I recently hopped a six-hour flight from Lagos to attend my very first international conference: SXSW London. Full disclosure — I had no idea what I was walking into.
You might know South by Southwest from its annual Austin takeover: wall-to-wall tech demos, indie film premieres, breakout music acts, and enough brand activations to fill a small city. Since launching in 1987, it’s become synonymous with creative experimentation and culture-shaping ideas.
This year, the organizers packed that same energy into the London neighborhoods of Shoreditch and Hoxton for the festival’s first-ever European edition earlier in June.
I went in with two simple goals:
The reality was a bit more nuanced. Queues fo rsessions snaked around the block, venue-hopping required a crash course in the London transportation system, and I definitely missed more sessions than I attended.
But the rooms I did squeeze into delivered deep-dive panels on the future of AI, brutally honest talks about pay for creators, and conversations that rewired how I think about content creation and career longevity as a marketer.
My main takeaway? The creator economy isn't just about influencers anymore. It's about anyone using the internet to make their work visible, build an audience, and create sustainable income streams. If you've ever posted about your expertise, pitched yourself via LinkedIn, or wondered how to turn your knowledge into revenue, these insights are for you.
1. Audiences crave presence over polish — and your "rough drafts" might be your best contentAudiences tend to scroll past perfect, studio-level posts and stop on anything that feels real and in-the-moment.
"People don’t open Instagram looking for a billboard — they’re looking for someone to hang out with." — Charlotte Stavrou, SevenSix AgencyIf you’re a creator
If you’re a brand
Share one unpolished “work-in-progress” clip this week. Track saves, shares, and meaningful comments for seven days, then compare with your last polished upload.
2. Brands want authenticity but need better ways to measure itPanelists pointed out that brands love the word authentic yet still judge a campaign by follower count and double-taps.
"Creators will deliver when there’s a single bull’s-eye, but if the brief says, ‘Mention us in the first 30 seconds, stay 100% authentic, go viral and drive all the week-one sales,’ you’ve given us four different targets — and nobody hits a bull’s-eye on four targets at once.” — Callux, YouTuberIf you’re a creator
If you’re a brand
Pull up your last sponsored post. Categorise the first 20 comments into:
If Category 1 dominates, your next partnership needs a warmer build-up—or clearer metrics—before anyone calls it a win.
3. Virality is nice, but trust is what sticksQuick wins feel good, but long-term trust is the real growth engine.
“Audiences want to support creators, absolutely, but they need to feel it’s real.”— Max Fosh, YouTuber.If you’re a creator
If you’re a brand
For your next partnership, run it as a two-step sequence:
Compare meaningful replies (questions, purchase intent) to your last one-and-done ad. A deeper thread means you’re building trust, not just traffic.
4. AI won’t take your job — but it will change how you do itAI popped up in almost every session, yet the consensus stayed grounded: the tech removes friction; it doesn’t replace the creator.
“AI can make you faster; it just can’t make you you.” — David Page, Founder at ViewtureIf you’re a creator
If you’re a brand
Pick one repetitive task — say, 60-second captions.
If the post lands the same (or better) and you saved 15 minutes, keep the tool; if the captions feel off-brand, scrap it. You want to be more efficient and editing prompts may not be the most effective way to do that.
5. Creators are now small-business ownersToday’s successful creators think like founders, not freelancers.
“You’re not hiring a person for one post, you’re partnering with a company.” — Liam Parkinson, Co-Founder at inflverseIf you’re a creator
If you’re a brand
Longevity comes from building routines that make posting predictable and protect creative energy.
“A good system beats a good mood. If I only created when motivated, I’d publish once a month.” — Max FoshIf you’re a creator
If you’re a brand
On your next post, time each step from idea to publish. Build a mini-checklist in Notion or Google Docs, then follow it on the next piece. If you cut even 20 % off the total time, lock that checklist in as your new standard operating procedure.
Your next post could be your best one yetSXSW London was a reminder that no one — creators or brands — needs more pressure to post. What we need are sharper questions, clearer systems, and better signals for what’s actually working.
Whether you’re a creator rethinking success metrics or a marketer experimenting with new partnership formats, the smartest moves aren’t always the flashiest. They’re the ones that make it easier to keep going.
Whether it’s rethinking how you measure success, experimenting with new formats, or finally building a workflow that protects your energy — the best moves aren’t always the flashiest. They’re the ones who make it easier to keep going.
If you’re feeling inspired to try something new after reading this, here are a few quick experiments to kickstart your next post:
And if you’ve already tried something from this list — or plan to — I’d love to hear how it went. You can find me on Threads, or come say hi in the Buffer Discord.
Remember: your next post doesn’t need to be perfect — it just needs to move you forward.
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