Wednesday 26 September 2018

Facebook Stories Hits 300 Million Users and Rolls Out Ads Globally

Today, Facebook has announced that it’s rolling out Facebook Stories Ads to advertisers globally.

More than 300 million people use Facebook Stories and Messenger Stories every day.

Since Snapchat debuted the Stories format back in 2013, it has taken over the social media landscape. Facebook first introduced the format to one of its properties in 2016 with the launch of Instagram Stories and has since launched similar updates across Whatsapp, Messenger and Facebook itself.

And the format is still growing across the board. Data from Facebook IQ found that 68 percent of people say they use stories on at least three apps regularly, and 63 percent plan to use stories more in the future.

The value of Facebook Stories ads

An Ipsos survey discovered that 62 percent of people said they became more interested in a brand or product after seeing it in a story and Facebook says that “brands testing Facebook Stories ads are already seeing results”.

Stories ads also have the power to help your brand grow via word of mouth, with 38 percent of people surveyed saying that after seeing a product or service in a story they talked to someone about it.

In addition, the survey found that more than half of people said they’re making more online purchases as a result of seeing stories and 34 percent said they went to a store to look for a product they had seen in stories ads.

Facebook says that both Tentree, a sustainable, eco-friendly clothing company, and Skout, a dating app,  found that adding Facebook Stories to their Instagram Stories ad campaigns resulted in more customer actions at a lower cost.

The challenges and opportunities with Stories

The audiences on Facebook Stories could be an issue for advertisers. 300 million people use stories across Facebook and Messenger whereas more than 400 million use Instagram Stories daily, and 1.47 billion use Facebook daily.

However, the newness of Facebook Stories could appeal to advertisers seeking a first mover advantage with the format. Brandon Doyle, the founder of digital agency Wallaroo Media, has been experimenting with Facebook Stories ads for over a month, and recently told Digiday:

“CPM and conversion rates have been the best of any placements over the course of the last month, probably due to the fact that the competition is lower there”.

Digiday also revealed that flight-booking service Hopper has seen both Facebook Stories and Instagram Stories ads performing better than ads in Facebook’s news feed and in Instagram’s feed. In fact, the results for Hopper have been so great that the businesses has been “prioritizing designing ads for the Stories format, then adapting them to the other formats”.

Getting started with Facebook Stories ads

Facebook has launched Stories Ads to help businesses reach more people and Stories Ads will be available to advertisers as an additional placement to News Feed or Instagram Stories ad campaigns. Facebook reports that Stories Ads will soon be coming to Messenger soon too.

Facebook Stories ads deliver your message in a fullscreen, immersive environment. Additionally, Facebook Stories ads support every objective that’s currently available for Instagram Stories ads, including:

  • Reach
  • Brand awareness
  • Video views
  • App install
  • Conversion
  • Traffic
  • Lead generation

Facebook Stories ads have been rolled out globally today. To get started with Stories ads, head over to Facebook Ads Manager and create your ad, then when it comes to selecting ‘Placements’ you’ll see the option to include Facebook Stories:

Want to learn more about the Stories format?

With more than one billion people using Stories and vertical video formats across Facebook, Instagram, IGTV — and even YouTube… Have you wondered what this means for your business? We recently partnered up with writer, maker and marketer, Owen Williams, to and how to get started in a four-part email series.



source https://blog.bufferapp.com/facebook-stories-ads

Tuesday 25 September 2018

How to Master Vertical Video and Stories: Introducing Our New Email Series

Today we’re launching a short email series enabling anyone to understand the importance of vertical video, and how to get started with the format.

The Stories format, first popularized by Snapchat, has changed the social media landscape.

The format, which encourages users to share short, vertical videos and images has presented marketers, creators, and individuals with innovative, interactive storytelling experiences — and has spearheaded the vertical video revolution.

More than one billion people use Stories on Facebook-owned properties alone. And at Facebook’s F8 conference, it was revealed that the Stories format is on a path to surpass feeds as the primary way people share stuff with their friends sometime next year.

This meteoric growth has created incredible opportunities for marketers.

That’s why we built this series from the ground up: To help you fully understand the rise of vertical video and its importance in the social media landscape, as well as how to get started — even if you haven’t produced video content before.

“Vertical video is an essential part of a modern social media strategy. If you want to be current, if you want to engage your audience, you need to invest in vertical video.” – Kevan Lee, Marketing Director, Buffer

How to Master Vertical Video: Series outline

Seventy percent of digital media time is now spent on mobile devices and 96 percent of mobile consumption is vertical. So if you want to succeed in the mobile-first world of social media, vertical video content is a must.

This four-part email series will take you on a journey through the world of vertical video and Stories, helping you to understand why vertical video is important for your business, what platforms to use and exactly how to get started.

4 free lessons to help you become a Stories expert

Here’s a breakdown of the content you’ll receive as a part of How to Master Vertical Video:

  • Part One: Dive into the science behind why vertical video is so popular and how it’s become the default for social sharing and consumption.
  • Part Two: Take a closer look at the benefits of vertical video and why it’s important for all businesses and creatives to embrace.
  • Part Three: Breaking down all the major platforms that support the stories and vertical video formats.
  • Part Four:  Everything you need to get going with vertical video, including our favorite tips, and things to be aware of as you’re starting out.

Oh, and, don’t worry about a commitment — once the emails are complete, we won’t add you to our mailing list forever (unless you want us to, of course).

Meet your host

How to Master Vertical Video is written by Owen Williams. Owen is a technologist with a background wearing different hats, as a writer, developer, engineer, and marketer — these diverse experiences make Owen the perfect person to help you explore the world of vertical video from various perspectives.

“Vertical is a compelling new storytelling format that can help you connect with your audience in new ways and is yet to be embraced fully by marketers, leaving you a great opportunity to start today.”

Owen Williams (@ow)
Writer, How to Master Vertical Video

 

Sign up below: ⬇



source https://blog.bufferapp.com/how-to-master-vertical-video

Monday 24 September 2018

How Two Brands Generate Hundreds of Thousands in Revenue on Social Media, Big News from Twitter, New LinkedIn Ad Formats, and More!

