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6 TikTok Accounts: 6 TikTok Tactics

Spin
Jacob Cardwell

What do Sylvanian Families, hot juicers, angry owls and global geopolitics all have in common? They are all totally viable and successful TikTok tactics that we can learn a whole lot from (duh!).

Here is a quick listicle of 6 TikTok accounts that are killing the game:

Tactic #1: Self Deprecate, the Internet will hate you anyway.

As we move towards a social media landscape governed by Gen Z, careful brand curation is thrown out the window in favour of creative chaos. A key pillar of this chaos is the ability to enact some form of brand self-deprecation and awareness. Yes, it’s scary – but the payoff can be more than worth it: see Ryanair.

With 1.6 million followers, Ryanair is not afraid to play with the public’s general conception of the brand and its services. From TikToks about the lack of TV screens on seats to lofi content poking fun at their garish blue and yellow colour scheme; Ryanair has cracked the code when achieving just the right balance between self-deprecation and showing off.

TikTok has repeatedly pushed the rhetoric of making TikTok’s and not adverts, and so many ‘average user’s’ TikTok profiles spend a majority of their space utilising a consistent undertone of making fun of themselves. Re-telling date horror stories, reenacting school-time embarrassments and even pointing out their visual flaws in a comedic manner – these are all common forms for content found on the app. This should be no different for brands – turn your ‘weak points’ or common complaints into jokes to develop a humanised voice that increases relatability, and ultimately engagement. But a word of warning – do be careful as the Internet can be a very harsh place as Im sure you all already know. But seriously, people are mean.

Tactic #2: If you’ve got it, Flaunt It.

Look, we are just going to say it – there’s a lot of hot people out there. Whatever your type, it’s a universal experience to be scrolling and then suddenly stop in your tracks when a drop-dead gorgeous content creator appears on your feed (don’t try to deny it). In the world of social, we always talk about thumb-stopping visuals, and sometimes you have that right under your very own roof.

A brand that understands this better than anyone is Joe and the Juice, who utilise their ‘juicers’ in a very clever way. Don’t be afraid to make your TikTok a tiny bit of a thirst trap – it’s what the app is for.

They have a recurring ‘cast’ of employees who bring in the numbers from their sheer charisma 😉. Showing off the team also put humans front and centre of the account – which is great as users enjoy knowing that your branded content is made by humans and not corporate monsters. It’s a chance to humanise your brand and make people feel extreme FOMO.

Tactic #3: Chaos is a Ladder

If social media proves anything, it is that sense is out the window in favour of the fantastic and strange. Chaos is so hot right now. It’s worth noting that this isn’t just the case on TikTok – from those weird Gen Z memes to the short 3 second videos on ‘stan twitter’, nothing makes sense anymore and that’s okay. Embrace the chaos.

It’s fairly obvious who we are going to use as an example here: the famous Duolingo. Found at the top of every ‘best TikTok’s’ list last year and universally enamoured due to its wacky output, Duolingo shows how embracing the fast-paced and non-sensical nature of social media has the potential to skyrocket brands into TikTok stardom.

We are not sure there is much point in dissecting these TikToks, they kind of speak for themselves:

#Tactic #4: Find the micro-trends, make them your own.

Remember Sylvanian families? Those cute mice, and other rodents, in frilly dresses and victorian dollhouses? Well, TikTok did its usual magic and created a micro-trend around the toys having all kinds of Kardashian-esque drama. It was strange, to say the least.

Not many brands jumped onto this trend – because it was niche, short and snappy and ultimately – very very strange. However, it can be rewarding to hop onto these niche smaller trends. Companies like Duolingo and Ryanair are often very quick (and successful) to utilise globally trending sounds/topics. So searching for smaller microtrends can be a very useful tactic.

Being part of a smaller number of brands that utilise smaller user driven trends for themselves will sometimes increase your engagement a bit more than being the 10,000 brands to post a ‘things that just make sense’ TikTok – although there are pros and cons to both. In fact, the best bet is to try a bit of both. This is something British streetwear brand Lazy Oaf do well – for example utilising the Sylvanian Families trend to mirror work party drama (produced by the user who started the trend):

Tactic #5: Teach something new!

Yes, our Mums always used to say if we spent too long staring at the screen our eyes would turn square and our brains would rot. And sure, staring at TikTok for hours can lead you into some sort of weird dissociative state, but there is also more to TikTok than watching dolls beef or someone prancing around in a giant bird costume.

People (and brands) often forget that social media is the perfect platform for knowledge sharing – and this can hook people in on a timeline saturated to the brim with memes and trend-driven content.

Sometimes it is worth taking a step back and thinking about what specialist knowledge you have to offer such a space. For example, it’s worth taking inspiration from The Washington Post’s TikTok which very cleverly breaks down complex things such as geopolitical conflict or the findings of the coveted Sue Gray report.

