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Trend-Jacking with Integrity: What the Coldplay “Kiss Cam” Scandal Can Teach Us About Ethical Marketing

By now, you’ve probably seen that kiss cam clip from the Coldplay concert  –  the one where a couple, clearly not expecting to be seen, got caught on the big screen… and accidentally exposed an affair in front of tens of thousands of fans (and now, millions on the internet).

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A post shared by Pushpek Sidhu (@pushpeksidhu_)

Within hours, the video went viral. And right on cue, brands jumped in. Tesla, Netflix, Nando’s Australia  –  they all took a stab at riding the wave, turning a messy personal moment into meme-fueled marketing.

Some posts were clever. Others? Kinda cringe.

And while trend-jacking (aka jumping on viral moments for brand visibility) can absolutely be effective  –  it also walks a very thin ethical line.

Because here’s the thing: what’s trending isn’t always what’s right. And as values-driven entrepreneurs and ethical marketers, we’ve got to be more intentional about the waves we choose to ride.

This post isn’t about canceling anyone or throwing shade  –  it’s about pausing to ask better questions. It’s about navigating visibility in a way that centers empathy, consent, and community care.

So let’s dig into the power (and potential harm) of trend-jacking  –  and how you can show up online with integrity without missing out on meaningful engagement.

What Is Trend-Jacking?

The definition of 'Trend Jacking' with a pronunciation guide and speaker icon. The definition reads: 'When a brand or creator hops on a viral moment – whether it’s a news story, meme, pop culture event, or social media trend – to get attention, boost engagement, or increase visibility.' Background features pink and red lipstick marks, with a large red lipstick print overlapping the bottom right corner.

Trend-jacking is when a brand or creator hops on a viral moment  –  whether it’s a news story, meme, pop culture event, or social media trend  –  to get attention, boost engagement, or increase visibility.

And honestly? It’s not hard to see why it works.

When done well, trend-jacking feels timely, relatable, and emotionally charged in all the right ways. It creates an instant connection with your audience  –  because they already know what you’re referencing, and they’re likely already talking about it.

Think:

  • Remixing Taylor Swift lyrics during an album drop.
  • Playing off a celebrity’s bizarre food order.
  • Reacting to the latest internet drama with a well-placed gif and clever caption.

For neurodiverse, mission-driven entrepreneurs trying to cut through the noise, trend-jacking can feel like a shortcut to connection  –  a way to stay relevant without reinventing the content wheel every week.

And sometimes? It is brilliant.

But (you knew that “but” was coming, right?)…

Trend-jacking also comes with risks  –  especially when the trend is rooted in harm, humiliation, or someone else’s personal business being blasted across the timeline.

So let’s talk about the good, the bad, and the ick.

The Power (and Perils) of Trend-Jacking

Title: 'Trend Jacking' with two columns comparing its pros and cons. Left column, labeled 'Why It Can Work,' lists: boost visibility quickly, tap into shared emotions, make your brand feel current and human, fuel engagement. Right column, labeled 'Where It Can Go Wrong,' lists: trivializes real harm, uses someone else’s story without consent, confuses or alienates your audience, contradicts your values, relies on lazy stereotypes or harmful tropes.

Why It Can Work:

Trend-jacking isn’t inherently bad. In fact, when done thoughtfully and ethically, it can:

  • Boost visibility quickly
    Riding the momentum of a viral moment can get your content in front of more eyes  –  without needing a huge budget.
  • Tap into shared emotions
    Whether it’s humor, shock, nostalgia, or irony, trends create a sense of collective experience  –  which can deepen connection with your audience.
  • Make your brand feel current and human
    Showing up in real time (with personality!) helps you feel more relatable, especially on fast-moving platforms like Instagram or X (formerly Twitter).
  • Fuel engagement
    When your audience gets the reference, they’re more likely to like, comment, and share  –  which can expand your reach organically.

But here's the twist…

Just because a trend is working for someone else doesn’t mean it’ll work for you  –  or that it should.

