Across the UK, the way consumers find, evaluate, and decide on brands has changed substantially over the last few years. The shift hasn’t been driven by economic pressure alone, though inflation and cost-of-living concerns have certainly played a role. The bigger change is structural — UK consumers, particularly those under 45, now make most of their brand discoveries on social platforms, often through creators they follow, before they ever encounter a brand’s website or paid advertising.
Understanding this shift matters for any UK business that depends on attracting new customers. The marketing channels that worked five years ago aren’t broken, exactly. They’re just no longer where the discovery is happening.
Where UK Consumers Actually Find New Brands Now
The traditional model for brand discovery in the UK relied on a predictable mix: search engines, paid advertising, word of mouth from friends, and editorial coverage in mainstream media. That mix still exists — but its share of total discovery has dropped significantly in favour of social platforms and creator-driven recommendations.
Recent consumer behaviour research across the UK shows that for many product categories — particularly beauty, fashion, food and drink, fitness, home goods, and small electronics — the majority of consumers under 45 first hear about new brands through TikTok, Instagram, or YouTube. Often, they hear about them through specific creators whose taste they trust.
This is why the modern UK marketing playbook increasingly centres on creator partnerships. Brands that invest in building relationships with UK influencers — particularly creators in the 10,000–100,000 follower range with engaged, niche audiences — are reaching consumers in the moment when they’re actually deciding what to buy. That moment used to happen in front of a TV ad or a magazine spread. Now it happens during a scrolling session on TikTok.
The data on conversion patterns support the change. UK consumers who first encounter a brand through a trusted creator convert at noticeably higher rates than consumers who first encounter the same brand through cold paid advertising. The trust transfer from creator to brand is real, measurable, and increasingly central to how UK marketing actually works.
What’s Driving the Change
A few structural factors are behind this shift:
Ad fatigue. UK consumers have grown sceptical of traditional advertising in ways earlier generations weren’t. Decades of online ads have produced a generation that intuitively filters them out. Creator content, by contrast, feels native and personal — closer to a friend’s recommendation than a paid pitch.
Platform shifts. TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube have become primary entertainment channels for huge segments of the UK population. Consumers spend hours per day on these platforms. The creators they follow effectively act as taste curators, shaping which brands enter the conversation in the first place.
Pandemic acceleration. The shift was already underway before 2020, but the pandemic accelerated it dramatically. UK consumers got used to discovering and purchasing brands entirely online, often guided by creator content. Many of those habits never reverted.
Lower trust in institutions. Trust in traditional media, paid advertising, and brand-direct communication has declined across the UK over the last decade. Trust in individual creators — particularly those with established niche communities — has risen by comparison.
Better-quality creator content. Five years ago, sponsored creator content was often awkward and obviously promotional. Today’s UK creators have learned to integrate branded content in ways that feel native and watchable. The quality bar has risen, and audiences respond accordingly.
What This Means for UK Brands and Retailers
For UK brands trying to capture new customers in this environment, a few practical implications follow:
Brand discovery now happens off your owned channels. Most new UK customers will encounter your brand before they ever visit your website. The first impression isn’t your homepage; it’s a creator’s TikTok or Instagram post. If that first impression isn’t being orchestrated, you’re leaving discovery to chance.
Paid advertising still works — but as the closer, not the opener. Paid ads have shifted from primary acquisition channel to retargeting tool. Brands that try to acquire new customers entirely through paid advertising face higher costs and lower conversion rates than brands that combine creator-driven discovery with paid retargeting.
Niche relevance beats broad reach. UK consumers responding to creator content tend to convert better when the creator’s audience tightly matches the brand’s customer profile. A creator with 30,000 highly engaged followers in your specific niche will outperform a creator with 200,000 broader followers in most categories.
Content authenticity matters. UK consumers are quick to detect content that feels overly scripted or brand-controlled. Brands that let creators speak in their own voice see better results than brands that demand tight script control. This is counter-intuitive for marketing teams used to brand-controlled creative — but the data is clear on which approach converts.
Speed-to-purchase has compressed. UK consumers now expect to move from creator discovery to purchase in minutes, not days. Brands with friction in the purchase path — slow-loading sites, complicated checkouts, unclear value propositions — lose customers in the gap between intent and conversion.
What Good Adaptation Looks Like
UK brands navigating this shift well share a few patterns:
They treat creator marketing as a primary acquisition channel, not a brand-awareness experiment. They measure cost per acquisition per creator, the same way they measure paid search or paid social.
They invest in creator relationships over time, rather than running one-off campaigns. The third campaign with a strong creator partner outperforms the first significantly, because audience trust compounds.
They build their owned digital infrastructure to handle creator-driven traffic — fast loading times, mobile-optimized everything, simple conversion paths, and proper attribution tracking so they know what’s working.
They use creator content as paid social creative, often achieving better ROAS than brand-produced ads. This single repurposing trick can effectively double the return on creator partnership spend.
They pay attention to which creators drive customers who actually repeat-purchase — not just which creators generate the most initial conversions. The LTV difference between creator-acquired customers and paid-social-acquired customers is significant in many categories, and worth optimizing for.
The Strategic Takeaway
For UK businesses building marketing strategy for 2026 and beyond, the question isn’t whether consumer buying behaviour has shifted — it has. The question is whether the brand has built the operational capability to reach customers where the discovery is now happening.
The brands that recognise this and build the capability to execute creator partnerships effectively are taking market share at costs that would have been considered unrealistic a few years ago. The ones still relying entirely on the playbook that worked in 2018 are finding that playbook produces steadily diminishing returns.
The shift in UK consumer behaviour isn’t temporary. It’s the new baseline. The brands that adapt to it now will define the next decade of UK consumer marketing.
David Prior
David Prior is the editor of Today News, responsible for the overall editorial strategy. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist with over 20 years’ experience, and is also editor of the award-winning hyperlocal news title Altrincham Today. His LinkedIn profile is here.











































































