{“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”OpenAI flipped ChatGPT ads from impressions to cost-per-click this month. The minimum spend dropped from $250,000 to $50,000. Bids are landing at $3–$5 per click.\n\nThat’s a real change. It’s also not the headline a small ecommerce brand should chase.\n\nHere’s what actually shifted, and what to do with it.\n\n## What changed, and why\n\nThe original ChatGPT ad model was CPM-based. OpenAI charged a $60 CPM at launch in February. By April, average CPMs had eroded to $25 in some categories. CPM only works when you can sell the volume — and the volume hasn’t materialized at OpenAI’s preferred price. CPC is the natural pivot when impression demand is soft but advertiser interest is real.\n\nTranslation: OpenAI is repricing because the original price didn’t hold. That’s a normal part of a new ad surface maturing — but it’s also a signal that the channel is still figuring out its own value.\n\n## Who should pay attention\n\nCategories where users actively ask ChatGPT for a recommendation:\n\n- B2B software and services\n- Supplements and specialty health\n- Travel and lodging\n- Professional services (legal, financial, agencies, accounting)\n- High-consideration durable goods\n\nThese are users in active discovery mode. A clean answer from a sponsored result has a real chance of converting.\n\n## Who should skip it for now\n\nMid-funnel impulse-buy ecommerce: apparel, home goods, beauty, food. The ChatGPT user isn’t asking \”which $40 sweater should I buy\” — they’re asking \”what’s a good neutral wardrobe for a remote worker.\” That’s a content question, not a transaction. The intent gap will eat your CAC alive.\n\nSame goes for any product that wins at the bottom of the funnel on Meta or Google’s shopping surfaces. ChatGPT isn’t a substitute for those. It’s a different funnel stage entirely.\n\n## What $50,000 actually buys\n\nAt $3–$5 per click, $50,000 is 10,000–16,500 clicks. For a B2B service averaging 2% conversion to a qualified lead, that’s 200–330 leads. At a 10% close rate, 20–33 closed deals.\n\nWhether that pencils depends on your average customer LTV. We won’t run a ChatGPT pilot for any client whose modeled LTV is below ~$3,000 — the math doesn’t work below that line, even on the high end. The minimum is still a real barrier.\n\n## The bigger pattern\n\nEvery major AI lab is becoming an ad network. OpenAI just made the most public move; Perplexity, Anthropic-adjacent search wrappers, and Google’s AI Overviews are all monetizing answer surfaces in parallel.\n\nThe brands that win this cycle won’t be the ones who buy every new surface on launch day. They’ll be the ones who:\n\n1. Lock down branded search and retargeting first, on every channel that matters\n2. Pick one new AI surface per quarter to pilot at 5% of paid budget\n3. Have an attribution model they trust enough to actually kill underperforming spend\n\nWe’re watching ChatGPT closely. We’re piloting it for one B2B client this quarter. We’re not recommending it to our ecommerce clients yet.\n\nWhen that changes, you’ll see it here first — with the actual numbers.\n\nIf you’re trying to figure out where ChatGPT ads (or any new AI surface) fits in your stack, get a free analysis at “,”link”:null},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”OpenAI flipped ChatGPT ads from impressions to cost-per-click this month. The minimum spend dropped from $250,000 to $50,000. Bids are landing at $3–$5 per click.\n\nThat’s a real change. It’s also not the headline a small ecommerce brand should chase.\n\nHere’s what actually shifted, and what to do with it.\n\n## What changed, and why\n\nThe original ChatGPT ad model was CPM-based. OpenAI charged a $60 CPM at launch in February. By April, average CPMs had eroded to $25 in some categories. CPM only works when you can sell the volume — and the volume hasn’t materialized at OpenAI’s preferred price. CPC is the natural pivot when impression demand is soft but advertiser interest is real.\n\nTranslation: OpenAI is repricing because the original price didn’t hold. That’s a normal part of a new ad surface maturing — but it’s also a signal that the channel is still figuring out its own value.\n\n## Who should pay attention\n\nCategories where users actively ask ChatGPT for a recommendation:\n\n- B2B software and services\n- Supplements and specialty health\n- Travel and lodging\n- Professional services (legal, financial, agencies, accounting)\n- High-consideration durable goods\n\nThese are users in active discovery mode. A clean answer from a sponsored result has a real chance of converting.\n\n## Who should skip it for now\n\nMid-funnel impulse-buy ecommerce: apparel, home goods, beauty, food. The ChatGPT user isn’t asking \”which $40 sweater should I buy\” — they’re asking \”what’s a good neutral wardrobe for a remote worker.\” That’s a content question, not a transaction. The intent gap will eat your CAC alive.\n\nSame goes for any product that wins at the bottom of the funnel on Meta or Google’s shopping surfaces. ChatGPT isn’t a substitute for those. It’s a different funnel stage entirely.\n\n## What $50,000 actually buys\n\nAt $3–$5 per click, $50,000 is 10,000–16,500 clicks. For a B2B service averaging 2% conversion to a qualified lead, that’s 200–330 leads. At a 10% close rate, 20–33 closed deals.