Thursday, March 31, 2016

Instagram is coaching advertisers to approach it exactly the same way they do Facebook


   
Instagram has been telling advertisers directly to start treating the platform like Facebook, down to using the same creative in ads on both platforms — and to rely less on free, organic reach in the age of the algorithm.
“We’ve seen the Instagram pitch to clients twice now in the last month,” said an agency executive, who didn’t want to be named. “It is basically the Facebook pitch: Everything should be promoted, and there’s no point in doing organic.”
The pitch from Instagram comes in the wake of two major changes: It fully integrated with Facebook’s automated ad technology last October, and it recently announced that it will move to a Facebook-like algorithm to determine what photos its users see, potentially stifling free organic reach for brands.
As a result, Instagram is now telling advertisers to approach the platform the way they do Facebook, which owns the photo-sharing app. This is a shift from what Instagram was telling advertisers even just a few months ago.
“If you look back at [the end of ] 2015 when they first launched Instagram ads for all partners, they were really saying that Instagram ads had to be created for the platform, and even before that when Instagram ads were in the alpha-beta stage, they wanted really, really high-quality creative, and it was created specifically for Instagram,” said Jeanne Bright, vp of social at DigitasLBi. “What we’re hearing now from the Instagram team is that the ad creative still has to be of a very high quality, but that high quality also needs to translate to Facebook.”
Facebook bought Instagram in 2012, and it has since grown to more than 400 million users. Since Instagram began piggybacking on Facebook’s ad technology, 200,000 advertisers have used the platform. However, more advertisers meant lower-quality ads, a departure from Instagram’s early insistence on finely crafted images.
The emphasis on using the same creative for Facebook and Instagram is meant to raise the level of the ads on both platforms and lessen the presence of overly promotional posts that define a lot of Facebook’s advertising style.
Instagram does caution that re-using the same creative is not the right strategy for every brand, just that it can be effective. “Instagram is a place for visual inspiration, and Facebook is a place for personal discovery. When we see Instagram and Facebook work well together in driving business results, we share that insight. It may fit some clients’ campaigns but not others,” an Instagram spokesperson said in an e-mailed statement.
Also, even before the algorithm announcement, paid was becoming an increasingly important part of how advertisers reached Instagram. “We’ve found that people miss, on average, 70 percent of their feed content. We are doing this [algorithm] to make sure people see the content that matters to them, and that includes content from people and businesses,” the Instagram spokesperson said.
Earlier this month, Instagram was touting the success of campaigns that ran across both platforms and said that some of them used the same photos and videos. Mobile app UGO Wallet, for example, saw a lower cost per install on ads that used the same creative on both platforms versus ads that were designed differently for Facebook and Instagram.
The new same-ad strategy, however, is a departure from how many social media advertisers have been taught to think about creating content for multiple platforms. They’re building vertical for Snapchat and using short video on Twitter and magazine-style images for Instagram.
As a result, not everyone is convinced that what’s going to work on Facebook will work on Instagram,] or that the same creative should go on both.
“People are using both platforms, often at the same time, so they’ll open Facebook and then Instagram,” said Chris Gomersall, founder of Atomized, a creative startup that helps brands craft content strategies. “If a brand is showing the same thing on both, it is missing a huge opportunity to tell a slightly different version of the same story to hit people in different ways.”

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Snapchat's New Voice and Video Chatting Features Should Get Wireless Providers' Attention

 App releases major update 
The messaging app debuted a plethora of new features. Snapchat
In under two years, people have gone from asking what Snapchat is to asking what it can't do.
The Venice, Calif.-based company today released an update that lets its 100 million daily users make video and audio calls, among other things. During video or audio calls, Snapchatters can simultaneously send photos that appear as an overlay in the chat window.
The feature should get the attention of telecoms and wireless providers that want Gen Zers and millennials, who may become accustomed to free calls, to pay for phone services. Other free digital communication services like Skype and WeChat are already disrupting the space with free calling, and now, here comes white-hot Snapchat.
And on that note, T-Mobile appears to be already adapting to the changing environment. The telecom company is set to release data-only wireless plans Wednesday for as low as $20 per month, according to TmoNews
At any rate, Snapchat's Chat 2.0 also lets people communicating with each other instantly switch back and forth between video and audio calls, notes, stickers and text messages. 
In addition, the update lets users do the following:
  • Record video notes of up to 10 seconds and send them in GIF-style loops
  • Send audio notes that work as pithy voice snippets
  • Auto-advance videos so the clips in Snapchat Stories just roll and roll, letting users kick back and watch a bevy of content
  • Utilize more than 200 stickers 

