Competitive Position

Stronger taste, weaker operating discipline. The Medium has the sharpest cultural position in the Bali set but under-posts, under-systemizes, and leaves modern Instagram mechanics untouched.[1]

Where The Medium Wins and Loses

What The Medium wins on What competitors do better
Sharpest taste / cultural position in the Bali set[1] Kim Soo (~93.7K): brand-world engine — store + cafe + lifestyle as ecosystem[2]
Art authority, gallery destination identity[1] Bungalow Living (~81K): repeatable top-of-funnel Reels — store-tour format produced weekly[2]
Most editorial, least transactional[1] Sonne (~4.5K): design education as content — "lighting is a layered system"[2]
Artist/exhibition posts outperform catalog by ~7x[1] Woodara (~2.7K): operational clarity — 450+ verified factories, deadlines, logistics[2]
Collector/artisan premium positioning[1] Soo Living (~27K): keyword-rich captions, hospitality project proof (Maar Resort)[2]

The Medium: 259 posts vs Kim Soo 3,018 and Bungalow 8,500+. Content mix is 15% Reels (lowest in set), 45% carousels, 40% images.[1] Reel output, caption SEO, and systematic posting cadence are the clearest operational gaps.[2]

~7x
Engagement multiplier on artist drops + gallery atmosphere vs catalog posts[1]
"On film" 181 likes/5 comments vs mirrors 24 likes, Reel 12 likes

Wide-Open Opportunity

No brand in the Bali competitor set uses any of the following modern Instagram mechanics.[1][2]

Nobody in Bali uses

First mover on any of these mechanics gains structural advantage in a market where taste is high but Instagram discipline is low.

Global Best-in-Class Models

Common thread across the best design brands: serialized programming + clear commercial handoff, not "pretty posts."[3] None of these global brands lean on broadcast channels, comment-to-DM, or Trial Reels either — they compensate by making the next step brutally clear: showroom booking, sample ordering, drop timing, concierge shopping.[3]

Brand Model Key Tactic Relevance to The Medium
The Future Perfect Gallery programming Instagram as exhibition channel, not shop. Sale = visit / appointment / collector relationship[3] Closest operational model — gallery programming, appointment/collector relationships
APPARATUS (~295K) Immersive brand world Atmosphere sustains desire; conversion through galleries, specifiers, stockists[3] Brand-altitude benchmark — commerce without ever looking commercial
Olive Ateliers Instagram-native drops Scarcity + teaser language + countdown launches. Concierge shopping[3] Drop mechanic directly applicable to artist/collection launches
deVOL Kitchens (~880K) Editorial-to-inquiry Fantasy creates desire + workshop/process proves value. Showrooms in UK/NY/LA[3] Editorial-to-inquiry conversion benchmark — fantasy + workshop proof
FRAMA Lifestyle-spatial hybrid Furniture + goods + scent + projects + spaces — one compressed world[4] Multi-category under one brand model — furniture, lighting, art, homewares
Egg Collective Art-commerce braiding Feed sells curatorial intelligence, not catalog. Artist spotlights + gallery programming[3] Art-world identity + furniture commerce — direct parallel to The Medium
Casa Cubista Daily journal Instagram as daily journal for new designs/WIP. 100+ stockists worldwide[3] Posting cadence model — process/studio as content engine

See full breakdowns: Global Best-in-Class Brands

Design Studio Content Mix Model

The pattern across high-performing design studios: "world first, offer second, inquiry path always visible."[4]

Content Type Share of Feed Purpose
Completed spaces / projects ~40% Hero content — proves capability, inspires desire, shareable
Products in context ~25% Makes objects buyable — shows scale, materials, livability
Process / material ~15% Trust-building — craftsmanship proof, behind-the-scenes
Collaborations / exhibitions ~10% Network signal — cultural credibility, audience cross-pollination
Lifestyle / travel ~10% World-building — brand taste beyond the product

The Medium currently over-indexes on lifestyle/exhibition (~50%+ of feed) and under-indexes on completed spaces/projects and products in context.[1] The gap: more installed-environment content showing pieces in real rooms, villas, and hospitality projects.[2]

Bali Competitor Landscape

Three Playbooks in the Market

Playbook Brands Pattern
Destination-retail / lifestyle Kim Soo (~93.7K), Bungalow Living (~81K), Billie's (~11K) Reels-heavy retail storytelling: store walkthroughs, seasonal curation, shoppable lifestyle[1]
Project / specifier Soo Living (~27K), Kosame (~6.8K), Sonne (~4.5K), Woodara (~2.7K) Styled rooms, installed projects, materials, process. Design-language captions[1]
Taste-led gallery / design The Medium (~16K) Artist features, exhibition invites, collectible pieces, moody stills. Most editorial, least transactional[1]

Price Tier Map

Tier Brands
Accessible / value-led Billie's, Mercia, Bali Infinity
Mid-market design retail Canggu & Co, Bungalow Living, Kim Soo
Premium project / specifier Soo Living, Kosame, Sonne, Woodara, Bali Interio, Limesoda
Collector / artisan premium The Medium — priced by curation, art adjacency, design authority[1]

See full competitor profiles: Bali Competitors

Four Biggest Opportunities

1. Add repeatable Reel series
Borrow Bungalow Living's showroom-loop format or Sonne's design-education explainers. Low-effort, high-frequency content that feeds the algorithm without diluting the brand.[2]
2. Build a seasonal/calendar mechanic
Kim Soo's monthly theme approach gives the calendar structure and gives followers a reason to check back. Adapt around exhibition cycles, artist arrivals, or seasonal collections.[2]
3. Make buying/export/process clearer
Woodara's operational transparency builds trust. The Medium does not need to become transactional, but it needs to answer "how do I get this to Sydney/London/LA?"[2]
4. Keep art authority — do not slide into generic retail
Every borrowed tactic must pass: "Does this make us look more like a gallery or more like a shop?" The altitude is the moat.[2]
[1] Bali Competitor Landscape — Instagram profile analysis of 13 Bali furniture/design brands, March 2026
[2] Bali Competitor Tactics Detail — per-account tactical breakdown of 8 Bali accounts, March 2026
[3] Global Best-in-Class Design Brands — 10 design brand Instagram benchmarks, March 2026
[4] Global Best-in-Class Design Brands — design studio content mix model derived from best-in-class analysis