No one enters Instagram in order to get advertised to.
They enter because they are bored or wasting time, or simply need some time away from their real lives for half a minute. Some piece of content makes them stop scrolling mindlessly. Not because it was the most designed thing on their feed. Not because the brand behind it had the biggest budget. But because something about it felt oddly, uncomfortably specific to them.
That’s the whole game. And most agencies are still playing a different one.
Trends Don’t Work the Way Most Agencies Think They Do.
Here’s what usually happens. A trend picks up. The agency’s social media marketing team flags it in a group chat. Someone says, “We should do this.” After a day, the company releases an advertisement that seems like it was done by someone who found out about the trend indirectly, or the creative feels like an afterthought.
When the movie ‘Obsession’ released and the “one wish willow” trend took over every feed, and a race began between brands scrambling to participate. Most of them copied the format, swapped in their logo, and published. A few brands, though, paused. They wondered if there was something in this phenomenon that related to who they are. But only if there was, did they find an entry point that felt natural and not because they had been invited to the party too late.
This is key. This is what separates the trend-followers from the trend-setters.
‘Relatable’ Is Not a Brief.
The word gets thrown around a lot in creative briefs. “We want to feel relatable.” But relatability isn’t a tone of voice or a filter choice. It’s a choice that you make based on how open you want your brand to be.
That which doesn’t allow people to look away in the middle of scrolling isn’t always the most finely crafted. It’s often the most specific. It’s the post which tells them what they’ve all been thinking but nobody else had the courage to say yet. This comes only when someone has truly taken the time to understand the people.
Alongside that? There’s curiosity. Relatability might attract attention at first, but curiosity sustains it. Brands that grab people’s attention don’t have the best money in advertising. Their posts make them believe that a tap or swipe away could reveal something truly valuable to them.
What Does This Actually Look Like in Practice?
A good digital marketing agency isn’t trying to figure out what they should post each week. They’re asking, “Does this audience even care about that right now? Does our brand have something worth saying about it?”
Sometimes the answer is no. That’s fine. Better to be silent than to speak without meaning.
Here at Rioconn, that’s where we always begin. First, the audience, then the platform, and finally the content. Not because content isn’t important, but because when you create your content this way, it will mean something different. It won’t seem forced; instead, it’ll seem like it was born out of something organic.
With all of the trends, formats, and creative ideas in mind, we ask ourselves: “Does this really fit the brand, or does it fit the spreadsheet?” It’s a difference of two very different worlds. The brands that succeed on social, the brands that truly build relationships and aren’t just numbers on a sheet, know the difference.
The Bottom Line
Social media isn’t a broadcasting medium. It has not been for quite some time now. Brands that continue treating it as such are paying to remain invisible.
The key elements that work in social media today are the very same elements that have always worked in communication. Being honest, specific and creating an illusion of speaking to rather than at your audience.
That’s what we built at Rioconn. Not just content. Not just a strategy. A presence that actually feels like a human made it, because one did.
If your social media feels like it’s running on autopilot, let’s fix that.