Whilst we are not advocating for your brand’s TikTok to become a space to talk about topics such as these, the style of content produced could easily be remixed and fit snugly into your brand’s expertise – whether that be cars, chocolate or cereal. Everyone has some sort of knowledge to share that the TikTok userbase will find interesting.

Tactic #6: All of the above.

You have caught us – we have saved the best TikTok account until last so you read the whole blog post. We are serious about TikTok, and with our team of in house experts, we make sure we practice what we preach (no hypocrites here).

By utilising our amazing (and charismatic 😉) team, advocating for creative chaos and teaching easy/accessible TikTok tricks – Spin’s TikTok account truly is our magnum opus. Don’t be afraid – go have a look.

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Can brands promote healthier social habits without killing performance?

Whether it’s screen timers, ‘dumbphones’ or digital detoxes, the search for healthy social media habits is rising as people try to put firmer boundaries around their attention.

In 2025, the average person spends 2h 41m on social every single day. It’s high for Gen Z at 3 hours.

But let’s get one thing clear: social itself isn’t the problem and healthier habits aren’t just a user issue. Brands also have a role to play in shaping the environments they show up in, and that comes with responsibility.

The social challenge for responsible brands

Social platforms are designed to keep people scrolling. The more they lock in, the more valuable their attention becomes.

But attention isn’t endless. When feeds become overwhelming, users don’t engage as deeply. They disengage, scroll faster and retain less – technically active but mentally elsewhere. And as the quality of attention drops, performance follows.

If your social media strategy relies on addictive mechanics, artificial urgency or relentless posting, you may inflate short-term metrics but long-term impact will suffer.

This creates a strategic tension: how do you maintain performance without contributing to burnout?

What do ‘healthy social habits’ mean for brands?

Healthy social is about earning attention through value rather than volume. It’s about building relationships with your audience that feel intentional, not intrusive.

In practice, healthy social media habits include:

  • Creating content that justifies the time spent
  • Posting at the right time instead of flooding feeds
  • Optimising for depth of engagement over frequency
  • Delivering faster value per impression
  • Using social to amplify real-world activity

Social should strengthen communities and support offline connection, not just fuel consumption. A clear community strategy matters here. Healthy social habits are reinforced when brands create spaces for dialogue, not just distribution.

For audiences, healthy habits are rooted in control. Digital detoxes are real. Screen time is down 14% year-over-year.

That is, choosing when to engage rather than being pulled into an endless scroll. This looks like:

  • Setting time boundaries
  • Reducing passive consumption
  • Choosing content that delivers clear value
  • Seeking out connection rather than comparison
  • Logging off without FOMO

Used intentionally, social builds connection. Used excessively, it erodes attention.

The Spin perspective: sustainable performance is not a unicorn

You might think reducing posting volume or stepping away from addictive mechanics will hurt performance. Done properly, it strengthens it.

Sustainable performance isn’t about doing less. It’s about doing it better. Adding value.

In practice, this means:

  1. Earning attention fast: You don’t need your audience for 10 minutes. You need them for three seconds, done properly. Stop the scroll with creative that delivers immediate value.
  2. Posting strategically, not relentlessly: More content doesn’t automatically mean more growth. Smarter scheduling, sharper creative and clearer messaging outperform volume for volume’s sake.
  3. Working with platforms intelligently: Test high-impact formats, optimise for intent-led discovery and cut wasted spend. Use the system without feeding the worst parts of it.
  4. Building beyond the feed: Offline events, real-world community building and slower formats, like newsletters or long-form storytelling, create connection without contributing to endless scroll.

At Spin, we focus on quality of attention over quantity of impressions. We know your audience. Know when they’re ready to buy. Where they’re scrolling. And how to cut through the noise.

Targeting younger audiences responsibly

Brands must acknowledge that some of the users engaging with their posts will be young and impressionable.

The conversation around healthy social media habits for teens is growing, and brands targeting Gen Z and Alpha can’t ignore it.

Because that audience isn’t ignoring it. Nearly half of all teens believe socials have a negative effect.

Responsible social means creating content that connects without exploiting anxiety or insecurity. It requires being conscious of the messages and behaviours you reinforce.

If your creative leans heavily on comparison, artificial urgency or aspirational pressure, it doesn’t just drive engagement; it shapes behaviour. Messaging, imagery and ad mechanics all play a role in setting social norms.

Brands that take this seriously build stronger trust over time.

The commercial case for healthier social

Healthier social strategies improve the quality of attention. When audiences aren’t fatigued, they engage intentionally. That improves signal strength, sharpens optimisation and stabilises long-term performance.