\n\nWhether that pencils depends on your average customer LTV. We won’t run a ChatGPT pilot for any client whose modeled LTV is below ~$3,000 — the math doesn’t work below that line, even on the high end. The minimum is still a real barrier.\n\n## The bigger pattern\n\nEvery major AI lab is becoming an ad network. OpenAI just made the most public move; Perplexity, Anthropic-adjacent search wrappers, and Google’s AI Overviews are all monetizing answer surfaces in parallel.\n\nThe brands that win this cycle won’t be the ones who buy every new surface on launch day. They’ll be the ones who:\n\n1. Lock down branded search and retargeting first, on every channel that matters\n2. Pick one new AI surface per quarter to pilot at 5% of paid budget\n3. Have an attribution model they trust enough to actually kill underperforming spend\n\nWe’re watching ChatGPT closely. We’re piloting it for one B2B client this quarter. We’re not recommending it to our ecommerce clients yet.\n\nWhen that changes, you’ll see it here first — with the actual numbers.\n\nIf you’re trying to figure out where ChatGPT ads (or any new AI surface) fits in your stack, get a free analysis at “,”href”:null}, {“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”camisadomarketing.com”,”link”:{“url”:”http://camisadomarketing.com/”}},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”camisadomarketing.com”,”href”:”http://camisadomarketing.com/”}, {“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”. We’ll tell you when it’s worth your money and when it isn’t.”,”link”:null},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”. We’ll tell you when it’s worth your money and when it isn’t.”,”href”:null}
Month: April 2026
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{“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”OpenAI flipped ChatGPT ads from impressions to cost-per-click this month. The minimum spend dropped from $250,000 to $50,000. Bids are landing at $3–$5 per click.\n\nThat’s a real change. It’s also not the headline a small ecommerce brand should chase.\n\nHere’s what actually shifted, and what to do with it.\n\n## What changed, and why\n\nThe original ChatGPT ad model was CPM-based. OpenAI charged a $60 CPM at launch in February. By April, average CPMs had eroded to $25 in some categories. CPM only works when you can sell the volume — and the volume hasn’t materialized at OpenAI’s preferred price. CPC is the natural pivot when impression demand is soft but advertiser interest is real.\n\nTranslation: OpenAI is repricing because the original price didn’t hold. That’s a normal part of a new ad surface maturing — but it’s also a signal that the channel is still figuring out its own value.\n\n## Who should pay attention\n\nCategories where users actively ask ChatGPT for a recommendation:\n\n- B2B software and services\n- Supplements and specialty health\n- Travel and lodging\n- Professional services (legal, financial, agencies, accounting)\n- High-consideration durable goods\n\nThese are users in active discovery mode. A clean answer from a sponsored result has a real chance of converting.\n\n## Who should skip it for now\n\nMid-funnel impulse-buy ecommerce: apparel, home goods, beauty, food. The ChatGPT user isn’t asking \”which $40 sweater should I buy\” — they’re asking \”what’s a good neutral wardrobe for a remote worker.\” That’s a content question, not a transaction. The intent gap will eat your CAC alive.\n\nSame goes for any product that wins at the bottom of the funnel on Meta or Google’s shopping surfaces. ChatGPT isn’t a substitute for those. It’s a different funnel stage entirely.\n\n## What $50,000 actually buys\n\nAt $3–$5 per click, $50,000 is 10,000–16,500 clicks. For a B2B service averaging 2% conversion to a qualified lead, that’s 200–330 leads. At a 10% close rate, 20–33 closed deals.\n\nWhether that pencils depends on your average customer LTV. We won’t run a ChatGPT pilot for any client whose modeled LTV is below ~$3,000 — the math doesn’t work below that line, even on the high end. The minimum is still a real barrier.\n\n## The bigger pattern\n\nEvery major AI lab is becoming an ad network. OpenAI just made the most public move; Perplexity, Anthropic-adjacent search wrappers, and Google’s AI Overviews are all monetizing answer surfaces in parallel.\n\nThe brands that win this cycle won’t be the ones who buy every new surface on launch day. They’ll be the ones who:\n\n1. Lock down branded search and retargeting first, on every channel that matters\n2. Pick one new AI surface per quarter to pilot at 5% of paid budget\n3. Have an attribution model they trust enough to actually kill underperforming spend\n\nWe’re watching ChatGPT closely. We’re piloting it for one B2B client this quarter. We’re not recommending it to our ecommerce clients yet.\n\nWhen that changes, you’ll see it here first — with the actual numbers.\n\nIf you’re trying to figure out where ChatGPT ads (or any new AI surface) fits in your stack, get a free analysis at “,”link”:null},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”OpenAI flipped ChatGPT ads from impressions to cost-per-click this month. The minimum spend dropped from $250,000 to $50,000. Bids are landing at $3–$5 per click.\n\nThat’s a real change. It’s also not the headline a small ecommerce brand should chase.\n\nHere’s what actually shifted, and what to do with it.