Looking to catch up on the latest social media news, but short on time? We have you covered! This week (episode #113) we’re chatting about all of this and more:

  • How two brands are using social media, particularly Instagram and Instagram Stories, to generate hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue and why it may not be as difficult as you think.
  • Instagram is testing a brand new stand-alone shopping app that could put them in the same conversation as massive ecommerce platforms like Shopify, WooCommerce, and Magento.
  • LinkedIn launches a powerful ad format for businesses called Dynamic Ads. We’re breaking down exactly what they are and what they can do for your business.
  • Big news on the Twitter front. They are releasing a feature that will allows users to switch between a chronological and algorithmic timeline. We’ve got all of the information you need to know.

Join 18,000+ weekly listeners for the Buffer podcast, The Science of Social Media, where we bring you the latest and greatest in social media marketing news, updates, stories, insights, and actionable takeaways.

Let’s dive in!

Buffer Podcast Episode 113 Show Notes

How two brands generate hundreds of thousands in revenue on social media, big news from Twitter, new LinkedIn ad formats, and more [complete podcast transcript]

What follows is a lightly edited transcript of the conversation between Hailley Griffis and Brian Peters.

Brian: Hi everyone! I’m Brian Peters and this is The Science of Social Media, a podcast by Buffer. Your weekly sandbox for social media stories, insights, experimentation, and learning.

Hailley: Welcome to episode #113, I’m Hailley Griffis and this week we’re bringing you the latest and greatest in the world of social media and and marketing, starting with a couple of case studies on how two companies used social media to generate hundreds of thousands of dollars in sales, plus some big news from Twitter.

Brian: We’ll also be diving into exciting new LinkedIn ad formats as well as Instagram’s brand new shopping app. Tons to talk about, thanks for joining us from wherever you’re tuning in – let’s kick off the show!

Part I: How two brands generate hundreds of thousands in revenue on social media

Hailley: It was a cold January morning in Berlin, Germany, and Jonathan Courtney was feeling a bit stuck.

Nearly six years had passed since he founded design agency, AJ&Smart. And though the business had been a huge success — winning multiple awards and a roster of big-name clients — Jonathan felt there was much more to come for his agency and team.

“But what?” he wondered to himself. “How can we take AJ&Smart to the next level?”

Brian: Jonathan decided to make a bold move.

He wanted to share everything that happened at AJ&Smart on social media platforms like Instagram, Facebook and YouTube, giving followers behind-the-scenes access to the agency.

Now, 18-months later — and despite the initial pushback from advisors — AJ&Smart has generated in excess 2 million in revenue from clients who first discovered the agency on social media.

Hailley: “We all had what I guess you call ‘real jobs’,” Jay Perkins told us.

Back in 2013, Jay worked at Bigcommerce, an e-commerce software provider where he learned about what it takes to have a successful online business.

But Jay could only hold back his entrepreneurial ambitions for so long.

Brian: After kicking around business ideas for a year-or-so, Jay and his two business partners decided to take the plunge and launch an online store of their own.

Fast-forward to 2018 and Kettlebell Kings is a leading kettlebell equipment supplier based in Austin, Texas, generating mid seven-figures per year in revenue — with much of its new business coming directly from leads generated on Instagram.

Hailley: So what do AJ&Smart and Kettlebell kings have in common?

They both use social media to drive consistent brand awareness, leads, and eventually sales. Hundreds of thousands in sales.

Brian: Lets start with Kettlebell Kings.

Today, Kettlebell Kinds get around 400-600 leads per week from social media, with half coming from Instagram.

Jay Perkins explained to us that most of their biggest deals and business development relationships have come through Instagram — they have even signed deals with national gym chains from leads generated on the platform.

Hailley: Getting to this point is a lot more attainable than you might think.

First, Jay and his team are ‘very strict on the posts that go into their feeds’

The first step to a successful Instagram marketing strategy is creating content for your Instagram feed that your audience wants to see and engage with.

Brian: In the Instagram feed, Kettlebell Kings focuses on sharing educational content and workout examples — this strategy has helped it to amass an audience of over 79,000 followers.

It also reposts images and videos from customers and this user-generated content angle has lead to the hashtag #kettlebellkings being used more than 20,000 times on Instagram

Hailley: Next, Kettlebell Kings features and reposts 10-12 customers who tag us on a daily basis through stories.

It’s a win-win because being reposted by the Kettlebell Kings account is highly engaging and rewarding for those featured and it also encourages more and more customers to share their content on Instagram. And it provides their team with an unlimited stream of great content.

Brian: Cool so quick recap, Kettlebell Kings focuses on creating consistently quality and engaging content for both the Insta feed and for Stories.

But that’s not all… In order to capitalize on all of the views, they’ll include CTAs to “swipe up” in some of their Stories.

Hailley: Once a viewer swipes up, they will be taken to a landing page or an article where they can read more about a topic and enter their email address for more exclusive content.

These pages tend to convert visitors to email addresses at around 25-45 percent, depending on the traffic source. So 100 visits would generate between 25 and 45 new leads, on average.

Brian: Finally, once the visitor has shared their email address it will be entered into one of many email workflows Kettlebell Kings has designed to serve helpful email drip campaigns about kettlebell workouts and techniques from experts.

Jay explained to us that they have unique workflows depending on how someone has entered our system. All of their email workflows are about building value and trust with new leads.

Hailley: And that’s the key.

Kettlebell Kings purposely includes product photos in its emails but rarely sends offers or tries to make a sale. Instead, providing high quality content is the number one goal.

Brian: It’s amazing what can happen when you invest in great content.

Now AJ&Smart is another social success story. The AJ&Smart team was inspired by Gary Vaynerchuk’s mantra of ‘Document. Don’t create’.

Hailley: Once Jonathan and the AJ&Smart team had decided to embrace social media, they went all in. “We invested almost all of our profits in building our brand,” Jonathan told me.

And though his strategy was a little out there for a creative agency — most agencies keep their cards close to their chest — there was a strategic reason behind it.

Brian: “We’re in a commodity market,” Jonathan told us in an interview. “We could compete on price or just rely on the quality of our work. But he didn’t want to do that.

