Showing posts with label Advertising Trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advertising Trends. Show all posts

Thursday, April 19, 2018

YOUR Social Media Catch Of The Day?


Catch of the day: social media buzz..





A whopping 69% of millennials take a picture of their food before they eat it. Businesses are cashing in and competing for social media fame by offering insta-worthy menu items that are sometimes just plain wacky.

Guest Authored By Liz McLaughlin. Liz covers Tech, Consumer and Feature Stories for NBC News. Follow Liz on Twitter.





"These two tips explain how you can succeed on social media and why you want to succeed on social media.

They improve clarity and provide a laser focus on your content ideas. Are you ready to start hitting it big on social media? -TimothySykes


    • 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 ;)

    Sunday, April 2, 2017

    Main Street Small Business Social Media?


    Social media offers a wealth of opportunities for main street store owners. By engaging with existing customers and reaching out to new ones, a small business can significantly enhance and promote its brand and ultimately improve its bottom line by utilizing and exploiting the unique opportunities social media provides..


    The exhilarating world of social media is constantly evolving and the savviest of business owners keep up with these fluctuating social media trends. Small Business Trends takes a look at 10 hot trends on social media right now for main street store owners.

    Hot Trends on Social Media for Main Street

    User-Generated Content

    Caroline Barker, Content Marketing Manager at Main Street Hub, which helps thousands of local businesses manage their social media marketing and maintain their online reputations, provided Small Business Trends with some current hot social media trends for main street store owners.


    One hot social media trend for main street store owners Barker highlights is user-generated content. The idea is simple. If customers are posting about your small business on their personal channels - share it! Just make sure to tag or credit them, and say thank you. These posts are great opportunities to show what’s happening in your business in real time and encourage new customers to give your business a try.


    Facebook Live

    Data shows social videos generate 1,200 percent more shares than text and images. Since Facebook Live debuted in 2015, the shrewdest of business owners have been capitalizing on sharing live-streaming videos on Facebook. By connecting your customers with your business via video, Facebook Live helps to increase the reach of your main street store.

    Augmented Reality

    Augmented reality is gathering momentum on social media channels. By sharing actual experiences rather than just information, augmented reality is creating new opportunities for brands to reach out and connect with their customers.

    Real-Time Content

    According to Main Street Hub, audiences appreciate relevance and authenticity, so post about what’s happening in your business right now. You can tee up a Facebook Live feed or utilize trendy disappearing content like Instagram stories - but if you have a small team or a small budget, simply posting a photo of an employee, an event or something happening in the moment will get your audience engaged.



    Chatbots

    A type of artificial intelligence which can have conversations, chatbots are proving invaluable in helping the likes of main street store owners and other businesses communicate with customers and improve customer service by responding quickly to queries, questions and comments.

    Messaging Apps

    An incredible four billion users worldwide use messaging apps to communicate. With such a huge chunk of the global population utilizing this convenient way to communicate, messaging apps currently offer a tremendous opportunity for brands to exploit this presence. Perceptive business owners are using messaging apps to communicate one-on-one and develop relationships with customers.


    Exclusive-to-Instagram Content

    During 2017, it's estimated that a staggering 70.7 percent of brands will use Instagram. Instagram is definitely a social media forum small businesses cannot afford to ignore.


    Main Street Hub says the coolest things to use on Instagram right now are their slideshow or carousel features, where you can upload multiple photos into one post, and Boomerang, where you can create a "mini video that plays forwards and backwards," according to Instagram's definition. Trying out new features on social platforms will impress your audience and vary your content.


    Social Media eCommerce

    The likes of Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram now offer ways for users to buy products directly from their apps. With a growing number of consumers following brands on social media to search for products for sale, the shrewdest of main street store owners are leveraging these shopping habits within their social media strategies.

    Create a Custom Snapchat Filter

    Official statistics show that 158 million people are using Snapchat every day. This prolific use of Snapchat means it is a social media platform main street store owners should be utilizing to the maximum.

    According to Barker, creating a custom Snapchat filter for the next event your business is throwing is the quickest, most economical way to capture a new audience on the platform.


    The website has a foolproof how-to list.  You can upload your own image or create one right on Snapchat, choose the date and time, and voila! You have a filter set up. Just make sure to let your customers know that if they're using Snapchat they should scroll through to find your filter.

    Mobile Advertising

    Advertising revenue generated from mobile formats is increasing. On Facebook, for example, in 2016, 80 percent of the social media network's $7 billion of ad revenue came from mobile ads. Savvy main street store owners and other small businesses are paying for mobile ads. The more creative and visually enticing the ads are, the better, as it will help get the mobile ad noticed.

