Equinet Academy > Digital Marketing > Social Media Marketing > Social Media Contest: A Step-By-Step Guide to Creating Your First Campaign

Singapore is one of the most digitally connected societies in the world. According to DataReportal’s Digital 2025: Singapore report, internet penetration stood at 95.8% and social media usage reached 5.16 million user identities as of January 2025, equivalent to 88.2% of the total population. For brands, marketers, and SME owners competing for attention on platforms such as Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and LinkedIn, the challenge is not simply being present; it is being noticed, remembered, and trusted.

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Social media contests offer one of the most cost-effective ways to cut through the noise. When designed well, a single contest campaign can grow your follower count by thousands, generate hundreds of pieces of user-generated content (UGC), fill your email list, and introduce your brand to audiences you would never have reached through paid advertising alone, all within a matter of days.

Yet many businesses in Singapore launch contests impulsively: a blurry iPhone photo, a vague caption, a $50 Fairprice voucher as the prize, and a confused set of entry rules. Unsurprisingly, these campaigns underperform. The difference between a contest that fizzles and one that goes viral lies in deliberate planning, platform-specific execution, and a clear understanding of your audience.

This guide is designed for Singapore-based marketers, SME owners, and aspiring digital marketing professionals who want to run their first, or their best, social media contest. You will learn every stage of the process: from setting objectives and drafting legally compliant rules, to managing entries, selecting winners fairly, and converting contest participants into loyal customers.

Instagram giveaways receive 3.5x more likes and 64x more engagements (followers, likes, and comments) compared to regular posts, based on Tailwind’s original study of over 60,000 Instagram posts, and accounts that run Instagram contests grow their followers 70% faster in three months compared to accounts that do not, according to the same Tailwind study.

On Facebook, 34% of people “Like” a Page primarily to access promotions and discounts, making contests and giveaways one of the most effective fan acquisition strategies, according to Wishpond.

Things You Can Learn

  • Singapore’s digital landscape is primed for contests: 95.8% internet penetration, 88.2% social media usage
  • Contests work because of four psychological drivers: reward anticipation, social proof/FOMO, reciprocity, and community belonging
  • The six contest formats are: like/comment/share, photo/video submission, caption contest, quiz/trivia, hashtag challenge, and refer-a-friend
  • Match your platform to your audience: Instagram (18–34), TikTok (16–30), Facebook (35+), LinkedIn (B2B/PMETs)
  • Always define one clear goal and 2–4 KPIs before launching
  • Legal obligations: comply with PDPA (separate consent for marketing), SCAP advertising standards, platform rules, and the Gambling Control Act 2022
  • Prize relevance beats prize value: generic prizes attract contest hunters who unfollow fast
  • Entry mechanics should take under five minutes to complete
  • Promote like a mini product launch: email, WhatsApp, influencers, paid social, and community groups
  • Select winners transparently using verifiable tools and document the process
  • The 48-72 hour post-contest window is critical: send thank-you emails, post UGC round-ups, offer consolation discounts
  • Always conduct post-campaign analytics to measure ROI and improve future contests

Understanding the Psychology Behind Contests

Before getting into tactics, it is worth asking: Why do social media contests work so effectively? Understanding the psychological drivers behind contest participation helps you design campaigns that feel irresistible, not gimmicky.

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The Reward Anticipation Effect

Neuroscience research consistently shows that the brain’s dopamine system activates not at the moment of receiving a reward, but in anticipation of it. Foundational research by neuroscientist Wolfram Schultz, published in peer-reviewed journals and widely replicated, established that dopamine neurons fire in response to reward-predicting cues rather than the reward itself, meaning the expectation of a prize is neurologically motivating before any prize is received.

This means that from the moment a user sees your contest post and decides to enter, their brain is already engaged in reward-seeking mode. Every reminder, countdown timer, and engagement update you send during the contest period sustains this anticipation, keeping your brand top of mind throughout the contest window.

Social Proof and FOMO

Singaporeans are highly social in their digital behaviour. When users see that their friends, colleagues, or favourite influencers have entered a contest, two powerful forces kick in: social proof (“other people trust this brand”) and FOMO, the fear of missing out. This is especially pronounced on platforms like TikTok and Instagram Stories, where contest activity is instantly visible to large networks.

Reciprocity

When a brand gives something of value, whether it is a chance to win a prize, a piece of exclusive content, or a discount simply for participating, users feel a subconscious obligation to give something back. This might be a follow, a like, a share, or an email address. Marketers who understand reciprocity design their entry mechanics to capture this moment of willingness.

