Showing posts with label social commerce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social commerce. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 November 2015

Here Are 5 Reasons Instagram Really Matters (Especially for 2016's Marketing Budgets)

This is a big statement from MDG Advertising: Instagram may be the single biggest opportunity for social media marketers next year. Can it be true? We’ve heard plenty this year from Facebook, Twitter, and Snapchat, as their uses and back end business deals fluctuate, but Instagram has been the steady social platform not making too much noise. But that just might be what makes it 2016’s winner. Its consistency has made it the fastest growing platform around right now, and MDG has gathered fresh data to prove why marketers everywhere should be factoring Instagram into their budgets. 
A few key takeaways from the infographic: 
-The platform is already massive and it’s growing. There are 400 million active monthly users (we said active) who are liking photos to the tune of 2.5 billion per day. Over a quarter of the U.S adult population is on Instagram. They’re there and they’re engaged. What more can you ask for? 
-The demographic that uses the platform the most is the money demographic. Over half of Instagram users are under 29 and 62% are teenagers. One third of U.S teens say it’s the most important social network. If you or your brand is looking to capture the aesthetically-minded youth, there is no platform more crucial for your social strategy than Instagram.
-It’s got everything marketers need to advertise to their heart’s content. There are several options for style and targeting, and the highly visual nature of Instagram content is perfect for beauty brands, fitness brands, lifestyle brands, and more to capitalize on the rush to mobile ecommerce.
Will you be making Instagram a priority in 2016? Check out the infographic below and judge for yourself:
5 reasons Instagram matters in 2016
Source

Saturday, 3 October 2015

5 Tips To Improve Your Content Marketing Strategy

Basic Marketing Tips

It’s no secret that marketing has evolved into a data-driven process as a result of technological advancements and an increasingly competitive marketplace. The digital marketing landscape is ripe with opportunities to differentiate and expand businesses with insightful data. However, too much data can become overwhelming and lead you away from the original message of your content.
Under pressure to deliver results and reach growth targets, marketers can easily become distracted by the needs of the team, emails, and suggestions or input from colleagues or superiors. Faced with pressure from all sides, these distractions can lead to inefficiencies, and can potentially steer you away from the key message you originally intended to express in your content.
How do you separate yourself from these distractions and execute a successful content marketing strategy? We’ve put together a list of tips to help you get back to basics and focus on creating quality content that achieves your overarching objectives.

1. Don’t Shoot For The Moon

The primary function of a marketing department, and especially a content marketing team, is to increase awareness and interest in a brand to accelerate growth. Regardless of the size of your business, there will be immense pressure to deliver results and a myriad of opinions on how to do it. With so many opinions weighing in as you craft new content, it’s easy to feel like you’re being pulled in several different directions at once.
Sometimes to improve productivity, you have to put all of those opinions out of your mind and focus on what you know how to do. Remember, as a content marketer, your job is to create something of value for your brand’s target audience. Think about what you need to do to increase engagement, inspire social media discussions, and attract the attention of powerful influencers. If you focus on the primary objective of expanding your brand’s upper funnel, you will achieve the goals that are most important to your team.
You don’t need to be perfect; you just need to identify your most important goal, do your best work, and take a step towards achieving it.

2. Measure Your Performance

While some technological components can complicate your content marketing strategy, it is imperative that you use some form of technology to track and measure the performance of your marketing campaign.
To remain competitive marketers need technology that can optimize workflow and help build holistic content marketing strategies. There are five key components within the content marketing lifecycle, two of which are all about tracking the performance of content:
  • Planning
  • Creation
  • Distribution
  • Measurement
  • Optimization
The final two pillars of the lifecycle focus on tracking how your content performs. You need to optimize by learning what elements of your strategy are working and what needs improvement . Once you have quantitative data that conclusively tells you if you are hitting your targets, you can deliver more qualitative material for even greater results.

