What streaming platforms know about cultural relevance
Netflix, HBO, and their competitors do more than just release shows. They try to create conversations: things that people feel compelled to weigh in on, argue about, and share. The cultural moment is the product, and the show is what backs it up.
There are a few things these platforms have figured out that most brands haven’t quite nailed yet:
Meme-ability isn’t an accident. The most shareable campaigns are designed to be shared from the start. Before anything goes out, someone on the team is asking: will people screenshot this? Will they make it their own? If the answer is no, it goes back to the drawing board.
Data tells you what people want, not what they say they want. Streaming platforms use behavioral data obsessively. They monitor what gets watched, rewatched, abandoned, and searched. They’re optimizing for actual behavior, not survey responses. B2C brands often make the opposite mistake, building campaigns around what their audience says resonates rather than what their actions reveal.
Fandoms beat audiences. There’s a difference between someone who watches your content and someone who advocates for your brand. Streaming platforms invest heavily in the second category by offering early access, behind-the-scenes content, and moments that make fans feel like insiders. The feeling of being in the know is what turns viewers into advocates.
The drop strategy is also worth studying. The full-season drop versus weekly episodes debate is largely about viewer experience. But it’s also a question of how you sustain attention over time. A weekly drop extends the cultural moment. A full-season drop creates a concentrated moment but risks burning fast. Both have a logic. The question is which one serves your launch goals.
