Monday, April 24, 2017

Reebok Social Chief: Feed The Beast

Many would argue that content marketing became a “thing” because of social media and the need to feed the beast. After all, if you’re going to have a successful social program, you need to have good content to share—right?
Ben Blakesley, head of global social media at Reebok, recently sat down with CMO.com to discuss how the brand has evolved its social strategy over the past few years. This evolution has affected Reebok’s content strategy, processes, and structure. Additionally, Blakesley said, Reebok has moved from just doing social to actually being social, while also supporting the business and overall business objectives.
CMO.com: What do you love most about social media?
Blakesley:
I started social media marketing about 12 years ago. I guess that kind of makes me a dinosaur in the space because, back then, YouTube didn’t exist and neither did Facebook. What I love about social media is the connections it allows you to have. I love connecting with all kinds of different groups of people and using social media as a medium to break through time and space to make those connections.
CMO.com: Start from the beginning. When did Reebok first become serious about social media?
Blakesley: I came to Reebok about three years ago. I think that’s when we decided we wanted to get serious about not just doing social media, but actually getting social and having it matter to the business and the business objectives.
And so I was brought in, and I was able to build a team from scratch. We have evolved quite a bit in these last three years, and we’ve grown by leaps and bounds. We’re continually developing more and better resources and [bringing in] more and better people to help continue to drive this mission.
One of the things I love, though, about the evolution, is that although our structure has changed quite a bit in the last three years in terms of the procedures we undertake to make this work, our mentality, attitude, and strategy really haven’t changed much.
CMO.com: How is social a different beast than all the other digital channels marketers have to play with?
Blakesley:
Believe it or not, social media marketing isn’t really that different than any other kind of marketing. It’s still about the right messages, at the right time, to the right person. Social media is just a new medium to reach those people. It’s not a complete change from the way we’ve always been marketing and the way we’ve always been building relationships. The medium has just changed.
CMO.com: How are you fostering innovation from a social perspective? Do you train your social team?
Blakesley:
Half of the people who I’ve hired are experienced in social media and social media marketing, and the other half are fresh out of school and hungry to learn and explore. We do an extensive amount of training to prepare them for actually doing social media for a business.
That’s actually one of the things I am proudest of here in our organization. I’ve been able to build on my team and up their levels for growth. We’ve got four levels within my team, so you could essentially join the team right out of college and stay with this team for eight or 10 years, continuously progressing. One of the things I noticed, in all the companies that I’ve either worked with in the past or [with] all of my peers in the space, is that a lot of people feel stuck in this thing, that they get into the social media role, they really enjoy it, they want to take it to the next level, but there’s nowhere for them to progress to or to advance their career, so they feel like they need to leave social media and do something else. What we’ve essentially done here is create different levels for people to move up.
CMO.com: Can we revisit the topic of structure? You said it has changed quite a bit over the years. How so?
Blakesley:
Every company that I speak with and have worked with, they don’t quite know where social media can live because, really, social should be baked into so many aspects of what a company does. It can’t be pigeonholed into just living in corporate communications or PR, just living in marketing or in digital content. I don’t know how many people you’ve talked to, but it seems like, every couple of years, companies are changing where their social media program lives because they just can’t quite find a perfect fit.
It’s been similar here. It started off as what we call the “experiential” team, within our brand communications division, and we’ve stayed within brand communications the whole time, but we’ve shifted from being aligned with our events team and our PR team to being aligned with our PR team and digital content teams. We’re a part of what we call the Reebok “global newsroom,” which is PR, digital content, meaning our website content, and social media as the three things.
At this point, we’re working as an integrated, single team representing three [those] different disciplines, as opposed to three different disciplines and three different teams kind of working in silos but sitting near each other. We’re really working in an integrated way where, so if we are telling a story, it would never just be told on social media. We are going to tell it in all three of these disciplines.
CMO.com: What about procedure? How have your processes changed?
Blakesley:
I’m a big believer that social media loves process because process is what allows us to be creative. I know that process can sound like a terribly stodgy word, but when you’re trying to be creative, if you don’t know what the next step is or you don’t know where this thing’s going to go, then it distracts you from being creative in the moment.
We’re creating processes to not only brainstorm on a regular basis and keep those fresh ideas coming, but also to create content and to make sure that other groups are integrated so that the content works harder for us. If we didn’t have process in place, then there might be content being created throughout the organization that just wouldn’t work for social. Social media is a content-hungry monster, and we have to continue to feed it, so we look for opportunities throughout the organization to help feed that monster.