3. Remember The Human Component

Marketing has recently become more data-driven, but marketers cannot rely solely on technology to deliver results.. There is a humanistic element to successful marketing campaigns that cannot be replaced by data insights alone.
Data science is essential to determining what works and what doesn’t in your content strategy. However, the core of your content marketing campaign is built around your brand’s identity and your target audience. Your content should address the needs of your target audience to draw them to your site for more information or convert them into paying customers. Content that drives people back to your site increases the size of your upper funnel and improves your brand’s reputation.
When you review the data from your analytics, look at the numbers from the perspective of your ideal customer. What did people respond to within your existing content? What should you replicate to reach more of this demographic? What social channels can you use to reach them? What encourages them to bookmark your brand as a reliable source of information? Once you understand your audience and listen to the data, you can optimize content that will continue to build a positive relationship with your target demographic.

4. Avoid Distractions

Avoiding distractions may seem impossible when they seem to be coming from every direction. Fortunately there are a few strategies that you can implement to reduce distractions and get back to work.
First and foremost – don’t look at your email every few minutes. Creating a quality piece of content requires focus and attention, which is next to impossible if you are reacting to emails that arrive in your inbox throughout the day. This doesn’t mean avoid your emails entirely. Instead, simply limit the number of times you allow yourself to check the inbox every hour or minimize the window to help you become more productive.
It’s also useful to set a daily priority to manage your workflow. If everything is categorized as an immediate priority nothing will get done (and certainly not to the best of your abilities). Prioritize your tasks and organize deadlines to determine what needs to be done first. Focus on completing that task before you start working on anything else. Put all of your effort into one priority at a time so that you don’t end up feeling like you are pulled in too many directions.
Finally, don’t be afraid to delegate priorities from other people in your department. This doesn’t mean dumping work on others or shunning members of your team. A successful marketing team is a supportive unit where everyone is willing to chip in on important tasks in order to get the job done.

5. Make Your Content Fun

Humour is one of the best ways to build a relationship with your audience. People respond well to brands that have a little fun with their content and find a way to laugh at themselves. Humour not only humanizes the brand, but also makes them more relatable and authentic in the eyes of the audience.
Not only will humour give your brand a human face, but it will also make your content more interesting. This strategy is especially useful for challenging or mundane topics that might not receive a lot of traffic otherwise.
You can also incorporate visuals and use videos or webinars to help tell your story. Don’t be afraid to have a little fun with your content, if for nothing else than to stimulate your mind. Your creative mind.

Friday, 2 October 2015

How Is UGC Changing Content Marketing?

usergeneratedcontent

Consumers find the word-of-mouth nature of user-generated content to be particularly trustworthy, which has resulted in a surge of popularity comparable to that of influencer marketing.
"User-generated content" (UGC) may have become a clichéd marketing buzzword, but it's still one that resonates enough with consumers to have shifted the nature of content marketing.

According to digital think tank L2, 55 percent of consumers trust UGC over other types of marketing. Coca-Cola for example, attributed a 2.5 percent quarterly sales increase in part to an Instagram gallery centered on the massively popular "Share a Coke" campaign from last summer.
shareacokegallery
Why is UGC so popular with people? Authenticity, according to Tessa Wegert, communications director at digital agency Ensighten. 
"Brands are producing more content than ever, and consumers are starting to feel overwhelmed," Wegert says. "There's the potential for native ad and brand content blindness, particularly if the content doesn't ring true to the viewer, but UGC can combat that. We all know the power of word of mouth, and there's an element of that with UGC. Consumers are seeing their peers speak favorably of products and services. It's trustworthy and it's visual, and those are powerful things."
The visual nature of UGC makes it particularly popular on Instagram. Hyatt uses location tags to incorporate Instagram photos into its email marketing, while Sigma Beauty, for whom Instagram has become the top source of referral traffic, curates 16,000 user photos each month.
"When I have an army of 16,000 marketers [marketing] for me, it's a far more cost-effective, timely way for me to produce marketing content for my brand," says Matt Langie, chief marketing officer at Curalate, the visual and analytics platform behind #SaksStyle. Also known as "the shoppable selfie," #SaksStyle is a hub made up of pictures users have shared from Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and Instagram.
saks-style
"The smart brands are the ones going, ‘We're seeing behavioral changes; how do we connect that with a sale?" Langie says. "What's interesting to me is that this is really becoming a conversion of social, content and commerce where consumers are sharing what they're doing on social and brands are developing more and more authentic imagery. The missing link has been connecting all this to commerce."
The way Wegert and Langie speak of UGC is parallel to the sentiment toward the growing trend of influencer marketing. According to content and influencer marketing firm IZEA, more than half of digital marketers invested in paid social influencer endorsements last year. For example, Michelle Phan, whose beauty tutorials have helped her accrue nearly 8 million followers on YouTube, was recently featured in a Diet Dr Pepper campaign.


