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While posting organically costs nothing, effective social media requires a significant budget. This includes salary for skilled talent, professional development to keep up with platform changes, proper equipment, and paid ad spend. The initial "free" access belies the true, ongoing cost of proper care and feeding.
Stop spending money to test ads. Instead, publish a high volume of organic social content and identify what naturally gains traction. Then, convert only those proven, high-performing pieces into paid ads. This model dramatically lowers customer acquisition costs by ensuring ad spend only scales winners.
To de-risk ad spend, use your organic social media as a testing environment. Post content regularly, identify the videos or images with the highest engagement, and then repurpose those proven winners as paid ads by simply adding a call-to-action at the end.
Businesses claiming 'social media doesn't work' are blaming the tool, not the user. A tool's value is determined by the operator's skill. For an expert like LeBron James, a basketball is a billion-dollar asset; for an amateur, it's a liability. The same is true for marketing platforms.
Hiring an inexperienced person for social media to save money is a false economy. The potential cost of a public blunder or brand damage is far greater than the salary of a trained professional who can navigate the complexities and risks of online communication and avert crises before they happen.
In the current "interest media" era, social platforms act as a free testing ground. Post content organically, identify what performs best with the algorithm, and only then invest media dollars to amplify those proven winners, eliminating expensive guesswork.
We are in an unprecedented and temporary period where the world's attention is concentrated on platforms that allow free access to it. This is a historical anomaly akin to free television ads. Businesses that fail to capitalize on this massive, free opportunity for growth will profoundly regret it once the window closes.
Don't guess which ads will work. Post content organically and let the platform's algorithm validate it. When a post gets unusually high engagement, you've found a winner. Turn that specific post into a targeted paid ad to de-risk your ad spend.
It's standard practice to have dedicated experts for Google Ads and Facebook Ads, yet companies expect one person to master all organic social platforms. To achieve excellence, marketing teams should structure their organic social function with platform specialists, mirroring the successful paid media model.
A smaller marketing budget can defeat a much larger one by investing in high-volume, low-cost organic social media. This strategy leverages platform algorithms to achieve massive reach that would otherwise require millions in ad spend, thus neutralizing a competitor's financial advantage.
The current ability for anyone to reach a global audience for free on social platforms is a historical anomaly, not a permanent state. This "gold rush of attention" will likely end as technology shifts (e.g., to AR/VR) and platforms consolidate power, making the urgency to build a brand now immense.