Jonathan wanted AJ&Smart to stand out alone in the field of design agencies. He wanted the business to have its own brand.

Hailley: So they decided to focus on making one channel really great. That channel is Instagram.

‘Instagram is their social media hub’. As Jonathan explained to us, it’s a super low friction way to create content and a great way to get started.

They use Stories mainly to provide an authentic look at what the agency is like day-to-day and tries to show as much of what’s happening in real-time as possible.

Brian: And guess what?

When the AJ&Smart team goes to visit a client, the client already knows the whole journey and what the agency is all about.

And when it comes to their main Instagram feed, they post highly curated content that’s focused on design-related hashtags the agency wants to reach.

Hailley: Here’s the catch.

Jonathan openly admits that long-term social media success rarely happens overnight.

After a couple of months of investing heavily in social media marketing, AJ&Smart had only picked up a few hundred followers here and there. It took about eight-months in total before potential clients would contact the company saying they found it on Instagram, YouTube or any other social channels.

Brian: Jonathan told us, “If I hadn’t have been patient I’d have given up long before we started to see the benefits of social media. If you’re just focused on the numbers, you’re not going to succeed.”

By focusing on humanizing the AJ&Smart brand and by documenting instead of only creating, they were able to generate more than 2 million in revenue directly from social media.

Part II: Instagram working on a brand new standalone shopping app

Hailley: Just when we thought Instagram was all out of new features, sources from The Verge tell us that they are working on a new standalone app dedicated to shopping,
The app — which may be called Instagram shopping or something similar — will let users browse collections of goods from merchants that they follow and purchase them directly within the app.

Brian: At this point, the potential Instagram shopping app is still very early on in the development stage and so there’s no timetable for release yet, but we do believe that Instagram is well positioned to make a major expansion into e-commerce.

More than 25 million businesses already have Instagram accounts, and 2 million of them are advertisers.

Hailley: Four in five Instagram users follow at least one business. Creating a standalone app would allow the company to provide a dedicated home for an increasingly popular activity on Instagram while also expanding opportunities for revenue.

Brian: And of course, in true Facebook fashion, they could introduce more tools for merchants who are building their businesses on Instagram, entering into the space with major e-commerce platforms like Shopify and WooCommerce.

Hailley: As always, we’ll keep you posted here on the Science of Social Media.

I don’t know, Brian, I find myself shopping on Instagram more and more.

Brian: Oh totally – me to. I was just thinking about that the other day. I think I shop more on my mobile phone now than I do on my desktop which is a huge shift for me.

Part III: LinkedIn launches powerful new Dynamic Ads format

Hailley: Alright, next up, LinkedIn has just launched a brand new ad type called Dynamic Ads.
They’re actually really neat. According to LinkedIn, “Dynamic Ads help you build deeper relationships with your audience by automatically customizing your ad creative with the publicly available information from LinkedIn member profiles – adding visibility and scale.”

Brian: So essentially with Dynamic Ads you can personalize the ad creative to feature member profile details such as their photo, first name, company, and job title. LinkedIn says this will “capture your audience’s attention in a way that standard display ads can’t.”

Early results sound promising too as LinkedIn has shared that Dynamic Ads have shown up to 2X the click-through rate of traditional display ads.

Hailley: With Dynamic Ads, you just need to write your ad copy, set up the creative and then LinkedIn will automatically personalize your campaign for each person you target.

Dynamic ads are available in three different formats — Follower ads, Spotlight ads and Content ads — and can be used across your marketing funnel to connect with prospects at different stages of their journey.

Brian: If you’d like to read more about Dynamic Ads or get started with some experiments, head on over to the Buffer blog where we’ve got the inside scoop on everything you need to know.

Part IV: Twitter allowing users to switch to a chronological timeline

And last, but not least, and this one sort of went viral this week, is that Twitter will, yes you guessed it, soon allow you switch between a chronological feed and algorithm feed.
Hailley: Now you will be able to uncheck a box in settings reading “Show the best tweets first,” which will completely revert your timeline to chronological.

Twitter said that they’ve learned that when showing the best Tweets first, people find Twitter more relevant and useful. However, they’ve also heard feedback from people who at times prefer to see the most recent Tweets.

Brian: Ultimately their goal with the timeline is to balance showing you the most recent Tweets with the best Tweets you’re likely to care about, but we don’t always get this balance right.

However, and Hailley we’ve talked about this before, is that I think this is one of those “be careful what you wish for situations” – I’m not sure if people realize just how useful and valuable the algorithm is.

Hailley: Thank you so much for tuning in to the Science of Social Media today.

If you ever want to get in touch with me or Brian, we’re always here for your on social media using the hashtag #bufferpodcast. You can also say hi to us anytime and hello@bufferapp.com

Brian: Yes we would absolutely love to hear from you all.

And a huge thank you from myself and Hailley – we just passed the 18,000 weekly listener milestone and could not be more excited. You all are the reason we do this every single week. So, keep up the awesome work.

Lots more to come in 2018 so stay tuned. Until next Monday, everyone!

How to say hello to us

We would all love to say hello to you on social media – especially Twitter!

Thanks for listening! Feel free to connect with our team at Buffer on TwitterBuffer on Facebook, our Podcast homepage, or with the hashtag #bufferpodcast.

Enjoy the show? It’d mean the world to us if you’d be up for giving us a rating and review on iTunes!

About The Science of Social Media podcast

The Science of Social Media is your weekly sandbox for social media stories, insights, experimentation, and inspiration. Every Monday (and sometimes more) we share the most cutting-edge social media marketing tactics from brands and influencers in every industry. If you’re a social media team of one, business owner, marketer, or someone simply interested in social media marketing, you’re sure to find something useful in each and every episode.  It’s our hope that you’ll join our 18,000+ weekly iTunes listeners and rock your social media channels as a result!

The Science of Social Media is proudly made by the Buffer team. Feel free to get in touch with us for any thoughts, ideas, or feedback.



source https://blog.bufferapp.com/buffer-podcast-episode-113

Thursday 20 September 2018

Behind-the-Scenes: How Mercy For Animals Gets Millions of Social Media Impressions Every Week

  • Mercy for Animals is a global non-profit organization that uses social media to spread awareness of its cause.
  • Since signing up to Buffer for Business Mercy for Animals’ Twitter impressions have risen by more than 300 percent.
  • The organization’s primary Instagram account has grown by more than 70,000 followers in 2018.