    Guest Authored By Gabrielle Pickard-Whitehead. Gabrielle is a freelance writer and journalist based in the verdant hills of the Peak District, the U.K.’s oldest National Park. Since finishing her degree in Media and Journalism at John Moores University in Liverpool, Gabrielle has followed her passion for writing and sculptured a rewarding career out of her love for the written word, writing predominantly for local newspapers and websites. Gabrielle thrives on the fast-paced, constantly-evolving and global world of digital media and enjoys writing and producing engaging and unique content for websites and organisations around the world. Follow Gabrielle on Twitter.





    "The exhilarating world of social media is constantly evolving and the savviest of business owners keep up with these fluctuating social media trends.."


      • Authored by:
        Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.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 ;)
      Follow Me Yonder..                     Instagram

      Friday, February 3, 2017

      2017 Video and Social Media Marketing?


      Mark Zuckerberg said at the end of 2015 that we would be in the "Golden Age of Video" for some five years. So... it's not over yet, and business owners' and marketers' growing access to video will only further the shift in our social feeds in 2017..


      We should also expect to see changes in the way users engage with content on social channels; an influx of new media formats, including 360-degree video, live video, and virtual reality; and new marketing tactics as brands experiment with these new formats.


      Finally, we'll also start to see more automated ads and personalized ads targeting our screens as such new technologies make their way into the hands of more and more marketers.

      Here are seven predictions for the social media and video marketing landscape in 2017.

      1. Every Marketer Will Need to Have a Video Strategy

      Many businesses recognize that they need a marketing strategy, which often includes a social media presence. However, as the focus and functionality of social media platforms change, so should marketing plans. Today, that means more video, and lots of it.


      With users constantly refreshing their news feeds, marketers will need to consistently post branded video content that stands out and engages users. And that requires a video strategy.


      2. Automated Video Ad's Will Become Prevalant

      Technology has had transformative effects on the advertising industry, both in targeting and marketing content; now, it is transforming the way ads are created.

      To make it easier for app developers to promote their products, Google launched automated video ads that automatically pull images, descriptions, and ratings from the app store and add music to create a quick promotional video. There are also new social video creation platforms (like my company's Promo) that allow SMB's and marketers to create hundreds of personalized videos in a matter of minutes, with minimal resources. We'll be seeing many more such automated video ads in 2017.



      3. Videos Will Get Shorter, and Quality Will Diminish

      The average attention span is now just eight seconds, and it's not for nothing that brands are spending anywhere from hundreds to millions of dollars a year on marketing and want to ensure their ads are being seen. Snapchat video ads, for example, average less than three seconds a view.

      To get the most out of their audiences, marketers are increasingly shifting their focus and budgets away from the ad itself and toward targeting users with ad penetration techniques.

      4. Audience Tastes and Expectations Will Evolve

      Although video length and quality might diminish, people still want to connect with brands. It can be simple, but each ad needs to be consistent with the brand's story so that audiences come to recognize that brand in every interaction. A challenge for advertisers will be consistent messaging across different platforms and mediums.


      Whether using pictures, livestreams, or video ads, marketers need to ensure they are telling the same brand story over and over.


      5. Marketers Won't Take to Disappearing Livestreams

      The Snapchat model of disappearing videos has now permeated Instagram. Big brands might be convinced to give it a spin, but with users' feeds already overcrowded, disappearing livestreams will quickly lose their allure. Marketers already have constrained budgets and limited time—and the disappearing act for videos that they've put effort and resources towards will likely end up providing too few rewards.

      Short-form videos on social media are a much more effective marketing tool since users can connect, like, share, and revisit.


      6. Shoppable Ad's Will Be Huge

      YouTube was the first to take shoppable ads mainstream, but Pinterest and Instagram have quickly followed suit. Facebook is even testing shoppable video ads. The popularity of these ads will quickly rise as new technologies make it easier and more affordable for brands to participate. Moreover, instead of redirecting transactions to a brand's website, social platforms are now making it possible to complete in-channel transactions for a seamless user experience.


      7. SMB's Won't Engage in AR orVR Ad's For a Few Years Still

      There's been a lot of hype in marketing and advertising around the next big revenue-generating frontier: augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR). However, their use will remain less prevalent for SMBs as production costs are still way out of reach.

      It will be years before these types of ads make their way to everyday marketers. For now, AR/VR ads will be reserved for big brands with large advertising budgets and the flexibility to test new technologies.

      Guest Authored By Tom More. Tom is the CEO and Founder of social video creation platform, Slidely.





      What we are likely to see is more branded content within AR/VR games along with opportunities for small businesses to engage, such as with Pokemon Go.

      In short, we are still in the "Golden Age of Video," and we should expect to see more of these valuable nuggets of marketing and advertising, in all shapes and sizes, in the years to come..


        • Authored by:
          Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.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 ;)
        Follow Me Yonder..                     Instagram