By Olena Fedas
Over the past seven years, I have led marketing teams in designing and implementing immersive brand activations within the Metaverse, primarily through the Decentraland platform.
My professional experience encompasses projects where digital innovation seamlessly merges with cultural relevance and clearly defined business objectives. I have overseen campaigns involving NFT launches, large-scale virtual events, and collaborations with philanthropic organizations. From these experiences, it is evident that the success of such initiatives relies on a precise purpose, a carefully crafted narrative, and rigorous technical execution. The Metaverse does not function merely as a novelty; rather, it represents a novel communication channel with its own logic and audience engagement rules.
Case studies that prove the point
One of the campaigns that made the potential of the Metaverse visible to mainstream audiences was the Coca-Cola NFT launch in Decentraland. We created a multi-piece NFT offering that included wearable digital apparel and a virtual rooftop celebration for International Friendship Day. It wasn’t only about selling collectibles; it was about translating Coca-Cola’s cultural heritage into shareable, collectible moments in a place where audiences gather, socialize, and express identity. The campaign also linked to charitable giving, which deepened audience goodwill and gave the initiative a tangible social purpose. (Ledger Insights, The Coca-Cola Company)
Another project that demonstrated what careful creative and technical integration can deliver was the Apollo 11 Moon-landing recreation in Decentraland. We designed immersive staging, matched the emotional cadence of the original broadcast, and released a NASA-themed wearable collection so participants could inhabit the moment as avatars. The event combined education, nostalgia, and spectacle, and it introduced a different kind of museum- or-history-led brand experience: one that’s participatory, shareable, and collectible in the form of virtual wearables. (NFTS.WTF)
Alongside that, I worked with foundations and cultural partners to make cause-driven metaverse drops – for example, a spacewearables collection whose proceeds supported STEAM education and emphasized environmentally friendlier blockchain choices. These projects proved that virtual activations can be engineered to support measurable philanthropy, community programs, and sustainability goals – not just buzz. (The Mac Observer)
Why the Metaverse matters for marketing today
There are three reasons the Metaverse is now essential to consider, not merely experiment with:
- Identity and ownership: In virtual worlds people express identity through avatars and digital goods. NFTs and wearables give brands a way to enter that expression layer. When someone chooses a branded wearable, they become a walking, talking extension of that brand – and that has real value for long-term affinity.
- New forms of attention: Virtual events can draw global audiences without the geographic and financial friction of physical events. Even when attendance isn’t massive, those who do show up often stay longer and engage more deeply because the experience is interactive and social.
- Cross-channel amplification: Metaverse moments don’t live in isolation. They generate video clips, social posts, earned media, and user-created content that flow back into traditional channels and extend reach far beyond the virtual platform.
How Metaverse marketing actually works – the practical stack
From concept to launch, a Metaverse campaign uses a blend of creative, technical, and measurement layers:
- Narrative and experience design: Start with story and purpose. Are you celebrating a milestone, selling a collectible, educating audiences, or driving social good? The story drives timing, platform choice, and creative assets.
- 3D & UX production: This is about the world-building: avatar animations, environmental design, and interaction scripts. The UX must be intuitive; virtual friction kills experiences faster than poor visuals.
- NFT / economy design: If you’re minting wearables or collectibles, consider supply, rarity tiers, utility (what the NFT unlocks), and how it connects to both the metaverse and off-platform benefits.
- Community and PR: Pre-launch community seeding, creator partnerships, and influencer engagement are essential. A strong pre-launch narrative helps convert curiosity into tickets, bids, and adoption.
- Measurement & commerce: Track DAUs, retention, time-in-world, conversion to owned channels (email, e-commerce), secondary-market sales, and social amplification. Combine on-chain data (where relevant) with standard marketing analytics to form a composite view of ROI.
Measurement: what success looks like
Brands often expect the same KPIs they use for a static campaign. The Metaverse requires a blended approach. Short-term metrics might include attendance, social impressions, NFT sell-through, and charitable donations. Mid- to long-term ROI is reflected in brand lift, earned media value, community growth, and downstream commerce (e.g., more visits to your site or increased sales of physical merchandise). For charitable or cultural projects, success metrics must also include funds raised and educational outcomes.
The future – where marketing and immersive tech converge
Looking ahead, the biggest accelerant will be the marriage of immersive design with intelligent data. Three trends will reframe how marketing teams operate:
- Hyper-personalized experiences at scale. Machine learning will let us adapt in-world moments to user behavior in real time – customizing music, narrative pacing, or product offers based on who’s in the room. That isn’t science fiction; it’s an extension of current personalization practices into a spatial context.
- Interoperable digital identity. As standards evolve, users will carry identity and ownership across spaces. That means a wearable you buy in one world could be visible in another – and brands that own those cross-platform experiences will have a sustained edge.
- Better creator economies. Creators and micro-studios will play a central role. Brands that build tools and revenue-sharing models for creators will unlock continual content, keeping experiences fresh and culturally relevant.
Practical advice for brands ready to lead
If you’re responsible for a brand’s digital roadmap, here are pragmatic steps to get started without blowing budget or brand equity:
- Start with a small, measurable mission. Try a single, purpose-driven activation (a limited wearable drop tied to a charity partner, a short live event with a measurable call to action). Keep the scope tight and the measurement clear.
- Invest in partnerships. Work with experienced studios for 3D and platform integration, partner with platform-native creators for authenticity, and align with nonprofits if social impact fits your brand.
- Treat marketing as product development. Build in fast feedback loops, iterate on experience UX, and be prepared to pivot based on attendee behavior.
- Design for cross-channel storytelling. Ensure every metaverse moment creates shareable assets – photo ops, short-form clips, and social hooks – to amplify reach.
- Respect the audience and the platform. Early metaverse adopters value authenticity and creativity. A transparent mechanism for giving back (charity, sustainability commitments, community investments) goes a long way.
Closing: an invitation to think bigger
Digital marketing has moved from banners and feeds into a place where people gather, dress, and celebrate. The Metaverse is not a silver bullet – it requires the same discipline and strategy as any marketing channel – but it offers rare creative freedom and new forms of value exchange between brands and people.
If you’re a brand leader, product marketer, or creative director wondering whether to take the first step, start with the question I always ask my team: what will your audience remember five months after the event? If your answer involves emotion, ownership, or meaningful action, you’re on the right path.
– Olena Fedas