Crafting a Mission-Driven

Social Media Strategy

Katie Wight | March 6, 2023

Focus on storytelling

Stop focusing on production value  

Pillar #1: Reflecting your audience’s aspirations.

Let’s take snowboarding as an example. You could show someone covered in snow, smiling after their favorite run, or a group of friends on a lift. This is getting people to see themselves in what you’re offering — and it doesn’t have to be perfectly shot or edited images, either.

Pillar #2: Showcasing the product.

In the snowboard example, we’d have pictures of the snowboards the brand offers, the gear, testimonials, etc. Even go far as to show the texture of the board or the material of the goggles. I’d recommend a little higher production value here so you can get into the details.

Pillar #3: Establishing value and credibility.

This is where that storytelling comes in. You can play the long game and show what you stand for. As a snowboard brand, for example, it’s about your mission to get everyone to feel that fresh powder on their face or how your American-made boards open new opportunities for manufacturing jobs.

This is where UGC, video, and real, raw posts shine.

With mission-driven brands, it’s more important to give people a peek behind the curtain, to showcase the humans behind the brand, and to avoid the vanity bullshit that is the social media industry.

So again, let’s focus on quality, not production.

And listen — no one, not a single person, is expecting your brand the most polished or put together. What they actually want to see are the real ins and out of why you do what you do, and to feel like they’re connected to what you’re doing.

That’s it. No ring lights or video editor required.

Drive small actions first

Focus on engagements and conversations

Create a social media strategy that drives results (while supporting your mission)