In 2020, Airbnb cut hundreds of millions from paid acquisition. The industry expected collapse. What happened instead revealed the difference between a channel and a brand.
In 2020, Airbnb cut a significant portion of their performance marketing budget, removing hundreds of millions from acquisition channels.
From a traditional performance perspective, the expectation was clear: traffic would drop, bookings would decline, growth would stall.
Was Airbnb's growth built on ads, or something more fundamental?
Performance marketing was not the foundation of Airbnb's growth. It was the amplifier.
Owned the category of "belong anywhere", not just accommodation, but experience.
Emotional differentiation vs traditional hotels, a decade in the making.
A decade of trust, community, and user-driven experiences.
Strong direct traffic, brand search, and word-of-mouth loops already in place.
"Channels amplify what already exists. They do not create it."
— Altara SocialAirbnb didn't cut marketing out of panic. They removed amplification to test the strength of what was already built underneath.
They removed amplification to test the strength of the foundation. The foundation held.
Demand already existed: independent of paid media. The brand had built something the ads were only reflecting, not creating.
This case is widely misunderstood. Most brands take away the wrong lesson entirely.
"We should reduce or stop paid ads."
Airbnb could cut ads because the brand was already built. This is the real insight.
They had:
Without this foundation, cutting ads is not strategy. It is invisibility.
From an Altara perspective, the Airbnb case is not about paid media. It is about the order of operations that every brand must follow.
If your brand is not clearly differentiated before you run ads, paid media becomes expensive noise rather than efficient growth.
Paid media works best when the market already knows who you are. Ads capture demand, they rarely create it from scratch.
If your business relies entirely on paid channels for growth, you have not built a brand, you have rented attention.
"Stop running ads."
Build a brand strong enough that your ads are optional, not essential.
Because they had already done the right work long before 2020.
The ads were never the foundation. They were the amplification.
If the answer is no, the problem is not your ads.
It is your strategy.
At Altara, we evaluate systems, not decisions in isolation. If your brand is dependent on paid media to exist, that is the strategic problem we solve first.