For brands, the idea is that regular people see Phan as more relatable than someone like, say, Gisele Bündchen. According to Langie, the same principles apply to UGC.
"[Consumers are] tired of the manufactured image. They want something that's authentic to a consumer who looks just like me: maybe a little heavyset, maybe a little too skinny, maybe not handsome," Langie says. "Everyone has their own shortcomings and at the end of the day, I'm not buying a product because I want to look like Gisele. I'm buying it because it makes me look good."

Sunday, 4 January 2015

2015 Social Media Predictions

2015 Social Media Predictions image Social Media Trends2015 1024x370.jpg

There is always interesting discussion at the end of one year looking into the next – What are the social media predictions, trends and hot topics to look forward to. This year I thought to analyze several of the expert predictions for what is to come from a recent Business 2 Community post.

Many marketers are looking forward to a “buy” button availability. During summer 2014 the “buy” button has been tested on Facebook and a roll-out to the rest of us seems to be in the eminent future. And who wouldn’t love the one-click opportunity to buy when the products or services seem impending from those potential Facebook clients. As the article says, this is a strong prediction for 2015!
With the introduction of the ‘buy’ button both on Twitter & Facebook, social commerce will truly get its wings. To ensure the most targeted offer on social for customers based on demographic & behavioral attributes, vendors will build cross channel consumer profiles. Customers will benefit with more relevant offers and companies will benefit with a more comprehensive customer profile across social and traditional channels.
Impending Facebook algorithm changes will make it harder to be promotional. post too many “look at me” posts and your content will not be shown to your target audience. In this social media overloaded society, it will be increasingly important to create content that engages your audience. Starting in January, content on Facebook pages will have increased scrutiny, that why I think that this next statement is likely true for a 2015 outlook. It’s a no-brainer really, work smarter and not necessarily harder. Invest more on sharing your influence and expertise and less on the shameless self-promotions that many are getting tired of seeing. It is not about quantity, but instead good quality!
Businesses will no longer strive to push content out daily. Instead, they will focus on longer form content (stats show effectiveness here) that provides context, hard data and analysis.
Another thought shared by one of the 25 industry experts I agree with, as well as disagree with. As far as social media predictions go, it is certain that social media will continue to be further integrated within business practices, how can it not? What I disagree on is that business owners should never choose their social media channels before considering their overall marketing plan – Just because a social platform is out there, does not mean that you should be there. Be sure to choose the right platforms for your business to be on. Also, always be aware of the implications of being there. Do you have the manpower to properly manage the platform? Is your voice being heard? Are your customers there? Careful consideration needs to take place FIRST!
Social media will continue to be more closely integrated with day-to-day business practices.
DISAGREE: Social media will continue to be more closely integrated with day-to-day business practices. Many businesses will think social first when crafting a marketing plan or developing sales outreach strategies. In addition, businesses will continue to invest more of their marketing and strategy budgets toward existing and new social platforms, as well as social analytics. Specifically, as the organic reach of promotional content faces more challenges, paid placements will become essential in reaching potential customers via social media.
Feel free to read more of what the social media predictions for 2015. There are several more thoughts that merit careful consideration. No matter what happens though, during 2015 we will continue to find more businesses participating in social media to reach their customers.