Where It Can Go Really Wrong:

Trend-jacking crosses a line when it:

  • Trivializes real harm
    Turning someone’s pain, trauma, or deeply personal situation into your brand’s punchline? That’s not edgy  –  it’s exploitative.
  • Uses someone else’s story without consent
    Even if it’s “public,” using a stranger’s likeness or experience to sell your stuff can cause harm  –  especially when they didn’t sign up to be a meme.
  • Confuses or alienates your audience
    If a trend feels off-brand or misaligned with your usual tone, it can come across as insincere  –  or worse, manipulative.
  • Contradicts your values
    Nothing torpedoes trust faster than saying you care about people… then using their personal crises as content fodder.
  • Relies on lazy stereotypes or harmful tropes
    This is a big one. If a trend reinforces ableism, racism, fatphobia, misogyny, or other forms of marginalization  –  skip it. No “reach” is worth the harm.

And even if the people at the center of a scandal made some questionable choices (looking at you, kiss cam couple), that doesn’t make it okay to pile on for clout. There are always ripple effects  –  spouses, kids, coworkers, and communities who didn’t ask to be dragged into the spotlight.

Empathy and ethics don’t have to kill creativity. But they should shape how you show up.

Ethical Questions to Ask Before Hopping on a Trend

'5 Questions to Ask Before Hopping On A Trend: Is this trend actually relevant to my audience? Could this cause harm to someone involved (even indirectly)? Am I using someone else’s story without their consent? Would this land the same if it happened to someone I love? Does this reflect what I stand for as a business owner?'

Before you repost, remix, or make a meme out of the latest viral moment, pause. Breathe. And ask yourself:

1. Is this trend actually relevant to my audience?

Sure, it’s everywhere now. But does it connect to your niche, your mission, or what your community is coming to you for? If it’s not meaningful or relatable to your people, it might just be noise.

2. Could this cause harm to someone involved (even indirectly)?

It’s easy to forget that there are real humans behind viral content. Even if they “put themselves out there,” public visibility doesn’t equal consent  –  especially when that attention turns mean-spirited.

3. Am I using someone else’s story without their consent?

Ask yourself: Would I still post this if it were my face, my name, or my relationship in the video? If not, it’s probably not yours to use.

4. Would this land the same if it happened to someone I love?

Empathy check. If this situation happened to your best friend, your partner, or your kid  –  would turning it into a content opportunity still feel okay?

5. Does this reflect what I stand for as a business owner?

Values alignment isn’t just a buzzword. If your brand is rooted in justice, equity, and compassion  –  your content should be, too. That includes knowing when to sit one out.

Trend-jacking can be a powerful tool  –  but like any tool, it depends on how you use it. Ask these questions not to overanalyze, but to stay rooted in your integrity.

Just Marketing® Best Practices for Navigating Trends

You don’t have to sit out every trending moment  –  but you do need to engage with care. Here’s how to ride the wave without compromising your values or your community’s trust:

Title: 'Best Practices for Navigating Trends' on a pink-to-purple gradient background. It lists five tips, each with an icon: 'Pause before posting (pause icon), Lead with empathy (heart with rays icon), Check for value alignment (sparkling diamond icon), Know when to pass (X mark icon), and Shift the frame (refresh icon in a frame).'

Pause before posting

Give yourself a moment  –  especially when a trend feels urgent, outrageous, or emotionally charged. Being first isn’t worth being careless. A quick pause can mean the difference between a post that lands… and one that causes harm.

Lead with empathy

Before you hit “publish,” ask: Who might this hurt? Who might feel seen? Who might feel exploited or erased? Make space for those answers  –  even the uncomfortable ones.

Check for value alignment

Ask yourself: Does this reflect who I am and how I want to show up in the world? If your gut says “meh” or “maybe not,” trust that. Your content should support your values  –  not stretch or contradict them for attention.

Know when to pass

You don’t have to jump on every trend. In fact, silence can be one of the most powerful, ethical strategies out there. If a trend doesn’t align  –  let it go. You’re not “falling behind.” You’re building trust.

Shift the frame: Add context or depth

If you do engage with a trend, consider flipping the script. Use it as an opportunity to educate, uplift, or challenge the narrative  –  rather than just reposting for laughs or likes.

