At first glance, it looks like just another Insta poll, but the trick is when this “poll” actually clicks through to Fora’s site. It's a cleaver hack: repurposing native interaction patterns to make the ad feel organic, while lowering the barrier to engagement. Paired with the dreamy location, the interaction is hard to resist. After all, who doesn’t want their next job to look like a vacation?
On Pinterest, were used to seeing flat lays serving lattes and linen sheets, but this one is serving period updates. The soft light and muted tones look like a wellness influencer’s vision board, but a hot pink thermometer and the “Not Fertile” tell you exactly where to look. Blending seamlessly into the Pinterest aesthetic while dropping a fertility flex is a clever move.
Martini in one hand, millionaire in the other. This six-second scroll-stopper rides the “girl math” wave with net worth projections climbing in real time — proving that finance content can go down as smoothly as happy hour. The dark, moody lighting makes it feel more like a candid Instagram story than a polished ad — that intimacy makes it irresistible
Less is more. This ad gives LinkedIn’s usual wall of text the silent treatment — just a few tiny lines floating in a sea of white space. It’s the creative equivalent of someone whispering in a loud room: you can’t help but lean in. Minimalism screams confidence; the product sells itself. Negative space isn’t wasted space — sometimes the absence of clutter is the hook.
An animated mushroom crashing a morning routine is almost TOO cute. Pixar-level visuals layered into everyday coffee habits make the brand both relatable and enchanting. The magic works because it isn't just showing coffee, its showing transformation - from groggy to glowing - a story that sticks in your head longer than latte foam art. In the age of AI, this little CGI shroom feels refreshingly genuine. Think Geico’s Gecko or the Pillsbury Doughboy, tiny characters with lots of charm that make brands memorable. Sometimes the smallest spores spread the mightiest magic.
Bathroom breaks don’t usually double as brand awareness moments, unless you’re Rumer Willis. Breastfeeding on a toilet while reading out PFAS, bleach, and formaldehyde like ingredients for a cursed smoothie is refreshingly raw, and exactly why you stop scrolling. Celebrities always add intrigue, but the real flush of success comes from the comments. Half the crowd calls it empowering while the other half calls it distasteful. That kind of split is marketing gold. Turns out the bathroom isn't the only place you can make a splash.