Irish creators reaching Peru brands on Threads — practical steps

💡 Why Irish creators should care about Peruvian brands on Threads Peru’s creative economy — food artisans, small fashion houses, sustainable beauty start-ups — is hungry for export attention. Threads has become a new front for brands to test tone, community and low-friction outreach. If you’re an Irish creator who writes long-form product reviews, there’s a very practical play here: use Threads to open conversations, build trust, and secure sample products or paid commissions without the bureaucracy of email. ...

7 February 2026 Â· 6 min

Irish advertisers: Find UAE Apple Music creators fast

💡 Why Irish advertisers should care about UAE Apple Music creators If you’re an Irish advertiser selling music tech, lifestyle products, or trying to drive product-led growth via creator content, the UAE is a smart market to test. Dubai and Abu Dhabi host a dense creator ecosystem — fast-adopting audiences, high ARPU, and a thriving creator-startup scene that’s increasingly attractive to global brands. ...

6 February 2026 Â· 6 min

Irish creators: Pitch Swiss Shopee brands to share local gems

💡 Why Swiss brands on Shopee need your local-gem stories If you create travel, food or lifestyle content in Ireland, you’ve probably wondered how to hook into EU e‑commerce flows. Shopee Switzerland is becoming an underrated discovery channel for Swiss brands who want commerce-led storytelling — short video, creator-led demos and fast purchase paths. Swiss Beauty’s CMO, Vidushi Goyal, recently underlined that brands are moving to “commerce-led discovery” and creator storytelling to build clear, consistent brand salience across channels. That’s your in. ...

5 February 2026 Â· 6 min

Irish brands: Find Oman VK creators for seasonal fashion

💡 Why Irish brands should look for Oman VK creators now If you’re an Irish brand wanting to show seasonal fashion—say a spring linen drop or winter outerwear—picking the right regional creators matters. Oman’s fashion scene blends modesty, luxury, and young-city energy; creators on vkontakte (VK) and similar Russian-language / regional social apps can reach diasporas, tourists, and affluent local shoppers who still respond strongly to creator-led discovery. ...

4 February 2026 Â· 7 min

Irish creators: Pitch Cyprus brands on Josh & boost wellness

💡 Why Irish creators should care about Cyprus brands on Josh Josh is an Indian short-video app that’s been building pockets of regional brand activity. For creators in Ireland who want to run wellness or “healthy habits” campaigns, Cyprus brands are an underrated sweet spot: they’re small enough to be flexible, have money for seasonal wellness pushes (tourism, local festivals, spas), and often want English-speaking creator partners to reach diaspora customers and international tourists. ...

3 February 2026 Â· 6 min

Irish advertisers: Find Egypt Instagram creators to boost sales

💡 Why Irish advertisers should look to Egypt (quick reality check) Egypt’s creator scene has matured fast — strong Reels-first habits, big youth audiences, and creators comfortable with commercial work (think try-on hauls, product dupe reviews and commerce-driven storytelling). You’ve probably seen similar formats from markets in the reference material: influencers doing try-on hauls for fast-fashion platforms or unpacking cheap finds on TikTok and Instagram to drive impulse buys. Those same formats translate really well into the Egyptian market, where price-sensitive shoppers and trend-chasing Gen Zers respond to social proof and promo codes. ...

1 February 2026 Â· 7 min

Irish creators: pitch Japanese brands on LinkedIn, fast

💡 Why Irish creators should care about Japanese brands (short and real) Japan’s brands are picky but patient — they prize craftsmanship, continuity and long-term fan relationships. If you’re a creator in Ireland thinking “how do I even get a Japanese brand’s attention on LinkedIn?”, you’re not alone. Brands expanding across APAC (for example, CREATIP’s work supporting Japan expansion and wider APAC strategies) are actively looking for partners who can localise content, show measurable fan engagement, and craft follow-up experiences that keep customers hooked. ...

31 January 2026 Â· 6 min

US Roposo creators for gaming communities — fast wins

💡 Why US Roposo creators matter for gaming — and why now Roposo isn’t the biggest fish in the US pond, but it’s a different pond. For Irish advertisers chasing niche gaming audiences — think mobile esports clans, indie studio fandoms, modding communities — Roposo creators often have tight, engaged followings and formats that favour gameplay clips, micro-guides and challenge-led series. ...

30 January 2026 Â· 6 min

Irish creators: Pitch Lebanon brands on Hulu — fast guide

💡 Why Irish creators should care about Lebanon brands on Hulu If you’re an Irish musician or creator hunting real placements and not just likes, landing a brand tie-up that feeds into a Hulu feature is the kind of break that changes a career. You get streaming visibility, catalog value for sync licensing, and social proof to sell bigger gigs or publisher deals. ...

29 January 2026 Â· 6 min

Irish brands: Find Cambodia Moj creators for wellness

💡 Why Irish advertisers should care about Cambodian Moj creators If you’re an Irish brand in wellness — yoga apps, herbal supplements, mindful sleep products, or retreats — Cambodia’s creator scene is an under-used gem. Moj creators in Cambodia combine local rituals, approachable movement content and low production costs with authenticity that European audiences find refreshing. Recent digital tourism pushes that highlight sites like Siem Reap show creators can frame local tradition and modern travel in ways that shift perceptions — from purely heritage tourism to lived, contemporary experiences. Wei Xiaojing’s commentary about the depth of Cambodia’s cultural knowledge (referenced in promotional work around Siem Reap) is a reminder: creators who live that mix of spiritual heritage and everyday modern life make content that resonates. ...

28 January 2026 Â· 7 min