Trend-jacking doesn’t have to mean selling out your values. With some thoughtful reflection and a whole lot of heart, you can stay relevant and stay rooted.

When Silence Is the Most Ethical Strategy

Here’s your gentle reminder: you don’t have to say something just because everyone else is.

In the age of constant content and hot takes, silence can feel risky  –  like you’re missing out, falling behind, or failing to stay “relevant.” But let’s reframe that.

Centered text reads: 'Silence isn’t inaction – it’s intention.' Below the text is a small purple heart icon. A light purple paintbrush stroke background on white.

Choosing not to engage with a viral moment is a decision  –  one rooted in awareness, discernment, and care for your audience.

Sometimes the most values-aligned thing you can do is sit this one out.

Especially when:

  • The trend centers someone else’s harm or humiliation
  • You’re unsure whether your take adds value or just noise
  • You’re feeling the pressure to respond fast, not thoughtfully
  • You’re using someone else’s story to fuel engagement or sales

Visibility that aligns > Visibility that harms

Staying visible ethically means being intentional  –  not reactive. It means showing up in ways that build trust over time, even if that trust doesn’t come with instant likes or viral reach.

There are so many ways to stay present online that don’t require trend-jacking. Create original content. Reshare a past win. Offer something helpful, even if it’s not “on trend.”

Let your marketing reflect the pace, depth, and values you want to bring to your entire business  –  not just your content calendar.

Final Thoughts: Legacy > Likes

Trends will come and go. Algorithms will keep changing. And viral moments? They burn hot… and fade fast.

But your integrity?
Your values?
Your impact?

That’s the stuff that lasts.

You don’t need to be the first to post.
You don’t need to be the funniest or flashiest.
And you definitely don’t need to capitalize on someone else’s pain to be seen.

What you do need is alignment  –  with your values, your audience, and the kind of business you’re actually trying to build.

Because real visibility  –  the kind that grows trust, community, and long-term success  –  doesn’t come from chasing trends. It comes from showing up consistently, consciously, and compassionately.

So the next time a viral moment explodes across your feed, pause. Ask the hard questions. Lead with empathy. And know that choosing the ethical path may not always be the loudest move…

…but it’s always the most powerful one.

Categories: All Categories, Just Marketing®

Tags: Ethical Marketing, Inclusive Marketing, Increase Brand Awareness, Marketing Clarity, Marketing Confidence, Marketing Consistency, Overcome Marketing Overwhelm, Social Media Strategy, Values-Aligned Promotions

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About Meg Brunson

Online marketing authority and former Facebook employee Meg Brunson combines their mission to build a more accessible and inclusive world, with their expertise in the digital marketing space.

Meg is on a mission to disrupt the status quo of marketing so that financial success is the byproduct of a genuine commitment to justice, rather than an end goal in itself.

Through Meg’s signature approach, Just Marketing®, businesses are implementing ethical, inclusive, and accessible marketing campaigns that make a positive impact on society and their bottom line, creating a virtuous cycle where profitability and responsible practices reinforce each other.

Meg is a professional speaker, children’s book author, host of the Just Marketing® podcasts, CMO of BetterCEO.app and CEO of Just Marketing®.

Follow me on Instagram @theMegBrunson
When I first started learning about love bombing i When I first started learning about love bombing in marketing, my stomach dropped a little.

Because I recognized some of it. In things I'd written. In copy I'd been proud of. In language I'd used because I genuinely thought it was kind and encouraging and... good.

It wasn't a great feeling.

But here's what I had to remind myself -  and what I want to offer you if you're sitting in that same discomfort right now:

Awareness isn't an accusation. It's an invitation.

We didn't invent these tactics. We learned them. From courses, coaches, sales trainings that presented emotionally manipulative language as "high-vibe connection." We were doing what we were taught, with the best intentions we had at the time.

And now we know better. 
So we get to do better. 

No shame spiral. 
No throwing out everything you've ever written and starting from scratch at 2am.

Just a gentle pause. 
A willingness to look at your messaging with fresh eyes. And a commitment to showing up for your audience in a way that genuinely honors them -  their autonomy, their nervous systems, their right to make informed decisions without being emotionally maneuvered.

