Thursday, June 30, 2016

Facebook Canvas: How to Create an Immersive Facebook Ads Experience


Facebook Canvas
Watch a video walkthrough of Facebook Canvas here…
Facebook Canvas is a pretty amazing way to provide users an immersive, mobile experience through ads. How do I describe what these things are for people who haven’t seen them before?
Well, they’re similar to Instant Articles, which allow publishers to share their content in an instantaneous fashion, bypassing slow load times. However, that’s not the same here. This isn’t a special feed from your website.
TechCrunch has described Facebook Canvas as “Instant Ads.” Canvas allows you to build a unique experience with the combination of text, images, videos, carousels, product feeds and more.
Here are some screen grabs from that TechCrunch article of a Facebook Canvas created by Wendy’s…
Facebook Canvas Wendy's
After clicking, you will keep scrolling to see more of this content…
Facebook Canvas Wendy's
And scrolling…
Facebook Canvas Wendy's
Creating Canvas ads is incredibly easy — or at least far easier than you’d expect. Facebook provides the tools that help you create them.
How can you create your own Facebook Canvas ad? Let me step you through it, from start to finish…

Access Canvas Through Your Page

To access Canvas, click on “Publishing Tools” from within your page…
Facebook Canvas
On the left hand side, you should see an option for Canvas.
From here, you can view a Canvas you’ve created before (you can’t edit them) or create a new one.

Create Your Canvas: Basics

Let’s create a new one! Click that “Create” button at the top. You’ll then see the following…
Facebook Canvas
First, name that new canvas at the top…
Facebook Canvas
On the left hand side, you will be adding components to build your canvas. On the right, you can preview what it will look like.
By default, Facebook will ask you to provide a theme, header, photo and button. But you can add, delete and move any items that you want.
At the very bottom, click the “Add Component” button.
Facebook Canvas
As you can see, you can add any of the following:
  • Button
  • Carousel
  • Photo
  • Text Block
  • Video
  • Product Set
You can select one or several of these and click “OK” to add them to your canvas. You can also add multiples of each if you want. You decide!

Create Your Canvas: Select a Theme

The theme is essentially the background color for any empty space (mainly text blocks). You have the options of White, Black or Custom. If you select Custom, click the color box next to it.
Facebook Canvas
Then you can choose the color for your theme by entering the hex code or clicking it within the color guide.

Create Your Canvas: Header

You can insert a fixed header that will always sit at the top of your canvas.
Facebook Canvas
For whatever reason, Facebook recommends an image of 120x44px. That’s a really small image. Within Facebook’s canvas specs, they say that the maximum size of a header is 882x66px.
If your header is transparent, you can also select a background color as well as opacity.
Facebook Canvas
Keep in mind that this actually sits on top of the first item that goes below the header, so you may need to adjust accordingly.

Create Your Canvas: Video

If you’re going to add a video, Facebook makes a few suggestions…
1. Minimum resolution of 720p.
2. Portrait orientation is recommended (landscape videos will automatically resize).
3. Avoid full screen videos.
4. Total video length can’t exceed two minutes. You can have more than one video in the canvas, but the total time of all videos can’t be greater than two minutes.
5. Use MP4 or MOV format.
6. The first frame will be the thumbnail (you can’t change this). This really doesn’t matter since the video will autoplay once you scroll to it anyway.
Something that surprised me was that the videos within a canvas autoplay with sound and replay on a loop. As soon as you scroll by them, of course, they will stop.
Facebook Canvas
For video scaling, you have options of either default or “tilt to pan.”
If you choose the default, the video will fit the screen.
If you choose “tilt to pan,” the video will zoom in, and you can tilt your phone to see other areas of the video. This is most ideal for high resolution video tours.

Create Your Canvas: Photo

Facebook Canvas
When adding a photo to your canvas, Facebook provides three options:
  • Default
  • Tap to Expand
  • Tilt to Pan
Once again, it’s kind of strange that within the canvas creation process, Facebook recommends a 640 pixel image with a minimum of 72 dpi. However, that’s not consistent with their specs.
Here are photo design requirements, according to Facebook:
  • Images will use the full width of the screen by default
  • A full width image is 1,080 pixels wide
  • You can use wider images for the tilt to pan option
  • A full-height image is 1,920 pixels high
  • You can use a taller image for the tap to expand option
  • Use PNG or JPG file types
You can use up to 20 photos within your canvas.
If you use the tilt to pan option, Facebook will focus on the middle portion of the image. Here’s an example…
Facebook Canvas

Create Your Canvas: Carousel

Facebook Canvas
You can also add a carousel to your canvas, including a minimum of two images. While this is similar to creating a carousel ad, understand that these are images only (a link can be included in the default option) and they don’t need to be square.
Scaling options are default and tilt to pan. If you choose default, you can include a link. Otherwise, the tilt to pan option includes images only.
Here are the specs for canvas carousel from Facebook:
  • There is no requirement on image ratio, but all images need to be the same size
  • Maximum width is 1,080 pixels
  • Maximum height is 1,920 pixels
  • Use PNG or JPG file type
  • Use up to 10 images per carousel

Create Your Canvas: Text Block

Facebook Canvas
Text blocks are a good way to break up your canvas with information.
You can adjust the following:
  • Font face
  • Font size
  • Color
  • Bold, italics, underline
  • Alignment
You are allowed no more than 500 characters in a single text block.