INFLUENCERS MORE VALUABLE WITH INSTAGRAM CHANGES


Toronto's #Paid says the end of the chronological feed shifts the proposition

Instagram has announced that posts to the social media platform would no longer appear in reverse chronological order, a change that will have far-reaching implications for social media marketers.
For brands with smaller social media followings, this means posts will likely be seen by fewer users, unless those users are highly engaged with the account.
“It’s more important now than ever for small- and medium-sized brands to leverage the massive reach and engagement of influencers in order to become successful in this space,” said Bryan Gold, the co-founder of #Paid, a Toronto-based marketing platform that connects brands with Instagram influencers. “Now they actually need the reach of influencers to hit their target audience, because if they only had a couple hundred followers before they were hoping to sell to, only a fraction of them will actually see the posts.”
While the effects of the recent changes to the social media platform remain minimal, Gold believes that as posts become more curated in the future, the value of influencers on Instagram will increase.
“As of right now, it’s very minimally effective. You’re still seeing a majority of your posts. Over time, though, I think they’re going to really turn the dials up on curating which posts you see,” he said. “When it gets to that point, influencer marketing is going to be possibly even more cost effective.”
Gold said that if the cost per engagement (CPE) goes down as a result of these changes, then running individual campaigns should become less expensive.
“Marketers will still get the same high quality content,” he said. “This is especially cost effective when marketers repurpose the content across multiple channels such as their own website or social channels which gives them increased credibility.”
Since launching in 2013, #Paid has helped major brands — including Microsoft xBox, Adidas and AXE — connect with Instagram influencers through its software platform. The thousands of verified influencers scattered around the world are easily searchable by category or location, and set their own price per posts.
“We’ve built out an algorithm that takes into account their followers, their average likes and their average comments and actually suggests how much they should be charging per posts, but they set their own price,” said Gold. “When brands find influencers to collaborate with it just sends them a message saying the brand is interested, and if the influencer accepts than the brand and influencer then collaborate to create compelling content together.”
The company provides both parties a platform to communicate, the ability to collaborate on and review each post before publishing and a dashboard to track campaign analytics. Each influencer must have a minimum of 5,000 followers and average levels of engagement for their category.
Gold’s main advice to marketers working with social media influencers is to focus on collaboration as opposed to dictation.
“Instead of telling the influencer what to post to meet your marketing objectives, make it more of a conversation where you let them know your marketing objectives, but take their feedback on how to reach those objectives most effectively,” he said. “The influencer sometimes knows how to reach that brand’s target audience better than the brand does, so taking the feedback of the influencer is really important.”

Friday, March 18, 2016

10 Essential Tools for Marketing on Instagram

Have you been using Instagram for social media marketing? Are you running low on tools to use along with this picture-sharing platform? Could you do with a little less work and a little more simplification?
Here are 10 tools to help you entice your audience, manage and grow a presence, and build your business using Instagram.
This tool keeps track of all trending hashtags. With the help of Tagboard, you can search any hashtag you like and find all of the most recent public posts that used that specific hashtag via Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Google Plus, Vine, and Flickr. You may also favorite, re-tweet, reply, or comment on anything you like directly from Tagboard. The basic plan is free, but for more options you'll have to pay.