CMO.com: Most of the time, you’re probably not selling shoes via your social media posts, right? Do you feel pressure from the rest of the marketing organization in terms of showing ROI?
Blakesley:
Oh, absolutely. This is a high-pressure job, and one of the things that’s very unique about working in social media for a business is that everybody thinks that they’re an expert because they have their own Facebook account or their own Instagram. A lot of people think that they know what you should be doing or they know what your job is like. I’ve been in this game long enough that I don’t get frustrated about that mentality anymore because it’s not going to go away. Just because I’ve seen commercials on TV doesn’t mean I know how to make effective ones. And the same thing goes for social media marketing: Just because you have a Facebook page doesn’t mean that you are able to be a top-notch social media marketer.
Fortunately, here at Reebok, the top-level and senior management buy into what we do, so when we set forth the strategy three years ago, my goal was that we align on what the whole organization is trying to achieve.
CMO.com: What would you say is most unique about your social strategy?
Blakesley:
We are a brand that believes in community. We believe in hard work and the journey of fitness and transforming lives. That’s why we are more focused on having conversations with everybody, as opposed to creating hyper-cool, tech-focused product campaigns and things like that. It’s much more important to me that we have all of these real, authentic interactions with people, as opposed to creating the shiniest piece of content we can. So I think that definitely sets us apart within our industry.
From a standpoint of how we approach social, I think just being as thoughtful as we are and as community-focused as we are continues to set us apart. We’re always trying to push the boundaries, to go ever further, beyond the likes and simple conversations.
CMO.com: Community-focused? What do you mean by that?
Blakesley: I’m a big believer in the mentality of “no comment left behind.” We have thousands of people talking to Reebok every day on social media, and although we don’t get to every single one of them, that's our hope. We want to have two-way conversation because that’s how you develop relationships. You do it by being there when it matters, in the good times and the bad, by encouraging people, by being enthusiastic, sharing their joys, and sharing their successes. These are the things that are really important. That’s how you build relationships with people, and that’s how you build relationships with brands, too.
If we can identify moments that are important to you and be a part of that in a positive way, then that’s what we want do on social.
CMO.com: What types of content is your audience most receptive to?
Blakesley:
A lot of what we’ve been doing for the last two years is repositioning our brand and landing our brand point of view so the people know what Reebok, in 2017, means. We’re not the shoe of the NFL or the NBA. We are the shoe of what we call the “fitness generation.” We are the apparel that you wear when you go to the CrossFit box; we’re the shoes you wear when you go on a Spartan race. Those are the kinds of things we are, so a lot of our content deals with landing that brand point of view so that we can gather this tribe of unique people who view fitness in a specific way and as a significant part of their lives. So that’s the content that really resonates. I think we’ve done a really good job with transitioning to having an audience that believes the same thing that we do, at this point, as opposed to what we were five years ago.
CMO.com: Are there any specific programs you can tell me about that have done really well or just really stand out?
Blakesley:
I’m really proud of the daily interactions we have with people, our kind of normal, “brand-building” content, that sparks conversation, that we have one-on-one interactions with people. I tell my team every day, “We have the opportunity to make someone’s day today. Now let’s go out and do it.” That might mean sending them some free shoes, it might mean replacing something that was stolen from them, or it might be as simple as having a great conversation where we’re making them laugh, or we’re making them appreciate that we’re a part of their life that day. Those are the things that really drive me.
But, beyond that, we also do some crazy stuff that I really enjoy doing, too, to bring new people into the fold and make them consider Reebok for the first time, when they hadn’t before. One of the things that we did last year as part of our title sponsorship of the CrossFit Games, we were looking for a way to really have people be shocked at something new that we did and be able to reach not just the people who were there on site but reach the broader audience throughout the world who weren’t there.
One of the themes that we dug into a little bit was that a lot of romances are created in CrossFit gyms. We put a call out and said, “Hey, anybody who has a relationship that they’re in that they’re willing to take to the next level, we’d like to help you guys get married at the CrossFit Games, so we’re literally going to have the wedding on the games floor, in front of all these thousands of CrossFit people because CrossFit’s such a central part of your life and your relationship.”
The fact that anybody was willing to raise their hand and say, “Yes, I want do this,” was pretty amazing, but we had hundreds of people share great stories of finding romance in the gym or strengthening their relationships by going to the gym together. We chose two people, Christina and Oliver, who had really found each other through fitness and that changed their life in a really meaningful way. We had Dave Castro, leader of the CrossFit Games, be the officiant on the Games floor, marrying those two in front of thousands of people.

