Dropout's primary customer acquisition channel is organic social media. Shows like "Game Changer" are intentionally designed to produce viral, context-free clips for TikTok and Instagram, turning the content itself into a powerful, self-sustaining marketing funnel that drives most signups.
Duolingo avoids a one-size-fits-all video strategy. They use TikTok for capitalizing on trends due to its virality mechanics. YouTube Shorts, which favors original content, is used for building out the mascot's lore. Instagram serves as an informational hub and a home for 'millennial-core' content.
At pop-up events, founder Haley Pavoni saw a 90% purchase rate when she demonstrated her convertible shoe, versus near-zero otherwise. Realizing the demo was key, she scaled that experience by filming TikToks, creating a highly effective, zero-cost customer acquisition channel.
Platforms like Zagged use a "clipping" strategy, where hundreds of creators post UGC-style videos about a product. This floods platforms like TikTok with seemingly organic content, generating huge top-of-funnel awareness at extremely low CPMs ($3-4) and lowering blended CPAs.
The true measure of success for short-form video isn't just views, but private shares. To get your content shared in DMs or Slack channels, focus on creating highly shareable content with a strong 3-second hook, compelling storytelling, and a clear loop or CTA.
The strategy scales from individual sponsored videos to having 100+ creators on retainer posting monthly. This creates an "astro turf" of content that dominates the niche's ecosystem. A successful video can then go viral, prompting other creators to organically make videos about your product to capture views.
Dropout avoids licensing third-party shows, not for brand reasons, but because it would lose control of social media marketing. Since its growth relies on posting clips, it will only acquire content if the deal grants them the ability to run the associated social channels.
Acknowledging that traditional traffic from search and social is disappearing, Broke Ass Stuart is heavily investing in TikTok and Reels. They find video is the only platform providing consistent audience growth, making it an essential pivot for survival in the face of the 'dying open web.'
By framing Dropout as a "comedy SaaS," the CEO simplifies the business to its core transaction: subscribers pay a monthly fee for laughs. This mindset avoids the operational complexities and stakeholder demands common in traditional media companies, focusing purely on the creator-audience relationship.
Standard top-of-funnel campaigns like "video views" often target low-quality audiences that Facebook's algorithm has already identified as non-buyers. True top-of-funnel marketing requires a unique method for capturing attention, like viral TikTok content or major creator partnerships.
Unlike platforms with longer content shelf lives, TikTok's algorithm needs a constant stream of new videos on popular topics. This creates an opportunity for new creators to succeed by identifying and producing content that fills this immediate, algorithm-driven demand.