Create Your Canvas: Product Set

Facebook Canvas
If you have a product feed, you can display it here. This is what you otherwise use for Dynamic Product Ads (more details on the product feed here).
You can’t determine the order of the products, and Facebook will dynamically display up to 40 at a time.

Create Your Canvas: Button

Facebook Canvas
The final option is a button. This is another opportunity to send users to an external link. Your button will allow for a max of 30 characters, and you should allow for 48px of padding above and below.
One nice option is that you can show the button either inline or fixed to the bottom of the canvas (similar to the fixed header at the top).

Create Your Canvas: Save, Preview and Finish

Facebook Canvas
When you’re done, be sure to save the canvas at the top left. Before you click “finish,” you absolutely need to preview. After clicking on “Preview on Device,” Facebook will send an alert to your phone so that you can view it there.
The reason the preview is so important is that once you finish the canvas, you can’t edit it.
Facebook Canvas
Make sure it’s the way you want it first!

Create Your Campaign, Ad Set and Ad

First, create a campaign with either the Clicks to Website or Website Conversions objective.
Facebook Canvas
On the ad set level, it’s important that you only select Mobile News Feed for placement.
Facebook Canvas
Within the destination while creating the ad, choose “Canvas” and select the canvas that you previously finished.
Facebook Canvas
You’ll need to provide the following…
  • Text: The text that goes above the ad
  • Headline: The headline that goes below the thumbnail
  • Thumbnail Image
Facebook has not been clear about the dimensions of the thumbnail image. Until you hear otherwise, use the 1200×628 image size (1.91:1 aspect ratio) that is required for the typical link ad.

My Canvas

I created a canvas that acts as a tutorial on some of the basics of creating one. It includes images, videos, text boxes and carousels that assemble all of the basic guidelines that I’ve discussed here. Maybe you’ll see it on Facebook?

Your Turn

Have you started experimenting with canvas yet? What types of things are you thinking about doing?

Monday, June 27, 2016

#SocialSkim: Brand Love for Hot Messaging App Yubl, Plus 12 More Stories in This Week's Roundup

New apps and ad capabilities. That's the agenda on this week's SocialSkim. We dive into the latest under-25 messaging platform that brands are scrambling onto, and we introduce Twitter's new standalone app built specifically for its power users.
We'll give you the latest on Tumblr's foray into live video (spoiler: it's not like Facebook Live), discuss why Reddit might be the next social network your brand joins, and make your day with a bounty of free and cheap visual marketing tools. Skim to stay on top of it all!
Introducing Yubl, the latest messaging app grabbing teens'—and brands'—attention
Pronounced "Yubble," the social messaging app targeted at the under-25 demographic appears a lot like Instagram, but images on the social network's feed aren't static and can include interactive "buttons" that let users vote, see a location, or follow a link.
That last one's a huge draw for brands, since other platforms, including Snapchat and Instagram, don't allow shoppable links in posts.