\n\n## What changed, and why\n\nThe original ChatGPT ad model was CPM-based. OpenAI charged a $60 CPM at launch in February. By April, average CPMs had eroded to $25 in some categories. CPM only works when you can sell the volume — and the volume hasn’t materialized at OpenAI’s preferred price. CPC is the natural pivot when impression demand is soft but advertiser interest is real.\n\nTranslation: OpenAI is repricing because the original price didn’t hold. That’s a normal part of a new ad surface maturing — but it’s also a signal that the channel is still figuring out its own value.\n\n## Who should pay attention\n\nCategories where users actively ask ChatGPT for a recommendation:\n\n- B2B software and services\n- Supplements and specialty health\n- Travel and lodging\n- Professional services (legal, financial, agencies, accounting)\n- High-consideration durable goods\n\nThese are users in active discovery mode. A clean answer from a sponsored result has a real chance of converting.\n\n## Who should skip it for now\n\nMid-funnel impulse-buy ecommerce: apparel, home goods, beauty, food. The ChatGPT user isn’t asking \”which $40 sweater should I buy\” — they’re asking \”what’s a good neutral wardrobe for a remote worker.\” That’s a content question, not a transaction. The intent gap will eat your CAC alive.\n\nSame goes for any product that wins at the bottom of the funnel on Meta or Google’s shopping surfaces. ChatGPT isn’t a substitute for those. It’s a different funnel stage entirely.\n\n## What $50,000 actually buys\n\nAt $3–$5 per click, $50,000 is 10,000–16,500 clicks. For a B2B service averaging 2% conversion to a qualified lead, that’s 200–330 leads. At a 10% close rate, 20–33 closed deals.\n\nWhether that pencils depends on your average customer LTV. We won’t run a ChatGPT pilot for any client whose modeled LTV is below ~$3,000 — the math doesn’t work below that line, even on the high end. The minimum is still a real barrier.\n\n## The bigger pattern\n\nEvery major AI lab is becoming an ad network. OpenAI just made the most public move; Perplexity, Anthropic-adjacent search wrappers, and Google’s AI Overviews are all monetizing answer surfaces in parallel.\n\nThe brands that win this cycle won’t be the ones who buy every new surface on launch day. They’ll be the ones who:\n\n1. Lock down branded search and retargeting first, on every channel that matters\n2. Pick one new AI surface per quarter to pilot at 5% of paid budget\n3. Have an attribution model they trust enough to actually kill underperforming spend\n\nWe’re watching ChatGPT closely. We’re piloting it for one B2B client this quarter. We’re not recommending it to our ecommerce clients yet.\n\nWhen that changes, you’ll see it here first — with the actual numbers.\n\nIf you’re trying to figure out where ChatGPT ads (or any new AI surface) fits in your stack, get a free analysis at “,”href”:null}, {“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”camisadomarketing.com”,”link”:{“url”:”http://camisadomarketing.com/”}},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”camisadomarketing.com”,”href”:”http://camisadomarketing.com/”}, {“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”. We’ll tell you when it’s worth your money and when it isn’t.”,”link”:null},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”. We’ll tell you when it’s worth your money and when it isn’t.”,”href”:null}
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{“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”OpenAI flipped ChatGPT ads from impressions to cost-per-click this month. The minimum spend dropped from $250,000 to $50,000. Bids are landing at $3–$5 per click.\n\nThat’s a real change. It’s also not the headline a small ecommerce brand should chase.\n\nHere’s what actually shifted, and what to do with it.\n\n## What changed, and why\n\nThe original ChatGPT ad model was CPM-based. OpenAI charged a $60 CPM at launch in February. By April, average CPMs had eroded to $25 in some categories. CPM only works when you can sell the volume — and the volume hasn’t materialized at OpenAI’s preferred price. CPC is the natural pivot when impression demand is soft but advertiser interest is real.\n\nTranslation: OpenAI is repricing because the original price didn’t hold. That’s a normal part of a new ad surface maturing — but it’s also a signal that the channel is still figuring out its own value.\n\n## Who should pay attention\n\nCategories where users actively ask ChatGPT for a recommendation:\n\n- B2B software and services\n- Supplements and specialty health\n- Travel and lodging\n- Professional services (legal, financial, agencies, accounting)\n- High-consideration durable goods\n\nThese are users in active discovery mode. A clean answer from a sponsored result has a real chance of converting.\n\n## Who should skip it for now\n\nMid-funnel impulse-buy ecommerce: apparel, home goods, beauty, food. The ChatGPT user isn’t asking \”which $40 sweater should I buy\” — they’re asking \”what’s a good neutral wardrobe for a remote worker.\” That’s a content question, not a transaction. The intent gap will eat your CAC alive.\n\nSame goes for any product that wins at the bottom of the funnel on Meta or Google’s shopping surfaces. ChatGPT isn’t a substitute for those. It’s a different funnel stage entirely.\n\n## What $50,000 actually buys\n\nAt $3–$5 per click, $50,000 is 10,000–16,500 clicks. For a B2B service averaging 2% conversion to a qualified lead, that’s 200–330 leads. At a 10% close rate, 20–33 closed deals.