Community and Belonging

Contests that ask users to submit photos, videos, or creative entries tap into a deeper need: the desire to be seen and to belong to a community. User-generated content (UGC) contests, in particular, transform passive followers into active contributors who feel personally invested in your brand.

When writing your contest copy, lead with the experience, not the prize. Instead of ‘Win a $500 voucher!’, try ‘Show us your favourite hawker dish and WIN, we’re celebrating Singapore’s food culture together.’ The second version triggers a sense of community belonging and social identity, not just greed.

Types of Social Media Contests

Not all contests are created equal. Choosing the right contest format depends on your goals, your audience, and the platform you are using. Below is an overview of the most effective formats, along with their pros, cons, and ideal use cases for Singapore brands.

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Like, Comment, and Share Contests

The simplest and most widely used format. Users enter by liking a post, leaving a comment (often tagging a friend), and/or sharing the post to their Story or feed. Entry barriers are low, making these ideal for rapid follower growth and reach amplification.

  • Best for: Brand awareness, follower growth, reach expansion
  • Platform fit: Facebook, Instagram
  • Singapore example: A Buona Vista bubble tea brand asks followers to tag two friends who would share a cup with them. The post reaches 12,000 accounts within 48 hours with zero ad spend.

unnamed-4

Source: Sprout Social

Photo and Video Submission Contests

Photo and Video Submission Contests

Source: Instagram

Users submit original photos or videos featuring your product, brand, or a theme you define. These contests generate high-quality UGC that you can repurpose in future campaigns, and they attract deeply engaged participants who are already fans.

  • Best for: UGC collection, brand storytelling, product showcases
  • Platform fit: Instagram, TikTok, Facebook
  • Singapore example: A Jurong East gym asks members to post a 30-second “transformation reel” using a branded hashtag. The best entry wins a three-month free membership. Over 200 videos are submitted, many featuring friends and family, expanding organic reach substantially.

Caption Contests

Screenshot 2026-04-21 at 10.46.30 AM

Source: Wishpond

You post an image and ask followers to write the funniest, most creative, or most relevant caption. These are excellent for brands with a playful personality and generate high comment volume, which boosts algorithmic visibility.

  • Best for: Engagement, brand personality expression, algorithm boost
  • Platform fit: Instagram, Facebook

Quiz and Trivia Contests

Screenshot 2026-04-21 at 10.50.15 AM

Source: Sprout Social

Followers answer a series of questions about your brand, industry, or a topic relevant to your audience. This format is excellent for educating your audience while measuring brand awareness. Interactive poll features on Instagram Stories make trivia contests particularly frictionless.

  • Best for: Brand education, lead qualification, audience insight
  • Platform fit: Instagram Stories, LinkedIn, Facebook

Hashtag Challenges

3-minute-makeup-challenge

Source: Sprout Social

Popularised by TikTok, hashtag challenges invite users to create content around a specific theme or action using a branded hashtag. The viral potential is enormous, but execution requires a clear, simple, and repeatable action that users feel comfortable performing.

  • Best for: Viral reach, UGC at scale, brand personality
  • Platform fit: TikTok, Instagram Reels
  • Singapore example: A homegrown skincare brand launches #GlowWithSG on TikTok, asking users to show their morning skincare routine. Within two weeks, the hashtag accumulated over 500,000 views, primarily driven by micro-influencers with 5,000-50,000 followers in Singapore.

Refer-a-Friend Contests

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Source: Sprout Social

Participants earn additional entries or rewards for each friend they successfully refer. This format has a compounding effect on reach and is particularly powerful when combined with email capture mechanisms.

  • Best for: Lead generation, email list growth, customer acquisition
  • Platform fit: Any platform, combined with a landing page

Contest Type Effort to Enter UGC Potential Viral Potential Lead Gen Value
Like/Comment/Share Very Low Low High Low
Photo/Video Submission High Very High Medium Medium
Caption Contest Low Medium Medium Low
Quiz/Trivia Medium Low Low High
Hashtag Challenge Medium Very High Very High Low
Refer-a-Friend Low Low High Very High

Choosing the Right Platform for Your Contest

Each social media platform has its own algorithm, culture, and user demographics. Running a contest on the wrong platform, even with a generous prize and polished visuals, will yield disappointing results. Here is how to make the right choice for the Singapore market.

Instagram

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Source: Daily Mail

Instagram remains the dominant platform for content marketing in Singapore, particularly for B2C brands in food and beverage, beauty, fashion, lifestyle, and retail. Its visual-first nature suits photo and video contests, while Stories and Reels offer powerful distribution tools.