Commercially, this means:

  • More efficient media spend
  • Stronger signal quality for platform optimisation
  • Higher-quality engagement, not just higher volume
  • Improved brand recall and consideration
  • More resilient long-term ROI

The new social contract

When brands move from volume to value, from urgency to clarity and from consumption to connection, performance becomes more resilient.

The brands that thrive will be the ones that respect attention and make every second count. Not endless scroll. Not constant noise. Just attention earned.

Ready to take a spin?

We build culture-first creative that’s made for discovery and intent, backed by community and platform insights that go deeper than vanity metrics.

1 https://sqmagazine.co.uk/social-media-screen-time-statistics

2 https://unplugwell.com/digital-detox-2025-statistics-trends

3 https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2025/04/22/teens-social-media-and-mental-health

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Spin’s 2026 Social Predictions

1. Human-made content becomes a quality signal

AI slop is everywhere. In 2026, it will continue to rise. With more AI content flooding socials, originality will become rare and more valuable than ever.

Human-led content will become a marker of trust, true craftsmanship, and creative intent. Audiences will favour brands that communicate with human clarity over corporate polish.

Maria Rubio, Marketing Manager, Spin

“2026 is the year we see a massive premium placed on unscalable, messy, human context. While everyone else is trying to automate their output, the smartest brands will double down on the things AI can’t do: opinion, personality, and a distinct point of view. We’re moving from an era of ‘polished perfection' to 'verified reality.’”

Harry Morton, Founder, Lower Street

“In 2026, the corporate voice on social media will disappear. Even B2B companies are realising that people aren't interested in polite, scripted language. The more human the brand sounds, the longer people engage.”

What this means:
Perfectly polished content is losing its shine. Above all, people want personality and honesty. Imperfection will become a trust cue, proving that a human was involved.

2. Trust in communities overtakes creators

Trust is decentralising. Instead of following influencers, people are following conversations in Reddit threads, Discord servers, and niche Substack comments.

Audiences aren’t looking for a single voice of authority. They want many honest opinions. These spaces are already shaping purchase decisions before users reach your site or socials.

Lucy Allen, Comms Director, Spin

“Reddit’s raw, human conversations are becoming the place people trust for real answers. From skincare and parenting to sport and money, users want opinions from people like them - not algorithms.”

Vaibhav Kakkar, CEO, Digital Web Solutions

“Communities will evolve into trusted spaces where people share knowledge and support one another. Members will value honest conversations that feel real and personal. Their trust will rest more on shared experiences than on traditional influencer voices.”

What this means:

Brands need to show up where conversations are already happening, not force their way in. Community contribution will beat creator partnerships for trust.

3. Social content restructures around search intent

Social behaviour is shifting away from passive scrolling towards active searching. This changes everything about how videos are edited, text is structured, and value is framed.

The ones winning will make content that signals relevance within seconds, answers questions fast, and aligns with search intent.

Adam Holdsworth, Senior Video Editor, Spin

“With TikTok now the go-to search engine for Gen Z and Alpha, the goal isn't necessarily interruption anymore. It's information. 

“The way we edit needs to shift - from passive scrolling to active intent. Because if your video doesn't immediately signal it answers someone's search query, the algorithm won't just scroll past it. It'll bury it.”

What this means:
Your creative needs to signal value immediately. Structure content like mini-articles, with front-loaded answers in the first three seconds, not entertainment clips.

4. Creator power decentralises

Influence belongs to those with the most credibility, not followers. Audiences trust those who feel closest to the product, whether that’s employees, superfans or micro-experts.

UGC shouldn’t be an afterthought. It’s a strategic tool. In 2026, UGC should be incorporated into your media strategy to tell your brand story.

Julian Thomas, Senior Content Creator, Spin

 “Content creation is becoming a universal job requirement. Moving beyond occasional TikTok cameos, employees across all departments will become formal brand representatives on platforms like LinkedIn and through other media. SheerLuxe is a great example of this, turning an entire workforce into a recognisable media personality.”

Himanshu Agarwal, Co-Founder, Zenius, which provides social media VAs.

“Social media marketing will be less about discovery and more about brand reliability and social proof. So, experts and micro-influencers could become more common than generic influencers. Their responsibility will shift from reviewing products to promoting transparency and building customer trust for the brand.”

Janelle Warner, Co-director, Born Social

“Brands will start paying their most engaged followers. This will go beyond typical influencer marketing and become a standard practice. Low organic reach and ad fatigue are the main issues. Consumers put more stock in suggestions made by actual people than in professionally produced ads.”

What this means:
Your most valuable creators already exist inside and around your brand. Give them the platform and freedom to create with credibility.

5. Social becomes multi-sensory storytelling

Short video isn’t going anywhere, but formats are diversifying fast. Audiences want smoother, more relaxed learning experiences, not single-format posts. In 2026, platforms will reward multi-format journeys where audio, video, text, and interactive elements work together.