Animals are the true champions of social media.

Facebook and Instagram are awash with pet photos and stories. Twitter has its memes and curated feeds of cute animal pics.

But what if we thought about farmed animals the same way we did of our domestic companions?

MFA Instagram Post

Mercy For Animals is an international nonprofit dedicated to eliminating cruelty to farmed animals, and regularly garners thousands of likes on their social posts. They’ve developed a level of engagement with their social audience that many organizations might only dream about, based on a strategy focused on triggering compassionate emotional responses, identifying top performing posts, and iterating on their best content.

On their global Twitter account, you’ll find content that is particularly confronting. Their most retweeted posts are often videos with footage of mistreated animals, asking us to question our own habits and conceptions around farmed animals and food. Warning: if you do find yourself visiting their Twitter account, prepare to be challenged.

Posting emotive content that drives organic reach

A year or so ago, Mercy For Animals’ Facebook performance was hit pretty hard by Facebook’s algorithm shift. Without turning to advertising dollars to boost their social media posts, they still managed to grow their organic impressions to millions.

How?

Focusing on consistently producing and recycling high-quality content that engages their followers and spreads their compassionate message.

MfA video on facebook

According to their Global Content Manager, Julie Cappiello, Mercy For Animals focuses on being the most effective for their mission with the resources they have. As a nonprofit, they didn’t want to spend their donor’s money to place their social media posts in front of people.

(Mercy For Animals do run ads on social media platforms, mostly to promote their donor drives or their Veg Starter Guide on Facebook but not to boost their organic posts.)

Furthermore, posting organically also helps Julie and her team understand what their audience really reacts to.

“Our content varies, but we keep our focus on farmed animal and vegan advocacy. With the ebbs and flows of algorithms, we’ve found recipe videos work wonders on Instagram (and not so much on Facebook), but our news videos outperform on Twitter and Facebook. We try to maximize our content as much as possible, including reworking videos to be in “frames” to become more shareable. It’s all about keeping up with the trends.

Julie Cappiello
Global Content Manager

 

Behind-the-scenes of a global organization’s social media team

Mercy For Animals’ social media team has a total of nine people — eight working directly on social media and one supervisor. With the help of their video and graphic design teams, they manage 19 social media accounts worldwide. Their social media goals are total impressions, organic impressions, engagement, and followers.

Developing and distributing content and campaigns in a global organization is no easy feat. Mercy for Animals has a presence in different regions, from North America to Latin America to Asia. And each region has its own culture and sensitivity to the topics that Mercy For Animals advocates for.

Cappiello works very closely with the staffers in each region to develop culturally appropriate content. In some regions, she also works with VPs and managing directors to make sure their content is local and their messaging is what they need it to be to maximize the impact of every post. This also includes which platforms they choose to work on since some regions are more frequently on certain platforms more than others.

MFA video post

When it comes to the content creation process, Cappiello said that they have very collaborative teams, and that the process is different for images and videos.

For images, their graphics department works hard on their Instagram stories and some social images with direction and requests from the social team. The social team also creates images themselves from time to time as well.

On the other hand, for videos, their video team and social team meet once a month to discuss ideas and upcoming projects to work on. The social team also requests two to three “news” videos (similar to NowThis) a week to keep our followers updated on vegan and animal rights news.

Bringing their social media to the next level with Buffer

When Julie was hired at Mercy For Animals, she was in desperate need to cut down the time she was volunteering on social media and wanted to republish old posts. She spoke to all of their social media staff about Buffer to see if it was something they wanted to implement. The staffer who oversees their US Twitter account, Joe Loria, was tweeting approximately 50 times a day and using another tool, which was proving to be cumbersome. To extend the shelf-life of their best content, they would have to copy the posts into their schedule multiple times.

Since adopting Buffer, Julie, Joe and the team have streamlined their publishing process, scheduling all their content a day or two in advance to ensure their social accounts never “go dark”.

MfA buffer analytics

During the scheduling process they use Buffer’s native analytics tools to identify which social media posts have performed particularly well, so that those posts can be recycled or repurposed.

“By being able to quickly and easily sort through past posts based on set KPIs, we know what type of content is performing best. Using this data we try and replicate the success by either rebuffering the content or creating a new, but similar, piece of content. Rebuffering content helps us reach more people with the same messaging. It saves us, literally, hours and in turn, helps us spread our message even further.”

Joe Loria
Content Manager, U.S.

 

As their Instagram and Pinterest content is created by their design and video teams, they also use Buffer as a place to store images and video. This stops content from becoming lost in their inboxes, and provides flexibility in timing; their social posts can be easily rearranged by dragging and dropping content within the Buffer interface.

According to their Pinterest and Instagram content manager, Sarah Von Alt, Buffer has also made their Pinterest account more consistent, helping their team spread out the content they’ve created and post on a more regular basis, rather than pinning a ton of things at once. Sarah has found that “Pinterest users seem to value regular content without being overwhelmed by dozens of pins at once”.

There are also a couple of side benefits that are unique to being global. 1) Covering staff who aren’t fluent in a region’s local language are able to easily reschedule pre-vetted content. 2) Buffer’s automatic Instagram scheduling means that staff no longer have to be online at odd hours of the day or work on weekends to post to Instagram.

The results are impressive.

In the face of declining organic reach across the industry, Mercy For Animals has garnered a 300 percent increase in Twitter impressions since they started with Buffer, and have been steadily and efficiently extending their reach across Facebook, Instagram and Pinterest.

MFA's Twitter analytics

Perhaps most impressively, they’ve achieved these results without the assistance of advertising dollars, extra staff or extra hours on social media. Time and money are scarce resources in the nonprofit sector, and with a smart strategy and the right tools, Mercy For Animals are maximizing their returns for both.

Mercy For Animals: Key Stats

19: The number of social accounts managed by Mercy for Animals across the globe.
300 percent: The increase in Twitter impressions since signing up to Buffer.
70,000+: The growth in followers on their primary Instagram account in 2018.
8: The number of staff working on directly on social media.

