Creator-led campaigns have continued to shape digital marketing strategies, but organic reach alone has not delivered consistent impact. According to insights from Dentsu, brands have increasingly relied on paid amplification to extend the effectiveness of creator content.
The report has highlighted that creator content has a short lifecycle, typically peaking within 48 hours before losing visibility in algorithm-driven feeds. This has limited the ability of organic-first campaigns to sustain engagement and reach.
As a result, brands have integrated paid media into their creator strategies. Formats such as partnership ads and short-form video placements have enabled brands to scale creator content while retaining its authenticity and platform-native appeal.
Data has shown that even modest investments in amplification have driven significant results. Campaigns allocating 20% of their budget to boosting creator content have achieved up to 71% higher brand lift in purchase intent compared to those relying solely on organic reach.
The report has also pointed out that the distinction between paid, owned, and earned media has diminished. Creator content has increasingly been repurposed, optimised, and distributed across formats to maximise impact.
Case studies have demonstrated that campaigns combining creator content with paid distribution have delivered stronger reach, improved recall, and higher intent compared to traditional brand-led executions.
The findings have reinforced a broader shift in strategy. Creator content has no longer functioned as the final output of campaigns but has become the foundation of a wider media system. Without amplification, even high-performing content has risked under-delivery.