CMO.com: What are your top objectives in social? What about KPIs? What are some of your measures for success?
Blakesley:
Our top objective is to build and deepen relationships. Our secondary objective is brand and product awareness. And then our third objective is to reach new people through conversation. So the KPIs that we have for these things are–the obvious one is engagement. We want people to interact with the content we put out there. We want people to go deeper down the funnel, so that means a comment is more important to us than a like would be. A share and a comment are very similar in importance to us because we want to reach new people as well.
Probably our top metric, though, is what we call the “conversation metric,” and that’s the metric of how many people are talking about Reebok, in any way, shape, or form online anywhere, so we’re looking to drive that number.
Then, finally, how many people we reach is a very important metric, for which we’re measuring audience, impressions, and those kind of things.
CMO.com: Who is your target on social media?
Blakesley:
Our target audience overall, not just on social media, is what we call the “fitness generation,” and we define that not as a demographic, but more of a psychographic. It’s a mentality. But it tends to be people who are active four or more times a week, and they’re not physically active doing just one thing; they have a variety of activities they do. They might do yoga one day or CrossFit the next day and a Spartan race on the weekend. Those are the kinds of people we’re after, and they live an active lifestyle where they’re not just trying to fit fitness into their lives but fitness is a big part of their lives.
CMO.com: Generally speaking, what are the biggest social media mistakes you see companies make?
Blakesley:
No. 1, not having a strategy and alignment about what they’re trying to do and achieve. Again, just doing social media, isn’t enough. And, every time that I’ve considered what’s next for social media marketing and how do we go beyond all this stuff, I run into heads of companies, and it seems to be a still large percentage of people who just don’t put that thought behind what they’re doing here. They treat it as frivolous still, or they give it to an intern. A lot of the businesses still aren’t taking it seriously and realizing that it’s an important part of your marketing mix and the relationship you have with your consumer.
CMO.com: If you could give one piece of advice to marketers, what would it be?
Blakesley:
Move with purpose. Purpose and direction is the most important thing that a social media program could have.

#SocialSkim: All About Facebook's F8, YouTube's 'Adpocalypse'

