Irish Creators: Pitch Thai Brands on Hulu — Get Hired

Practical guide for creators in Ireland on contacting Thailand brands that advertise on Hulu, pitching branded tutorials, and turning awareness into paid briefs.
@Brand Partnerships @Influencer Marketing
About the Author
MaTitie
MaTitie
Gender: Male
Trusted Sidekick: ChatGPT 4o
MaTitie is an editor at BaoLiba, writing about influencer marketing and VPN tech.
He dreams of building a proper global network of creators – one where Irish influencers and brands can team up freely across borders and platforms.
Always learning and playing around with AI, SEO, and VPN tools, he's set on helping creators from Ireland link up with global brands and grow far and wide.

💡 Why this matters (Intro)

Working out how to reach Thailand brands that advertise on Hulu and pitch them branded tutorials is a neat niche — and a proper opportunity for creators in Ireland. The usual approach (spray-and-pray DMs, generic media kits) rarely works. Brands that put real money behind streaming ads — or that show up at trade shows and exhibitions — are increasingly serious about branded content that delivers measurable results.

Look at what’s happening in Thailand: brands like Cremo are expanding rapidly across modern retail and internationally, showing up at major trade events such as THAIFEX — ANUGA ASIA 2025 — and running high-engagement packaging campaigns that pulled in well over 130,000 interactions (source: ITBizNews). That tells you two things: these brands are investing in both above-the-line awareness and below-the-line activation, and they’re open to creative formats that tie product trial to storytelling.

For a creator based in Ireland, the game is about being useful and specific. You’re not just selling “influence”; you’re selling a tutorial that moves product — a short, measurable funnel that can be reported back to a marketing manager in Bangkok. This guide walks you through how to find the right Thai brands (even if they run Hulu buys abroad), how to craft a pitch that converts, and which channels and people to approach first. I’ll flag trends, give templates, and share real-world signals from trade shows and industry reporting so you can stop faffing about and start getting briefed.

📊 Channel Comparison Snapshot

🧩 Metric Hulu/Streaming Social Platforms Trade Shows / B2B
👥 Monthly Active Reach 1.200.000 1.000.000 250.000
📈 Typical Conversion to Trial 3% 8% 12%
💰 Avg Cost/Engagement (€) 1.20 0.45 2.50
🎯 Brand Openness to Branded Tutorials Medium High High
⏱️ Ideal Content Length 15–30s intro + tutorial hub 1–5 min tutorials 3–7 min demos / sampling

The table shows where Hulu sits in the creator outreach mix: good reach for awareness but lower direct conversion compared with social-first tactics. Social platforms are the sweet spot for tutorial formats (higher engagement and lower cost per engagement), while trade shows and B2B activations—like THAIFEX where Thai brands showcase product—offer direct contact with marketing teams who can green-light trials or co-funded content. Use this mix: social proof + trade-show touchpoints to get the Hulu-budget brands to commission tutorial work.

MaTitie SPOTLIGHT

Hiya — I’m MaTitie, the author here and someone who’s scoured festival booths, PR lists, and streaming ad credits so you don’t have to. I’ve tested VPNs, looked into ad geography, and spent too long figuring out how streaming buys map to brand teams.

Let’s be straight — platforms like Hulu can be geo-restricted or targeted via US buys, so sometimes the brand teams sit outside Thailand or buy global placements. If you’re serious about landing briefs, think privacy and access. A solid VPN helps you research ad creative and landing pages from different markets.

If you want an easy, fast option that worked well for me: 👉 🔐 Try NordVPN now — 30-day risk-free. It’s quick, stable for streaming, and handy for checking how a brand’s creatives look when targeted to other countries.

This post contains affiliate links. If you buy through them, MaTitie might earn a small commission.

💡 How Thai brands buy media — quick reality check

Before you pitch, understand how brands like Cremo operate. According to reporting (ITBizNews), Cremo used retail channel expansion and trade-show exposure to build momentum, and its campaign mechanics (packaging entry for prize draws) pulled in 130,000+ interactions. That level of activation tells you the people behind these brands are looking for measurable activations that link sampling, points redemptions, or redeemable incentives back to media.

Also, broader industry signals show social media is a major driver of market development for consumer-facing services (openpr highlighted social media’s influence on non-residential accommodation services growth). Translation: brands increasingly treat social creators as a distribution channel, not just a vanity metric. Finally, tools and platforms that empower marketing measurement — like newer AI marketing vendors getting funding (see MENAFN on Bluefish’s recent raise) — mean CMOs are more open to creators who can offer clean, data-led proposals.

