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codex · operators · Dave Gerhardt · ins_gerhardt-social-as-testing-lab

Social media is a content testing lab, not a distribution channel, break ideas into small testable pieces, only invest in the ones that earn organic traction

By Dave Gerhardt · Founder Exit Five; former CMO Privy and Drift; author Founder Brand · 2022-09-15 · book · Founder Brand — Social as Testing Lab

Tier A · TL;DR
Social media is a content testing lab, not a distribution channel, break ideas into small testable pieces, only invest in the ones that earn organic traction

Claim

The traditional marketing workflow, build a campaign in a vacuum, then hope it works, wastes resources on ideas that haven't been validated. The corrective is to treat social media (LinkedIn, Twitter, etc.) as a testing laboratory: break big ideas into small testable pieces, measure organic engagement as a proxy for resonance, and only invest in producing full campaigns around the ideas that earn traction. Social isn't where the campaign goes; it's where the campaign idea gets validated before production.

Mechanism

Most marketing decisions about which idea to fund are made on instinct or focus-group sample sizes. Social platforms provide near-zero-cost validation at real audience scale: a post takes 30 minutes to write, reaches a meaningful sample of the target audience, and produces engagement signals (likes, replies, reshares) within hours. Ideas that earn organic traction have demonstrated resonance with real buyers; ideas that don't have signalled their failure before the team committed production resources. The discipline reverses the workflow: instead of "build the campaign, then promote it," it's "test the angle on social, then build the campaign around the angle that worked." The savings are direct, production resources go to validated ideas, and the upside is non-linear because validated angles also tend to perform better in paid and owned channels.

Conditions

Holds when:

Fails when:

Evidence

"treat social media as a content testing laboratory rather than a distribution channel: break big ideas into small, testable pieces on LinkedIn or Twitter, measure engagement as a proxy for resonance, and only invest in producing full campaigns around the ideas that earn organic traction"

· see raw/expert-content/experts/dave-gerhardt.md line 15.

Signals

Counter-evidence

Some genuine breakthrough ideas don't perform on social initially because they require longer-form context to land. A post-format failure isn't always an idea-quality failure. The discipline includes knowing which ideas need long-form and shouldn't be tested in 280-character form.

Cross-references

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