Social & Influencers

Brands are getting creative with being real

The app prohibits advertising, but some brands are still using BeReal’s trendiness to their advantage.
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Illustration: Dianna “Mick” McDougall, Photos: Sour Patch Kids, Trident Gum

· less than 3 min read

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Imagine Snapchat with no filters and the rawness of Twitter rolled into one. Now, add a two-minute time limit to the single post allowed per day—that’s BeReal.

How it works: Users have two minutes to upload a front-facing and back-facing photo after receiving a notification prompting them to post, and photos posted after the window are marked “late,” which other users can see.

BeReal has skyrocketed this year, reaching 3.3 million downloads globally in Q1 of this year, a 390% jump from Q4 of 2021, according to data.ai. It sits in the No. 1 spot for free apps in Apple’s App Store.

BeReal champions steering away from influencer culture and prohibits advertising, but some brands have gotten creative, especially with real-time posts.

  • Chipotle has posted promo codes for free entrées (which were gone in about 30 minutes the first day and subsequently ran out almost immediately) to its then-2,000 friends on the app, its director of social and influencer told Retail Brew in May, though its following there pales in comparison to its 1.1 million followers on Instagram and 1.7 million TikTok followers.
  • Trident, PacSun, and Love Island, among other brands, have hopped on the trend of posting BeReal-style photos to Twitter.

Why it’s growing

  • Its signature two-minute time limit is similar to the formats other popular apps have used. “A creative constraint is essential—think Twitter’s 140 characters, or Vine’s six-second loops—and BeReal’s two-minute countdown timer has inspired similar ingenuity,” according to Platformer.
  • Its popularity among college students and young adults is likely a result of Gen Z’s interest in authenticity on social media and the app’s campus-ambassador program.

Though brands can’t have a formal presence on the app through advertisements, “posting behind-the-scenes snapshots from meetings, shoots, or everyday office life can help customers view the brand in a different light,” according to Amber Coleman, a new business manager at luxury digital marketing agency Verb Brands.

Zoom out: BeReal joins a growing trend of authenticity on social media, like “Insta casual.” Other apps, like Poparazzi, eliminate the ability to take selfies entirely. Time will tell whether brands can keep up with Be(ing)Real.—MB

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