  • Singapore demographic: Highest engagement among 18-34-year-olds
  • Ideal contest types: Photo submission, hashtag challenge, like/comment/share
  • Algorithm advantage: Comments that tag friends are heavily weighted, giving your contest post extended organic reach

TikTok

Tiktok-VidAeo-Image

Source: Mega Digital

TikTok’s “For You Page” (FYP) algorithm is uniquely democratic; a brand with 500 followers can go viral if the content resonates. This makes it the highest-risk, highest-reward platform for contest campaigns. Singapore’s TikTok user base skews younger (16-30), but the platform is increasingly used by older demographics too.

  • Singapore demographic: Fastest-growing platform; strong among 16-30-year-olds
  • Ideal contest types: Hashtag challenge, duet/stitch contests, video submission
  • Key tip: Keep the challenge action simple enough to do in under 60 seconds

Facebook

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Source: Engadget

While Facebook’s organic reach has declined significantly for younger audiences, it remains the most effective platform for reaching Singaporeans aged 35 and above. Facebook Groups, in particular, are underutilised contest venues; a well-executed contest in a niche community group can outperform a brand page contest with a fraction of the effort.

  • Singapore demographic: Most effective for 35+ audiences, parents, and community groups
  • Ideal contest types: Like/comment/share, photo submission, refer-a-friend

LinkedInLinkedIn_clubhouse_features_1617192179919

Source: Gadget 360

LinkedIn contests are less common but highly effective for B2B brands, professional services, training providers, and recruitment firms. Contest formats work best when tied to professional development, for example, asking followers to share a career lesson or industry insight to win a SkillsFuture-eligible course.

  • Singapore demographic: Professionals, PMETs, business owners, recruiters
  • Ideal contest types: Insight sharing, case study submission, quiz/trivia

Singapore Insight: According to DataReportal’s Digital 2025: Singapore report, YouTube reaches the highest share of Singapore’s internet users, followed by Facebook with an ad reach equivalent to 66.0% of the local internet user base, and Instagram with 3.15 million users equivalent to 53.8% of the total population. TikTok reached 72.4% of all Singaporean adults aged 18 and above, while LinkedIn reported a reach equivalent to 85.6% of the internet user base based on total registered members.

Note that each platform uses different methodologies for reporting reach, so these figures are not directly comparable. When selecting a platform for your brand or campaign, match your audience demographics; do not simply default to Instagram because it feels more modern.

Setting Goals and KPIs Before You Begin

The most common reason social media contests fail is not poor execution; it is a lack of clear objectives. Before you write a single caption or choose a prize, you must be able to complete this sentence: ‘This contest will be successful if…’

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Aligning Your Contest to Business Goals

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Every contest should serve a specific business objective. The four most common goals for Singapore brands are:

  • Growing your social media following: You want to increase your follower count on one or more platforms.
  • Generating leads: You want to collect email addresses, phone numbers, or WhatsApp opt-ins.
  • Increasing brand awareness: You want to introduce your brand to new audiences.
  • Driving product trials or sales: You want to incentivise first-time purchases or repeat buying.

Defining KPIs for Your Contest

Once your goal is clear, select two to four KPIs that will measure progress toward it. Avoid the trap of measuring everything; focus on what matters most.

defining-kpis-for-your-contest-infographic

Setting Realistic Benchmarks

What counts as a successful outcome? For a Singapore SME running its first contest with an existing follower base of 2,000-5,000, realistic benchmarks might include:

  • Follower growth: 5-15% increase over the contest period
  • Reach: 3x-8x your normal post reach
  • Engagement rate: 8-20% (significantly above the industry average of 1-3% for regular posts)
  • Leads generated: 100-500 email sign-ups (depending on prize value and promotion effort)

Action Step: Before proceeding to the next section, write down your single primary goal, your two to three KPIs, and a specific numeric target for each. For example: ‘Goal: Grow Instagram following. KPI 1: Net new followers, target 300. KPI 2: Total contest reach, target 20,000.’ Having this documented will shape every decision you make from here.

