Scale Social solves the local marketing paradox for franchise networks – centralized enough to manage, local enough to actually convert.
ENTRY ANGLES
Platform connecting multi-location businesses with local micro-influencers who are actual customers · Word-of-mouth activation platform for personalized recommendations about local businesses · Hyperlocal marketing mechanism requiring minimal creative effort from individual location owners
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Network effects and two-sided marketplace management (businesses + local influencers/customers), Hyperlocal targeting and geo-fencing technology
SCALE SOCIAL FOUNDER
“marketing engine for franchise growth”
Scale Social built a "marketing engine for franchise growth" – purpose-built for networks of local locations.
These networks have serious marketing problems:
- Centralized advertising performs poorly for local audiences, and the cost of blanketing large geographies is prohibitive.
- Local franchisees typically lack both the marketing expertise and the time to run effective local campaigns on their own.
Scale Social's answer: a centralized platform for running hyperlocal marketing campaigns at scale. Every location in the network follows the same always-on system – but each campaign is strictly local, tailored to the specific tastes and interests of the audience in that location.
Here's how it works:
- During every customer interaction at a local location, a QR code is handed to the customer – on a receipt, a coupon, a bag, a payment terminal, anywhere that works.
- Scanning the code, the customer can take a photo or short video selfie and leave a few words – positive or otherwise. No app install required; the entire experience happens in a mobile browser.
- All the resulting photos and videos from across all locations flow through the platform to the team running hyperlocal marketing for the network.
- That team selects the best content and uses the platform's AI engine to turn it into posts and ads.
- Those posts and ads are then targeted – typically to the specific location where the content originated, though occasionally cross-promoted to other locations if the material is broadly applicable.
This removes creative responsibility from individual locations. Their only job is to put QR codes in front of as many customers as possible, so the platform receives enough raw material to work with.
Transforming that raw material into effective content is handled by a centralized team of professionals who operate according to consistent brand standards.
The content they produce remains inherently local – tied to specific locations and recognizable faces from those communities. That's the key: local content from real local customers consistently outperforms polished commercial ads by a significant margin. People respond to neighbors, not actors.
The results back this up. Networks using Scale Social see a 15% increase in new customer acquisition per location. Return on investment from the platform is 580%. A 100-location franchise network realizes an economic impact of $870,000 from the combination of reduced traditional marketing spend and increased revenue.
Scale Social was founded in the spring of last year. It received $110,000 in angel funding and $85,000 in grants before closing a $1.3M round from venture fund Launch.
Scale Social's tagline is "We turn real moments into real growth." The underlying logic: real customers at real locations have real stories. The platform's job is to surface the best ones and make sure the right people see them.
This connects to a pattern that has appeared in several recent reviews – use AI to create content from what's already happening in your normal operations.
Waldium ([related review](/review/vot-kak-nuzhno-delat-mashinki)) does this for software developers. Its AI monitors code changes in a developer's GitHub repository and automatically generates blog posts – feature announcements, competitor comparisons, problem-solution guides – based on what was actually shipped. It runs content marketing on autopilot, using the artifact that developers produce anyway: code.
Enzy ([related review](/review/2-minuty-i-2-kopejki)) does something similar for sales teams. The platform lets managers run competitions between salespeople – any number, on any metric. The AI then provides live commentary on the contest, encouraging those falling behind and pushing those in the lead. Salespeople keep selling and generating results; the AI extracts that activity data and turns it into motivational content that drives even more selling.
Scale Social is the same concept in a different context. Local franchise locations continue serving customers as normal – and in doing so, they passively generate content that can be used to market those same locations.
Right now that process still involves a centralized team of humans working with AI assistance. But as AI capabilities and the Scale Social platform evolve, the human layer in that loop will shrink considerably.
As Scale Social's funding announcement noted, "the startup raised at exactly the moment when franchises and multi-location businesses are beginning to feel the pain of declining centralized campaign effectiveness and rising influencer costs."
In other words: the marketing problem is becoming acute for businesses that are technically large but structurally local – networks made up of many individual points of presence that each need foot traffic, not clicks.
This is a trend, not a one-off. The direction: platforms for hyperlocal marketing in networked businesses.
Scale Social is one startup moving in this direction. Others have emerged.
Hummingbirds ([related review](/review/kak-masshtabirovat-sarafannoe-radio)) raised $10M for a platform connecting multi-location businesses with local micro-influencers who are actual customers of those businesses and want to earn rewards or discounts for telling their local followers about them.
Hypt ([related review](/review/rekomendacii-drajvjat-prodazhi)) raised $2.07M in September for a platform that activates word-of-mouth by helping people send personalized recommendations to friends about businesses where they just had a good experience. Broader in scope, but highly applicable to local businesses.
So – what other mechanism could drive local promotion for hyperlocal businesses, while requiring nothing from individual location owners in terms of creative effort?
This space is not just timely but genuinely profitable: building a product used by an entire franchise network is far more lucrative than selling to scattered independent local businesses one by one