Instagram | Facebook | Twitter

Mercy For Animals subscribes to Buffer for Business.



source https://blog.bufferapp.com/how-mercy-for-animals-gets-millions-of-social-media-impressions-every-week

Q4 Content Calendar: Important Dates and Campaign Ideas for Small Businesses

Monday 17 September 2018

How to Discover Irresistible Content Ideas Using Reddit, YouTube, Quora, and Online Communities

Where and how am I going to find my next great content ideas?

We’ve all asked this question at one time or another.

Developing consistently great content for your social media accounts, blog posts, webinars, online courses, and workshops is a major challenge from both a creative and resource standpoint.

This week on The Science of Social Media, we’re sharing a simple, yet proven formula that you can use time and time again to discover irresistible content ideas using Reddit, YouTube, Quora, and other online communities.

Let’s kick it off!

How to Discover New Content Ideas

How to subscribe: iTunes | Google Play | SoundCloud | Stitcher | RSS

How to discover irresistible content ideas [table of contents]

Brian: Hi everyone! I’m Brian Peters and this is The Science of Social Media, a podcast by Buffer. Your weekly sandbox for social media stories, insights, experimentation, and learning.

Hailley: Welcome to episode #112! I’m Hailley Griffis and this week we’re taking a look at a simple formula that will leave you with tons of content ideas for your social media and content marketing. Not just any ideas, though, we’re going to tell you how to dig in and really find the content that your audience will find irresistible from places you might not be using right now, like Reddit, Quora, YouTube, and a few other spots.

Part I: The formula for discovering great content on any network

Brian: I’m so excited to share these with everyone, there are some real gems in here. Let’s get started!

Hailley: To kick it off today, we’re going to look at the exact formula to come up with these amazing content ideas, and then we’ll go through a couple of unconventional networks and the specific steps to take there.

For this formula, it is pretty straight forward and you can definitely use it on several social networks, but we are going to apply it to just a few today to give you an example of what it can do.

Brian: So first up, you have to figure out the topic you’re looking to create content about. Now, you can of course have multiple topics for this, but we recommend only picking one topic at a time when you’re researching.

Topics could be things like social media marketing, or remote work, those are both topics that we might be looking to create content around.

Hailley: I think I could spend hours reading about remote work!

So now we have our topic and next up is to determine what people’s struggles are around our particular topic, and the way to figure that out is different per network so we’ll get into that in a minute, but in general you want to look for words that people use when they’re struggling with something, like:

  • “How do you”
  • “How can I”
  • “Can someone help”
  • “Tips”
  • “Suggestions”
  • “Biggest challenge”
  • “Biggest struggle”
  • “Struggle with”

So anything that would point to someone having a challenge around the topic you’ve set.

Brian: Now, once you’ve done that, you need to really dig in. Look at all of the comments about that topic, read through threads, really learn about what this challenge means to the people who are writing about it. Understanding this information will help you create richer, more thorough content.

Some questions you can ask yourself are:

  • What other problems do people have that are related to the core problem?
  • What solutions have worked for other people?
  • What solutions have failed?

Hailley: If you’ve done this thoroughly, which we’re sure you have because you are a listener of this show and we know you’re working hard to be a better social media marketer, then you should have a ton of information about the challenge, the core problem, potential solutions, and things that haven’t worked.

Combining this with your own expertise on the subject, you now have more than enough to go off of to create content that will directly solve a problem that several people have shown interest in.

Brian: That’s right, so now that you have all of this information now comes the fun part, you get to create content!

Now whether that content is a blog post, newsletter, video, or a series of tweets or Facebook posts, that all depends on what you want to create and how your audience wants to consume it. We won’t get into that part too much, but the main part of this formula is using all of the information you’ve gathered to create the most informed content possible about the specific problem that you are solving.

Hailley: Finally, the last part of this formula is to publish your content and not only that, but to go back to some of the places where you collected struggles and information from and share that info with those people.

Now we’ve gone really high-level in this section because we want you to know that this is the kind of formula you can adjust and use anywhere on social media, but we’ll give you a few good examples in a minute here.

Brian: Yes, I love this formula. So to recap for everyone listening it went like this:

  1. Choose a topic you want to create content around
  2. Determine people’s struggles about that content through the use of key phrases like “how do you”
  3. Dig in and learn everything you can about the specific problem people are facing as well as the proposed solutions
  4. Create your content based on all of your research and expertise; and finally,
  5. Share it with the world

Hailley: I love that formula! It just makes me feel like I could turn into a content creating machine if I wanted to.

Now to the fun part, let’s apply this formula to several different social networks and talk about how it works for each of them. These are all pretty non traditional places and we don’t talk about them much on the show so it’s pretty exciting that we get to dig in today!

Part II: Using Reddit as a source of content inspiration

Brian: Agreed! Let’s get started with a network I know we haven’t talked about on the show before because we’ve had people tweet us and ask us to cover it, and that’s Reddit.

Now, I know some social media marketers are super familiar with Reddit while others have never even gone to the website before, and that’s totally fine! So let’s take a quick look at why Reddit is so powerful.

First of all, according to Alexa.com, Reddit is the sixth most popular website on the planet.

Hailley: Wow, I don’t think I would have guessed that. That’s amazing. The other thing about Reddit is not only is it hugely popular, but according to statistics published in The Next Web, the average Reddit user spends 15 minutes, 47 seconds on Reddit.com each day, compared to just over 11 minutes for Facebook.com visitors and 6 minutes 23 seconds on Twitter.com.

And the platform is growing at an incredible rate: Reddit had more than 330 million monthly active users as of April 2018, which is up from 250 million in November 2017.

Brian: Plus, since the platform was launched, its users have posted nearly two billion comments and cast more than 16 billion votes.

No matter what topic you’re trying to research, there’s almost certainly a subreddit (Reddit’s name for topic-specific forums) for it. Statista suggests that there are nearly 1.2 million subreddits.

Given its size, engagement and depth, Reddit is certain to have something valuable for you to use to come up with a content ideas.

Hailley: Totally! So let’s apply the formula to Reddit specifically.