As the name suggests, this tools is for measurement—an analytics tool. You can obtain a free report on how effectively you have been engaging with your audience, which photos were most liked, and how well you are performing on Instagram. The free version helps keep track of up to 25,000 followers.
This top Instagram-friendly tool helps you track your followers. If you've followed too many people and you're wondering who your true fans are, you're going to need Crowdfire to sort that out. You can identify inactive followers, those who have unfollowed you, as well as the right people to follow. It will help you determine where your top followers are located and their Instagram habits (people they follow, hashtags they use, etc.)
4. Iconosquare (formerly known as Statigram)
This is an iconic analytics tool used with Instagram. You can use it to measure key metrics related to your Instagram account. For example, you can find out how many likes you received for a photo, average number of likes and comments per photo, your most liked photos, follower growth graph, and more. This tool is being used by thousands of brands, including the likes of Coca-Cola, Ford, Nike, Starbucks, The Gap, etc.
This website has a collection of tools to use with your Instagram account. Currently, it offers a selection of seven tools that have various, differing functions. For example, Snap Widget allows you to display your Instagram posts on your website/blog. With Keepsy, you can create Instagram photo books, custom calendars, and more. All listed tools are free.
This is a mobile-based application you can download from the App Store or Google Play to solve your followership problems. With the help of this app, you can find interesting and follow-worthy people. The app uses a coin system to encourage users to find and follow people as well as promote their account. The app has some features similar to Crowdfire's, such as tracking unfollowers and those users who don't follow you back.
7. Ink361
This service will allow you discover new friends and followers, connect with famous people, brands, and influential people, organize your account with albums and alerts, analyze your social impact, and more.
8. PicFlow
RedCactus offers this tool for creating collages and slideshows. It includes a tool that will allow you to create video slideshows. All you have to do is combine a few photos, adjust the timing, add an audio, choose from transitions, and hit post! It is available at the App Store for free, with some premium options.
Fancy writing inspirational quotes? Here's your tool! Instaquote allows users to create text images, add text to a photo, and share quotes or mere thoughts in beautiful ways. The basic plan will get you six free backgrounds and a variety of fonts. The pro plan ($2.99) will get you a lot more. You can get it from the App Store or Google Play.
10. Post so
This is a tool for managing your Instagram account. You can plan and schedules your pictures, videos, and links at a specified time at any future date. You can also invite your team to manage your social accounts without worrying about sharing passwords or problems with access to all your Instagram accounts. After a free trial, you will be charged $14.95 per month.


Read more: http://www.marketingprofs.com/articles/2016/29561/10-essential-tools-for-marketing-on-instagram#ixzz43Inn78Ja

#SocialSkim: Instagram: 'Chronological Order Is so... Yesterday';4

This week's all about new frontiers: Instagram jumps aboard the algorithm train; Facebook, WhatsApp, and Snapchat push encryption boundaries against regulators' wishes; and Kodak tries its hand in social.
We'll also discuss why Facebook's Canvas ads could be a mobile game-changer, and we'll give you some tools to build your perfect social media calendar. Skim to stay ahead!
Instagram joins the algorithm club, turns feed over to the robots
Following Twitter's announcement last month, Instagram is set to ditch chronological order and reorder the photos you see with a Facebook-style personalized feed.
The algorithm will roll out in the coming months. It will be based on the likelihood you'll be interested in the content, the timeliness of the post, and your relationship with the poster—meaning your previous likes and comments, among others variables.