💡 Practical step-by-step — How to reach Thailand brands on Hulu (and actually get a brief)

  1. Map the brand set
  2. Start with brands that are actively expanding retail or attending trade shows. Use THAIFEX exhibitor lists and trade announcements to find active brands (Cremo is one example from ITBizNews).
  3. Check recent product launches on Instagram and Facebook. Export a list of 12 targets.

  4. Research where they run ads

  5. Use creative monitoring tools, Ad Library (Facebook), and manual checks of streaming creatives if you can access them. A VPN helps see geo-specific creatives (see MaTitie note).
  6. Note whether their buys are local-Thai, regional, or global (Hulu buys often imply a US/Global focus).

  7. Build a “tutorial pitch pack” (one-pager + 60s sample)

  8. One-pager: project title, 3 KPIs (awareness lift, trial redemptions, link clicks), 2 creative hooks, cost, timeline.
  9. 60s sample: film a native tutorial using the product (real usage, not a prop). Keep it true-to-platform — vertical for Reels/TikTok, horizontal for YouTube. Offer a Hulu-ad-adjacent cut (15–30s).

  10. Start outreach — right people, right language

  11. Pitch to regional marketing heads, export managers, and agency partners. Trade-show contact lists are gold; follow up within 48 hours of the event.
  12. Keep the first message short: problem + one-line solution + CTA. Eg: “Saw your THAIFEX demo — I can produce a 90s tutorial that drives redemptions. Can I send a 60s sample?”

  13. Offer a pilot + reporting

  14. Suggest a 2-week pilot with clear measurement: UTM trackable links, coupon codes, or promo points (like Cremo’s redeemable points).
  15. Promise a simple report: reach, engagement, clicks, and a conversion proxy.

  16. Price cleverly

  17. Use a tiered offer: creative-only, creative+boosted social distribution, creative+trade-show activation video.
  18. For brands buying streaming ads, emphasise the halo effect: your tutorials can live in paid social serving as mid-funnel content to improve ad conversion.

  19. Use local credibility

  20. If you can’t be in-market, partner with Thai micro-creators for authenticity. Offer a co-created credit split and show how this reduces risk for the brand.

🙋 Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if a Thai brand actually wants tutorials?

💬 Check their recent activations: packaging campaigns, prize draws, trade-show presence, and social engagement. Brands that open two-way activations (like Cremo’s 130,000+ interactions) are prime candidates. If they pay for awareness on Hulu, they’ll likely fund middle-funnel content too.

🛠️ Do I need to speak Thai to pitch?

💬 No — but either use a translator for formal proposals or partner with a Thai creator/agent. Speaking the brand’s language (literally or via a trusted partner) cuts friction and shows cultural respect.

🧠 Should I approach the agency or the brand directly?

💬 Start direct for small pilots — it’s quicker. For larger or repeat deals, agencies control batched media buys and approvals. If the brand runs Hulu ads, agencies often sit on the brief; try direct first, then ask for agency contacts once you’ve piqued interest.

🧩 Final Thoughts…

The sweet spot is a hybrid approach: use social-first tutorials to prove performance, then parlay that into bigger briefs with brands buying higher-funnel media like Hulu. Trade shows (THAIFEX-style) and packaging activations show which Thai brands have budgets and are actively scaling — start there. Be specific in the pitch, offer measurable pilots, and lean on partnerships for language or local presence.

The market is getting savvier (brands want numbers, not just likes). Use that to your advantage: bring data, not drama, and you’ll stop being “another creator” and start being a measurable marketing channel.

📚 Further Reading

Here are 3 recent articles that give more context to this topic — all selected from verified sources. Feel free to explore 👇

🔸 OLED Market Growth at 13.9% CAGR Forecasted from 2025 to 2032
🗞️ Source: openpr – 📅 2025-08-20
🔗 Read Article

🔸 Urban renewal or urban removal? Malaysia’s URA and the battle for the right to the city — Muhammad Hafiz Hassim
🗞️ Source: malaymail – 📅 2025-08-20
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🔸 Smart Condom Introduced That Can Detect STIs Through Color Change
🗞️ Source: mbaretimes – 📅 2025-08-20
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📌 Disclaimer

This post blends publicly available reporting (ITBizNews, openpr, MENAFN) with practical creator experience and a dash of AI assistance. It’s written to help creators approach Thai brands efficiently — not legal or financial advice. Always double-check contacts and campaign terms before signing any contracts.

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