๐ŸŽฏ Giveaway Growth Strategy

Research summary & action plan for scaling our social following

70%
Faster follower growth over 3 months
Tailwind study (cited by Later, Shopify)
~20-30%
Typical post-giveaway unfollow rate
Industry benchmarks (variable)
1M+
The Kitchen Pickle's followers
Grew via repeated giveaways + Gleam.io

The Concern: Will New Followers Stick Around?

Short answer: Some won't โ€” and that's fine. The research confirms that post-giveaway drop-off is real, but the net gain is still strongly positive when giveaways are designed correctly.

Key insight from Later.com (June 2025): "Brands and businesses can often see drop-offs once the giveaway is closed. So it's all about hosting intentional, well-planned giveaways that attract your target audience โ€” so you can reach people who actually want to stick around and engage with your content."

The followers who unfollow after a giveaway were never going to become customers. The ones who stay are pre-qualified โ€” they entered because the prize (and your content) genuinely interested them. You're not losing real audience; you're filtering.

What the Data Actually Shows

The Tailwind Study

The most-cited data point in giveaway marketing: accounts running Instagram giveaways grow 70% faster over 3 months than accounts that don't. This is from Tailwind's analysis and has been referenced by Later, Shopify, HubSpot, and others.

Gleam.io's Strategy Framework (2026)

Gleam โ€” the platform The Kitchen Pickle used โ€” published their core thesis on what separates high-performing giveaways from follower farms:

The Kitchen Pickle Model

They grew to 1M+ followers not through a single viral giveaway, but through repeated, niche-aligned giveaways using Gleam.io. Each giveaway required multiple actions (like, follow, share, tag), which filters for higher-intent followers. The compounding effect over many campaigns is what built their audience at scale.

Our Advantage: We Have Niche Prizes for Free

This is a huge edge. As paddle affiliates, we can get discounted or free paddles to give away. A pickleball paddle is a perfect niche prize โ€” it self-selects for people who actually play pickleball and would engage with our content. We don't need to spend $200 on an iPad that attracts random contest hunters.

Compare the two approaches:

Generic Prize (iPad, gift card) Niche Prize (paddle from our affiliates)
High entry volume Lower entry volume
Low follow-through engagement High follow-through engagement
30-50% unfollow after contest 10-20% unfollow after contest
Attracts "contest hunters" Attracts actual players
Costs real money Free or heavily discounted

Action Plan

1

Pick the Right Prize

Use one of our affiliate paddles. Ideally partner with the paddle brand for co-promotion โ€” they may share it with their audience too.

2

Set Entry Requirements

Follow both our accounts + the paddle brand. Like the post. Tag 3 friends. Bonus entries for sharing to Stories or tagging more friends.

3

Use Gleam.io to Manage It

Automates winner selection, tracks entries across platforms, captures emails for follow-up. Free tier works fine for our size.

4

Plan Post-Giveaway Content

Have 1-2 weeks of strong content ready. The new followers are watching โ€” this is your chance to convert them into long-term audience.

Critical step most people skip: After the giveaway ends, post a winner announcement, follow up with a "thanks for entering" Story, and keep the content momentum going. The 2 weeks after a giveaway are when you either lock in the new followers or lose them.

Platform-Specific Notes

Instagram

Facebook

Gleam.io Setup

Realistic Expectations

Based on our current follower counts (~5K IG, ~10K FB) and using a niche paddle prize:

Even at the conservative end, that's a 3-4% follower increase on IG and 1.5-2% on FB for essentially zero cost. Over multiple giveaways (like The Kitchen Pickle did), the compounding effect is significant.

Sources