This week's 'Skim kicks competition up a notch: Facebook unveils a suite of new apps, tools, and features at its yearly F8 developer conference; YouTube's algorithm change is wiping out revenue for some; LinkedIn explains how its new privacy policy will affect users; Snapchat launches impressive new augmented reality Lenses, reportedly readies a self-serve ad platform; Tumblr takes on co-viewing with a new app; 20 video content ideas for your social media strategy, and much more...
Skim to stay up to speed!
1. Everything Facebook launched at F8 and why
TechCrunch's roundup of Facebook's big developer conference highlights absolutely all you need to know about the latest from the social giant. Check out the most important bits below, but be sure to scan through the entire slideshow for all the major takeaways and how they'll affect you!
  • Camera effects platform: A new platform for developers to create an endless array of augmented reality filters (likely in order to one-up Snapchat)
  • Facebook Workplace: The company's work collaboration platform can now integrate with file services like Box, things like Salesforce, and more (likely to take on Slack)
  • Instagram offline mode: Android users can now view content they've previously loaded, and leave likes and comments that register once back online (likely to attract users in countries with more limited data capabilities)
  • AI-powered Facebook Insights: Business page insights now uses artificial intelligence to scan for and highlight your best performing content
  • Facebook Spaces: A new virtual reality app for Facebook's Oculus products meant to give users a new way to "hang out" (likely to be a first-mover in the VR world)
  • Messenger 2.0: Bots like Spotify or Subway will allow Messenger users to listen to music in-app or order and pay for a sandwich. A new discovery feature will help users find relevant bots for them.

2. YouTube's "adpocalypse" is destroying revenue for some content producers
In response to the boycott of YouTube by dozens of brands scared to have found their ads on the platform aside videos with objectionable content, YouTube implemented a sudden change to its algorithm that has left some YouTube creators with massive voids where their ad revenue used to be.
Whereas YouTube's goal was to help brands feel more comfortable by taking a tougher line on where brands' ads are placed, the algorithm change also reportedly tanked ad revenue for channels with political commentary, military-associated content, and other types of content that might, possibly, be considered objectionable by some.
It's a sticky situation for all involved, and it could be one of the defining moments—and battles—in YouTube's history.
3. LinkedIn previews new privacy policy, and what it means for users
Linkedin's privacy policy and user agreement will get a refresh in June, and the Microsoft-owned company wants to be up front about how the changes will affect users. Some third-party services will be able to show users' profiles to their users, increasing users' visibility and, hopefully, helping them more easily connect with relevant members and find opportunities.
New automated systems and bots will assist users with pre-drafted messages, offer ice breakers, and assist with scheduling meetings. The changes will also let users take advantage of a new feature to help them find nearby members who might be at a conference or event.
Most all of these new features come with opt-in or opt-out possibilities, so you'll still (mostly) have control of what you'd like to take part in.
4. Snapchat reportedly ready to give advertisers a self-serve ad platform
Snapchat's making a play for more advertisers in the face of possibly the most challenging period for its future by building a way for brands to buy and serve video ads—not just geofilters—all by themselves via a self-serve platform. The report from Digiday suggests the platform could launch shortly and bring a big advertising bump for Snapchat.
Prior, a semi self-serve platform allowed advertisers to purchase directly on the platform, but they still had to do so through an API partner or third party, which often came with big markups. Now, brands will be able to create and run full-screen vertical video ads between users' Stories or within the app's Discover section by themselves.
The move comes at a time when Snapchat needs to justify its $20 billion valuation after going public in March.
5. Tumblr launches app to watch videos with friends
Introducing Cabana, Tumblr's new app—and its attempt to convince users to share and watch videos, in real time, with their real-life friends. Whereas Tumblr boasts a fandom environment where strangers can connect and share content based on similar interests, Cabana is meant to be a place for real-life groups of friends to share that viral video they just discovered and can't wait to spread, or that newsworthy, gut wrenching clip that pulls at heartstrings.
Tumblr certainly isn't the first to jump into the co-viewing space; YouTube has been experimenting with its own app called Uptime—and many others exist. There's no advertising in Cabana for now, nor is there a clear-cut path for brands to get involved, but the co-viewing space is certainly one to keep an eye on.
6. Snapchat still most popular app among teens, despite Instagram Stories
Despite all the news about Instagram stealing Snapchat's Story and users, Snapchat still has a big edge among teenagers. A recent survey from Piper Jaffray's Taking Stock With Teens—completed even after Instagram launched its own version of Stories—finds that 35% of teens claimed using Snapchat every day, versus just 24% for Instagram.
Moreover, Snapchat's share among teen respondents has increased to 39%, while Instagram's has fallen to 23%. Facebook's Instagram might be making gains in users of its new functions, but it might still have an uphill battle for overall popularity.
7. Facebook ramps up fight against fake news
The social network is increasingly stepping up its attack on fake news and spam on its platform, most recently announcing the deletion of over 30,000 fake accounts in France just days before the first round of the presidential election there.
Facebook is also tackling fake likes and comments, mostly generated from Indonesia, Bangladesh, and Saudi Arabia, by using algorithms to detect the fraudulent bots that are responsible.
The company isn't relying only on its bots to rid the platform of fake content, though; it's hired human fact-checking editors and enlisted its own users with the assistance of tip sheets and prompts for spotting fake news in an effort to scale back the distraction of fake news.
Have you seen any prompts about fake news while using Facebook?
8. Snapchat shows off World Lenses to... the world
Snapchat might just showcase the promise of augmented reality's (AR) future with its World Lenses product—a new set of Lenses that place virtual objects in users' world on-screen that move and rotate in a 3D environment according to the camera's placement.
It probably seems familiar to those of you who played Pokemon GO. Although Snapchat is certainly not the first one to use this 3D mapping concept, it will likely be the world's most widespread use of the technology, considering the scope and reach of the app.
But knowing how these things work, we're sure Facebook is right around the corner, eyeing every move.
9. 20 YouTube video content ideas for your small business
Filling your brand's YouTube channel with useful content that not only generates leads and responds to customers' needs but also helps your channel rise above YouTube's complex algorithm can be a challenge. But Small Biz Trends has a handy guide filled with 20 great ideas to do just that—from highlighting product announcements and spotlighting specific services to helping your company stand out with product comparison videos or showcasing customer stories. Check out the full list (each with an example video!) to get ahead on your YouTube content planning.
10. We'll wrap with India's backlash against Snapchat that's making it tank in app stores
Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel reportedly claimed he had no desire to expand in "poor countries like India and Spain" because the app "is only for rich people." Spiegel's quote, from an internal company meeting in 2015, was released to the world when Snapchat released a public filing of a lawsuit containing the comments that was redacted by an employee.
In response, Indians have (ironically) taken to social media in an effort to teach Snapchat a lesson. #UninstallSnapchat encourages Indians to delete the app from their phones and rate the app one star in the App Store, and it seems it might have worked.