First of all for Reddit, start with choosing your topic and then finding the most relevant subreddits around it.

This might take a few searches, especially if you aren’t familiar with Reddit, but in the end you should have several subreddits that at least address some parts of your topic.

Brian: Next up look for people sharing their struggles. This involved diving into the subreddits you’ve found to look for problems that you can solve for users with your content.

You can use the search function for each subreddit to look for phrases that indicate a struggle. We chatted about this a minute ago but quick recap, it would be things like:

  • “How do you”
  • “How can I”
  • “Can someone help”

Make sure to include quotation marks around your search parameters, especially for the multi-word phrases, as that will ensure an exact phrase match.

Hailley: You can repeat this process across all of the subreddits you’ve identified to come up with a list of dozens (or more) potential content topics.

So now that you’ve identified people’s struggles, you can dig in and learn everything you can about the specific problem people are facing to ensure your content thoroughly solves the reader’s problem.

Go through each of the posts that you’ve found where someone is talking about a problem and try to figure out the problems related to the core problems, the solutions that have works and the solutions that have failed.

Brian: Now that you’re armed with your Reddit-mined article idea and the research to build your post around, it’s time to write.

If you’ve completed each step, then you have everything you need for your next valuable piece of content. Whether that’s a blog post, YouTube Video, or even a tweetstorm.

Hailley: That’s it! You’re ready to share your content with the world. Now, one thing we mentioned is that sometimes it makes sense to go back to where you originally found the problem and share your resource.

I don’t have a ton of experience with Reddit but I’ve heard their community doesn’t react well when someone it promoting their own content but I’m not sure how that’s different if you’re adding it in a comment instead of creating a new post around it. I’d say be cautious, and if you’re unsure just stick to the content promotion channels you’re most familiar with.

Part III: Using YouTube as a massive content search engine

Brian: Next up, let’s talk YouTube. Now we did a whole episode on YouTube marketing back in episode #95, but we’re going to quickly go over it as a tool for finding content ideas.

A lot of people don’t think of it this way but YouTube is the world’s second largest search engine — and third most visited site after Google and Facebook

And we as viewers watch over 1 billion hours of YouTube videos a day, more than Netflix and Facebook video combined

Hailley: Huge potential! So the formula for finding content ideas on YouTube is pretty similar but there some key differences that we’ll chat about.

Once you have your topic and the keywords associated with it for your YouTube search you can combine that with those questions we’re using to determine struggles and start entering them into the YouTube Search bar.

Brian: The key difference here is that because YouTube is really a search engine, you not only have access to the content related to your search term, but it will suggest tons of other long tail keywords based on your search.

This is the same experience for when you start to type a search term into Google and it started suggesting what other popular searches are based on what you’re typing.

Hailley: What’s cool is that YouTube is telling you what people are searching for related to your search! So that’s an extra bit of information to add to your research as you’re figuring out what people struggle with most.

This definitely lends a hand to the next step of the formula in terms of digging in so it should be pretty straight forward there!

Brian: Yes! Once you have all that you can start creating content and sharing it with the world.

I think YouTube is a great place to find content ideas even if the content you’re creating isn’t necessarily video, however, we’ve also had a ton of success with our YouTube channel by implementing this search strategy we’re talking about and uploading videos based on that. Like I said, we do talk about that whole experience back in ep. 95.

Part IV: Other communities and social networks for content discovery

Hailley: Where else might this strategy work?

Well, tons of places.

Another place I think you’d have a ton of success with this is Quora, a place where people specifically go to ask questions about things they’re unsure of. Plus as of 2017 Quora had over 200 million monthly unique visitors so that’s plenty of people that are creating content or asking questions.

Brian: Quora is great for this!

I also think Facebook Groups are a good place to look for content ideas. If you join a Facebook group specific to the topic that you’re writing about then you’ll already be looking at a group of people that are your target audience and all you have to do is find posts where people talk about their struggles.

Hailley: Too true! Okay and the last one I want to mention is Slack Communities, which can definitely be challenging because you have to really search to find active communities, but I think similar to Facebook groups if you join the right Slack community you could be in the perfect place to see the kinds of struggles that people are relaying and see how you can create content to help solve problems for them.

Brian: Thank you so much for tuning in to the Science of Social Media today. The show notes for this episode are now available on the Buffer Blog at blog.buffer.com with a complete transcript.

If you ever want to get in touch with me or Hailley, we’re always here for your on social media using the hashtag #bufferpodcast. You can also say hi to us anytime and hello@bufferapp.com

Hailley: Also, thank you so much to everyone leaving iTunes reviews! It’s so awesome to read through all your kind comments there – and we actually do read through all of them and go through all of the tweets so thank you again!

Until next Monday, everyone!

How to say hello to us

We would all love to say hello to you on social media – especially Twitter!

Thanks for listening! Feel free to connect with our team at Buffer on TwitterBuffer on Facebook, our Podcast homepage, or with the hashtag #bufferpodcast.

Enjoy the show? It’d mean the world to us if you’d be up for giving us a rating and review on iTunes!

About The Science of Social Media podcast

The Science of Social Media is your weekly sandbox for social media stories, insights, experimentation, and inspiration. Every Monday (and sometimes more) we share the most cutting-edge social media marketing tactics from brands and influencers in every industry. If you’re a social media team of one, business owner, marketer, or someone simply interested in social media marketing, you’re sure to find something useful in each and every episode.  It’s our hope that you’ll join our 16,000+ weekly iTunes listeners and rock your social media channels as a result!

The Science of Social Media is proudly made by the Buffer team. Feel free to get in touch with us for any thoughts, ideas, or feedback.



source https://blog.bufferapp.com/content-ideas

Thursday 13 September 2018

AJ&Smart Has Generated More Than €2 Million in Sales from Social Media: Here’s How

  • Product design and innovation studio AJ&Smart has generated more than €2million from clients who first discovered it on social media.
  • Ninety percent of AJ&Smart’s new clients now come from social media referrals, replacing word-of-mouth as the #1 source of new business.
  • Social media has helped AJ&Smart’s client base to go global.

It was a cold January morning in Berlin, Germany, and Jonathan Courtney was feeling a bit stuck.

