Why Marketers need to embrace the funny when it comes to podcasting

While there’s no sure-fire formula to being funny, brands that lean into comedic ads find the effort has a good success rate.

A funny ad is a sticky ad

Marketing (and business) doesn’t have to be that serious, have some fun. It may even make your work better.

If only there were a “holiday” coming up that would let you safely try humor for your brand…

How consumers find new brands and products on social media, marketplaces, and brick-and-mortar retail in 5 charts

Here are 2:

Ways in Which US Internet Users Are Informed About a Product or Service, by Age, Nov 2023 (% of respondents) Channels Where US Internet Users Start Their Online Shopping Journeys, 2022 & 2023 (% of respondents)

Over two-thirds (67%) of US 16-to 24-year-olds say they’ve learned about a product or service through a social media video that organically entered their feed

But

Social media is just one part of the discovery mix. Online marketplaces or search engines are the top places where US consumers start their shopping journey

Outside of impulse purchases, discovery and shopping are two different phases.

Are Lookalikes Still Relevant?

I get that lookalikes are technically a bit more specific, in theory. You could find people similar to your paying customers, for example. I wonder if advertisers simply don’t trust the newer options as much as the tried and true lookalikes.

I’m just not convinced that lookalikes are any better than these other methods. I’ve mostly abandoned them completely as a result.

I am now very interested in this question. Mostly because I’m interested in what’s working on Meta.

And because I just made a bunch of lookalikes earlier today for an upcoming campaign. Wonder if that was time wasted…