How to build a social launch strategy that actually works
The playbook these brands are running isn’t exclusive to beauty. But beauty makes it visible because the feedback loop is so fast; a foundation goes viral on TikTok Monday and sells out by Wednesday. Here’s what the social strategy needs to contain.
Pre-launch (four to six weeks out): Tease the product category without revealing the product. Community involvement like shade feedback, formula input, and “we heard you” moments creates investment before there’s anything to buy. Creator seeding at this stage should prioritize genuine affinity over reach. The review that converts is from someone who actually uses the brand, not someone with the biggest following.
Launch week: Founder or artist-led content that demonstrates the product in a real-use context. Not a photoshoot, not a commercial; a demonstration. Education about what makes this product different from the ten others in the category. This is where the social differentiation happens, not in the press release but in the content.
Post-launch: UGC amplification. Respond to reviews. Repost customer content. Turn the “first impression” videos into an ongoing conversation. Monitor what people are asking in the comments and answer those questions in new content. Rare Beauty’s viral blush tutorial literally originated from a comment asking how to use it.
Analytics: Track which content formats drive profile visits and saves during the launch window, not just likes. Saves on product-focused content predict purchase intent better than any other metric. Watch your link-in-bio clicks against every piece of content you publish during launch week; this tells you which content is actually converting, not just performing.
UGC collection: The brands winning complexion launches are all gathering and amplifying UGC fast. ‘s media folder lets you collect all your UGC in one place, from tags, mentions, and comments, so when a customer posts their perfect shade match or a first impression video at 11 pm, you can find it, save it, and repost it before the conversation moves on. That speed is the difference between a brand that feels community-driven and one that just says it is.
‘s analytics and content planning give beauty teams a cross-platform view of what’s working at every stage of the launch cycle, so the post-launch content is informed by what the launch content actually proved, not by what felt good to post. For agencies managing multiple beauty brand clients, ‘s Growth and Scale plans handle the calendar complexity of coordinating multiple launch timelines without the chaos.