\n\nWhether that pencils depends on your average customer LTV. We won’t run a ChatGPT pilot for any client whose modeled LTV is below ~$3,000 — the math doesn’t work below that line, even on the high end. The minimum is still a real barrier.\n\n## The bigger pattern\n\nEvery major AI lab is becoming an ad network. OpenAI just made the most public move; Perplexity, Anthropic-adjacent search wrappers, and Google’s AI Overviews are all monetizing answer surfaces in parallel.\n\nThe brands that win this cycle won’t be the ones who buy every new surface on launch day. They’ll be the ones who:\n\n1. Lock down branded search and retargeting first, on every channel that matters\n2. Pick one new AI surface per quarter to pilot at 5% of paid budget\n3. Have an attribution model they trust enough to actually kill underperforming spend\n\nWe’re watching ChatGPT closely. We’re piloting it for one B2B client this quarter. We’re not recommending it to our ecommerce clients yet.\n\nWhen that changes, you’ll see it here first — with the actual numbers.\n\nIf you’re trying to figure out where ChatGPT ads (or any new AI surface) fits in your stack, get a free analysis at “,”link”:null},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”OpenAI flipped ChatGPT ads from impressions to cost-per-click this month. The minimum spend dropped from $250,000 to $50,000. Bids are landing at $3–$5 per click.\n\nThat’s a real change. It’s also not the headline a small ecommerce brand should chase.\n\nHere’s what actually shifted, and what to do with it.\n\n## What changed, and why\n\nThe original ChatGPT ad model was CPM-based. OpenAI charged a $60 CPM at launch in February. By April, average CPMs had eroded to $25 in some categories. CPM only works when you can sell the volume — and the volume hasn’t materialized at OpenAI’s preferred price. CPC is the natural pivot when impression demand is soft but advertiser interest is real.\n\nTranslation: OpenAI is repricing because the original price didn’t hold. That’s a normal part of a new ad surface maturing — but it’s also a signal that the channel is still figuring out its own value.\n\n## Who should pay attention\n\nCategories where users actively ask ChatGPT for a recommendation:\n\n- B2B software and services\n- Supplements and specialty health\n- Travel and lodging\n- Professional services (legal, financial, agencies, accounting)\n- High-consideration durable goods\n\nThese are users in active discovery mode. A clean answer from a sponsored result has a real chance of converting.\n\n## Who should skip it for now\n\nMid-funnel impulse-buy ecommerce: apparel, home goods, beauty, food. The ChatGPT user isn’t asking \”which $40 sweater should I buy\” — they’re asking \”what’s a good neutral wardrobe for a remote worker.\” That’s a content question, not a transaction. The intent gap will eat your CAC alive.\n\nSame goes for any product that wins at the bottom of the funnel on Meta or Google’s shopping surfaces. ChatGPT isn’t a substitute for those. It’s a different funnel stage entirely.\n\n## What $50,000 actually buys\n\nAt $3–$5 per click, $50,000 is 10,000–16,500 clicks. For a B2B service averaging 2% conversion to a qualified lead, that’s 200–330 leads. At a 10% close rate, 20–33 closed deals.\n\nWhether that pencils depends on your average customer LTV. We won’t run a ChatGPT pilot for any client whose modeled LTV is below ~$3,000 — the math doesn’t work below that line, even on the high end. The minimum is still a real barrier.\n\n## The bigger pattern\n\nEvery major AI lab is becoming an ad network. OpenAI just made the most public move; Perplexity, Anthropic-adjacent search wrappers, and Google’s AI Overviews are all monetizing answer surfaces in parallel.\n\nThe brands that win this cycle won’t be the ones who buy every new surface on launch day. They’ll be the ones who:\n\n1. Lock down branded search and retargeting first, on every channel that matters\n2. Pick one new AI surface per quarter to pilot at 5% of paid budget\n3. Have an attribution model they trust enough to actually kill underperforming spend\n\nWe’re watching ChatGPT closely. We’re piloting it for one B2B client this quarter. We’re not recommending it to our ecommerce clients yet.\n\nWhen that changes, you’ll see it here first — with the actual numbers.\n\nIf you’re trying to figure out where ChatGPT ads (or any new AI surface) fits in your stack, get a free analysis at “,”href”:null}, {“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”camisadomarketing.com”,”link”:{“url”:”http://camisadomarketing.com/”}},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”camisadomarketing.com”,”href”:”http://camisadomarketing.com/”}, {“type”:”text”,”text”:{“content”:”. We’ll tell you when it’s worth your money and when it isn’t.”,”link”:null},”annotations”:{“bold”:false,”italic”:false,”strikethrough”:false,”underline”:false,”code”:false,”color”:”default”},”plain_text”:”. We’ll tell you when it’s worth your money and when it isn’t.”,”href”:null}
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Social Media in 2026: What’s Actually Working
Social media in 2026 is unrecognizable from social media in 2022. Between algorithm rewrites, AI-generated content flooding every feed, platform consolidation, the rise of closed-loop shopping, and the quiet death of organic reach on half the networks you used to rely on — most small business owners we talk to are just exhausted. They’re posting into the void, paying for reach that used to be free, and watching their engagement metrics crater month over month.