That's what Just Marketing® is all about.

Read more: MegBrunson.com/love-bombing

Have you ever had a moment where you realized a tactic you'd been using didn't quite align with your values?
How did you handle that realization?

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#JustMarketing #EquityForAll #EquityCenteredBusiness #EthicalMarketing #OnlineBusinessMarketing #EthicalBusiness #OnlineMarketingTips #MarketingWithADHD #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent #a11y #ContentStrategy #InclusiveMarketing #AccessibleMarketing #SocialMediaForAll #ContentCreation
June is here, and it’s bringing sunshine, celebrat June is here, and it’s bringing sunshine, celebration, and a whole lot of love.

Here’s some of what makes June shine:

Pride Month (All June) - Love is love is love. Pride Month is a time to honor the LGBTQIA+ community, celebrate progress, and recommit to the work that’s still needed for equality. It’s about joy, resilience, and making space for everyone to be their authentic selves. (Pro tip: Support LGBTQIA+ creators and businesses this month - and every month!)

Juneteenth (June 19) - Also known as Freedom Day, Juneteenth marks the end of slavery in the United States. It’s a day to honor the resilience and contributions of Black Americans, reflect on history, and commit to creating a more just future.

Father’s Day (June 21) - Let’s hear it for the dads, father figures, and caregivers who’ve had our backs through thick and thin. From teaching life lessons to the perfect dad jokes, Father’s Day is a time to celebrate the people who’ve shaped us with love, guidance, and maybe a little grilling expertise. (Pro tip: Be sensitive - this day can be complicated for some, so focus on inclusivity in your messaging.)

Now, let’s talk marketing…

June offers endless opportunities to create content that matters. It’s a time to amplify voices, build connections, and create impact.

Need Help Planning Your Content?

The Inclusive Holiday Content Bundle is here to help you plan content that’s thoughtful, authentic, and inclusive - not just in June, but all year long. It’s packed with holidays, observances, and ideas to keep your marketing fresh and meaningful.

Grab it Here: CelebrateOnSocial.com

Which observance resonates most with you this month?

ID - A 6-card carousel highlighting 'Diverse & Inclusive Holidays' in June. Promotional graphic encourages planning inclusive holiday content year-round. Text promotes access to Canva templates, graphics, and guidance for over 470 inclusive holidays. CelebrateOnSocial.com appears in a purple bar.

 #JustMarketing #EquityForAll #Holidays #DaysOfTheYear #June #June2026
Manageable - not stressful. That's the vibe we're Manageable - not stressful.

That's the vibe we're going for over here - and Michelle said it better than I ever could.

Marketing can feel this way. Let me show you…

Comment, DM, or learn more at YourMarketingPerson.co 

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#JustMarketing #EquityForAll #a11y #EquityCenteredBusiness #DiversityInMarketing #SocialJustice #RacialJustice #BeTheChange #DismantleWhiteSupremacy #DiversityEquityInclusion #EthicalMarketing #InclusiveMarketing #AccessibleMarketing #MarketingAccessibility #SocialMediaMarketer #EthicalBusiness #MarketingCoach #CommunityOverCompetition #MarketingWithPurpose #MarketingWithImpact #DEI #DEIMarketing #SocialMediaForAll #ContentCreation #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent  #MarketingWithADHD #adhdBusiness #adhdBusinessOwner
Here are five ways to shift your marketing toward Here are five ways to shift your marketing toward messaging that's genuinely empowering, trust-building, and consent-based:

1. Affirm Without Inflating
There's a big difference between "You're a total rockstar who was BORN for this transformation!" and "If you've been looking for support that aligns with your values, this might be it." One tells people who they are. The other meets them where they actually are.

2. Center Autonomy and Consent
Instead of telling your audience they're ready, invite them to decide for themselves. "You know yourself best. If this feels like a fit, I'd love to support you."

3. Empower Without Pressure
Encouragement that says "your work matters whether you buy from me or not" builds genuine trust. 

4. Honor Neurodiversity + Emotional Safety
Not everyone responds well to high-emotion, high-intensity language - choose calm and clear over hype and overwhelm. 

