The rise of edutainment marketing: How brands are turning learning into loyalty
When you think about marketing, you envision slick advertorials, groovy jingles, or some viral TikTok trends. However, a new force has been shaping the relationship between brands and people in 2025: edutainment marketing. It is a hybrid between education and entertainment that develops content that not only sells but also teaches, inspires, and keeps the audience engaged long after the campaign has ended.

Why education is the new engagement
The consumers of today are informed, sceptical, and quick to tune out hard selling.
They expect real value from the brands they engage with – something useful, meaningful, and life-enhancing. That’s why the most effective companies don’t just advertise; they educate and grow their audiences. That is power.
Case Example: Duolingo on TikTok
Duolingo has established one of the most distinctive brand presences on TikTok. It goes beyond random mascot dancing. It centres its campaigns around micro-learning moments, which are simple and fun reminders for people to practice their language skills that feel less like lessons and more like play.
This approach delivers measurable results: millions of users are nudged back into the app daily, driving both retention and brand loyalty.
Nike has extended its brand beyond apparel into the role of a personal performance coach.
Guidance concerning running form, training tips, and motivation is offered through its training platforms and video content. Nike has shifted from selling products to positioning itself as a partner in consumers’ fitness journeys, delivering continual practical value.

Learning = trust
Why does this strategy work so well? When a brand teaches you something, whether it’s how to manage stress, bake bread, or prepare for a marathon, it gains your trust.
You are not merely buying a product; you are buying into a relationship with a brand that has added value to your life.
Psychologists call this the “reciprocity principle”: when someone gives us value, we’re naturally inclined to give back. In marketing, that “give back” is loyalty, word-of-mouth, and ultimately, sales.
The South African opportunity
On this side of the globe, edutainment marketing holds huge power for South African brands.
What if financial institutions offered bite-sized budgeting tips on Instagram Reels?
Can a food retailer offer quick cooking tutorials as recipe inspiration?
Such initiatives would cut through the typical ad clutter and give audiences real reasons to engage and connect with brands beyond the usual sales pitch.

Where education meets loyalty
Edutainment marketing humanises brands. It reminds us that behind every logo is a group of people who understand our challenges and want to make life a little easier – or more fun.
That’s the loyalty-building factor in a cluttered marketplace.
When you’re ready to move from following marketing trends to shaping them, consider the Master of Philosophy (MPhil) in Marketing from the IMM Graduate School.
The programme equips you to design and implement research strategies, source marketing intelligence, and creatively solve complex strategic challenges. If you’re ready to lead with evidence-based thinking and shape marketing’s next frontier, this is where that journey begins.
For marketers and students, the lesson is clear: the future favours brands that teach, inspire, and help people grow.