Why brands can’t stop acting like reply guys and jumping into viral comment threads on social media

Brands like Dude Wipes and Vita Coco are shifting social media strategy to comment on viral posts rather than creating original content, with Vita Coco's Romeo jingle comment generating 250 million impressions. This tactic helps brands find creator partnerships and drive engagement as algorithms reward interaction over static posts.
Marketplace sellers should reallocate social media budgets from polished content creation to real-time community management and viral comment strategies. Track engagement rates on comments versus posts to identify which viral threads align with your brand voice and customer base.
This reflects the broader shift from brand-controlled messaging to authentic, real-time interaction as consumers increasingly distrust polished corporate content and algorithms reward genuine engagement.
Monitor TikTok and Instagram trending hashtags daily -- if content aligns with your brand, comment within 2-4 hours for maximum visibility.
Shift 30% of social media budget from content creation to community management and real-time engagement tactics over next 30 days.
Bottom Line
Comment-first social strategy beats polished posts for engagement.
Source Lens
Industry Context
Useful background context, but lower-priority than direct platform, community, or operator intelligence.
Impact Level
medium
Comment-first social strategy beats polished posts for engagement.
Key Stat / Trigger
250 million impressions from single comment strategy
Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.
Full Coverage
Digital Marketing Redux // April 14, 2026 Why brands can’t stop acting like reply guys and jumping into viral comment threads on social media By Gabriela Barkho In their quest to drive up social media engagement, brands are spending more time in the replies.
A prominent example came last year, when soda brand Olipop commented on the news of Poppi gifting influencers with vending machines as a Super Bowl campaign. Olipop replied under a post on the news claiming that PR boxes should go to “real customers,” which generated hundreds of likes.
At this point, corporate social media accounts have experimented with nearly every trick in the book over the past decade to drive up engagement. In the 2010s, for example, social media managers of giant conglomerates like Wendy’ s were known to reply directly to customers with sassy comments or to dunk on them.
But for brands, today’s reply tactics are less about clapping back and more about finding a way to participate in the online discourse du jour, or strike new partnerships. One reason brands are leaning into a comment-driven engagement strategy is that audiences are no longer enamored by highly polished social media posts.
One of these companies is Dude Wipes, which says that jumping into the comments section is now a core part of its daily social strategy to drive real-time engagement and remain culturally relevant. Dude Wipes, which is active on platforms like TikTok, Instagram and X, uses them to comment and interact with fellow brands and creators.
In the past few months, the brand’s account has stirred up conversations with brands and influencers that include Buffalo Wild Wings, Taco Bell and KFC.
Ryan Meegan, chief marketing officer at Dude Wipes, said that while the company has been actively commenting on other accounts’ posts for years, he attributes the tactic’s impact to audiences’ shifting behavior. “On platforms like X, Instagram and TikTok, people scroll straight to replies looking for something entertaining,” he said.
At the same time, Meegan said, as the algorithms evolved, the platforms began rewarding interaction over static posting. “Back-and-forth conversations, especially ones that feel unscripted, tend to travel further,” he said.
Because Dude Wipes’ online voice was already known for off-the-wall humor, Meegan said the commenting strategy hasn’t been a major pivot. However, the brand is now more intentional about where and how it comments.
“Instead of just posting on our own channels, we think about the broader conversation happening across the internet and insert ourselves where it makes sense,” Meegan said. “It’s less about volume and more about timing and tone.” Coconut water brand Vita Coco is another brand that has recently upped its social media reply cadence, particularly on TikTok.
The brand is increasingly experimenting with TikTok replies as a way to generate engagement on posts that are picking up steam. The brand’s January comment on a Billie Eilish TikTok video has since drawn nearly 400,000 likes. But it’s not just likes that Vita Coco is after. The brand is using TikTok comments as a way to strike real-time creator deals.
One of the brand’s most successful creator partnerships came earlier this year, when Vita Coco’s account commented on creator Romeo’s viral Dr. Pepper jingle pitch. The original video drew comments from countless brands, including Dr. Pepper itself, which quickly turned it into a Super Bowl ad.
Vita Coco jumped in and wanted its own version, asking Romeo to create a special jingle for Vita Coco through a paid partnership. The brand’s new jingle, along with content the Vita Coco account posted following Romeo’s journey to the Super Bowl, generated a total of over 250 million impressions.
According to Jane Prior, chief marketing officer at Vita Coco, the audience reaction to the Romeo jingle generated a lot of engagement, with many comments celebrating a smaller creator receiving a paid partnership. “A well-placed comment on TikTok or Instagram takes up some of the most valuable real estate brands can leverage,” Prior said.
Unlike a traditional post, Prior said comments on other pages turn social media from a broadcast channel into a two-way conversation. “[This is] where brands and consumers engage in real time,” said Prior. These interactions are more likely to spark a larger conversation or moment the brand can own,” she said.
During the week the jingle launched in early February, Google searches for Vita Coco reached a four-year high, spiking 22% above the next closest week in the previous three months. According to Vita Coco, so far, the Romeo partnership has brought more than 210,000 new TikTok followers to its page.
While the subsequent likes and follows to a viral comment are great metrics to go by, Dude Wipes largely measures comments’ impact by user reactions. Basically, Meegan said, the goal is usually to get t
Original Source
This briefing is based on reporting from Modern Retail. Use the original post for full primary-source context.
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