Critics who call high-volume social media content 'spray and pray' are mistaken. Gary Vaynerchuk argues it is the modern equivalent of traditional advertising frequency, like running daily print or radio ads. The low cost of production simply enables more strategic 'shots on goal' to achieve relevance.

Related Insights

Gary Vaynerchuk argues that the marketing industry wrongly demonizes a high volume of creative output. He reframes it as taking more "shots on goal," a strategic necessity in an algorithmic world that allows brands to efficiently test relevance with different consumer segments.

Forcing a team to meet a weekly post quota often leads to mediocre content. A better strategy is to ditch fixed schedules and instead post extensively—even ten times—about a single viral moment when it occurs. This approach prioritizes quality and impact over arbitrary volume.

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.

Gary Vaynerchuk argues that large companies cling to outdated marketing playbooks, measuring success by "potential reach" (e.g., billboard impressions). This metric is flawed because it ignores whether anyone actually paid attention. Startups win by focusing on "actualized reach" on platforms where attention is guaranteed.

We are in an unprecedented and temporary period where the world's attention is concentrated on platforms that allow free access to it. This is a historical anomaly akin to free television ads. Businesses that fail to capitalize on this massive, free opportunity for growth will profoundly regret it once the window closes.

The most successful organic posts are not born from a strategic plan but are discovered through constant, high-volume posting. Breakthrough success in content comes from putting in the 'reps' and observing what resonates, rather than waiting for a single brilliant idea.

Since algorithms no longer show every post to every follower, the risk of "overposting" has vanished. This creates a free opportunity for marketers to test large volumes of organic content at scale to identify potential viral hits before committing ad spend.

Marketing on social media is no longer about who follows you ('social graph') but about what the algorithm shows users based on their behavior ('interest graph'). This fundamental shift forces brands to create a high volume of content tailored to specific consumer segments to achieve relevance and reach.

Instead of reactively trying to please algorithms, proactively identify the best 'doorways'—specific platforms and content formats—to reach your ideal audience. This shifts the focus from chasing reach to strategically choosing where you appear and how you present your brand.

Effective marketing isn't about budget size, but about identifying and mastering channels where attention is undervalued. Gary Vaynerchuk built a business with no money by mastering nascent platforms. This requires deep, tactical knowledge of channels like organic social to achieve high upside with minimal cost.