To achieve authentic, word-of-mouth growth, Olipop's social media strategy intentionally relies on real customers. A full 70% of its content creators are first-timers, not professional influencers. This ensures the brand's messaging feels genuine and resonates with its audience, fostering high brand affinity.

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Despite running a company with a near $2 billion valuation, Olipop's CEO Ben Goodwin personally formulates every flavor. He views this hands-on work not as a hobby, but as his most direct and unfiltered expression to customers, ensuring the product quality that underpins the brand's success.

Instead of using traditional celebrity endorsements, Square's 'See You in the Neighborhood' campaign heroes its actual customers. This approach treats local business owners as influential figures in their own right, lending unparalleled authenticity and relevance to the campaign's storytelling.

When starting out, resist the pressure to immediately master algorithms and conversion tactics. Instead, follow your intuition and create content that is genuinely you for several months. This builds a sustainable brand and audience connection, which can then be optimized later.

Instead of spending big on trendy mega-influencers, Gamma found success by scaling relationships with thousands of micro-influencers in niche, high-trust "echo chambers" like education. These smaller, authentic voices spread like wildfire within their communities, driving more effective growth.

Gymshark's initial influencer success wasn't a calculated campaign. It was born from genuine fandom; they sent products to YouTubers they personally admired. This authentic, non-transactional approach built real community trust long before influencer marketing became a formalized, paid industry.

Olipop only pursues celebrity partnerships after discovering the star is a genuine fan, like when Camila Cabello was repeatedly photographed with the product. The brand then creates "anti-celebrity celebrity ads," featuring the star's real family to ensure the endorsement feels authentic rather than transactional.

The traditional "one-to-many" broadcast model no longer delivers sufficient reach or engagement. Unilever now uses a "many-to-many" approach: the brand develops multiple message expressions, then activates creators to communicate them authentically to their respective audiences.

As audiences push back against AI-generated and overly polished stock imagery, featuring real people in authentic situations will be critical for engagement. Showcasing your team, customers, or volunteers in natural settings—not on a green screen—builds trust and connection, making genuine humanity the key to cutting through the noise.

Large companies often stifle authentic stories with restrictive social media policies. The guest advises them to "put your brand ego aside" and trust employees to share. Personal profiles and individual stories have far greater reach and build more trust than polished corporate content.

Gamma’s founder personally onboarded early influencers, walking them through the product and brainstorming hooks. This investment treats influencers as extensions of the team, not just a media buy, fostering genuine understanding and authentic promotion in their own voice.