5. Let the Value Speak for Itself
Share real benefits. Tell honest stories. Trust that the right-fit clients will recognize themselves in your words -  not because you told them they were "destined" for it, but because they genuinely felt seen and respected.

These suggestions are not just "nicer" marketing. They're smarter marketing. They build the kind of relationships that lead to referrals, retention, and a reputation you're actually proud of.

And isn't that the whole point?

I share more at: MegBrunson.com/love-bombing

Which of these five shifts feels most relevant to where you are right now?

ID: 'Instead of Love Bombing,' five numbered alternatives are listed: 1) 'Affirm Without Inflating,' 2) 'Center Autonomy and Consent,' 3) 'Empower Without Pressure,' 4) 'Honor Neurodiversity and Emotional Safety,' and 5) 'Let the Value Speak for Itself.' Watercolor hearts in shades of pink and red.

#JustMarketing #EquityForAll #EquityCenteredBusiness #EthicalMarketing #OnlineBusinessMarketing #EthicalBusiness #MarketingWithADHD #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent #a11y #ContentStrategy #InclusiveMarketing #AccessibleMarketing #ContentCreation
Struggling to establish your authority and credibi Struggling to establish your authority and credibility online?
An inconsistent online presence might be the culprit.

Symptoms include:
– Sporadic posting
– Unclear branding
– Disjointed messaging

These issues can significantly impact your authority and credibility, leading to missed opportunities for networking, collaboration, and growth.

You’re not broken.
Your systems just weren’t built for you.

You need a system - designed to support neurodivergent brains and values-led business owners - that meets you where you’re at.

Including:
 – A flexible monthly content calendar
 – Ethical, inclusive, customizable prompts
 – Built-in ways to repurpose content so you’re not starting from scratch

Learn more: ContentMarketingMembership.com

ID: A paper that looks like a doctor's prescription pad. Diagnosis is inconsistency. The prescription is for the Content Marketing Membership. Background is light pink with dark pink crosses, a medical theme.

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Love bombing in marketing isn't just "a little cri Love bombing in marketing isn't just "a little cringe" - it's actually harmful.

A lot of this language gets passed down through traditional sales training as "high-vibe" or "empowering." But when we look closer? The impact tells a different story.

1. Flooding someone with praise to trigger a buying decision isn't connection, it's coercion. Even when the words sound kind, if the goal is to override someone's boundaries and get them to say yes before they're ready? That's manipulation. Full stop.

2. For people who've experienced emotionally manipulative or abusive relationships, love bombing in marketing doesn't just feel uncomfortable, it can be genuinely triggering. It mirrors the same dynamics they've already had to survive.

3. When someone realizes all that validation was just a setup for a pitch, the trust evaporates. And trust is the entire foundation of sustainable, values-aligned client relationships.

Short-term conversions built on manipulation don't grow businesses. They burn bridges.

This isn't about shame - it's about awareness and the willingness to do better.

Your audience doesn't need to be love-bombed into trusting you. 

When your marketing is honest, clear, and genuinely respectful, the right-fit people will find you… and they'll stay.

Read the blog - MegBrunson.com/love-bombing - It covers all of this plus what to do instead of love bombing in your copy.

Which of these three impacts surprised you most?

ID: 'Love Bombing is problematic.' Three broken heart emojis mark the reasons: 'Emotionally Manipulative,' 'Not Trauma-Informed,' and 'Undermines Trust.' The Just Marketing logo appears at the bottom on a light gray background bordered by shiny purple fabric hearts.

#JustMarketing #EquityForAll #MarketingWithHeart #EquityCenteredBusiness #DiversityEquityInclusion #EthicalMarketing #OnlineBusinessMarketing #EthicalBusiness #OnlineMarketingTips #DEI #MarketingWithADHD #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent #a11y #InclusiveMarketing #AccessibleMarketing #SocialMediaForAll #ContentCreation
Love bombing is designed to trigger an emotional r Love bombing is designed to trigger an emotional response. 

It floods your nervous system with validation, and then attaches those feelings to a buying decision. So by the time you're reaching for your wallet, it doesn't feel like pressure… it feels like clarity.
But it's not clarity. 

