The speed problem is actually a cultural intelligence problem
Yes, some TikTok trends peak in 48 hours. But culture operates at multiple timescales, and many brands struggle to navigate all of them effectively.
Viral moments come and go in 48 hours. Emerging signals like “little treat culture” or the Jet2 holiday phenomenon build over weeks and months. Then you have long-term cultural forces: the shifts that define generations. Millennials’ delayed timelines for marriage, home ownership, kids. Gen Z’s demand for radical transparency.
Creators understand culture at all these levels. They spot the signals early, know which viral moments connect to bigger shifts and which ones are just noise. They understand the long-game cultural transformations that determine how people think about wellness, authenticity, success, travel, identity.
Even sophisticated brand teams struggle here, not because of capability, but because of structure. When approval workflows take 9+ days, and planning runs on quarterly cycles, you’re too slow for viral moments, too rigid for emerging signals, and too siloed to understand the forces shaping how audiences think.
The real issue isn’t timing. It’s trying to speak directly to audiences without the cultural proximity creators naturally have. Creators already live in these spaces. They know the nuances, the inside jokes, what’s authentic and what’s cringe. That’s not something you can brief an agency on.
