Against typical advice, Dad Gang spent its initial ad budget boosting Instagram posts for "profile visits," not website clicks. This built a large, engaged community that was ready to buy when products dropped, proving the value of prioritizing audience growth over immediate sales for community-driven brands.
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.
Palta's playbook challenges the 'organic-first' mentality. They start with paid user acquisition, scaling spend to $3-5K daily on one channel. This forces an early, clear understanding of true unit economics and validates the business case before investing in slower organic strategies.
Relying solely on performance ads for rapid growth creates a sales machine, not a defensible business. This strategy makes you vulnerable to copycats who will replicate your product and target the same audience for less. Reinvest ad profits into organic content to build a brand moat.
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.
After finding paid ads on Meta were designed to be barely profitable, the founder stopped them entirely. She now focuses on organic marketing, using her personal story on Instagram and a strong email list to build a loyal customer base more profitably.
Social platforms want to acquire new advertisers. By boosting your best-performing organic posts with micro-budgets (even just $5), you can achieve disproportionately large reach as platforms "make it rip" to encourage future spending. Don't boost underperforming content.
Instead of large ad spends, marketers can achieve disproportionately high reach by applying very small budgets—as little as $5 on YouTube—to boost organic posts that are already showing traction. This tactic is effective across multiple platforms.
When creating branded social media content, BroBible allocates a portion of the client's budget to an ad buy that boosts the post. This not only increases the campaign's reach for the brand but also drives new, engaged followers to BroBible's own channels, making advertisers subsidize their audience growth.
Stop debating followers versus community. Treat followers as the first step in a conversion process where the goal is to nurture them from passive observers into active community members, brand advocates, and ultimately, customers. The real relationship-building begins post-follow.
Counterintuitively, dedicating budget to campaigns optimized for engagements, follows, and shares can be a powerful brand-building tool. This approach reaches more people less expensively than conversion campaigns, building an audience and 'searing memories' that lead to future demand, complementing direct response efforts.