The 24 to 48-hour trend window is real
If you zoom out and watch how trends behave now, the compression is obvious. Cultural moments emerge, spike, and fade inside a two-day window. By the time something is being covered in newsletters or showing up in “brands that nailed this” roundups, the participation window has already narrowed.
The typical pattern looks like this:
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Early signal within the first few hours
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Viral acceleration within 12 to 18 hours
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Brand participation wave within 24 to 36 hours
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Saturation and parody shortly after
The compression is getting more intense, too. AI-generated content accelerates saturation. Cross-platform sharing means trends that might have stayed niche on one app now break globally within hours. And audiences, especially Gen Z, are fast at identifying when a brand is genuinely in a moment versus awkwardly showing up after the fact.
Punch is a perfect case study. Punch is a baby Japanese macaque at Ichikawa City Zoo in Japan who went viral in February 2026 after videos of him clinging to an IKEA orangutan plush toy started circulating on TikTok and Instagram. The plush was his emotional support surrogate after being abandoned by his mother at birth. Within 48 hours, the hashtag #HangInTherePunch had tens of millions of views. The IKEA Djungelskog toy sold out globally. Resale listings hit $350 on eBay for a plush that retails at $20. Stephen Colbert referenced it on late-night TV.
IKEA’s response is the brand behavior lesson. They didn’t run this through a traditional campaign cycle. Their social team posted a photo of the plush, captioned “Sometimes, family is who we find along the way,” leaning directly into the emotional narrative the internet had already built around Punch. Multiple country accounts followed with localized versions. It felt natural because IKEA’s brand identity already aligned with warmth and home. The creative angle was essentially pre-built. The execution just had to be fast, and it was.