Nearly six years had passed since he founded design agency, AJ&Smart. And though the business had been a huge success — winning multiple awards and building a roster of big-name clients — Jonathan felt there was much more to come for his agency and team.

“But what?” he wondered to himself. “How can we take AJ&Smart to the next level?”

After much deliberation, Jonathan made a bold decision.

“Do you really want to do this?,” one advisor asked.

Other CEO friends in Berlin shared similar feelings. “Not only did they not understand it, they thought I was actively damaging the company,” he told me.

So what was it that sparked such impassioned responses from his friends and advisors?

Jonathan wanted to share everything that happened at AJ&Smart on social media platforms like Instagram, Facebook and YouTube, giving followers behind-the-scenes access to the agency.

Yet now, 18-months down the line — and despite the initial pushback from advisors — AJ&Smart has generated in excess €2million in revenue from clients who first discovered the agency on social media.

‘We invested almost all of our profits in building our brand’

Whether you love his work or not, Gary Vaynerchuk is hard to ignore in the social media space.

If you’ve ever listened to his podcasts or stumbled upon a few of his tweets, you’ve probably heard some variation of his ‘Document. Don’t create’ blueprint. It was this strategy that encouraged Jonathan to take the plunge into the world of social media.

Trying to create content was always a big issue for Jonathan. He liked the ‘Document. Don’t create’ strategy because it was focused on simply showing people what was happening day-to-day and it didn’t require him or his team to spend hours planning what they’d publish.

“People think that you’re damaging your brand if you’re not being super careful about it. But while other agencies are thinking about what they should post each week and writing their social media guidelines, we’ve produced and published like 20 hours of content in that same amount of time and already have people engaging with it.”

Jonathan Courtney (@jicecream)
CEO & Co-founder, AJ&Smart



Once Jonathan and the AJ&Smart team had decided to embrace social media, they went all in. “We invested almost all of our profits in building our brand,” Jonathan told me.

And though his strategy was a little out there for a creative agency — most agencies keep their cards close to their chest, Jonathan explained during our call — there was a strategic reason behind it.

AJ&Smart helps clients with product design and innovation as well as working closely with the Design Sprint creator (& NY Times Best Selling author), Jake Knapp. But it’s a competitive space.

“We’re in a commodity market,” Jonathan says. “We could compete on price or just rely on the quality of our work. But I didn’t want to do that.”

Jonathan wanted AJ&Smart to stand out alone in the field of design agencies. He wanted the business to have its own brand. “My belief was having a highly engaged audience would benefit us more than simply just focusing on client work,” he explained.

‘Instagram is our social media hub’

AJ&Smart decided to go all in on social media when Instagram launched Stories. “It was a super low friction way to create content and a great way to get started,” Jonathan said.

AJ&Smart uses Stories to be provide an authentic look at what the agency is like day-to-day and tries to show as much of what’s happening in real-time as possible.

For example, in its Stories you might see behind-the-scenes at a client workshop:

Or the team traveling to meetings with clients:

This type of content is super interesting for AJ&Smart’s followers, but it also provides talking points for its clients. “We’ll go into an office of a client and because of Instagram they’ll know the whole journey we’ve gone on to get to them. They always talk about it when we arrive,” Jonathan explained.

When it comes to the Instagram feed, it posts highly curated content that’s focused on design-related hashtags it wants to reach:

Hashtags are important for AJ&Smart to reach its target audience on Instagram. “A huge thing for us is designers following us,” Jonathan explained. “Designers follow us and then when their boss is looking to hire an agency, they recommend AJ&Smart. It’s made sales so much easier for us.”

Instagram has also evolved into a central hub for all of AJ&Smart’s content and it uses the Stories Highlight feature to showcase its content across platforms.

For example, one highlight showcases its podcast:

And another talks about its ‘Innovation Hackers’ Facebook Group:

“We’re big believers in re-purposing and re-packaging content tailored to the platform. We usually find that when someone starts following us on one channel, they’ll very likely soon start following us across our other channels too, which is fantastic. It also keeps us on our toes to always be putting out interesting, fresh content that is specific to the platform.”

Laura Faint (@laurafaint_)
Head of Growth, AJ&Smart

 

‘If you’re just focused on the numbers, you’re not going to succeed’

Social media success rarely, if ever, happens overnight.

After a couple of months of investing heavily in social media marketing, AJ&Smart had only picked up a few hundred followers here and there. And it took about eight-months in total before potential clients would contact the company saying they found it on Instagram, YouTube or any other social channels.

“If I hadn’t have been patient I’d have given up long before we started to see the benefits of social media. If you’re just focused on the numbers, you’re not going to succeed,” Jonathan explained.

The ROI of social media marketing

Just over a year-and-a-half after AJ&Smart went all in on social media, it’s seeing massive return on its investment:

  • 90 percent of its clients first discover the agency on one of their social media channels
  • Social media has been responsible for a minimum of €2 million in revenue
  • Its client base has expanded globally thanks to its social media presence

“If a company interviews us and two other agencies and the work and costs are similar, they tend to book us,” Jonathan says.

“They will choose AJ&Smart because they can get an insight who we are from social media, they feel we’re an authority because of the content we create and sometimes clients even ask for certain team members after seeing them on stories.”

“Having a strong social media presence is massive for us. To the point where almost every customer coming through our door already trusts us, knows who we are and what we stand for. It’s not only how many of our clients find out about us, it’s usually what convinces them to choose us over our competitors.”

Brittni Bowering (@brittnibow)
Head of Media, AJ&Smart

 

How to start grabbing attention and winning clients

AJ&Smart has been incredibly successful on social media by being authentic and sharing what goes on at the agency every day. It doesn’t spend hours planning content or creating elaborate, highly-edited videos. Instead, it just shares the processes its team goes through and the work they’re doing.

To get started all you need to do is pick up a phone, open up Instagram or Facebook and start talking about your work and the things you care about.

As Jonathan said on our call: “There’s little or no reason not to be talking with your audience every single day now.”