Designing Your Contest Concept

With your goals set and legal obligations understood, you can now move to the creative heart of the process: designing a contest that your target audience will find genuinely compelling. The best contest concepts feel native to the platform, relevant to the audience, and authentically connected to the brand.

designing-your-contest-concept-infographic

Developing a Contest Theme

Your theme is the creative hook that gives the contest its identity. Strong themes tap into one of three sources:

  • Cultural moments: National Day, Chinese New Year, Deepavali, Hari Raya, Christmas, and Singapore-specific events like the Singapore Food Festival or the Great Singapore Sale.
  • Brand milestones: Anniversaries, product launches, store openings, or hitting a follower milestone.
  • Community passions: Hawker food, local travel, fitness culture, family life in HDB estates, topics that resonate deeply with Singaporean identity.

Naming Your Contest

A memorable contest name increases recall and makes your branded hashtag more distinctive. Keep it short (three words or fewer), easy to spell, and culturally appropriate.

Examples:

  • #MySGTable – a food brand celebrating local home cooking
  • #GlowWithBLK – a beauty brand using its abbreviated brand name
  • #BuildYourBetter – a fitness brand encouraging transformation stories

Crafting the Entry Mechanic

The entry mechanic must balance accessibility with intent. If the barrier is too low (e.g., just liking a post), you attract a high volume of low-quality entrants who have no genuine interest in your brand. If the barrier is too high (e.g., submitting a 3-minute documentary), participation drops dramatically.

The sweet spot is an entry mechanic that requires some effort, enough to signal genuine interest, but can be completed in under five minutes.

Pro Tip: For Singapore audiences, the most effective hybrid entry mechanic combines a low-friction action (follow + comment + tag a friend) with an optional higher-effort action (submit a photo for bonus entries). This dual-track approach maximises entry volume while still generating UGC from your most engaged followers.

Contest Duration

Contest duration depends on your goals and the complexity of the entry mechanism. General guidelines for Singapore campaigns:

  • bLike/comment/share contests: 3-7 days (shorter creates urgency; longer risks audience fatigue)
  • Photo/video submission contests: 7-14 days (allow time for participants to create quality entries)
  • Hashtag challenges: 7-21 days (designed to build momentum over time)
  • Refer-a-friend contests: 7-14 days (enough time for referral chains to develop)

Crafting Your Prize Strategy

Your prize is the primary incentive for participation. A poorly chosen prize attracts the wrong entrants, contest hunters with no genuine interest in your brand, while a well-chosen prize pre-qualifies your audience and strengthens brand affinity.

prize-strategy-playbook-infographic

The Prize Relevance Principle

The most important rule in prize selection is relevance. Your prize should be something that only your ideal customer would genuinely desire. Offering a generic prize, like an iPhone or a holiday voucher, attracts everyone, which means your new followers will churn rapidly after the contest ends.

Case Example: A case study published by Social Media Examiner tracked 52 Instagram business accounts through sponsored giveaways and found that, on average, 61% of participants unfollowed the sponsoring accounts within two weeks of the winner being announced.

The study noted that generic, high-value prizes (such as iPhones or cash vouchers) attract people who are interested in the prize, not the brand. These followers ignore subsequent content, which causes engagement rates to drop sharply, which in turn signals to the algorithm that the content is low quality, reducing its organic reach. The accounts that fared better were those that offered prizes directly tied to their product or community, attracting entrants with a genuine interest in what the brand sells. Relevance beats scale every time.

Prize Value and Perception

Prize value should be proportional to the effort required to enter. If you are asking someone to create and submit an original video, a S$30 voucher is insulting. If you are simply asking someone to tag a friend in a comment, a S$50 voucher is generous.

entry-effort-prize-value-curve-infographic

Singapore-Specific Prize Ideas

Prizes that resonate strongly with Singapore audiences include:

  • Dining experiences: Omakase, chef’s table, or exclusive hawker food tours
  • Wellness packages: Spa vouchers, gym memberships, or TCM consultations
  • Education: SkillsFuture-eligible course enrolments at institutions like Equinet Academy
  • Local travel: Staycations at Singapore hotels, Sentosa experience packages
  • Family-oriented: Universal Studios Singapore tickets, zoo family passes
  • E-commerce credits: Shopee, Lazada, or Qoo10 vouchers for relevant product categories

Multiple Prizes vs Grand Prize

Research consistently shows that offering multiple smaller prizes increases entry volume more than a single grand prize of equal total value. A grand prize of S$500 generates less excitement than “1 winner gets S$200, 5 runners-up each receive S$50, and 20 participation prizes worth S$10 each” because participants feel their chances of winning at least something are higher.

Writing Clear Contest Rules

Clear, comprehensive rules protect both your brand and your participants. Ambiguous rules lead to disputes, complaints, and in some cases, regulatory scrutiny. Every social media contest in Singapore should have a written set of T&Cs that participants can access in full.

