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Workflow2026-04-07·6 min read·Hannah Greene

How to set up a UGC content workflow without sounding desperate

Most "UGC programs" produce content that looks scripted because it was. Here is the request-and-edit workflow that produces user content that actually feels like user content.

The reason most UGC content looks fake is that it was: a brand briefed a creator, the creator delivered "authentic" footage to spec, and viewers can smell it from three scrolls away. There is a better way that takes more patience and less budget.

The request pattern

Stop asking customers to "make a UGC video for us". Ask them to send you the clip they already have — the screenshot they posted in their own Slack when they got a result, the iPhone video they took on the day a feature shipped. UGC works when the customer was already going to make the content for themselves; the brand just gets to use it.

  1. Identify the customers who already create content unprompted (your top 5% support champions usually).
  2. Send a 1-line message: "Mind if we share this on our channels? Happy to credit you or keep it anonymous, your call."
  3. Get permission in writing. A Slack/email reply is fine; do not need formal release forms for first-party social use.
  4. Edit lightly — trim, caption, add brand frame at most. Do NOT re-shoot.

The editing rules

  • Keep the original aspect ratio. Cropping to a brand-standard square is a tell.
  • Keep the original audio levels. Cleaning up audio makes it sound produced.
  • No brand voice-over on top of customer footage. Let the customer be the voice.
  • Use the customer's own caption, not a re-written one.

Cadence

One real piece of UGC per 8–12 brand posts is the sweet spot. More than that and the program tips into "performative UGC" — your feed starts looking like it is performing authenticity, which is the exact opposite of authentic.

The compensation question

For first-party UGC (your existing customers), the cleanest model is no payment, real credit, and the occasional thank-you in product (custom Slack emoji, early access, branded swag if they want it). Once money enters the equation the content drifts toward "creator content", which is fine but is a different program — and should be labelled "paid partnership" by every regulator that matters.

What you should never do

  • Edit a customer to remove a criticism. If they hedged about your product on camera, keep the hedge.
  • Use UGC without permission, even from a public post. The cost of one upset customer outweighs the reach.
  • Aggregate UGC into a montage with corporate music. The form kills the credibility.

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