Case 03 · Social strategy (spec)
Dell already leads the market for AI servers, but that win is locked inside the server room. The brief: take it out of the trade press and into short-form video, the one format nobody in the category owns.
The leadership is real. The recognition is trapped in the server room.
Dell is already winning where buyers shop. The job now is reaching the next wave of builders, founders and engineers on the feeds they actually scroll, before they ever touch a procurement portal. That’s a short-form job, and it’s exactly the lane competitors have left empty.
Dell builds PowerEdge servers, including the GPU-dense XE-series machines enterprises use to train and run AI. This isn’t an underdog: PowerEdge was named the 2025 market and innovation leader for servers for AI, AI-server revenue more than doubled year over year, and the order backlog now sits north of $50B.
So the problem isn’t “nobody knows Dell.” It’s that the proof lives in earnings calls, analyst votes and trade press, all invisible to the engineers, ML leads and founders who’ll specify the next cluster. Ask a room of builders who powers AI and they name a chip. Dell’s job: own the box in culture, not just in the category.
Known in the wrong room. The obvious move, CEO thought leadership on LinkedIn, is one Dell already runs. The whitespace is the format conservative B2B brands still avoid and rivals haven’t claimed: native short-form video.
Leadership proven to analysts; invisible to builders in-feed.
A black rack of metal isn’t scroll-stopping until a person makes it one.
The GPU gets the glory; the box around it goes unseen.
Recognition isn’t one viral hit. It’s many small, consistent clips that compound into a name people know. Four moves:
Vertical-native, not repurposed: built for the feed, not webinar clips trimmed to size.
Engineers as creators, not just the CEO. Turn the people who actually build the racks into faces worth following.
Collaborate with the hardware-creator niche: the data-center YouTubers and tech TikTokers rivals barely touch.
Same-day point of view: a fast Dell vertical clip on every big AI moment, shipped while it’s still the conversation.
The people who choose infrastructure don’t start in a boardroom. They start in a homelab and a Discord. Today’s tinkerer is tomorrow’s buyer, or the engineer the buyer turns to. So we go where they already gather and back the creators they already trust.
r/homelab, self-hosting and PC-build communities: a hobby today, an enterprise spec tomorrow.
The people who actually stand up, run and recommend the clusters.
Channels like ServeTheHome and Level1Techs: technical, trusted, and rarely courted by rivals.
Startups scaling compute fast, watching closely what their peers run.
Mere exposure & fluency.
Names we’ve seen before feel easier to process, and easier reads as safer when the purchase is huge.
Social proof, from peers.
A real engineer on camera beats a logo. People trust people who do the job they do.
One category, owned.
Repeat one clear idea, “where AI gets built,” until it’s the first name recalled.
Watch-time and saves: the signals that actually move short-form reach.
How much of the AI-infra conversation names Dell.
Lift in searches for “Dell AI server.”
Followers & engagement from target roles, not vanity reach.
Independent portfolio concept, not affiliated with Dell Technologies. Illustrative spec work; figures drawn from Dell’s public 2025–2026 disclosures and third-party reporting.