Essential Elements of Contest Rules

 

Your contest T&Cs must include the following elements as a minimum:

1. Organiser details: Your brand name, registered business name, and UEN (Unique Entity Number).

2. Contest period: Specific start and end dates and times, including Singapore Standard Time (SGT, UTC+8).

3. Eligibility: Age restrictions (minimum 18 for prizes involving alcohol or gambling elements), residency requirements (Singapore residents only, or open to SEA), and any exclusions (employees and their immediate family members must be excluded).

4. How to enter: Step-by-step entry instructions with no ambiguity.

5. Prize description: Full, accurate description of each prize, including cash equivalent value.

6. Winner selection method: How winners will be chosen (random draw, judging criteria, or hybrid), and who will conduct the selection.

7. Winner announcement: When, where, and how winners will be announced. How long winners have to respond (typically 48-72 hours) before a reserve winner is selected.

8. Data use: How participant data will be collected, stored, and used in compliance with the PDPA.

9. Disqualification conditions: What actions will disqualify an entry (e.g., purchasing followers, using bots, submitting AI-generated content where prohibited).

10. Platform disclaimer: A statement that the contest is in no way sponsored, endorsed, or administered by the relevant social media platform.

Watch Out: Never host your full T&Cs in the Instagram caption; the 2,200-character limit makes this impossible, and the formatting renders poorly. Instead, include a summary in the caption and direct participants to the full T&Cs via a link in your bio, a pinned Facebook post, or your website landing page.

Age and Residency Considerations

For contests targeted at Singapore residents, state clearly whether participants must be Singapore Citizens, Permanent Residents, or if residents on Work Passes and Student Passes are also eligible. For prizes involving alcohol, gambling, or age-restricted products, the minimum age requirement is 18 years.

Building Your Entry Mechanics and Landing Page

How participants enter your contest has a direct impact on entry volume, data quality, and your ability to measure results. This section covers both native social media entry mechanics and landing page-based entry systems.

building-your-entry-mechanics-infographic

Native Social Media Entry Mechanics

The simplest approach is to manage entries entirely within the platform, no external tools required. This is ideal for brands running their first contest and prioritising reach over lead generation.

  • Instagram: Follow + like + tag friends in comments + save post (optional for bonus entry)
  • TikTok: Follow + like + duet/stitch the video + use branded hashtag
  • Facebook: Like page + comment + share to personal timeline (note: sharing as mandatory is against Meta’s guidelines; “share for bonus entry” is acceptable)

Landing Page-Based Entry Systems

For contests where lead capture is a primary goal, direct participants to a dedicated landing page where they submit their details. This approach allows you to collect structured data (name, email, phone number), segment entrants, and track attribution.

  • Recommended tools for Singapore marketers: Gleam.io, KingSumo, Typeform, Google Forms (for simple campaigns)
  • Ensure your landing page is mobile-optimised, as over 85% of Singaporeans access social media primarily on mobile devices.
  • Include a clear PDPA consent checkbox before form submission
  • Use a short, memorable URL, for example, yourbrand.sg/contest

WhatsApp Entry Mechanics

WhatsApp is deeply embedded in Singaporean daily life, with penetration rates above 80%. For hyperlocal campaigns or SMEs with strong community relationships, WhatsApp-based entry mechanics can be highly effective. Participants send a keyword or a photo to your business WhatsApp number to enter.

  • Advantage: Direct, personal channel with near-100% open rates for follow-up messages
  • Limitation: Manual management is labour-intensive; use WhatsApp Business API for scale
  • PDPA note: Obtain explicit opt-in consent before sending any subsequent WhatsApp marketing messages

Pro Tip: Integrate your contest landing page with a CRM tool such as HubSpot or Zoho CRM so that every entry is automatically tagged and segmented. After the contest, you can run targeted nurture sequences to convert participants into customers, the true long-term value of any well-run contest.

Creating Compelling Contest Visuals and Copy

creating-compelling-contest-visuals-copy-infographic

In Singapore’s crowded social media landscape, your contest announcement must stop the scroll immediately. The combination of standout visuals and clear, compelling copy is what separates a contest post that gets 50 likes from one that gets 5,000.

Designing Your Contest Graphics

Your contest graphic should communicate three things within the first two seconds: what the prize is, how to enter, and when it ends. Use these design principles:

  • Use bold, contrasting colours that align with your brand palette, but ensure they pop against the platform’s background.
  • Feature the prize visually and prominently. If you are giving away a product, photograph it beautifully against a clean background.
  • Include your logo, but do not let it dominate. The prize and the call-to-action should be the hero elements.
  • Add a deadline urgency element, a graphic countdown strip or a bold “Ends [date]” label.