Snapchat's rating in Apple's App Store at the time of this writing dropped from an apparent five stars to a single star with 6,099 customer ratings. The boycott spread to Twitter and other social platforms, teaching us all once again that seemingly small "internal" discussions can have major consequences.

Thursday, April 20, 2017

Influencer Marketing on Social Media: Everything You Need To Know


19 April 2017Social

You probably know that word-of-mouth is one of the most valuable forms of marketing out there: It’s been shown to influence 20 to 50 percent of all purchasing decisions. After all, potential customers are much more likely to be receptive to recommendations from a person they respect and trust than to ads or other corporate messaging.
In the new world of digital relationships, word of mouth extends well beyond recommendations from friends and family into the realm of influencer marketing.
In fact, research from Twitter shows that 49 percent of consumers seek purchase guidance from social media influencers, and 20 percent said that a Tweet from an influencer inspired them to share their own product recommendation. Even more important for marketers, nearly 40 percent of Twitter users said they had made a purchase as a direct result of an influencer’s Tweet.
And on Instagram, the amount brands are spending with influencers is over $1 billion per year, according to a study from Mediakix.
In this post we’ll take you through everything you need to know about influencer marketing—from strategy and tips, to tools you can use to boost your campaign.

Table of contents

What is a social media influencer?

How to incorporate influencer marketing in your social media strategy

How to find the right social media influencer for your campaign

Influencer marketing best practices

10 influencer marketing tools



Bonus: Download a free guide to discover how to get more sales and conversions with social media monitoring on Hootsuite—no tricks or boring tips.