The good news: social still works. Spectacularly well, in some cases. It just works very differently than it used to. Here’s what’s actually delivering results for Camisado Marketing clients right now, platform by platform, with zero fluff and a lot of opinions formed from running campaigns across every major network every single day.
The Three Shifts Shaping Everything in 2026
Before we get to tactics, three macro shifts explain almost everything that’s happening on social right now. Understand these and the rest of the playbook falls into place:
- Short-form video is no longer a ‘trend.’ It’s the default content format on every platform except LinkedIn — and even LinkedIn is moving that direction. If you’re not making short video, you’re not really doing social media anymore.
- Algorithms have shifted from follower-based to interest-based. Your followers see less of your content. But strangers who match your ideal audience see more. This means building a huge follower count matters a lot less — and making content that resonates deeply with a specific niche matters a lot more.
- AI-generated slop is everywhere, and audiences can smell it from a mile away. Generic stock photos with AI captions. ChatGPT ‘thought leadership.’ The stuff that worked for filler content in 2023 is actively hurting brands now. Real, specific, human voices are winning.
Instagram: Reels, DMs, and Nothing Else
Instagram’s algorithm in 2026 is brutally simple: Reels get distribution, everything else gets crickets. Static posts, carousels, and Stories are still worth doing — for the audience you already have — but they won’t grow your account. Reels will.
What’s working on Instagram right now:
- Native, vertical, sub-30-second Reels with trending audio and hard-hitting first-frame hooks. The first 1.5 seconds decide whether the algorithm pushes your video or kills it.
- Educational Reels with on-screen text captions (because 85% of viewers watch muted). ‘Three things I wish I knew before hiring a plumber.’ ‘The one mistake every new homeowner makes.’ Specific, valuable, saveable.
- DMs as a sales channel. Instagram’s DM-based conversions have exploded. A well-written auto-responder tied to a specific Reel keyword (‘Comment LIST and I’ll send you the checklist’) routinely outperforms traditional link-in-bio funnels by 10x.
- Collaborator posts with complementary local businesses. One post, two accounts, double the reach — and Instagram’s algorithm still loves them.
TikTok: Still the Growth Engine, If You Can Stomach It
TikTok is still where small brands grow from zero to 100,000 followers in 90 days — if they’re willing to be weird, specific, and prolific. It’s also where algorithmic reach is the most meritocratic: a brand-new account with the right video can get a million views on its fifth post. That almost never happens anywhere else.
The catch? The production bar is higher than ever, and the content cycle is merciless. What worked three weeks ago probably won’t work now. Commit to posting at least 4–5 short videos per week or don’t bother.
What’s working on TikTok in 2026:
- Founder-led content. Real humans, real voices, unfiltered personality. The ‘polished brand account’ era is dead.
- Behind-the-scenes and ‘day in the life’ videos. People want to see how the sausage is made — and they trust brands more when they can see the people behind the logo.
- TikTok Shop integration for product businesses. Closed-loop shopping inside the app is driving real revenue for small brands that lean in.
- Niche-specific education. Not generic tips. Specific, named, hyper-local, hyper-targeted micro-tutorials.
LinkedIn: Quietly the Best Organic Platform Right Now
Here’s the take nobody wants to say out loud: LinkedIn is having its best year for organic reach since 2019. If you’re a B2B, service-based, or professional business and you’re not active on LinkedIn in 2026, you’re leaving serious money on the table.
What’s working on LinkedIn right now:
- Long-form text posts (800–1,500 characters) with a hook in the first 2 lines and short, scannable paragraphs after. These still outperform everything else on the platform.
- Personal accounts, not company pages. LinkedIn’s algorithm heavily favors personal content. Have the founder (or a few key team members) post consistently, and repost from the company page.
- Thoughtful commenting on other people’s posts. Leaving a 3-paragraph, genuinely useful comment on a popular post often drives more qualified leads than posting your own content.
- Short-form native video. LinkedIn is pushing video hard and the reach is absurd compared to any other content type on the platform right now.
Facebook: The Unlikely Local SMB Powerhouse
Facebook is no longer cool, and it’s not growing — but for local service businesses, it’s still the best place on the internet to find warm leads. The demographic (35–65, homeowners, decision-makers with spending power) is exactly who most small businesses are trying to reach. And local Facebook Groups remain the single most underrated marketing asset for SMBs.
What’s working on Facebook in 2026:
- Hyper-local Facebook Groups. Join the ‘Encinitas Moms’ group, the ‘Carlsbad Local Business’ group, the neighborhood Buy Nothing groups. Be genuinely helpful. Never pitch. Customers will find you.