Writing High-Converting Contest Captions

Your caption must work hard. Here is a proven structure for Singapore contest captions:

1. Hook (line 1): Lead with the prize or an emotion-triggering question. Example: ‘Win a S$500 one-night staycation, yours to claim this National Day!’

2. Context (lines 2-3): Briefly explain why you are running the contest. This builds authenticity and brand connection.

3. Entry steps (lines 4-8): Number each step clearly. Use emojis as visual bullet points. Make each step a single, unambiguous action.

4. Deadline and T&Cs note: ‘Contest closes [date] at 11:59 pm SGT. Full T&Cs at [link in bio].’

5. CTA: End with an encouraging call to action: ‘Drop your entry in the comments below!’

Video and Stories Content

For higher-reach contests, create a supporting 15-30 second video or Instagram/Facebook Story sequence. This should include:

  • A quick reveal of the prize (slow-zoom, unboxing, or experience footage)
  • On-screen text overlay with the three to four entry steps
  • A countdown sticker (Instagram Stories) or text to reinforce urgency
  • A swipe-up link or ‘Link in bio’ CTA directing to the landing page

Pro Tip: Use Singapore-specific language in your copy to signal cultural authenticity. Phrases like ‘confirm shiok prize’, ‘tag your kaki’, or ‘don’t paiseh’ (used sparingly and authentically, not performatively) create immediate local resonance. However, know your audience; this approach works for B2C lifestyle brands targeting younger Singaporeans, but would be inappropriate for a B2B or professional services brand.

Promoting Your Contest Across Channels

Creating a great contest is only half the job. Without a deliberate promotion strategy, even the most well-designed campaign will fail to reach its target audience. Treat your contest like a mini product launch; it needs its own promotional plan.

promoting-your-contest-across-channels-infographic

Organic Promotion

Begin with the channels you already own:

  • Email list: Send a dedicated contest announcement email on launch day, a reminder email mid-contest, and a final “last chance” email 24 hours before closing. Subject lines with urgency and personalisation consistently outperform generic ones.
  • WhatsApp broadcast: For SMEs with a WhatsApp customer list, a broadcast message announcing the contest can drive immediate entries.
  • Cross-platform sharing: Announce the contest on all your active social media platforms, directing traffic to the primary contest platform.
  • Existing content: Add a contest banner to your website homepage and include a mention in your email signature for the duration of the contest.

Influencer Partnerships

Partnering with Singapore-based micro-influencers (5,000-50,000 followers) for contest amplification offers an excellent return on investment. Micro-influencers in Singapore typically charge between S$200-S$800 per post, and their audiences are highly engaged and trust their recommendations.

  • Select influencers whose audience demographics closely match your target customers.
  • Brief them to announce the contest in their own authentic voice, and avoid scripts.
  • Require proper ASAS and TikTok/Meta disclosure (e.g., ‘#ad’ or ‘#sponsored’)
  • Track their referral performance using unique UTM links or referral codes.

Paid Social Amplification

A modest paid advertising budget can dramatically expand your contest’s reach. Even S$200-S$500 in Meta or TikTok ads spent over the contest period can generate thousands of impressions from highly targeted Singapore audiences.

  • Facebook and Instagram: Use Reach or Engagement campaign objectives. Target by interest, location (Singapore), and lookalike audiences based on your existing customer base.
  • TikTok: Spark Ads allow you to promote your existing organic contest post, preserving social proof (likes and comments).
  • LinkedIn: For B2B contests, Sponsored Content targeting by industry, job function, and seniority is highly effective.

Community and Partnership Amplification

Singapore has a strong culture of community groups, and Facebook Groups for expats, mums, foodies, fitness enthusiasts, and professionals are highly active. Partnering with group administrators to share your contest (with transparency about the commercial nature) can unlock large, engaged audiences at zero cost.

  • Identify two to five relevant Singapore Facebook Groups with active members.
  • Contact administrators directly and offer a prize to one of their members as a gesture of goodwill
  • Ensure any sponsored posts in groups are disclosed transparently.