What is a social media influencer?

An influencer is quite simply someone who carries influence over others. A social media influencer is someone who wields that influence through social media. The form of influence can vary and no two influencers are the same. Celebrity endorsements were the original form of influencer marketing, but in the digital age of online connection, regular people have become online “celebrities” with powerfully engaged social media followings, especially in certain market segments.
In fact, a survey of U.S. teens conducted for Variety last year found that YouTube creators took eight of the top 10 spots in a survey of influencers, outranking traditional celebrities like musicians and movie stars.
Perhaps no one embodies the concept of the social media influencer more than DJ Khaled, whom The Washington Post dubbed “The King of Snapchat.” His 6 million Snapchat followers make him an obvious choice for brands who may not (yet) have a strong Snapchat presence of their own.
When the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority debuted on the social network, they hired DJ Khaled for an account takeover that brought in more than 350,000 views in its first two days alone.


How to incorporate influencer marketing in your social media strategy

Think of influencer marketing as simply another arrow in your marketing quiver. While it’s a different approach to brand messaging, your influencer campaigns should still align with your larger content strategy and brand image so that they enhance your overall brand reputation.

Extend your reach (or laser-target your message) through influencer channels

In many cases, you will use influencer marketing to extend the reach of your brand messaging by working with social media influencers to create or support content they post on their own social media channels. This allows you to piggyback on someone else’s follower base, either to reach a broader audience or to segment your efforts in ways that would never be possible through your own branded social media accounts.
For example, the National Pork Board has partnered with Latino social media influencers in its #sabrososmomentos campaign to encourage Hispanic American families to serve more pork at family get-togethers throughout the holiday season, targeting a specific segment it would be challenging to reach through the board’s own branded channels.

This video, posted by influencers Los Pichy Boys on October 18, already has more than 340,000 views.

Boost credibility with influencer messaging on your own channels

You can also recruit influencers to participate in content that you share or cross-post on your own channels, as clothing company ThreadBeast did when it created a series of Facebook Ads with streetwear influencers like Nightwing2303 unboxing ThreadBeast packages.

Check out the views on that Facebook video: 3.4 million! Plus, it garnered another 200,000 views on Nightwing2303’s YouTube channel. The campaign targeted 18- to 24-year-old men in the U.S. with an interest in hip-hop or streetwear brands, and resulted in a 36 percent increase in clickthrough rate.
ThreadBeast’s Facebook ads influencer campaign ended in July, but the company is still working with influencers: Nightwing2303 posted a new unboxing video to YouTube earlier this month.

A social media takeover, like the DJ Khaled example above, is another effective way to leverage an influencer’s following and cross-promote your own channels to build up your own follower base.

How to find the right social media influencer for your campaign

Before reaching out to a potential social media influencer, you’ll need to consider the Rs of influence:
  • Relevance: The influencer is sharing content and developing a following relevant to your business and the particular market segment you want to target.
  • Reach: The number of people you could potentially reach through the influencer’s follower base that would bring value to your business.
  • Resonance: The potential level of engagement the influencer can create with an audience that’s valuable and relevant to your brand.
When determining whether an influencer is a good match for your three Rs, you’ll need to ask yourself a couple of important questions.

Who are you trying to influence?