- Community-building on your own business page through events, Q&A posts, and polls.
- Facebook Marketplace for product businesses and reviews-driven service businesses.
- Retargeting ads, which are still the highest-ROI paid tactic on the platform.
What to Cut in 2026
Just as important as what to do — here’s what to stop wasting time on:
- Generic inspirational quotes on branded backgrounds. They worked in 2015. They’re invisible now.
- Hashtag-stuffing. Instagram has quietly stopped caring about hashtags almost entirely.
- Cross-posting the identical video to every platform. Each platform has its own aspect ratio, pacing, and culture. A TikTok reposted to Reels gets punished by both algorithms.
- Automated AI-generated captions without human editing. Readers can smell them, and so can the algorithms.
- Obsessing over follower count instead of DMs, saves, shares, and profile visits. Those are the metrics that actually correlate with revenue.
The Meta-Strategy That Ties It All Together
If we had to condense our 2026 social media playbook into one sentence, it would be: Make specific, genuinely useful content about one tightly defined niche, distribute it natively on the 2–3 platforms where your customers actually live, and measure everything downstream of awareness (DMs, bookings, sales) — not vanity metrics.
The brands that are winning aren’t the ones posting the most. They’re the ones with the clearest point of view, the most specific audience, and the discipline to show up consistently for 6–12 months before judging the results.
Too Busy to Figure This Out Yourself? That’s What We’re Here For.
At Camisado Marketing, we run social media programs for growing businesses across the country. AI-driven content research, senior strategists who actually understand the platforms, and zero cookie-cutter calendars. Every client gets a social strategy built specifically for their audience, their niche, and their goals.
Request a free social media audit at camisadomarketing.com and we’ll show you what’s working on your current accounts, what’s broken, and the fastest path to actual business results.
Why Your Brand Needs a Story, Not Just a Logo
There’s a certain conversation we have with new clients every few weeks, and it always goes the same way. They tell us they need a rebrand. We ask what’s driving it. They say something like, ‘Our logo feels dated’ or ‘The colors don’t pop.’ We nod politely, and then we ask the question that usually lands a little harder than they expected: What’s your brand’s story?
Nine times out of ten, they don’t have one. They have a logo, a color palette, and maybe a tagline that someone on their team Googled into existence at 2 a.m. before a board meeting. That’s not a brand. That’s a visual identity — and in 2026, a visual identity by itself isn’t nearly enough to build a business people remember, trust, and recommend.
The Difference Between a Logo and a Brand (And Why It Matters)
Your logo is a symbol. Your brand is everything people feel when they see that symbol. A great logo can catch someone’s eye for 3 seconds. A great brand story keeps them coming back for 30 years.
Think about the brands you personally love. Patagonia. Trader Joe’s. Costco. Apple. In-N-Out. Each has a logo, sure — but what actually anchors them in your brain is a story you already know by heart. Patagonia sues the government to protect public land. Trader Joe’s employees wear Hawaiian shirts because the founder wanted every shopping trip to feel like a mini vacation. Costco famously pays its workers twice what competitors do. Apple makes products for ‘the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels.’ In-N-Out has never opened more stores than it can supply with the freshest beef.
Those are stories. They’re the reason you’d pay more. They’re the reason you’d drive farther. They’re the reason you’d defend the brand in a conversation at a dinner party. A logo has never once made someone do any of those things.
What a Real Brand Story Actually Contains
A brand story isn’t a paragraph on your About page. It’s a cohesive, specific, deeply true explanation of five things. Get these right and your marketing becomes ten times easier. Get them wrong — or skip them entirely — and you’ll spend the rest of your business life competing on price.
1. The Origin
Why does your business exist? Not the fluffy version — the real version. What problem were you so frustrated by that you were willing to quit a comfortable job and bet your savings on solving it? Specific, honest origin stories build instant emotional credibility. Vague ones (‘We believe in quality and integrity’) build nothing at all.
2. The Belief
What do you believe about your industry that most of your competitors don’t? A genuine brand belief is often the single most powerful differentiator a small business has. It’s also terrifying, because it means some people will disagree with you. That’s the point. A brand that everyone likes is a brand that no one loves.
3. The Villain
Every great story has an antagonist. In brand storytelling, your villain is usually a bad practice, a lazy assumption, or a frustrating industry norm — not a specific competitor. Warby Parker’s villain was the price gouging of traditional eyewear. Dollar Shave Club’s villain was the absurd markup on brand-name razors. Identify your villain clearly and your customers will start rooting for you without you having to ask.
4. The Hero
Here’s where most small businesses get this wrong: you are not the hero of your brand story. Your customer is. Your job is to be the guide who helps them defeat their villain and become the hero of their own story. The best brand stories make the customer feel seen, understood, and empowered — not lectured to about how amazing the company is.
