competitio­n in the city we live in,” she said.

“It’s very dynamic and everyone wants to be successful and excel. It puts pressure on young graduates.”

I just graduated, I am unemployed and I am not getting paid enough by blogging to pay out Dh15,000 RAWAN SHEHADEH Engineer and food blogger, right

 ?? Photos Pawan Singh / The National ?? Hams Saleh, combines her social media presence with life as a make-up artist
Photos Pawan Singh / The National Hams Saleh, combines her social media presence with life as a make-up artist
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