Managing Entries and Community Engagement

Once your contest is live, the real work begins. Managing entries effectively and maintaining active community engagement during the contest period are critical to maximising participation and ensuring a smooth experience for all entrants.

managing-entries-community-engagement-infographic

Setting Up an Entry Tracking System

For native social media contests (like/comment/tag), manually tracking entries at scale is impractical. Use the following tools to streamline management:

  • Gleam.io or Rafflecopter: Automate entry collection, validation, and random winner selection.
  • Google Sheets: For smaller campaigns, create a shared spreadsheet to log entries with columns for username, entry date, submission URL, and any disqualification notes.
  • Brandwatch or Keyhole: Track branded hashtag submissions in real-time for UGC and hashtag challenge contests.

Moderating Entries

Not all entries will comply with your rules. You must actively moderate for:

  • Fake or duplicate entries: Multiple accounts from the same individual, purchased followers, or bot-generated comments.
  • Irrelevant or offensive content: Especially important for UGC contests where public submissions are visible to all followers.
  • Missing required actions: An entry that tags a friend but does not follow your account, for example, is incomplete.
  • Copyright infringement: Submitted photos or videos that use unlicensed music, images, or content.

Engaging With Participants During the Contest

Community engagement during the contest period serves multiple purposes: it sustains excitement, signals to the algorithm that your post is generating meaningful interaction, and builds brand affinity with participants who feel acknowledged.

  • Respond to comments: Like every valid entry comment and reply to questions promptly (within 2-4 hours during business hours).
  • Repost UGC entries: Share standout photo or video entries to your Stories or feed (with credit), which encourages other participants and raises the contest’s visibility.
  • Post mid-contest updates: A mid-contest Story or post reminding followers of the prize, the entry steps, and the deadline extends the campaign’s organic reach.

Pro Tip: Respond to negative comments or disqualification queries via private message, not publicly. Handling grievances privately reduces the risk of public disputes and demonstrates professionalism. Always be polite, reference your T&Cs, and explain your decision clearly.

Selecting Winners Fairly and Transparently

The integrity of your winner selection process is fundamental to your brand’s reputation. A perceived unfair or arbitrary selection, even if genuinely random, can generate negative comments and erode trust. Transparency is your best protection.

selecting-winners-fairly-transparently-infographic

Methods of Winner Selection

methods-of-winner-selection-infographic

Random Draw

For like/comment/share and refer-a-friend contests, winners are selected by random draw. Use a verifiable tool to ensure fairness:

  • Comment Picker: Specifically designed for Instagram and Facebook comment-based draws.
  • Gleam.io built-in draw: Randomly selects from verified entries.
  • Wheel of Name: A visual spinning wheel tool ideal for transparent winner selection during a live stream.

Judged Selection

For photo, video, or caption contests, winners are selected by a panel of judges based on predefined criteria. Your T&Cs must state these criteria clearly. Typical judging criteria:

judged-selection-criteria-infographic

Community Vote

Allowing your audience to vote for their favourite entry increases engagement significantly, but also creates the risk of vote manipulation. If using a community vote, always combine it with a final editorial review by your team.

Documenting the Selection Process

Regardless of the method used, document your winner selection process thoroughly. Keep records of all eligible entries, the selection method used, and the identity of the person who conducted the draw. This protects you in the event of a dispute.

Contacting Winners

Contact the winner via direct message (DM) from your official brand account within 24 hours of selection. Your winner notification message should include:

  • Congratulations and confirmation that they have been selected
  • The specific prize they have won
  • The information you require from them to process the prize (e.g., full name, delivery address, NRIC for prizes above S$200 for tax purposes)
  • A deadline for response (typically 48-72 hours) before a reserve winner is selected

Watch Out: Beware of impersonation scams. After a contest, scammers often create fake accounts impersonating your brand and DM participants claiming they have “won a prize” and asking for payment or personal details. Proactively warn your community in your winner announcement post that your brand will never ask for payment or banking details as part of prize collection.

Announcing Winners and Post-Contest Engagement

The winner announcement is a high-engagement opportunity that too many brands squander with a brief, perfunctory post. Done well, it generates a second wave of engagement and leaves all participants, not just the winner, with a positive brand experience.

Crafting the Winner Announcement Post

Your winner announcement post should:

  • Congratulate the winner by username with genuine warmth
  • Restate the prize so that the announcement post reads well to anyone encountering it for the first time
  • Thank all participants: ‘To everyone who entered, your entries were absolutely incredible. Watch this space for our next contest.’
  • Where applicable, feature the winning entry (photo, video, or caption) to showcase the quality of participation.
  • Include a next step for non-winners: a consolation discount code, an invitation to subscribe to your newsletter, or a preview of an upcoming promotion.

