Friday, April 13, 2018

A 'Brand Stand Out' On Social Media?


5 ways brands can stand out on social media..


As networks are tightening control over what content their users see — often to the detriment of brands — BoF boils down five tips for social-media success.

Social media has become the key conduit between brands and consumers. Even C'eline, until last year a rare Instagram holdout among major luxury labels, now has over one million followers hoping to catch a glimpse of the brand's latest handbags and knitwear.

But there's no guarantee anywhere near that number will actually see C'eline's products. As platforms become more saturated, brands are engaged in an ever-escalating fight to stand out in feeds. Their competition ranges from rivals to celebrities and influencers -- not to mention users' own friends and family.


The rules are also constantly changing. Social networking platforms frequently tweak the algorithms that determine what surfaces in users' feeds.

Facebook earlier this year began promoting "meaningful interactions," a phrase many brands are still trying to parse. Snapchat introduced a radical redesign of its app late last year to more clearly distinguish content produced by advertisers and ordinary users. Mark Zuckerberg spent two days in Washington this week being grilled by lawmakers about the dangers of giving third parties too much access to the social network's members.

So where does that leave the fashion industry? Even amid a landscape of constant change, brands and consultants say a few tried-and-true methods still pack a punch.


One Size Does Not Fit All

Within fashion, Instagram remains "the place to be," accounting for about 50 percent of brand posts (up from 30 percent two years ago), according to a 2017 report by Exane BNP Paribas.

Even so, companies are abandoning broad social media strategies for tailored campaigns targeting a single platform. That can mean producing visually rich images for Instagram while documenting spontaneous (or spontaneous-seeming) moments with Instagram Stories or Snapchat, and hiring a quick-witted Twitter team to handle customer-service complaints.

Tatcha founder Victoria Tsai said people will read more on Facebook, so the beauty brand posts product news and links to blog posts there. Instagram is for photos of products, which often prompt questions from the community. Tatcha has two social media managers, but Tsai said she treats Snapchat as her own "open inbox," where she'll respond personally to customers' stories and questions.


Gucci produces a steady stream of campaigns tailored to different social media platforms.

The brand's #GucciGram project asked illustrators to create images that repurposed Gucci motifs on Instagram, while its #24HourAce project invited a series of artists to take over its Snapchat channel for 24 hours, shooting videos inspired by the popular Ace sneaker.

To Engage Your Community, Engage With Your Community

Often, brands approach digital marketing in a similar way to print advertising, with a goal of getting as many people as possible to view brand-related content. However, when it comes to social media, active engagement trumps passive consumption: the primary aim should be to get your audience to talk back.

"It's an opportunity to build deeper relationships," explains Tatcha's Tsai. "We consider social media a place for education and taking care of our clients. Although we regularly share content, a lot of the action happens in comments and through direct messages."


Fashion Nova "has a small army of individuals whose only job is working with both influencers and consumers to provide really cool direct brand experiences," says Connor Begley, co-founder of Tribe Dynamics, a marketing technology firm that quantifies the dollar-value of digital content and works with a number of fashion and beauty brands that span luxury and mass.

For example, if a customer tags Fashion Nova in a photo where they are wearing a new pair of the brand's jeans, the brand will reach out directly to that customer via a like, a comment or even a repost.

Influencers Are Unavoidable

Certainly, many brands have ramped up interactions with influencers. According to a survey of 600 fashion industry professionals by the data analytics provider Launchmetrics, some 78 percent of brands implemented influencer marketing campaigns in 2017, up from 65 percent the previous year.


But the question today is not whether to work with influencers, but how to work with influencers.

The goal is to maintain a relationship with social media power users -- big and small -- to steer a conversation about a brand that might be happening anyway.

"If you don't have a relationship, then you don't have any participation or any voice in the conversation, so you don't have any ability to shape the conversation," Begley says.

Make The Customer Do The Work

Brands can increase their visibility by encouraging fans to create content. With users following hundreds, or even thousands of accounts, they'll miss the vast majority of posts. If fan communities are flooding a platform with memes and original art about a brand, it's less likely to get lost in the shuffle.


Beauty companies like Anastasia Beverly Hills, Huda Beauty and Fenty Beauty often repost content created by fans.

This also encourages more people to post content about a given brand, as they know their pictures could be put in front of millions of their peers.

Collaborating directly with fans and influencers is another way to leverage social media communities on platforms like Instagram and Facebook. Gucci's Michele, for example, discovered British artist Helen Downie -- Unskilled Worker -- via Instagram. This led to a collaboration around a capsule collection, which resonated across Gucci's community and Unskilled Worker fans too.


Take A Bold Stand -- Carefully

Today, brands need to engage with the wider cultural zeitgeist. That can mean supporting a popular charity -- as Balenciaga did in its work with the World Food Programme -- or taking on more controversial issues. Gucci donated $500,000 to gun control activists, while Patagonia sued to block the Trump administration from rolling back land protections in Utah.

It's a risky strategy that can invite backlash, such as the instantly notorious Pepsi ad featuring Kendall Jenner and imagery associated with the Black Lives Matter movement.

"Authenticity is something that consumers can spot; says Brit McCorquodale, marketing and communications director at Tribe Dynamics. "If it's not authentic, it's going to be really easy to be called out."

On social media, this can have a significant impact, "because the brand has less control over the way that message is shared and communicated across the community, and, ultimately, back to consumers."


Political activism is a natural outgrowth of brands attempting to connect with their customers on a more personal level.

Taking a controversial stand might not directly affect sales, but it can help build loyalty, particularly with younger consumers.

"With that humanization of brands comes a responsibility to take a stance on things," says Mike Froggatt, intelligence director at Gartner L2, which tracks the digital performance of consumer brands.

Guest Authored By Tamison O'Connor. Tamison is a content creator at BoF. Follow 'Business of Fashion,' (BoF) on Twitter.





"There is a tremendous amount of information in social media data.

In decades past, enterprises paid market research companies to poll consumers and conduct focus groups to get the kind of information that consumers now willingly post to public social media platforms.." -MargaretRouse


    • Post Crafted By:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

    1 comment:

    1. In kurulus osman season 3 in hindi Turgut realizes that the only solution is to run away and runs away with Kosses. Nikola begins to follow them into the forest. Turgut asks Kosses to return to his castle and bring soldiers to save kurulus osman season 3 in hindi. After a long war, the Mongols capture Osman. Nikola captures Turgut, but Kosses and his soldiers rescue him. Geyhatu says Osman will die soon and takes him away. Bala and Malhun ask the Beys for support to kurulus osman season 3 in hindi.
      Geyhatu says the horses will run over the Turks. Osman says he is not afraid of death and waits for Geyhatu’s arrival. Alemshah realizes that Osman’s wives are trying to do something secretly and asks Gunduz to do something about it urgently. Gunduz agrees to banish Bala and Malhun from the tribe. Kosses attacks the Mongols with thenew soldiers he brought from the castle. Turgut uses this opportunity and saves Osman’s life kurulus osman season 3 in hindi.
      Go and Watch the Latest Episode kurulus osman season 3 in hindi.
      Only on our kurulus osman season 3 in hindi.

      ReplyDelete