Most marketers have no trouble coming up with a high-level answer to this question: you’re trying to influence your customers, prospects, and the broader industry community. But your influencer campaign can’t be all things to all people: as in all types of marketing strategy, a meaningful answer requires greater focus and a clear understanding of your goals and your audience.
Perhaps you’re trying to influence people who work in a specific job function—social media professionals or community managers who tend to spend significant amounts of time on social media every day, for example. Or maybe your goal is to influence decision-makers in a particular vertical—maybe government or finance leaders who tend to place deep trust in recommendations from their peer network. Or, you could be trying to target a specific consumer segment, like millennials looking to buy their first home.
These are three very different groups, and an effective influencer marketing strategy requires you to speak to the right people using the right tools (and, in this case, the right influencers), just like you do in all of your other marketing work.
Looking at a very specific marketing niche, for example, a recent survey from public relations firm MWWPR found that influencer marketing is the most effective way of marketing spirits to millennials, along with earned media. According to the report, 54 percent of Millennials share branded content from spirits companies when it is posted by a social influencer, and 93 percent usually try a new liquor after someone recommends it to them. For any liquor brand looking to expand into the millennial market, those numbers should be hard to ignore.

Who do your customers, prospects, and community trust?

For marketers, the key requirement for true influence is trust. Your audience must trust and respect the opinion of the influencers you partner with. Without the trust component, any lift in results will be superficial and you’ll struggle to see a tangible business impact from your efforts.
Working from a clear idea of exactly who you’re trying to influence, take the extra step to find key opinion and thought leaders whom your audience already looks to as sources of meaningful information. These people are already influencers—and partnerships with them can drive real impact.
Keep in mind that your audience demographics play a major role in determining which influencers will be the most trusted in your marketplace. Data from Twitter shows that people aged 45 and up view more traditional household name celebrities as preferred influencers, while millennials prefer digital content creators.
Targeting that millennial market, Contiki has been using influencer marketing for five years through its #RoadTrip series, hosting groups of YouTube stars as they follow Contiki itineraries around the world. Some videos, like the one below created by influencers Jesse and Jeana (BFvsGF), racked up more than a million views (not to mention more than 125,000 likes).

Perhaps it’s no surprise, then, that after its 2015 RoadTrip to Southeast Asia, Contiki saw a 175 percent increase in owned YouTube audience and a 25 percent increase in traffic to its Asian trip packages online. Anecdotally, when Contiki’s Canadian sales managers visited various campuses across the country, they heard from at least one person each day who mentioned they had first learned about the travel brand through their favorite YouTuber. The campaign helped Contiki win the Skifties award for Best Travel Brand on YouTube and the British Youth Travel Award for Best Use of Social Media.
There are plenty of tools to help you identify people with large and engaged networks talking about topics that matter to your audience, including followerwonk, Traackr, Klout, and Hootsuite. But remember that reach alone does not indicate a powerful influencer—you also need the other two Rs: relevance and resonance. Watch for engaged followers—that means plenty of views, likes, comments, and shares, all from the precise follower segments you’re trying to reach.
A huge follower count is meaningless without evidence that those followers are paying attention, and a smaller follower count can be very powerful if it’s a niche area and the potential influencer is a recognized leader. Markerly, a network that connects brands with influencers, recently found that partnering with “micro-influencers” can provide much better ROI than trying to snag a big celebrity. Their analysis of 800,000 Instagram users found that the  influencers with 10,000 to 100,000 followers offer the best combination of resonance and reach.

Image via Markerly.
Image via Markerly.

Influencer marketing best practices

Influencers are becoming increasingly important in the social media world, and they expect to be recognized for the value they bring to your brand. Here are some key ways to ensure you build influencer relationships that are beneficial over the long term.

Reach out slowly

Once you identify a social media influencer you want to engage with, start the connection process by reaching out through content they are already sharing, and conversations they are already starting or leading. Twitter chats are a great way to do this. If you know your potential social media influencer is hosting a Twitter chat, be sure to mark the date and participate. If they have a blog, comment on their blog posts to show that you are actually reading their content.
Once you’ve begun to build rapport, the relationship can bloom into a mutually beneficial one. On that note…

Create mutual value

As a marketer, you’re probably focused on the value that influencers can provide to your brand, not the other way around. But to create a meaningful and lasting relationship, influencers must also derive value from partnering with your brand—and not just in the form of cold, hard cash (although that always helps).
“Value” doesn’t only mean financial compensation; it simply means that the perceived benefit of the partnership is equally important to both you and the influencer. It could involve a content swap, an introduction to a unique community, or some kind of swag or product placement, but always keep in mind that mutual value will be the key driver of long-term influencer relationships.

