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Think of social media platforms like real estate markets. The greatest returns come from identifying and investing in "emerging neighborhoods" (like TikTok in 2018) before they become saturated and expensive. Being an early adopter on a new platform is the digital equivalent of buying beachfront property decades ago.

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Categorize platforms into two types: 'discovery' (social media algorithms) and 'relationship' (email, podcasts). The strategy is to use discovery platforms for audience acquisition and then migrate those followers to relationship platforms to build long-term, owned assets.

Social media platforms heavily promote new features to drive adoption. By being an early user of TikTok's 'Bulletin Boards'—a feature similar to Instagram's broadcast channels—brands can gain a significant, temporary advantage in reach and visibility before the feature becomes saturated and algorithmic priority fades.

Live social shopping is transitioning from a niche in China to a major force in the West. Brands that master this channel now, particularly on platforms like TikTok, will gain a significant competitive advantage similar to early adopters of social media marketing.

The potential for a new, unknown account to achieve massive organic reach on TikTok is greater than it has ever been on any other major social platform, including the early days of Facebook, Instagram, or YouTube. This creates a unique, time-sensitive opportunity for brand building.

Chris Camillo argues that platforms like TikTok are where people express themselves most freely about interests and purchasing intent. This 'conversational data' precedes the 'transactional data' (like credit card receipts) that Wall Street funds rely on, providing a significant edge.

Marketers chasing trends on 'cool' platforms like TikTok create an imbalance where massive, older platforms have huge audiences consuming features like Facebook Reels but few creators serving them. This supply/demand gap for attention creates a significant, underpriced marketing opportunity.

Frame marketing strategy not as managing channels, but as "day-trading attention." Identify platforms where user attention is high but advertising costs are low due to a lack of saturation from major brands. This arbitrage opportunity allows smaller players to achieve outsized results before the market corrects.

Early platforms like TikTok are 'beachfront property' because user attention (demand) vastly outstrips the amount of content and ads (supply). This creates a huge opportunity for organic reach. Mature platforms like Instagram are saturated, making it exponentially harder to gain attention.

The algorithmic shift on platforms like Instagram, YouTube, and Facebook towards short-form video has leveled the playing field. New creators can gain massive reach with a single viral video, an opportunity not seen in over a decade, akin to the early days of Facebook.

The cost to acquire attention on platforms like Facebook and Instagram is currently inefficiently low, similar to Google AdWords in its early days. This window of opportunity will inevitably close as the market matures and prices rise to reflect their true value.

Treat Social Media Attention as a Real Estate Asset by Investing in Underpriced Platforms | RiffOn