We steady the practice of influencer marketing in oligopoly markets and its effect on market efficiency. In our model, each consumer is influenced by choices of a subset of other consumers. Firms gather information on consumers' influence and price discriminate using this information. In equilibrium, firms charge premial subsidize below-/above-average-influential consumers; the premial discounts depend on the strength of network effects and on how much information firms have on consumers' influence. Influencer marketing leads to inefficient consumer-product matches. Firms' investments in information are strategic complements, leading to a race for information acquisition that erodes welfare and,firms' profits but increases consumer surplus.