Stand out from the crowd…Sometimes

On social, its crucial for brands and identities to sometimes stand out from the crowd, to create content that engages users and makes an impact.

Making the same content as others can appear stale and overdone, so there is a lot of pressure to create content that can be thought-provoking or impactful. When done well, you can see social campaigns going viral, with users supporting it all the way – poorly done, and you can see users revolt.

Recent activity on social has seen brands creating content that, in no uncertain terms, astonishes users. You can see an example of this type of content with the recent collaboration between Weetabix and Heinz beans (accumulating 38.4K retweets and 134.8K Likes on Twitter). This approach creates a memorable moment for users and allows other brands to react with organic responses that further enhance the social experience.

On the other hand, we see brands trying this similar effect with less than desirable results. Take the recent controversial tweet from Burger King as an example; they wanted to create an initial impact on users to grab their attention and then deliver the campaign’s crux with a secondary response. This created issues, as many users saw the first tweet without the context to justify the statement. With a flurry of posts centred around IWD, I can only assume they wanted to stand out from the crowd and create their impactful moment.

So what can we take away from these two examples? We can learn that standing out may not always be the best option, that knowledge of the social platform is imperative and that the more innocent ‘WTF’ moments generate the best results.

Only if Twitter brought out their undo button this week… ah well.

Latest Posts

TikTok has released its annual trend prediction report for marketers, designed to help brands understand where the platform – and its users – are heading next. If you’re trying to grow your presence or plan smarter content for the year ahead, it’s well worth…
Read More
2016 is when social stopped being “posts in a feed” and became a ranked system that decides what gets seen, shared, trusted. In 2026 that same logic sits everywhere, in-platform search, Google snippets, and AI overviews that summarise your brand before anyone clicks. Ofcom says around 30% of UK keyword searches now show AI overviews, and 53% of adults often see AI summaries. The uncomfortable truth is that buyers get a machine-written version of you, then sanity-check it with humans in DMs and group chats. Brands win when their claims are clear, proof is easy to find, and real people show up consistently.
Read More
AI is helping B2B organic content rebound on LinkedIn and Reddit, so SEO optimisation for posts has never been more important. We’ve got a playbook to help you get started on boosting that organic visibility on Google and LLMs. First things first – we do often preach here at Immediate…
Read More