Primark, ASOS, and RedBull are already onYubl with verified pages, and the app has been floating around the top 20 social apps for iPhone users.
But it will ultimately be the teens who decide the fate of this newcomer in the already crowded space of social messaging. Would you consider Yubl for your brand?
1. Tumblr launches live video... for publishers
Rumors began swirling on Tuesday that the microblogging social network would be the latest to throw its hat into the livestreaming ring when it published a teaser hinting at "live video" and a schedule that included things like a live broadcast from the surface of Mars and a basketball lesson from a Harlem Globetrotter.
Clarification came Wednesday when the company announced a "publishing and discovery platform for live video" from media partners, including Mashable, MTV, and TimeOut.
The platform will include a series of live broadcasts from the partners to be brought to their followers in the form of push notifications. So, it might not be a direct competitor to Facebook Live or Twitter's Periscope just yet, but who knows what the future holds?
2. Twitter launches standalone app for influencers, increases video length for all users
The company just launched Twitter Engage, a standalone app designed for the social network's top users that helps them easily engage with followers, generates down-to-the-second analytics about their tweets, and also surfaces @mentions and follows from loyal fans and other influencers.
The social network also appears set to invest heavily in video: It announced this week that all users may now post 140-second videos rather than having to stick to the previous 30-second limit; and its$150 billion acquisition of machine-learning company, Magic Pony Technology.
3. Facebook opens up fast-loading Canvas ads to organic posts
The social network's mobile-only, full-screen Canvas ads became available for organic page posts on Wednesday: Now, when a brand creates a Canvas, it can also be published as a page post instantly.
With 50% of Canvas ads being built by advertisers in ten minutes or less, and a super-efficient mobile ad builder at brands' disposal, it's no wonder the social network is bringing the ad product front and center. Here's a refresher of what Canvas looks like:
4. Is Reddit going mainstream for brands?
Coca-Cola, eBay, and Proctor & Gamble have all joined Reddit in recent months, and suddenly the niche social news networking site that brands avoided for fear of being harassed for their marketing efforts by the network's infamous community of Internet trolls appears set to attract more big names.
Reddit nearly doubled its traffic over the past year, skyrocketing from 28.4 million to 51.4 million monthly users in May, and its newly established internal creative agency that helps brands create native content, along with its introduction of an ad-tech platform, appears to be making companies consider diving into the Reddit abyss. Would you consider Reddit for your brand?
5. Instagram tops 500 million monthly users
...and not only that! The photo-sharing platform went from 300 million monthly active users to over 300 million daily active users in less than two years. Popularity in overseas markets, including Germany, Japan, France, and Indonesia, fueled the growth, with 80% of Instagram users now coming from outside the US.
It's not all peachy, though, for the Facebook-owned social network; the rate of images shared per day is slowing down. However, Instagram is now two times bigger than Snapchat, and that's not something to scoff at.
6. Facebook gives brands more editorial control of their Instant Articles content
New updates to Instant Articles bring more features and freedom for branded content, including support for marketer logos atop those articles. The logos will be automatically added if a publisher identifies a third-party product, brand, or sponsor.
Publishers can now also add custom bylines and kickers, and the Instant Article style editor will allow new coloring, spacing, and text features, along with a new real-time preview feature in the coming weeks.
7. Why it's time for B2B marketers to embrace mobile
B2B brands have been much more reluctant to jump into mobile marketing than those in the B2C space, but times have changed, technology has advanced, and now's the time to make mobile a part of your multi-channel strategy.
Why? This B2BMarketing piece breaks down all of the reasons, but included are the unique benefits brought about with a mobile app, and the incredible usefulness of location-based marketing that's been enabled by mobile. Those benefits aren't just for B2C companies, and they can be used to breathe new life into a B2B omni-channel marketing strategy.
8. Guess what? Almost 60% of the links shared on Twitter are never clicked
Fully 59%. According to a first-of-its-kind study, that's the percentage of links shared on the social network that are never clicked on, including by the users who shared them.
The study included 2.8 million shares from links shared by various news organizations, with only 9% of shared links on the site generating 90% of the clicks! In short, although exaggerated headlines might get a lot of eyeballs, that doesn't necessarily translate into clicks, and social sharing is less connected to the gravity of news shared than previously thought. It's also a possibility that your Twitter followers are vastly more uninformed than it appears. Sigh.
9. Facebook Messenger receives slight redesign, new search feature
For any of you using Messenger for customer service, or for those exploring that option (which, you should, because it boasts over 900 million users), Facebook ushered in a round of welcomedupdates and upgrades to the app that should help finding and starting conversations easier.
The new interface will continue to show your most recent messages at the top, but users will now find a new Favorites section below, which will include those you message most. The new design also has a search bar, which will return the same results as Facebook mobile search. Finally, the app will also show birthdays and whether someone is currently active on the platform, making it just a bit easier to prioritize your conversations.
10. Up your game with these free, cheap, and easy visual marketing tools
Even a top-notch product at an unbeatable price can fail if it lacks attractive packaging, and that extends to digital and visual elements as well. Attract more viewers, increase conversion, and appeal to your customers' decreasing attention spans by using these free, cheap and easy tools for design, presentations, infographics, and more! We know you love us.
11. Seven social branding do's and don'ts
Luckily we're no longer in the dark days of trial and error for branding our companies on social media. Ample research reveals seven key do's and don'ts that extend across platforms and serve as a guide to building your brand on social.
Check out the full list, but we've wrapped up the need-to-knows below here:
  • Be quick and responsive: Customers expect fast, professional responses; the lack of them can gravely damage a brand. Just ask British Airways.
  • Involve users: Don't just respond to users. Involve them. Take Starbuck's WhiteCupContestas an example.
  • Be real: 80% of consumers rate authenticity of content as the most important factor when choosing to follow a brand on social. Need we say more?
  • Be consistent: Use a consistent name and consistent colors and overall branding. Doing otherwise confuses users, especially for brands with numerous social accounts.
  • Promote offers that matter: Use social to discover what your followers want and need, so social can eventually be a sales channel.
12. We'll wrap with how Facebook wants to plan your next birthday party for you
Facebook wants to algorithmically plan your next birthday party, and it doesn't even have the courtesy to ask for your input. A report from The Verge highlights how the social network's growth team has been creeping on your friend list and picking potential hosts to corner into planning an event for your special day, whether you like it or not.
The social giant prompts its chosen hosts with a call to action to create an event, without even letting the birthday boy or girl know it's doing so.
For anyone under 30 celebrating youth and possibility, this is fun news that could lead to a surprise party and a night of lifelong memories. For anyone older, it might be seen as a privacy-breaching attempt to force you into an unwanted celebration when all you'd rather do is have a glass of wine by yourself and binge-watch House of Cards.