It's a manufactured moment of emotional intensity.

And for folks who've navigated burnout, rejection sensitivity, or trauma… emotionally manipulative marketing doesn't just feel bad - it can cause real harm by mirroring dynamics they've already had to fight their way out of.

Just Marketing® exists because I believe marketing can be better. 

More actually-kind… not performatively kind.

You deserve marketing that respects your autonomy enough to let you decide if something is a fit -  without being emotionally maneuvered into it.

Read more on the topic: MegBrunson.com/love-bombing

What's your gut reaction to love bombing in marketing? 
I'd love to hear your thoughts in the comments.

ID: 'Love Bombing isn't about seeing someone's potential, it's about using praise to pressure them into action.' The Just Marketing logo appears below the text, displayed inside a white decorative lace doily frame on a pink background patterned with hand-drawn hearts.

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Love bombing in marketing isn't always obvious. Love bombing in marketing isn't always obvious. 

It doesn't always look like a pushy sales bro screaming "LIMITED TIME OFFER.” 

Sometimes it shows up softly - wrapped in spiritual language, coated in empowerment rhetoric, or disguised as a coach who really believes in you.

Here's what to watch for:
– Language that tells you who you are rather than inviting you to reflect 
– Compliments that seem designed to make you feel obligated to say yes 
– Praise that shows up right before (or during) a pitch

The goal of ethical, Just Marketing® isn't to strip the warmth out of your messaging. It's to make sure the warmth is real - rooted in genuine care, not conversion tactics.

Your audience can feel the difference. And the ones you actually want to work with? They're looking for someone they can trust - not someone who makes them feel temporarily amazing and then asks for their credit card.

Real connection doesn't need to manufacture emotional dependency. It builds naturally, over time, through honesty and respect. 

Want to understand love bombing in marketing more deeply - including why it's especially problematic for neurodiverse and trauma-impacted communities? 

Read about it: MegBrunson.com/love-bombing

And then come back here and tell me: has any of this show up in marketing you've encountered recently?

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You may have heard of “love bombing” in the contex You may have heard of “love bombing” in the context of toxic relationships, but it shows up in marketing too.

Love bombing in marketing is when brands flood you with over-the-top praise, inflated compliments, and feel-good validation... all designed to fast-track your trust and nudge you toward a "yes" before you're actually ready.

It sounds like:
– "You're clearly meant for more - don't waste your potential by saying no."
– "I only work with soul-aligned visionaries, and I just KNOW that's you."
– "You're so ready for the next level. Why wait?"

A lot of marketers aren't doing this on purpose. It gets taught as "high-vibe connection" in traditional sales spaces. But good intentions don't cancel out harmful impact.

And for neurodiverse folks, people navigating burnout, or anyone with a history of emotionally manipulative relationships… This kind of language can be genuinely triggering, not just uncomfortable.

Your audience deserves to feel seen and respected -  not love-bombed into a buying decision.

Read more: MegBrunson.com/love-bombing 

And I want to hear from you: Have you ever noticed love bombing in marketing… either in someone else's content or (no judgment!) in your own?

ID: 'Love Bombing: Over-the-Top Praise Isn't as Kind as It Seems.' A cartoon pink bomb with a red heart and a sparkling lit fuse sits in front of a glowing white heart outline on a pastel pink and purple gradient background with sparkles.

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When we talk about the EIEIO Marketing Framework - When we talk about the EIEIO Marketing Framework - a lot of people think Engage and Interact sound like the same thing, but they're not - and understanding the difference can really change how you approach your time on social media.

* Engaging your ideal audience is about showing up for the people you want to serve (your ideal clients).

* Interacting with relevant accounts is about showing up alongside the people who influence, serve, or exist in the same ecosystem as your ideal clients.

When building your interaction list, consider:
-- Complementary service providers who serve the same audience
-- Thought leaders or educators your ideal clients follow and trust
-- Organizations or communities your ideal clients are part of
-- Potential collaborators, podcast hosts, or referral partners
-- Accounts that are already creating content your ideal clients love

When you interact consistently with these accounts - a few things start to happen:
-- Their audience sees your name. Repeatedly. In a positive context.
-- The account owner notices you. Relationships form. Collaborations become possible.
-- You become part of a larger ecosystem, rather than a lone voice posting into the void.