Find AJ&Smart on Instagram or learn more about the agency here.



source https://blog.bufferapp.com/how-ajsmart-increases-sales-using-social-media

Monday 10 September 2018

How to Sell on Instagram: A Stories Strategy That’s Generated ‘Hundreds of Thousands’ in Sales

  • Kettlebell Kings has used educational content to build an audience of over 79,000 fitness enthusiasts on Instagram.
  • It generates 400-600 new leads per week from social media, with half of those leads coming directly from Instagram.
  • ‘Hundreds of thousands of dollars’ in revenue can be directly attributed to leads generated on Instagram.

Read on to get the full story and learn exactly how Kettlebell Kings uses Instagram to grow its revenue.

“We all had what I guess you call ‘real jobs’,” Jay Perkins told me.

Back in 2013, Jay worked at Bigcommerce, an e-commerce software provider where he learned about what it takes to have a successful online business.

But Jay could only hold back his entrepreneurial ambitions for so long.

After kicking around business ideas for a year-or-so, Jay and his two business partners decided to take the plunge and launch an online store of their own.

Fast-forward to 2018 and Kettlebell Kings is a leading kettlebell equipment supplier based in Austin, Texas, generating mid seven-figures per year in revenue — with much of its new business coming directly from leads generated on Instagram.

‘Most of our biggest deals and business development relationships have come through Instagram’

There was a time, when Kettlebell Kings first started out, that Google AdWords campaigns and a compelling free shipping offer — “the first of its kind in the kettlebell space,” Jay said — were its main marketing tactics.

Yet as the company grew, social media took over as the #1 way to generate new business and Instagram is now Kettlebell Kings most successful marketing and acquisition channel.

“On average we get 400-600 leads per week from social media, with half coming from Instagram,” Jay told me over email.

When it comes to revenue generated directly from Instagram “it would be in the hundreds of thousands,” he revealed (Kettlebell Kings uses Hubspot to track its conversions).

But Instagram hasn’t just helped Kettlebell Kings to generate one-off sales to consumers, it’s also an important channel for business development.

Jay explained:

“Most of our biggest deals and business development relationships have come through Instagram — we have even signed deals with national gym chains from leads generated on the platform.”

“Most of our biggest deals and business development relationships have come through Instagram — we have even signed deals with national gym chains from leads generated on the platform.”

Instagram didn’t become a lead generation goldmine overnight, though. It took a lot of work.

‘We’re very strict on the posts that go into our feed’

The first step to a successful Instagram marketing strategy is creating content for your Instagram feed that your audience wants to see and engage with.

In the Instagram feed, Kettlebell Kings focuses on sharing educational content and workout examples — this strategy has helped it to amass an audience of over 79,000 followers. It also reposts images and videos from customers and this user-generated content angle has lead to the hashtag #kettlebellkings being used more than 20,000 times on Instagram.

Key takeaway: User-generated content

“Back in 2016, we started to embrace user-generated content for our Buffer Instagram account. In the first year, this strategy helped our account grow by almost 400% – 4,250 to 21,000 followers. Now we have over 40,000 followers.”

Brian Peters
Digital Marketing Strategist

 

“We’re very strict on the posts that go into our feed,” says Jay. For a post to make it to Kettlebell Kings’ Instagram feed, the content must:

  • Feature good use of a Kettlebell Kings product ✅
  • Show good form (when using the kettlebells) ✅
  • Provide a ton of value to the viewer (helping them to learn something new, improve their technique) ✅

But with stories, Jay believes there’s more freedom to post less-polished content at a higher frequency.

Kettlebell Kings can also repost and feature more of its customers using stories than it can within the feed. “We can repost 10-12 customers who tag us on a daily basis through stories,” says Jay. Being reposted by the Kettlebell Kings account is highly engaging and rewarding for those featured and it also encourages more and more customers to share their content on Instagram.

Here’s how that strategy plays out…

Within the Instagram feed, you might see a video of a perfectly-executed kettlebell workout:

Or a shoppable, high-quality image of a Kettlebell Kings product:

Then on Instagram Stories you might see a Kettlebell Kings customer working out:

But how does this all translate into leads and revenue?

Instagram Stories: The lead-gen secret weapon

Now we move onto the conversion focused part of this strategy.

Here’s how Kettlebell Kings drives hundreds of leads per week directly from Instagram.

1. Share engaging content to stories

First, Kettlebell Kings will share content to Instagram Stories. Often these posts will be workout examples or reposts from customers:

On average these stories will be viewed by around 10 percent of Kettlebell Kings’ followers, sometimes up to 15 percent if there’s a CTA in a feed post to ‘check out stories’.

2. Include swipe up CTAs to drive traffic to a landing page

Next, Kettlebell Kings will include a CTA to ‘Swipe Up’ for workout examples or more content within one of its stories posts:

Writer’s note:

The Instagram Stories ‘Swipe Up’ feature is now available to all Instagram business accounts with 10,000 followers or more.

If you don’t quite have 10,000 followers, here are some resources to help you grow your account:

Ash Read
Managing Editor

 

Once a viewer swipes up, they will be taken to a landing page or an article where they can read more about a topic and enter their email address for more exclusive content:

These pages tend to convert visitors to email addresses at around 25-45 percent, depending on the traffic source. So 100 visits would generate between 25 and 45 new leads, on average.

3. Create custom email flows for each landing page

Finally, once the visitor has shared their email address it will be entered into one of many email workflows Kettlebell Kings has designed to serve helpful emails about kettlebell workouts and techniques from experts.

“We have unique workflows depending on how someone has entered our system,” Jay explained. All its workflows are about building value and trust with new leads. Kettlebell Kings purposely includes product photos in its emails but rarely sends offers or tries to make a sale. Instead, providing high quality content is the number one goal.

Due to the work Jay and his team put in ensuring Kettlebell Kings’ Instagram feed is always filled with fresh, engaging content the company constantly has batches of new followers — “about 1,000 new followers per week right now,” Jay says — to check out its Instagram stories and enter into its email funnels.

Over to you

This strategy has generated ‘hundreds of thousands’ in revenue for Kettlebell Kings and there’s no reason you can’t also implement within your own social media plans.

How does your business use Instagram stories? Let me know in the comments below.

Feature image: Vibetality / Kettlebell Kings on Instagram



source https://blog.bufferapp.com/how-to-sell-on-instagram-case-study