We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
Don't just host an event; design it for social media amplification. Spend extra on a unique, highly shareable spectacle. This gives attendees the 'ammo' to create user-generated content, turning your event into a marketing campaign that reaches a much larger audience.
Gary Vaynerchuk observes that brands are now treating major events like the Super Bowl as efficient production opportunities. Instead of just hosting parties, they leverage influencers and on-site activations to generate a high volume of social content, maximizing ROI on expensive experiential marketing.
The success of an experiential event depends on how its story travels online. Every element—from signage to security guards—must be art-directed like a film shoot to produce compelling, self-explanatory images for the much larger secondary audience who weren't there.
Maximize the ROI of analog events like pop-ups or conference booths by treating them as content creation opportunities. Film everything—activations, customer interactions, behind-the-scenes—to generate creative assets for social media, effectively doubling the value of the execution.
As social feeds become oversaturated and less personal, consumers will crave real-world connections. Marketers should focus on experiential events and pop-ups, which not only build community but also generate authentic social content, creating a powerful IRL-to-digital flywheel.
In an AI-driven world, "scaling the unscalable" creates a competitive edge. Host intimate, in-person events like local dinners or meetups. The primary ROI is not direct sales but filming the interactions to create a powerful engine for authentic, high-performing social media content that can be distributed globally.
Brands maximize the ROI of expensive activations like those at the Super Bowl by reframing them as 'production days.' Instead of a one-off event, they become content engines for social media and creative campaigns, using influencers and programming to reach a much broader audience.
In an AI-saturated world, real-life content is rare and valuable. The primary ROI of experiential marketing isn't just the event itself, but filming it to create a pipeline of authentic social media content that stands out.
The true ROI of experiential marketing comes from its use as a content creation engine. Design events with the primary goal of producing a high volume of social media creative, not just for the in-person experience.
A low-cost physical activation, like a single billboard or street posters, can be amplified 10x by documenting it and sharing the story online. The real value isn't the physical impression but the digital content it generates for a broader audience.
Don't view live shopping solely as a sales channel. Treat each session as a content production day. While the live sales are valuable, a single 40-second viral clip extracted from a two-hour stream can generate far greater marketing impact and brand reach.