Can I track my influencer discovery process on the platform?
Quick answer
Yes, a discovery tool normally lets you save what you find and keep a record of who you have reviewed, so the process does not live in scattered spreadsheets and browser tabs. You can shortlist creators, mark who you have vetted and who you have ruled out and carry that state forward, which keeps a team from re-reviewing the same names and losing track of why someone was cut. The point of tracking discovery is repeatability, so the next campaign starts from your saved work rather than a blank page. The honest point is that discovery is a process not a one-off search, so keeping a record of who you found, vetted and rejected is what turns it from a scramble into something you can run again and improve.
We keep losing track of who we already looked at. Can I track my influencer discovery process on the platform?
Yes, a discovery tool normally lets you save what you find and keep a record of who you reviewed, so the process does not live in scattered spreadsheets and tabs.
T
Tobias Becker
Media buyer
0
You shortlist creators, mark who you vetted and who you ruled out and carry that forward, which stops a team re-reviewing the same names and losing track of why someone was cut.
A
Aisha Bello
Social media manager
0
Discovery is a process not a one-off search, so a saved record turns it into something repeatable that your next campaign starts from rather than a blank page.
L
Lucas Moreau
Content strategist
0
Yes and this is one of the practical reasons to run discovery in a tool rather than ad hoc. Discovery is rarely a single search that ends in a decision, it is a process: you search, you find candidates, you review and vet them, you shortlist the good ones and you rule others out for specific reasons. A discovery tool normally lets you capture that process, saving creators you want to keep, building shortlists, marking who has been reviewed and holding the state so it is there when you come back. That record is what stops the common mess of three people on a team independently reviewing the same creators or rediscovering someone you already rejected last month and not remembering why.
The value of tracking the process shows up across time and across a team. Within a campaign, it keeps everyone working from one shared shortlist rather than competing spreadsheets. Across campaigns, it means your next search starts from the creators you already found and vetted, so the effort compounds instead of resetting to zero each time. It also makes your decisions auditable, you can see who was considered, who made the cut and who was cut, which matters when someone asks later why a creator was or was not used. So tracking discovery turns a one-off scramble into a repeatable process you can hand off, revisit and improve. So yes, you can track your discovery process and doing so is what makes discovery something your team can run consistently rather than reinvent every campaign.
Saving and tracking what you find is part of how Flinque is meant to be used, since it lets you discover, vet and shortlist creators in one place and keep that work rather than losing it to scattered tabs. You build and hold shortlists of the creators you have reviewed, so the discovery effort carries forward to the next campaign instead of starting cold. The deeper campaign-management and project-tracking work, briefs, contracts, deliverables, lives in your own tools but the discovery and vetting record that feeds it is exactly what Flinque keeps for you. So use Flinque to run and save your discovery process and feed those shortlists into your own campaign workflow.