SOCIAL MEDIA

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4 min read

4 min

Why Brand Rivalries Are Taking Over Social Media

As social media favors boldness, brands are leveraging rivalry to capture attention, and audiences remain highly engaged.
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By

Giovana B.

Marketing Enters Its Competitive Era

Rivalry has always been part of marketing, but recently it has become more visible, turning brand communication into public contests in real time. Across industries, companies now engage in playful yet pointed exchanges, using rivalry to promote products and capture fleeting social media attention.

This dynamic was highlighted recently when a viral video showed Chris Kempczinski hesitating while tasting the company’s new Big Arch burger, sparking widespread commentary. Competitors responded quickly: Burger King posted a video of its president enjoying an updated Whopper, while Wendy’s made a playful jab about its Frosty machines reliably working, referencing McDonald’s ongoing issues with soft-serve equipment.

An isolated exchange between rival brands quickly became a cultural event, demonstrating how a well-timed jab can spark conversation, generate headlines, and drive engagement in today’s fast-paced media environment.

When Rivalry Becomes Content

Competitive advertising has long been part of the marketing playbook. Decades ago, campaigns from companies such as Audi and Samsung famously took aim at their rivals, while the decades-long rivalry between Pepsi and Coca-Cola produced some of the most memorable comparative advertising in modern marketing history.

Previously, such moments were rare and carefully planned, appearing in high-budget commercials or elaborate print campaigns over months. Today, the difference lies in both tone and speed. Social media has turned competitive marketing into an ongoing dialogue, allowing brands to respond almost instantly and turning simple posts into the start of larger conversations.

In this environment, a witty remark or clever comparison can quickly spread across platforms, amplified by memes, commentary, and media coverage. For marketers facing fragmented audiences and shorter attention spans, generating this kind of organic amplification is especially valuable.

The Super Bowl Signals a Bolder Tone

If social media has provided the stage for competitive marketing, the Super Bowl—long regarded as advertising’s grandest showcase—demonstrates how brands now bring this rivalry spirit into their most high-profile campaigns.

During this year’s game, Pepsi revived the iconic Pepsi Challenge with a creative twist that captured viewers’ attention. In the commercial, a Coca-Cola polar bear participates in a blind taste test and chooses Pepsi, turning the rival’s mascot into part of Pepsi’s message.

The gesture transformed what might otherwise have been a nostalgic homage into a calculated moment of competitive theater, delivered before one of the year’s largest television audiences.

Meanwhile, the technology sector shows this approach is broader than consumer packaged goods. For example, the AI company Anthropic aired commercials hinting that some assistants may soon insert advertisements while promoting its assistant, Claude, as more trustworthy. No competitor was named, but the implication toward platforms like ChatGPT was clear enough to prompt discussion online.

This subtlety reflects an increasingly common advertising strategy: imply rivalry rather than name it directly, inviting audiences to draw their own conclusions.

Why Brands Are Embracing the Fight

The rise of competitive marketing reflects cultural and technological shifts that have changed how brands communicate. Social media rewards content that provokes reaction, debate, and participation, making rivalry a natural framework for engagement.

When one brand challenges another—whether tWhen one brand challenges another through humor, irony, or subtle mockery, audiences engage by choosing sides and sharing the exchange. This creates a narrative that unfolds across posts and comments, drawing consumers into the story and encouraging ongoing engagement.om the economics of attention. In an era of costly campaigns that often struggle to break through, a clever bit of competitive content can generate organic visibility, multiplying the impact of the original investment.

At the same time, digital culture has evolved to make these exchanges feel natural. Humor, sarcasm, and playful confrontation now define online discourse, and brands that adopt this tone often appear more relatable than those that remain distant or overly polished.

The Fine Line Between Wit and Risk

Despite its advantages, rivalry marketing requires careful execution. The visibility that makes these campaigns effective can also increase risk, especially if audiences perceive the tone as too aggressive or opportunistic.

Throwing shade invites scrutiny, and brands that highlight a competitor’s weaknesses may find their own vulnerabilities examined just as closely. For example, a joke about reliability can prompt consumers to revisit complaints about the brand making the joke.

Referencing a rival can also draw more attention to that competitor, reinforcing its presence in consumers’ minds. Competitive marketing can therefore act as a double-edged sword, generating both publicity and unintended promotion.

For that reason, the most successful executions tend to rely on wit rather than hostility, ensuring that the rivalry feels entertaining rather than antagonistic.

When Marketing Becomes Entertainment

Despite these risks, rivalry marketing continues to gain momentum. In a fast-paced media environment where algorithms reward engagement, brands increasingly recognize that boldness, when managed carefully, can provide a rare opportunity to stand out.

This has led to a style of advertising that resembles cultural entertainment, blending humor, competition, and storytelling in real time across digital platforms. Consumers are now watching brands compete for relevance, personality, and attention before a global audience.

And as long as audiences continue to share, debate, and enjoy these moments of corporate sparring, marketers will likely keep stepping into the ring.

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