Click Here!
The move comes as it's revealed that Insta's 400 million monthly users miss 70% of their feed, on average. If history is any indication, users will likely kick and scream about the change until they inevitably reach a point of acceptance.
As Instagram's user base continues to grow, content floods the platform, and engagement decreases, one fear is that the move will create a pay-to-play landscape and brands that previously depended on organic reach will need to pay to compete. However, Instagram should be able to deliver increased engagement and better targeting because of the algorithm.
Are you ready for a curated feed? Let us know in the comments below!
1. Social giants up encryption game as Apple vs. FBI looms
It's increasingly clear that the public feud regarding encryption is about much more than a single iPhone. Facebook, WhatsApp, and Snapchat are working to increase encryption capabilities amid the showdown, a move at odds with the FBI because it makes accessing communications, even with a wiretap order, increasingly difficult—or impossible.
Tech companies will likely continue this trend toward more secure data—resulting in a much broader discussion than "Apple vs. FBI" taking place in Congress.
2. Why Facebook's Canvas could be a mobile advertising game-changer
You already have plenty of Mobile ad options, but the potential of Canvas ads might blow the rest out of the water (if marketers can create content that people want to consume). Here are key reasons the new format could take hold, and how it could keep your customers' eyes on your content!
It's fast to get in. It's an immersive ad format that loads no time: Even the most impatient users will catch a glimpse before escaping.
It's fast to get out. Users can leave a Canvas ad with a swipe of a finger, leaving little chance consumers will view your ad as being overly intrusive.
It's an answer. You have great content but don't want to stick it on a website nobody views. Canvas has the answer, delivering a website-like experience to mobile ads.
It's easy to build. No special coding knowledge is required, letting you spend your dollars on the creative rather than the technical aspects.
3. Snapchat reportedly building smart glasses!
The rumors come amid a crop of hiring from big-time augmented reality groups (think Microsoft HoloLens) and an eye-tracking tech maker. It could be Google Glass-style eyewear, or just a move to optimize AR tech for its app. Either way, Snapchat's impressive rollout of features in the last year point to the $16 billion company's aggressive, and sometimes perplexing, moves that we'll be watching closely.
4. Kodak tries its hand at social with "Kodak Moments" app
And it might not succeed, considering its lack of photo editing tools. The once omnipresent "Kodak moment" has lost much of its meaning amid the rise of Snapchat-era bathroom selfies. In contrast, Kodak Moments is designed to be less of a dumping ground for all of your pics and more of a storytelling platform for meaningful photos and the memories behind them.
The app includes basic features such as likes, comments, and followers, and it also does a good job incorporating Kodak's print business with its "Shop" tab; yet, the platform's lack of editing capabilities could make it tumble before it has a chance to soar.
5. Facebook showing page admins auto-generated ad examples
In what appears to be a new tactic to sell its ad inventory, Facebook is auto-generating previews of personalized potential ads in page administrators' News Feeds, alongside a CTA. It's an interesting push from a platform that recently introduced a batch of new ad products designed to bring full-screen, rich media ads in-app. Have any of you seen these previews?
6. Yik Yak pushes community-building role, possibly setting sights on business
The popular college messaging app, besieged by critics for facilitating bullying because it's anonymous, lets anyone post to everyone in their vicinity. It's founders spoke at SXSW about the app's ability to create communities, a new narrative for the company after it broke from its past last week by introducing optional handles to identify users.
Although major brand involvement has yet to materialize, Yik Yak seems to be taking a first step toward building user profiles that could lead to monetization. The BBC experimented with Yik Yak this year, receiving impressive results when asking questions about mental health. It found that the app's Millennial audience shared more freely than on Facebook, where every comment is easily traced to a user's identity.
7. What Facebook's acquisition of a Snapchat-like filter company means
Facebook might be where your mom hangs out, but that doesn't mean the social giant isn't trying really hard to stay relevant. Its recent acquisition of Masquerade gives it some photo and video filter editing features it missed out on with its failed $3 billion bid to buy Snapchat in 2013.
Facebook's endeavors to ward off competition are a mixed bag—ranging from its failed Slingshot Snapchat copy, to successes with Instagram and WhatsApp. The acquisition of Masquerade is an effort to take some wind out of Snapchat's sails, but users will have the final say. And if Facebook makes filters "uncool" by bringing them mainstream, they might have a bigger problem to filter through.
8. Demographic targeting becoming less effective on social—and how to fight back
Social media users want to be approached in a more personal way; they don't want to be thought of as fitting in a demographic box. Large swaths of digital consumers, across generations, say brands have failed to target them based on their interests, a recent survey found.
Only 62% of American digital shoppers say ads are generally well-targeted, making the case that lifestyle marketing—in which your brand builds relationships with customers through shared values and interests rather than just demo data—could be important to incorporate into your broader marketing strategy.
9. Here's why Snapchat should be a part of your marketing arsenal
Snapchat gives marketers a platform to better reach a Millennial audience (your future customers), and its nontraditional vibe and slew of new features can help brands stick out from the crowd amid the increasing Millennial distrust of traditional advertising tactics.
From the nitty-gritty of building content specifically for your audience to embracing the app's signature ephemeral nature and tapping into relevant influencers, find out how to make your company speak Snapchat.
10. How to build a social media calendar that works for your business
Delivering engaging content doesn't rest solely on the content itself, but also on how, when, and where you share it. Managing several platforms with different needs can be cumbersome, but building a robust social calendar can take some mystery and stress out of the equation.
Decide where and when to post what, mark important dates, craft content in advance and evaluate your success with more finesse via a combination of a tailored social media calendar and these free, complementary tools!
11. We'll wrap with how Lane Bryant used social to call out TV networks
What happens when two major American networks reject an ad promoting positive body image? Lane Bryant found out last week when both ABC and NBC said the spot required edits to be aired due to indecency guidelines.
Filled with plus-sized models in little or no clothing, and one breast-feeding a baby, "This Body" features women expressing pride in their shape. Instead of editing to comply, the company cleverly used the rejected video on a platform that allowed it—Facebook—piquing interest that led to over two million views, 43,000 shares, and 78,000 reactions in a matter of days... a level of engagement and attention likely higher than otherwise possible. Watch the ad:


Read more: http://www.marketingprofs.com/chirp/2016/29562/socialskim-instagram-chronological-order-is-so-yesterday-plus-11-more-stories-in-this-weeks-roundup#ixzz43InQrI1q