The more genuinely you support others in your ecosystem, the more you become a recognized, trusted presence in the spaces your ideal clients already inhabit. That’s visibility through community. And when we lift each other up, everyone benefits.

Your Challenge This Week:
Identify 3-5 accounts in your ecosystem that you're not currently interacting with regularly. Follow them, and engage with their content authentically. The relationships you build through consistent interaction often turn into collaborations, referrals, and friendships you didn't see coming. Show up with no agenda and see what grows!

Comment or DM:
Has "Interact" been on your radar, or is this a missing piece for you?

ID: Meg is smiling with long pink hair wearing a black tank top with pink lettering reading 'Angry Liberal Feminist Killjoy.' Their arm is covered in colorful tattoos. They accessorize with rainbow bracelets. Trees and urban buildings are visible behind them.
Credentials aren't the villain. I want to be real Credentials aren't the villain.

I want to be really clear about that because this conversation can feel uncomfortable, especially if you've worked hard for your experience, your certifications, and your results.

You should share those things. Your audience deserves to know you know your stuff.

But there's a difference between building genuine credibility and performing authority in a way that manipulates, excludes, or overwhelms the people you're trying to serve.

So let's make it practical. Here's the swap:

1. Instead of leading with extreme, cherry-picked success stories... Try sharing client transformations with honest context -  who it worked for, how, and why.

2. Instead of inflated claims designed to impress... Try transparency about your actual journey, including the learning edges.

3. Instead of hype-heavy messaging that creates urgency and pressure... Try relatable stories that help your audience see themselves in your work.

These aren't just "nicer" ways to market. They're more effective -  because they build the kind of trust that actually converts, without leaving people feeling manipulated or excluded after the fact.

Read more: MegBrunson.com/authority-bias

Which of these three swaps feels most relevant to where you are right now in your marketing?

ID: 'Authority is not the problem... it's how we use it that deserves our attention.' Three pairs of thumbs-down and thumbs-up labels contrast approaches: 'extreme examples of success v. client transformations with context,' 'inflated claims v. transparency about your journey,' and 'hype-heavy messaging v. relatable stories.'

#JustMarketing #EquityForAll #EquityCenteredBusiness #SocialJustice #AlignedBusiness #DiversityEquityInclusion #EthicalMarketing #OnlineBusinessMarketing #EthicalBusiness #OnlineMarketingTips #DEI #MarketingWithADHD #adhdBusiness #adhdBusinessOwner #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent #a11y #ContentStrategy #InclusiveMarketing #AccessibleMarketing #SocialMediaForAll #ContentCreation
Growth doesn't have to come at the cost of your me Growth doesn't have to come at the cost of your mental health or your bandwidth. 

The right marketing support should help you expand your capacity, not drain it.

If you're ready for results that feel good and work well, I'd love to connect. 

Comment, DM, or learn more at YourMarketingPerson.co

ID: A testimonial from Michelle T. reads: 'Bringing Meg on was one of the best decisions I made... I doubled my group class offerings and increased demand for 1:1 sessions, while feeling less overwhelmed by marketing.' Michelle is smiling and kneeling outdoors with three dogs beside her. YourMarketingPerson.co

 #JustMarketing #EquityForAll #a11y #EquityCenteredBusiness #DiversityInMarketing #SocialJustice #RacialJustice #BeTheChange #DismantleWhiteSupremacy #DiversityEquityInclusion #EthicalMarketing #InclusiveMarketing #AccessibleMarketing #MarketingAccessibility #SocialMediaMarketer #EthicalBusiness #MarketingCoach #CommunityOverCompetition #MarketingWithPurpose #MarketingWithImpact #DEI #DEIMarketing #SocialMediaForAll #ContentCreation #ContentMarketing #ContentMarketingMembership #WeeklySocialContent  #MarketingWithADHD #adhdBusiness #adhdBusinessOwner
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