Leveraging the Post-Contest Window

The 48-72 hours following your winner announcement represent a high-engagement window where your audience’s attention is still captured. Use this window strategically:

  • Send an email to all contest email list subscribers thanking them for participating and offering an exclusive post-contest discount.
  • Post a UGC round-up: a carousel of the best entries received, celebrating your community’s creativity.
  • Announce a future contest or promotion to give participants a reason to keep following your account.

Singapore Insight: For prize deliveries involving physical goods, allow sufficient time for logistics, given Singapore’s high expectations for prompt fulfilment. Partnering with reliable local courier services such as Janio, J&T Express Singapore, or Ninja Van, and providing tracking information to winners, builds confidence in your brand and reduces post-contest complaints.

Measuring Success: Post-Campaign Analytics

Your contest is over, your winner is announced, and most brands stop here. That is a mistake. The post-campaign analysis is where you extract the full intelligence value from your campaign and set yourself up to run a better contest next time.

Platform Analytics Review

Pull your analytics reports from the native platform tools within 48 hours of contest close, while the data is fresh. Key metrics to review:

  • Total reach and impressions during the contest period vs your baseline
  • Net new followers gained vs followers lost during the same period
  • Engagement rate on the contest post(s) vs your average post engagement rate
  • Profile visits and website link clicks generated from the contest
  • Story views and swipe-up rates (if Stories were part of the promotion strategy)

Lead Generation and CRM Analysis

If you captured leads via a landing page or form, analyse:

  • Total entries received and conversion rate from contest click-throughs to form completions
  • Email open rate for your post-contest follow-up sequence
  • Unsubscribe rate from your post-contest communications (high unsubscribes suggest your prize attracted the wrong audience)
  • Promo code redemption rate from the post-contest consolation offer

ROI Calculation

Calculate the return on investment for your contest using this framework:

  • Total cost: Prize value + creative production + paid amplification + tools/platform fees
  • Total value generated: Calculate the commercial value of each outcome (e.g., new follower value, cost per lead acquired, UGC content value, attributed revenue from promo code redemptions)
  • For benchmarking: A well-executed contest in Singapore typically achieves a cost-per-follower of S$0.50-S$3.00 and a cost-per-lead of S$2.00-S$8.00, both significantly below the cost of equivalent paid advertising.

Creating a Post-Campaign Report

Document your findings in a structured post-campaign report that includes: objectives vs results, key metrics performance, audience insights (who entered, what content performed best), and three to five recommendations for future campaigns. This report is invaluable if you work in a team or agency setting.

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Even experienced marketers make mistakes when running social media contests. Here are the ten most common errors seen in Singapore campaigns, and how to avoid them.

10-contest-mistakes-to-avoid-infographic

Conclusion

Social media contests, when planned and executed with deliberate intent, are among the most powerful tools available to Singapore marketers. They are not a shortcut to overnight success, but they are a highly efficient mechanism for compressing months of organic audience growth into days, generating authentic user content, and building a genuine brand community in one of the world’s most digitally connected markets.

The key insight from this guide is that the quality of your planning determines the quality of your results. Brands that run successful contests in Singapore share three traits: they define a clear, specific goal before launching; they choose a prize that resonates with their ideal customer rather than just anyone with a social media account; and they treat the post-contest period as seriously as the contest itself, using it to nurture and convert their new audience into loyal customers and repeat buyers.

Running a contest well is ultimately an exercise in strategic social media marketing. It requires audience insight, platform fluency, content craft, data analysis, and community management, all working together.

If you want to strengthen these skills in a structured, practical setting with industry-experienced trainers, Equinet Academy’s WSQ Social Media Marketing Strategy & Optimisation course covers exactly the disciplines this guide draws on: social media planning, multi-platform campaign execution, content creation, performance measurement, and community management.

Every great campaign began with a marketer who decided to stop improvising and start planning. This guide has given you the framework. The next step is yours.

Article Written By

Marvin Andres

Marvin is an enthusiastic content writer at Equinet Academy who loves crafting lively, engaging articles, blogs, and digital materials that speak directly to the right audiences. He brings a cheerful curiosity and a playful creativity to every project, always eager to produce content that sparks a smile, connects with readers, and delivers real results.


Article Written By

Marvin Andres

Marvin is an enthusiastic content writer at Equinet Academy who loves crafting lively, engaging articles, blogs, and digital materials that speak directly to the right audiences. He brings a cheerful curiosity and a playful creativity to every project, always eager to produce content that sparks a smile, connects with readers, and delivers real results.

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