The Shift to User-Prioritized Feeds
In early July, Facebook rolls out its new “See First” feature, giving users control over which friends and Pages appear at the top of their News Feed. For brands, this is a wake-up call: content must now earn its spot. Users no longer rely solely on algorithms—now they’re curating feeds themselves.
This development forces marketers to shift from pure reach strategies to value-based engagement. The question isn’t just how many people you reach—it’s whether your content is worth being seen first.
Twitter Doubles Down on Real-Time Discovery
Twitter’s Project Lightning is publicly revealed in late June, setting the stage for curated, live-event timelines. This effort, now known internally as “Moments,” signals Twitter’s commitment to real-time storytelling. Users will soon be able to follow events like the Women’s World Cup, breaking news, or award shows—without needing to follow specific accounts.
The shift from follower-dependent feeds to curated moments opens new doors for event marketers and journalists. It also forces brands to think visually and topically—being part of a conversation in the moment, not after the fact.
LinkedIn Doubles Down on B2B Lead Targeting
In late June, LinkedIn quietly expands its Lead Accelerator platform. This tool allows marketers to nurture anonymous web visitors with targeted ads and track multi-touch conversion journeys. The connection between content, social identity, and buyer intent is finally maturing.
With the right content and sequence, a visitor who reads a blog post today may convert into a client in weeks—without ever filling out a form.
Strategic Insight: You’re Not Just Publishing—You’re Proving Value
• What’s your story? You’re a brand that values trust, relevance, and timing. You meet users where they are.
• What do you solve? The content overload problem. Your goal is to be worthy of the ‘See First’ click.
• How do you do it? You publish rich, helpful content—delivered at the right time, using curated tools and real-time storytelling formats.
• Why do they care? Because attention is currency. When users curate their feeds, only the most trusted, relevant brands survive.
Fictional Ideas
Jonathan runs a niche consulting firm for logistics companies. Instead of flooding his LinkedIn with promotions, he publishes one highly visual SlideShare deck on ‘3 Mistakes in Freight Contracting.’ He runs a Twitter thread during the logistics conference using #SmartFreight and appears in a Project Lightning event timeline.
His SlideShare lands him in LinkedIn’s Lead Accelerator retargeting stream. The next week, a VP downloads a full whitepaper. By the end of the month, they’re on a discovery call.
He didn’t push. He proved.
References
Facebook Newsroom. (2015). See More of What You Love. https://about.fb.com/news/2015/07/see-more-of-what-you-love/
BuzzFeed News. (2015). Twitter Is Planning to Go Beyond the Timeline. https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/mat Honan/twitter-lightning
LinkedIn Marketing Solutions. (2015). What Is Lead Accelerator? https://business.linkedin.com/marketing-solutions/blog/linkedin-products/2015/what-is-lead-accelerator
MarketingLand. (2015). Twitter To Launch Project Lightning For Live Event Curation. https://marketingland.com/twitter-project-lightning-132843
TechCrunch. (2015). Facebook’s See First Lets Users Prioritize Updates From Friends And Pages. https://techcrunch.com/2015/07/09/facebook-see-first/
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