Sahil Kakkar, CEO / Founder, RankWatch

“Social media in 2026 will grow into a multi-sensory space where audio, video and interactive elements work together. Creators will design content that feels easy to follow and supports learning in a more relaxed manner. Audiences will look for smoother shifts between watching, asking and purchasing as they move through online experiences.”

What this means:
Posts will stop being ‘posts’. Carousels and other static formats will evolve into richer mixed-media formats. Brands need stories that feel fluid, responsive, and immersive.

6. AI becomes invisible infrastructure

This year, AI won’t just impact the content audiences see, but the systems that create, adapt and personalise it behind the scenes.

From real-time creative adaptation to AI-assisted planning, social teams will rely on AI as the engine that accelerates decisions and optimises output.

Pratik Singh Raguwanshi, Team Leader Digital Experience, CISIN

“In 2026, the biggest shift will be real-time creative adaptation. Social platforms will let brands auto-generate multiple versions of a post and adapt them live based on how different micro-audiences respond. Instead of A/B testing after the fact, the content will reshape itself as performance data comes in.”

Colton De Vos, Marketing Specialist, Resolute Technology Solutions, a Managed Service Provider in Winnipeg.

“Proactive brand reputation management will become non-negotiable for businesses on social media. Companies that rely on reactive approaches will struggle as consumers increasingly make decisions based on real-time reviews, mentions, and sentiment across platforms.”

What this means:
AI will underpin social strategy. Not necessarily creating content but orchestrating it intelligently at speed.

What does this mean for your 2026 strategy?

2026 rewards relevance over reach, authenticity over perfection, and responsiveness over rigidity.

You should:

  • Build content that answers questions, not just grabs attention
  • Design creative for intent, not just impressions
  • Prioritise community engagement and shared spaces
  • Enable employees and superfans to tell your brand story
  • Use AI to speed decisions, not replace your voice

How Spin can help

We build culture-first creative that’s made for discovery and intent, backed by community and platform insights that go deeper than vanity metrics.

If 2026 is the year you want social to actually perform, let’s talk.

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The Relevance Stack

Social relevance isn't about posting more. (Though everyone seems to think it is.)

It's about building real bonds with your audience. The kind of connections that earn attention, drive brand love, and get people to engage and act.

The Relevance Stack is how we measure and build that relevance. It's three parts that work together to give you a clear picture of where you stand, what's working, and how to create content that truly makes an impact for your brand.

Let's break it down.

The R-Score

Think of this as your social report card. One number that shows exactly where your brand stands and where it needs to go next.

This isn't some vanity metric. It's a proper measurement that combines the stuff that actually matters:

  • Social channel data: Your follower growth, engagement rates, all the performance basics 
  • AI content scoring: How good your content really is (and whether your audience cares) 
  • Audience relevance surveys: The real test - what your ideal customers think

It's like a fitness tracker for your brand. Shows you your current health, tracks progress over time, and tells you exactly where to push harder. Think a WHOOP but for brands. 

Relevance Hub

Let's be honest: no one wants to engage with brands that just don't get it or feel tone-deaf.

Understanding your audience properly is everything. The Relevance Hub is your weekly brief on what actually matters right now:

  • The trends that count (not just the ones everyone's talking about)
  • Global culture tracking
  • Cross-sector industry moves
  • Social listening analysis that goes deeper than keyword mentions
  • Platform updates that will actually affect your strategy

If the R-Score is your fitness tracker, the Relevance Hub is your personal trainer: keeping you sharp on the latest moves each week.

Creative Relevance Framework

Shouting into the void with content nobody cares about? Definitely not a strategy.

The Creative Relevance Framework organizes your content into three pillars, combining their efforts into real results:

  1. Showcasing the brand: Brand-led messaging, but made for social (not adapted for it)
  2. Joining existing conversations: Meeting your audience where they already are, through trends, moments, and cultural references that make sense specifically to them
  3. Making new moments: Creating original content that sparks fresh conversations and gets people talking

These three pillars help brands deliver content that feels authentic, timely, and impactful. To finish the fitness analogy: this is your workout plan, making sure every rep you do really counts for the broader goal.

Why The Relevance Stack Matters

Here's the truth: Relevance drives attention. Attention builds trust. Trust fuels growth.

The Relevance Stack is your three-part plan to nail all of that:

  1. A clear benchmark of where you stand right now
  2. Real-time insights into what your audience genuinely cares about
  3. A strategic framework for content that resonates instead of just existing

What this will give you is a social presence that stops people from scrolling, building genuine attachment to the brand, and delivering business results you can point to directly. 

Ready to Get Relevant?

We've built the tools. We'd love to help your brand build something that matters to your audience and to you.

Want to see how relevant your brand really is? Let's talk.

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