What exactly is UGC
UGC is any content about your brand that someone other than your marketing team creates. It falls into two broad categories: organic UGC (content customers create voluntarily because they love your product) and paid UGC (content commissioned from creators who produce it in an authentic, non-polished style).
The paid UGC model has grown rapidly because it gives brands the benefits of authentic-looking content without depending on customer behaviour. A paid UGC creator films themselves using your product, delivers the raw footage (no finished edit, no aesthetic filter), and you post it as though it were a real customer review. It looks genuine because the style is genuinely different from traditional advertising.
Organic UGC
Customers post about your brand voluntarily. You reshare it. Free, but unpredictable and hard to scale.
Paid UGC
You commission creators to produce authentic-style content. Consistent, scalable, and you own the usage rights.
Influencer UGC
A creator with an audience posts about your brand. Combines reach with authenticity.
Review repurposing
Screenshots of real reviews, Google ratings, or DM testimonials turned into feed posts.
Why UGC converts better than branded content
People trust people more than brands. This is not new information, but the scale of the effect is larger than most business owners realise.
The reason is simple: branded content looks like an ad. UGC looks like a recommendation from a real person. On Instagram, where users are trained to scroll past polished promotional posts, authentic-style content stops the scroll in a way that expensive production rarely does. Research compiled by Nosto shows that 79% of people say UGC highly impacts their purchase decisions, significantly higher than branded content.
For NZ businesses specifically, the local element adds another layer of trust. Seeing a real person in a recognisable NZ environment using your product is far more compelling to a local audience than a generic lifestyle image that could have been shot anywhere in the world.
How to get UGC as a NZ brand
There are three practical methods for getting UGC, each suited to different budgets and stages of business growth.
Method 1: Ask for it
The simplest way to get organic UGC is to ask your happy customers. After a purchase or completed service, send a follow-up message asking if they would be willing to share a photo or video on Instagram and tag your account. Most customers who had a good experience are happy to do this if asked directly. A small incentive such as a discount on their next purchase increases the response rate significantly.
Method 2: Send product to creators
Find micro-creators in your niche on Instagram or TikTok with 1,000 to 15,000 followers. Offer your product in exchange for a post and the usage rights to reshare their content. This works well for food, beauty, fashion, and lifestyle products. The creators get free product. You get genuine content from someone with an engaged local audience.
Method 3: Hire a UGC creator
Paid UGC creators produce video content specifically for brands to use on their own channels. They deliver raw footage with no filters or branded edits so it looks like a real customer review. For NZ businesses, budgeting $150 to $300 per video gives you consistently good content that you own completely and can run as ads or organic posts.
How NZ businesses are using UGC in their content mix
The most effective approach is to mix UGC with branded content across a weekly content calendar. A typical breakdown for a NZ service business might look like this:
- Monday: Branded educational Reel or carousel
- Wednesday: UGC or customer testimonial post
- Friday: Behind-the-scenes or team content
- Daily Stories: Mix of organic UGC reshares, polls, and links
This mix ensures your feed never looks like a pure sales channel. The UGC content builds trust. The branded content builds authority. The Stories maintain daily presence without requiring daily production effort.
What makes good UGC for NZ audiences
Not all UGC performs equally. Content that works for NZ audiences shares a few characteristics:
- It feels local. NZ locations, accents, or references create an immediate connection with local viewers
- It addresses a real problem. The best UGC shows a before and after, a problem being solved, or a genuine reaction to using the product
- It is short. For Instagram Reels, the 7 to 30 second UGC video consistently outperforms longer content
- The hook is in the first two seconds. Viewers decide whether to keep watching almost instantly
If you are commissioning paid UGC creators, brief them specifically on these points. Give them talking points and a desired outcome, but let them use their own words and filming style. The moment a UGC video sounds scripted, it loses its effectiveness.
Frequently Asked Questions
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