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The Revival of Surrealism Marketing.

Have you noticed recently that digital platforms are saturated with ads, scams, and hate speech?

As digital spaces grow increasingly crowded and toxic, a counter-movement is emerging: offline experiences are having a renaissance. Some brands resort to oversized guerrilla marketing (aka surrealism marketing) — lavish, attention-grabbing campaigns designed to cut through the noise. But there’s a twist—these real-world interactions are being turbocharged by online sharing, creating a powerful synergy.

Is the digital honeymoon era over?

Digital marketing, once a golden frontier, now faces critical challenges: ad fatigue, toxicity, and never-changing algorithms.

Firstly, consumers encounter up to 10,000 ads daily, leading to banner blindness and ad-blocker adoption (up 30% since 2020).

Secondly, platforms are rife with misinformation, privacy concerns, and divisive content, eroding trust. One of the main platforms we have seen this happening to is X (former Twitter). Since it was bought, the social media platform has been getting more and more bad press every day.

Last but not least, brands fight for visibility in feeds dominated by influencers, viral trends, political campaigns, and competitors. Have you noticed that some of your company’s posts don’t get as much traction as they used to? Even when promoted, campaigns do not provide the same results as they used to while budgets get bigger every year.

Result? Surrealist marketing campaigns—think celebrity endorsements, viral stunts, and CGI-heavy videos—are deployed to shout louder. But this arms race is unsustainable, often alienating audiences with its intrusiveness.

A double-edged sword.

Digital marketing campaigns are starting to prioritize spectacle over substance. A flashy challenge might achieve trendiness, but it fails to build long-term loyalty. On that note, consumers tend to get numb to shock tactics, demanding authenticity instead, especially the younger generations. All the while, tone-deaf influencer partnerships are starting to show how over-the-top messaging can backfire.

While the internet space is still a great tool, the offline space is thriving again because it taps into the human need for connection. Pop-up shops, live events, and human-to-human interaction create multisensory memories. Brands like Nike and Red Bull excel at this by investing in sports events and communities that resonate much more deeply with their audiences before even hitting their social feeds.

The amplification loop.

These realms can co-exist and even help each other push experiences and numbers further. For example, Glossier’s in-store time-limited experience drove urgency while creating a great social media buzz.

A few examples of this magical loop:

Offline as a content catalyst

A guerilla mural or pop-up concert becomes Instagram catnip and attendees become brand ambassadors. Consider how for each festival, by posting, its attendees become brand ambassadors for future editions of the festival, attracting more and more people who do not want to miss the experience.

Virality by design

Ikea’s virtual furniture placement tool was used mainly in stores, but once the tool was made publicly available on their website the usage exploded. Hashtags, QR codes, and AR filters bridge the gap between offline and online.

Metrics that matter

Offline’s biggest problem is the fact that it’s harder to track than online platforms, but working together can help bridge another gap in a marketing strategy. By tracking social shares, traffic, user-generated content and so much more, we can translate offline’s ROI into a digital lexicon.

Conclusion.

The winning formula is, as you may have guessed, a blend of both of these worlds. At its core an integrated, human-centric formula. Prioritizing experiences that invite sharing, talking about it digitally. As digital grows noisier day by day, offline marketing offers the chance to reconnect with audiences. Yet, the true power lies in the synergy created with online amplification.

In my humble opinion, the future belongs to brands that can play both narratives. Cutting through the noise and making space for your community online will become more desirable and easy to achieve.

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"Ideas are easy. Implementation is hard."

Guy Kawasaki