As mid-year approaches, you may be looking back at your social media plans and goals for the year and realizing they need attention. What was set in motion less than six months ago now causes us to pause.
In this ever-evolving industry, key social media networks consistently pivot, refresh, and introduce new features. Social media marketers always need to be ready to change their strategy on the fly.
So far in 2016, we’ve already seen the following moves:
- Facebook launched Reactions and Facebook Live video to all users, and doubled down on Messenger.
- Instagram expanded video lengths by 4x and implemented an algorithmic news feed to show top content first.
- Twitter changed their home feed, introduced GIF search, and just announced updates to the 140 character limit.
- Snapchat rolled out Chat 2.0 and opened up geofilters.
In a recent webinar with Mention, I addressed the interruption of platform changes and identified four digital trends for marketers to get out in front of now.
These aren’t the only changes happening in the social media industry, but if you need help positioning your brand and content for success, they’re a good place to start.
Think of social channels as content hubs
Imagine being invited to a friend’s house for dinner. Upon your arrival, you immediately tell your host that you have a casserole cooking in your oven, and they should come with you instead to your home, to eat your dinner and get the recipe too. That wouldn’t go over well, either with your host or the other guests. The more you do this, the less invitations you’re likely to receive.
So why do brands insist on treating their audience in social media the same way?
Too many brands (and people!) think of social media only as a way to redirect the audience back to their own website, instead of joining them in that channel.
To be a good guest, create content adapted for that social media channel. Use each social channel’s unique characteristics to inspire creativity, rather than limitations. Create content that adds value, not noise.
While fresh content should live on your domain for SEO and conversion purposes, recognize that sending users to your website is not always necessary. Join the party, don’t always insist on being the host.
Make content that moves, sings, and smiles
Content comes in many forms. Even so, there are three specific keys for producing content that gets noticed and earns engagement.
Move
Video is here to stay. Horizontal or vertical. Long-form or quick hits. Consumed live on a mobile device or in a virtual reality environment.
Audiences vote with time, and they’re increasingly spending time watching video online. In fact, Cisco predicts mobile video will make up the three-fourths of all the world’s internet traffic by 2020.
Your content strategy should include video in some form, with the intent of allowing your audiences to consume it natively in whatever channel they interact with your brand.
Sing
Audio is underutilized as a medium for marketers, even though audiences increasingly consume audio content. The same number of people listen to podcasts today as use Twitter.
Get started by seeking out opportunities to join podcasts as an interview guest or co-host. When you are ready to launch a podcast, this guide on the Convince and Convert blog can point the way.
If music is more natural for you or your brand, follow the example of Hamburger Helper and leverage music streaming services as a key community to participate with.
Smile
Don’t limit your emoji to text messages. Those ever-lovable pictographs are increasingly part of everyday communication, so much so that the “face with tears of joy” emoji was the 2015 Word of the Year by Oxford Dictionary.
Whether in display advertising or email subject lines, brands are getting comfortable using emoji in marketing messages. Twitter has jumped in with custom Twitter Emoji for historical moments, sports and entertainment events, and elections (and has made them for sale too).
If none of the 1,281 characters in Unicode 8.0 fit your needs, than go the way of IKEA and Kim Kardashian, who have both released their own custom emoji keyboards.
Targeted reach trumps mass reach
Facebook is commonly blamed as the primary culprit for declining organic reach, but the truth is each of the primary social networks have moved to an algorithmic feed in an attempt to serve up the most relevant content to each individual user.
Rumors are that Snapchat will soon follow suit in their Stories and Discovery sections. Now that total followers is a vanity metric and not an indication of views or engagement, what options are left to ensure content reaches the masses?
Social marketers can respond by honing in on their intended audiences through organic and paid targeting options. It’s time to include “audience“ in the content planning process, alongside intended channel, post type and time/date to publish.
With your paid social budgets, take advantage of the retargeting functionality offered by Facebook and Twitter advertising platforms to reach an audience that’s already indicated their interest by visiting your website or downloading gated content.
Create unique content specifically for these audiences who are already midway down your marketing funnel.
Consumers trust people, not brands
Who your audience trusts has changed. It’s extremely important to understand the role of influence and who truly wields power of influence over your audience. Most likely, your brand and your CEO, or even a paid celebrity spokesperson, aren’t trusted to the degree of a “person like yourself.”
Influencers can help bridge that trust gap with your social audience – @laurentee
Strong influencer campaigns can result in changing perceptions and reaching new audiences.
Working with influencers can be daunting at first. Be prepared to give up control of the message and medium, but do so with trust.
Outline your own expectations and goals before launching a campaign, but also be sure to understand what outcomes the influencer expects. Offer access to restricted or one-of-a kind experiences, but also don’t forget that for many influencers, their online brand is a financial venture.
Be prepared to compensate fairly for their time and effort. An influencer’s priority is to their audience first, and keeping their message authentic is the key to their (and ultimately your) success.
Get Ahead of the Trends for Success in Social Media Marketing from Lauren Teague
There’s no crystal ball in our industry. No way to guarantee the plans we put forth today will result in the outcomes we predict. Every social marketer or community manager understands this nuance and (mostly) embraces it.
By reading this post, you’ve already set yourself apart by staying one step ahead of the masses. Leave a comment or question below to share what other trends you are noticing so we can all move forward together.
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