What This Ad Tells Us About Influencer Marketing
This is one of the more interesting yet talked about stories when it comes to ads for Super Bowl 2026.
When Salesforce announced it was teaming up with MrBeast for its Super Bowl ad, it immediately turned heads. Not just because MrBeast is the biggest creator on YouTube, but because this partnership signals a bigger shift in how brands are thinking about viral and influencer advertising.
This isn’t your standard celebrity endorsement. It’s a creator-led campaign built around engagement, participation, and digital-first thinking and it’s a great case study for brands wondering how to use influencer marketing more effectively.
How the MrBeast and Salesforce Super Bowl Ad Came Together
Here’s the accouncement video – Straight from the source!
Like many modern marketing campaigns, this campaign started on social media. MrBeast tweeted that he’d been sitting on an idea for a Super Bowl commercial for years. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff replied publicly, and that quick exchange turned into a full Super Bowl partnership.
Instead of forcing MrBeast into a traditional brand script, Salesforce leaned into what he already does best. The brand reportedly gave him wide creative freedom with only a few guardrails: the ad had to be legal and include Salesforce products.

Why Viral and Influencer Advertising Works So Well
Influencer and viral advertising works because it feels native to how people already consume content and taps into a large audience that already exists. Audiences trust creators more than brands, and they engage longer when the content feels authentic.
In this case, Salesforce didn’t try to outshine MrBeast. Instead, they let him build the idea around participation, mystery, and a massive giveaway all core elements of his content.
This approach does a few important things:
- It turns passive viewers into active participants
- It creates conversation before the ad even airs
- It leverages existing popularity and an audience that is “brought” over to Salesforce.
- It extends the life of the campaign far beyond game day
That’s exactly how viral marketing works, especially when you add the hype that it is for the super bowl.
Turning Super Bowl Viewers Into Active Participants
One of the most interesting parts of the campaign is the interactive element. Teasers suggest viewers may need to solve puzzles or riddles tied to the ad, with the possibility of winning up to $1 million. But who knows what it will really be! We’ll report back once we see.
This transforms the Super Bowl ad from a one-way message into an experience. Instead of watching and forgetting, viewers are encouraged to engage, share theories, and even use AI tools to crack the clues.
From a marketing perspective, this is smart:
- Engagement increases recall
- Participation drives organic sharing
- Curiosity keeps the campaign alive across platforms
A Shift Away From Traditional Celebrity Advertising
Salesforce’s recent Super Bowl ads featured traditional Hollywood stars like Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson. Those campaigns worked but they followed a familiar formula. You can see from our other post on our favorite super bowl ads of 2026 –> HERE! That many do still feature major A list celeb power.
This year’s creator-first strategy shows a clear shift. MrBeast isn’t just talent in front of the camera. He’s deeply involved in the concept, execution, and rollout.
For brands, this is an important takeaway: creators aren’t just media buys. When used correctly, they’re creative partners and leverage their own popularity to reach a wider audience.
How Brands Can Apply This Strategy Without a Super Bowl Budget
You don’t need a Super Bowl slot or a 400-million-subscriber creator to apply these lessons.
Here’s what brands can take from the MrBeast and Salesforce campaign:
- Start with the platform, not the ad format
- Let creators do what they already do well
- Build campaigns around engagement, not just impressions
- Design content that encourages participation or sharing
Viral and influencer advertising works best when the idea is strong and the execution feels natural — not forced.
Frequently Asked Questions: How Volan Media Can Help Create Viral Marketing
Can Volan Media help create viral or influencer-driven campaigns?
Yes. We help brands design influencer and creator led campaigns that feel authentic, strategic, and aligned with business goals not just trend chasing.
Do you need a massive budget to create viral marketing?
No. While big budgets help (always!) with reach, viral marketing is driven more by concept, timing, and distribution. We focus on ideas that can scale, even with modest spend.
Does Volan Media work with influencers and creators?
We help brands identify the right creators, structure partnerships, and build content that works across paid and organic channels.
Is viral marketing predictable?
Not really, you 100% know what will happen and that’s important to understand. What is predictable is engagement when campaigns are built around audience intent, strong creative, and smart distribution.
How does Volan Media approach influencer advertising differently?
We start with strategy first which means understanding your audience, platforms, and goals before choosing creators or formats.
Final Thoughts: What This Super Bowl Ad Really Shows
The MrBeast and Salesforce Super Bowl ad is less about spectacle and more about evolution. It shows how influencer marketing, when done correctly, can outperform traditional advertising by driving engagement, trust, and conversation.
For brands willing to let go of control and embrace creator-led storytelling, this campaign is a blueprint — not just for viral marketing, but for how modern advertising works.
Want to take your marketing to the next level?
Contact Volan Media today to discuss your next project and get a custom quote that fits your vision and budget.
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