
April 21 @ 2:20 pm – 3:00 pm
This live webinar is part of The Next Generation Insights Summit – April 2026:

Onanma Okeke talks about Gen Z/Alpha trust, social search, and winning algorithms with authenticity over polished marketing.
Complete the form to register for this free virtual event
As we enter 2026, the primary barrier between a brand and a conversion is no longer just competition, it’s a deep-seated skepticism toward “marketing theater.” With TikTok and Instagram Reels now serving as the primary search engines for younger demographics, trust is no longer built through polished ads, but through algorithmic “social proof.”
This session explores how these platforms have shifted from entertainment apps to the new architects of consumer truth. We will analyze the transition from the “curated millennial” aesthetic to a world where raw “yap” sessions, behind-the-scenes “proof of process,” and creator-led radical honesty are the only ways to bypass the algorithmic filter for fake content. Attendees will learn how to navigate an ecosystem that rewards “imperfection” as a trust signal and punishes overly produced corporate narratives.
Expected Outcomes: * The Trust-First Algorithm: Understand how 2026 algorithms (TikTok/Reels) prioritize “watch time” and “human presence” over follower count to determine brand credibility.
- Social Search Optimization: Master the transition from traditional SEO to Social Search—ensuring your brand appears as a trusted result when users search for reviews and “how-to” content natively within video apps.
- Always-On Community Insights: Learn how to build community and capture continuous feedback as trust becomes harder to earn.
- Authenticity at Scale: Learn how to use “lo-fi” production techniques—such as unedited talking-head videos and “story-driven” arcs—to trigger the emotional radar of consumers who are weary of AI-generated “slop.”
- The Influence Pivot: Shift from macro-influencers to micro-influencers that leverage hyper-local creators to build tangible, ground-level trust.