5. The Transformation
What does the world look like after someone works with you? Not the feature list. The actual, emotional transformation. A financial planner doesn’t sell retirement accounts — they sell the feeling of knowing your kids won’t have to worry about you. A marketing agency doesn’t sell ads — it sells the relief of finally knowing your business is growing without you having to micromanage every single lead. Describe the after, vividly, and selling gets dramatically easier.
How to Actually Build Your Brand Story
You don’t need an agency to write the first draft. You need an afternoon, a notebook, and honest answers to five questions:
- Why did you really start this business? (Not the LinkedIn version.)
- What do you believe about your industry that most people refuse to say out loud?
- Who or what is the villain that your best customers are secretly fighting?
- What does a customer’s life look like 30 days, 6 months, and 2 years after they work with you?
- If your company disappeared tomorrow, what would your ideal customer genuinely miss?
Write down every answer. Then read them back. The through-line — the common thread running through every honest answer — is the beginning of your brand story. From there, a good brand strategist (or a good writer, or a smart team working together) can shape it into language you use everywhere: your website, your ads, your emails, your sales conversations, your social media.
Why This Is Especially Urgent in 2026
AI has made it easier than ever to launch a business, spin up a logo, build a website, and start running ads. Which means the market is more crowded, more noisy, and more commoditized than it has ever been. In a world where anyone can look professional in a weekend, the only enduring differentiator left is a real, specific, deeply felt brand story. Logos are table stakes. Stories are the moat.
At Camisado Marketing, every brand strategy engagement starts with story — because everything else (the logo, the website, the ads, the social content) is dramatically more effective when it’s hanging off a narrative customers actually care about.
Thinking About a Rebrand? Start With the Story.
If your brand feels like it’s blending in, the answer probably isn’t a new logo — it’s a clearer story. We help growing businesses uncover the story they’ve been telling themselves for years without realizing it, and then turn it into marketing that converts.
Request a free AI-powered brand analysis at camisadomarketing.com and we’ll show you exactly where your brand narrative is strong, where it’s invisible, and how to close the gap.
5 SEO Strategies Small Businesses Can’t Afford to Ignore
Most small businesses treat SEO like a set-it-and-forget-it checkbox. Pay someone a few hundred bucks, slap some keywords on the homepage, and hope Google notices. Spoiler: Google doesn’t notice. And every month you coast, a competitor who actually takes SEO seriously is quietly stealing the customers you should be closing.
Here’s the good news — small business SEO doesn’t require an enterprise budget or a six-person in-house team. It requires picking the right battles. Below are five SEO strategies that consistently move the needle for small businesses, ranked by the ones that deliver the fastest return. Skip them at your own peril.
1. Win Local SEO Before You Chase Anything Else
If you serve customers in a physical area — whether that’s one city, one county, or a 30-mile radius — local SEO is the single highest-leverage place to spend your first dollar. Why? Because ranking in the local map pack (those three business listings that appear above the regular search results) puts you directly in front of people who are actively looking to buy right now.
Here’s what actually works for local SEO in 2026:
- Claim and fully optimize your Google Business Profile. This is free, and most small businesses still leave half the fields blank. Fill in every category, every attribute, every service, every product. Upload real photos weekly — not stock images.
- Get consistent NAP (name, address, phone number) citations across the top directories. Yelp, Bing Places, Apple Maps, Facebook, BBB, and industry-specific directories. Inconsistency here confuses Google’s local algorithm and tanks your rankings.
- Ask for reviews relentlessly — but do it right. Send a personalized text or email 24–48 hours after a great interaction. Make it easy with a direct review link. Respond to every review, good or bad, within 24 hours.
- Write location-specific content. Not just ‘Plumber in San Diego’ but ‘Emergency Plumbing in La Jolla’ and ‘Water Heater Replacement in Encinitas.’ Each neighborhood page is a fresh chance to rank.
Done right, local SEO can double your phone calls in 60–90 days. We’ve seen it happen on client projects more times than we can count, and it almost always outperforms paid ads on a cost-per-lead basis.
2. Fix the Boring Technical Stuff Everyone Ignores
Technical SEO isn’t sexy. Nobody is going to brag on LinkedIn about fixing their robots.txt file. But if your site takes 6 seconds to load on mobile, has broken schema markup, or returns soft 404s on half your pages, you are actively paying Google to ignore you.
The technical SEO basics that matter most for small businesses:
- Core Web Vitals. Largest Contentful Paint under 2.5 seconds, Interaction to Next Paint under 200 milliseconds, Cumulative Layout Shift under 0.1. Use Google’s free PageSpeed Insights tool to diagnose. If your site is built on a bloated page-builder theme, this alone could be the reason you’re not ranking.
- Mobile-first everything. Google has been indexing mobile versions first since 2020. If your mobile site is a cramped afterthought, your desktop rankings will suffer with it.
- Structured data markup. LocalBusiness, Product, Service, Review, FAQ, and Article schema help Google understand exactly what you do — and unlock rich results that steal clicks from competitors who skipped this step.
- A clean XML sitemap submitted to Google Search Console. If Google can’t find your pages, nothing else on this list matters.
