FlockU if You Haven't Figured Out How to Market to MillennialsA site for college kids by college kids should be an advertisers dream come true.

ByTracy Byrnes

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

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You can't market to a millennial.

Unless, of course, you're a millennial.

Then it's a lay-up because the only people they listen to are each other. They are instant crowdsourcing and follow each other like a flock of sheep.

And yet so many companies haven't figured out how to tap into that herd mentality.

Well, Josh Verne thinks he has and is attempting to be their shepherd.

He launchedFlockUback in February 2016 as a site for college kids, written by college kids, marketed to college kids.

It's peer-to-peer everything.

And thanks to social media and a syndicated partnership withThe Huffington Post, co-founder and CEO Verne says he has 3.8 million monthly impressions and a 35 percent click thru rate.

That's a lot of sheep.

His writers are students and he has over 400 of them whom he calls -- wait for it -- Flockers. They write about everything -- and I mean everything -- that a college kid could be curious about. FromThe One Where I F&$ked on a RooftoptoWhat You Need to Know About Hillary Clinton's Email Investigation.

Related:3 Essential Tips for Marketing to Millennials

And while the topics may seem strange and risqué, they are very relevant to them.

"We may not understand them, but they understand themselves," says Verne. "So they're basically curating what's going out there."

And he's hoping that advertisers wake the flock up and take advantage of that.

He already has some branded content -- likeI Hooked Up With An Amish Boywas sponsored byGood Vibrations(no, not the Beach Boys).

And when companies send product samples, Verne resends them out to his Flockers in a FlockBox (you knew that was coming). Every week he gives away a box of free stuff to a lucky Flocker. Readers just have to sign up to be eligible. And its pretty cool stuff. Check out the Father's Day FlockBoxhere. And you guessed it, there's a sex box. But hey, its incentive for the kids to engage and sign up.

Related:4 Tips for Marketing to Millennials

此外,如果他看到孩子们说话about a particular brand, his team will reach out and suggest they get involved. "If a peer likes it, others will too because they create a trust factor, says Verne.

Granted, the site is relatively new and Verne is not making money yet, but he's seems to be closer to corralling the herd than most.

He never went to college so maybe he's just reliving his youth. Or maybe he really does have excellent sheep-like senses.

Related:3 Brand Experience Strategies to Attract Millennials

Either way he's on to something. Because college kids will eventually grow up, get married, have kids, be homebuyers, etc. And they'll probably stay faithful to the brands that understood their needs.

This all may be flocking brilliant someday.

Wavy Line
Tracy Byrnes

Principal, Wine on the Street

Tracy Byrnes has what many might call a dream gig, matching a career as an experienced and well-respected business journalist with her passion for wine. She began a wine column,Wine With Me, for FOX News Channel in 2010 and later startedWine on the Streetas a way to educate professionals about wine and provide an open forum for content around the wine business. Prior to founding Wine on the Street, Tracy was an anchor and reporter for the FOX Business Network, a writer for TheStreet.com and an accountant with Ernst & Young. She is also the author ofBreak Down Your Money: How to Get Beyond the Noise to Profit in the Markets.

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