Hi, what are you looking for?
“Right now, social media is no longer just where products are marketed,” Victoria Mei said recently. “It’s where trust is built, culture is cultivated, and technology becomes relevant to everyday life.”
By
Published
Opinions expressed by Digital Journal contributors are their own.
“Right now, social media is no longer just where products are marketed,” Victoria Mei said recently. “It’s where trust is built, culture is cultivated, and technology becomes relevant to everyday life.”
That observation captures a shift unfolding across the technology sector. As platforms fragment attention and audiences grow skeptical of corporate messaging, social media has moved from the margins of marketing strategy to its core. What once functioned as a distribution channel now shapes how products are understood, debated, and adopted. For Mei, a New York–based social media marketer and content creator, this evolution has defined her work and her growing influence.
With more than 600,000 followers globally and over 100 million views across her content, Mei occupies a hybrid role that blends creator sensibility with strategic rigor. Educated at UC Berkeley and Columbia University, and shaped by early exposure to venture capital and technology, she has built a career translating complex products in FinTech, crypto, and artificial intelligence into narratives that feel accessible, culturally fluent, and credible. Her work reflects a broader rethinking of how technology companies communicate in a social-first era.
In 2024 and 2025, social media spending continued its steady climb, with global ad spend surpassing $250 billion and projected to approach $350 billion by 2030. Yet those figures obscure a deeper tension. While investment has increased, effectiveness has become harder to measure. Algorithms reward novelty, but audiences reward authenticity. Views are plentiful; trust is scarce.
Mei argues that this disconnect stems from how companies still conceptualize social media. “Most tech brands treat social as an output,” she said. “A place to post announcements. What they miss is to participate into a culture. If you strategize it correctly, it compounds.”
Her approach replaces one-off campaigns with repeatable content frameworks built around creator-native formats, humor, and cultural context. Rather than leading with product features, she treats content as entertainment first and distribution second, allowing audiences to engage before being asked to convert. Performance, in her view, is measured not only in impressions but in signals like brand search lift, sentiment, community participation, and earned media pickup.
This methodology has helped campaigns achieve sustained engagement rates above industry benchmarks and secondary amplification by legacy media, often without paid public relations. It reflects a growing consensus among analysts that influence, not exposure, will define the next phase of digital growth.
Mei’s work sits at the intersection of technology and culture, an increasingly important terrain as platforms shape public discourse. By 2025, more than half of global internet users were consuming short-form video daily, and forecasts suggest that by 2030, the majority of product discovery for younger consumers will begin on social platforms rather than search engines.
Against that backdrop, Mei sees social media less as a marketing tool than as cultural infrastructure. “People don’t separate technology from culture anymore,” she said. “They understand products through memes, creators, and community before they ever read a white paper.”
Her own content reflects that insight. As an immigrant creator living in New York City, she explores technology, identity, and community through a personal lens, often using humor and self-reflection to unpack larger systems. That perspective has resonated globally, particularly with younger audiences navigating careers, technology, and cross-cultural identity simultaneously.
In 2024, she founded Asian Creatives Club, a global community designed to bridge Asia and the West through creativity, community, and technology. Through panels, talks, and collaborations hosted in New York and online, the group connects emerging creatives with founders, investors, and established brands. Attendance at events typically ranges from 100 to 300 participants, with extended reach through social media clips and community channels.
“Community is not an accessory,” Mei said. “It’s our friends, family, and everyone we love.”
Mei’s growing profile has brought institutional recognition. She serves as a Creative Partner for the New York Asian Film Festival, helping expand its reach through digital storytelling and audience engagement. She has spoken at the Harvard China Forum and served as a panelist on media and digital culture at New York University, where she is often asked to evaluate how creator economies and social platforms are reshaping communication.
International media outlets have also taken note. Her work and commentary have been cited in Chinese technology and finance publications, underscoring her cross-border relevance in discussions of social media, innovation, and cultural exchange.
Still, not everyone is convinced that creator-led social media strategies can deliver long-term value for technology companies. One media analyst, who advises enterprise software firms, offered a caution. “The risk is confusing personality with durability,” the analyst said. “Creators can drive attention, but attention doesn’t always translate into sustained adoption.”
Mei does not dismiss the concern. Instead, she reframes it. “That’s exactly why systems matter,” she said. “If social is just personality, it fades. If it’s built into how a company communicates and listens, it lasts.”
Looking ahead, Mei expects the role of social media marketers and content creators to grow more complex. As artificial intelligence lowers the cost of content production and platforms continue to evolve, differentiation will come less from output and more from judgment.
By 2030, analysts predict that creator-led commerce and community-driven distribution will account for a significant share of consumer technology growth. In that environment, Mei believes the distinction between marketer and creator will continue to blur. “The future belongs to people who understand culture and performance at the same time,” she said.
Her own work reflects that convergence. Part strategist, part storyteller, part community builder, Mei operates in a space where social media is no longer peripheral to technology’s public life. It is central.
“Technology doesn’t become mainstream because it’s powerful,” she said. “It becomes mainstream because people feel they vibe with it. Social media is where that understanding happens now.”
In an industry still adjusting to that reality, Victoria Mei has positioned herself not simply as a digital tactician but as a social media marketer and content creator shaping how technology meets culture, one system at a time.
IDC’s 2026 forecast shows AI moving into core infrastructure as economic and security pressures raise the stakes
Among overall categories, wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles, which includes e-commerce, ranked above all others.
Stop bleating about software and start focusing on the survival factor in coding.
Legacy systems often suffer from messy data and workflows that aren’t ready for AI’s speed and scale.
COPYRIGHT © 1998 – 2024 DIGITAL JOURNAL INC. Sitemaps: XML / News . Digital Journal is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more about our external linking.