None of this is glamorous. All of it compounds. A clean technical foundation is what lets every other SEO effort actually work.
3. Build Content That Answers the Questions Your Customers Actually Ask
The small businesses that win at SEO are obsessive about one thing: answering the exact questions their prospects are typing into Google. Not generic blog posts. Not fluff listicles padded out to hit 2,000 words. Specific, useful answers to specific, real questions.
Start with keyword research, but don’t overcomplicate it. Tools like Google’s free Keyword Planner, Ubersuggest, or AnswerThePublic will surface dozens of real questions in minutes. So will the ‘People also ask’ box on any search result. So will the autocomplete suggestions Google shows as you type.
Then build content that actually answers those questions better than anything currently ranking. A few rules of thumb that hold up in 2026:
- Match search intent exactly. If someone searches ‘how much does a bathroom remodel cost,’ they want a number — not a 3,000-word history of bathroom design. Give them a number in the first paragraph, then justify it.
- Prioritize depth over length. A 1,200-word article that fully answers the question will outrank a 3,000-word article that rambles.
- Update old content instead of constantly publishing new content. Refreshing a post that already ranks on page 2 is usually 10x more productive than starting from scratch.
- Include original data, quotes, photos, or case studies. Google’s helpful content system rewards firsthand expertise — and it’s increasingly good at detecting generic AI-spun filler.
4. Get Serious About AI Search Optimization (Yes, It’s a Thing Now)
Here’s the shift nobody wants to talk about: more and more of your customers are asking ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Claude to recommend businesses — not just Googling them. These AI tools pull from the open web, but they summarize and attribute differently than traditional search engines. If your business isn’t showing up in AI-generated answers, you’re invisible to a growing slice of buyers.
The emerging rules of AI search optimization (sometimes called Generative Engine Optimization, or GEO):
- Write in a way that’s easy to cite. Clear, declarative sentences. Data points with sources. Named entities. Direct answers at the top of each section.
- Build brand mentions on trusted third-party sites. AI models weight brand authority heavily. A mention in a local news outlet, industry publication, or respected blog is often worth more than a dozen backlinks from weaker sites.
- Keep your Wikipedia, Crunchbase, and LinkedIn pages current. Large language models lean on these sources heavily when answering ‘who is [company]’ or ‘what does [company] do’ questions.
- Create FAQ-style content that directly mirrors how people ask AI tools questions. Conversational. Specific. Self-contained.
At Camisado Marketing, we’re already seeing meaningful referral traffic from AI search for clients who adopted these tactics early. The cost of entry is low right now, and the early movers will own the next decade of organic discovery.
5. Earn Backlinks the Old-Fashioned Way (No Shady Shortcuts)
Backlinks — other websites linking to yours — are still one of the three most important ranking factors, and they’re the one most small businesses give up on because it feels hard. It is hard. But there’s a reason the hard stuff wins: everyone else quits.
Five backlink strategies that actually work for small businesses with zero outreach experience:
- Get listed in every reputable local and industry directory. Chamber of Commerce, BBB, local business groups, niche directories for your industry. Free, legit, and they add up.
- Sponsor a local event, charity, or youth sports team. Most sponsorship pages link to their sponsors. A $250 donation often nets a permanent, highly authoritative local backlink.
- Pitch yourself to local journalists and industry blogs. HARO (Help A Reporter Out) and Qwoted still work. So does sending a genuinely useful quote to a reporter covering your niche.
- Create one piece of genuinely linkable content per year — an original research report, a free tool, a comprehensive local guide. Then email every relevant site and ask them to link to it.
- Build relationships with complementary (non-competing) businesses in your area and cross-link naturally. A photographer, a venue, a florist, and a DJ can trade referrals and content for years.
Avoid anything that promises ‘cheap backlinks,’ ‘PBN links,’ or ‘guaranteed DA 50 backlinks for $99.’ Google’s spam algorithms are very, very good at detecting these, and the penalty will cost you more than the rankings were ever worth.
The Bottom Line
Small business SEO isn’t about gaming an algorithm. It’s about being genuinely useful, locally relevant, technically sound, and patient enough to let the work compound. The businesses that commit to these five strategies consistently — even just 4 hours a week — outrank competitors with five-figure monthly SEO budgets. We’ve watched it happen over and over.
If you’re not sure where to start, start with local SEO and technical fixes. Those two alone will move the needle in 60–90 days. Everything else builds from there.
Ready to Stop Losing Customers to Competitors Who Show Up First?
At Camisado Marketing, we combine AI-powered SEO analysis with senior strategists who’ve been in the trenches for years. No junior account managers reading from a script. No cookie-cutter playbooks. Just specific, measurable SEO work tailored to your business and your market.
Request a free AI-powered SEO analysis and we’ll show you exactly where the opportunities are, what your competitors are doing that you’re not, and the fastest path to the front page of Google for the searches that actually drive revenue.
Email david@camisadomarketing.com or call (760) 933-7945 to get started.