Something has changed in how people buy. It didn’t happen overnight, but the evidence of this change is everywhere. A scroll through any platform confirms it: consumers trust strangers more than they trust brands. That trust is the foundation of user-generated content, and understanding it is now part of the job description for anyone serious about growth.
The most effective content often costs nothing to produce. It comes from customers. It works because it is real, or at least feels that way, and in marketing, those two things are becoming the same.
The Numbers Behind the Shift
UGC isn’t new. Reviews, testimonials, and word of mouth have always existed. What changed is the bandwidth and scale. Social media provides every customer with a broadcast. A single post from a satisfied buyer can touch thousands before the brand even knows it was written. A negative one travels further and faster.
Studies consistently show that consumers find UGC significantly more influential than brand-produced content when making purchasing decisions. That gap has widened as audiences have grown more sceptical of polished advertising. The more effort a brand appears to have put into its message, the more consumers question it.
Audiences have been marketed to for long enough to know what it feels like. Social proof has always guided buying decisions. What’s different now is the speed at which it travels and the scale at which it operates. Ask any TikTok marketing company worth working with, and they’ll probably say the same thing.
Why Polished Content Is Not Enough Anymore
There’s inherently nothing wrong with professionally produced creative. A thought-out, thorough campaign still has a place. But when every brand in a category is producing high-quality video, striking imagery, and overwritten copy, none of it leads to an impact. Polished becomes the norm. It stops being a differentiator.
UGC does something different. It introduces imperfection. A real customer, with a real reaction to a real product, adds a texture that no studio shoot can replicate. The lighting might be terrible. The framing might be slightly off. None of that matters if the person on screen is genuine.
Trust, Authenticity, and the Distance Between Them
Authenticity is a word that gets used endlessly. But in marketing, it has a specific effect. When a customer sees content from another customer, the psychological distance between brand and buyer disappears. There’s no commercial barrier. No incentive to oversell. Just one person showing another person something they found useful, enjoyable, or worth sharing.
That’s extremely difficult to manufacture and incredibly easy to destroy. Brands that have attempted to fake UGC, by commissioning content designed to look organic while obscuring the relationship, have paid for it in trust. Audiences are smarter than most marketers give them credit for. The distinction between genuine and performative is not subtle to someone who spends hours a day consuming social content.
Incorporating UGC Into Brand Strategy
The practical challenge for most businesses is not finding UGC; it’s using it. For any brand with an active customer base, content already exists. The challenge is making use of it.
That starts with building the conditions for it. Customers share more when they feel seen. Brands that acknowledge, celebrate, and republish customer content send a clear signal: this matters to us. That signal encourages more of the same. It creates a loop where genuine advocacy becomes part of the customer experience itself.
The Cost Argument and Its Limits
UGC is sometimes framed as a cost-saving option. That framing is only half the truth. It’s incomplete. Yes, customer-created content reduces production costs. Yes, it can scale a content library without equivalent investment. These are real benefits.
But the greater argument is effectiveness. Brands don’t scribble UGC strategies because they’re cheap. They adopt them because they work. Cost efficiency is a consequence, not a cause. Conflating the two leads to programmes that prioritise volume over quality, which defeats the purpose.
The goal is content that resonates with an audience. Sometimes that means commissioning creators. Sometimes it means curating and amplifying what already exists. Often, it means both, running in parallel, each serving a different function within the same strategy.
A Question Worth Sitting With
Most brands already have customers who care. Some of them are already talking. The question worth asking is not whether UGC belongs in a marketing strategy. For most businesses, it already does, whether intentionally or not.
The more helpful question is whether it is being looked at seriously. Whether the conditions exist to encourage it. Whether the right processes are in place to use it well.
Getting that right is not complicated. But it does require strategic thought, a sensible strategy, and, more often than not, someone who has done it before. The brands doing UGC well are not doing so by accident.













