If you’re in the marketing world, you’re likely already aware that the only constant here is change. Saying marketing is changing is like saying the sky is blue.
Some skies, however, are bluer than others, just as some changes within marketing are more intense than others. One of the most significant changes in recent memory is the shift toward community-first and tech-enabled strategies. The brands enjoying real traction today aren’t outspending competitors, they’re out-connecting them. The most successful companies pursue not just loyalty but a sense of belonging.
The promise of community-first marketing
Marketing used to revolve around how best to push your message out. That’s no longer the case. It’s now something akin to ‘How do we create something people genuinely want to be part of?’ Besides the obvious retention, the by-products of a user base that feels connected to your work include organic advocacy and product innovation.
Traditional acquisition methods have become expensive and unpredictable and broadcasting is not enough. Beyond cost, this shift is about trust. People trust other people more than brands and community-first marketing leverages that credibility, turning engaged fans into powerful advocates.
There’s no use complaining about rising customer acquisition cost and shrinking signal quality across paid channels. That’s now a fact of marketing life. A marketer’s time is better spent pivoting towards trust-centric marketing, particularly through user-generated content. Users-turned-creators provide huge return on investment, amplifying messages at low or no cost to the point where they regularly outperform brand-led campaigns. Unlike paid campaigns, community-driven advocacy works even when there isn’t an active budget.
Using tech to supercharge community
Technology has completely reshaped how brands build communities, removing old limitations around geography, scale and how quickly you can understand what people care about. Modern communities are global, incredibly fast and always-on. A creator in Indonesia can duet a TikTok from someone in Brazil within seconds – that kind of spontaneous, organic interaction simply wasn’t possible before.
Tools like BrandWatch, Brand24 and Repsense, come into play here by measuring not only engagement but also sentiment. Social listening enables early detection of sentiment shifts, rising creators and emerging storylines, allowing brands to join conversations in a timely and authentic way. Community hubs now extend onto short-form video and streaming platforms, where shared identity and language develop around trends. These aren’t just channels – they’re fully-fledged ecosystems!
The conversations across social, Discord, comments and streams that community-intelligence platforms aggregate can be turned into actionable insights. For marketers, this is a goldmine. You get a direct view into which topics resonate, which segments are emerging and where your narrative should evolve next. And if you collaborate with your users, you’ll find they help shape content, influence roadmap decisions and become part of the story instead of passive recipients.
A clear example for us was Cooking Fever, a game that’s been thriving for over 11 years. When we analysed community-created content with AI, a clear emotional theme emerged: nostalgia. Players were posting “childhood core” videos, remembering when they first played the game, and sharing moments tied to growing up. We took that insight and leaned into nostalgia across our communication and UA strategy. The results were immediate. Engagement increased, performance improved, and the community itself started creating even more nostalgic content, amplifying the effect.
Marketing Technology News: Martech Interview with Aquibur Rahman, CEO of Mailmodo
What’s next, and why it matters
We’ve moved past the initial stages of community-first marketing, entering a phase where community provides a foundational layer for brand operations. In the coming years, community will evolve from a side initiative to an integral part of brand operations, complementing existing marketing models. AI and social listening will help brands understand real-time community sentiment, guiding product, creative, and communication decisions more effectively.
Micro-communities such as creator pods, regional clusters, or power-user circles will grow in legitimacy, serving as primary sources of advocacy and insight. Short-form video and streaming will continue to dominate, with creators often producing the highest-performing marketing assets.
The future of community-first marketing is a shift from campaigns to ongoing relationships. The brands set to win will be the ones that listen fast, co-create authentically and nurture community as an ongoing relationship rather than a campaign. When brands stop treating community as a megaphone and start treating it as a relationship, they’ll see improvement in virtually every area. Community isn’t an extra. It’s where belonging happens. And belonging is the most powerful economic driver we have in saturated markets.
Marketing Technology News: Beyond the Trend: How CMOs Are Using Cultural Intelligence to Lead Culture, Not Chase It