Go for a consistent look, feel, and tone

When choosing an influencer, in addition to finding a fit for your niche market, you need to find someone who’s producing content with a similar look and feel to your own, and whose tone is appropriate for the way you want to present your brand to potential customers. This will make it much easier for the brand and the influencer to share, swap, and collaborate without creating a disjointed feel in either party’s social media posts.
A social media influencer who has worked hard to build a following will not accept a deal that makes their own personal brand seem inconsistent. And allowing the influencer creative freedom is much easier when you know that their content will gel with your own. Combining your efforts creates the best results—data from Twitter shows that exposure to a brand Tweet creates a 2.7 times lift in purchase intent, but exposure to both a brand Tweet and an influencer Tweet more than doubles that lift to 5.2 times.

Measure the results

Social media influencers should be able to provide analytics and detailed reports on the reach of their posts, but remember that you’re also looking to track engagement. This can be tricky, with 47 percent of respondents to a recent survey saying that proving the value of their influencer marketing campaigns is their biggest measurement challenge. Hootsuite allows you to measure campaign success by tracking mentions of the brand or campaign hashtags with social listening streams.

Remember that influencer marketing is one of the hottest online marketing trends right now, but you still need to do your research, ensure your efforts align with your overall marketing strategy, and test and track your results to improve performance, just as you would with any other marketing tool.

10 influencer marketing tools

A list of influencer marketing tools to help you find influential people to partner with, and track the success of your campaigns.

1. Influencer strategy template

Stop chasing online personalities that have little sway over your target audience. This template will help you map out your influencer marketing strategy and inform partner decisions.

2. Followerwonk (free tool)

This tool by Moz makes it easy to find relevant influencers on Twitter by topic and location. Use it to build a list of potential influencers to engage and partner with. Pro tip: create a Twitter list for these individuals for easy reference.

3. Hootsuite (free tool)

You can use Hootsuite search streams to discover social media influencers by monitoring conversations relevant to your industry. Who is your target audience engaging with? Whose content are they sharing? These people have clout that can help your brand expand it’s reach.
Once you have a set of influencers to follow, you can add them to a Twitter list and save it as a stream to easily track what they share and who they engage with—learn from the best.

4. Demographics Pro for Twitter (free tool)

Use this tool to determine whether an influencer’s audience is right for your brand. The app will give you relevant data on a user’s following, including average age, income, location, likes, interests, and profession.

5. TrendSpottr for Instagram app

Find the top trending photos, videos, and influencers for any tag or topic with TrendSpottr for Instagram. The app also makes it easy to engage with key influencers, view trending hashtags, select from a list of popular tags, and easily share trending posts to your social networks.

6. Streamview for Instagram

Find local Instagram influencers posting in your area (or an area you choose to follow). You can monitor for locations and hashtags, or combine search terms for advanced listening.

7. UTM parameters (free tool)

These short text codes can be added to a URL to track important data about website visitors and traffic sources. Create them for your influencers to use when they share content on social media so you can track how much engagement the campaign is receiving.
Use the Hootsuite dashboard to create UTM parameters in a few simple steps. Then you can share the links with your social media influencer or easily add it to your posts.
Check out our guide, How to Use UTM Parameters to Track Social Media Success and learn more about this invaluable tool.

8. Facebook’s Pixel (free tool)

As we explain in our post, The Facebook Pixel: What It Is and How to Use It, this tool makes it easy to track conversions from a Facebook ad, optimize ads based on data collected, build targeted audiences for future ads, and remarket to qualified leads (people who have already taken some kind of action on your website).
If your influencer marketing strategy includes a Facebook ad component, you can use a pixel’s remarketing capabilities to expand an influencer’s reach and connect with a new and relevant audience. Check out our step-by-step guide to learn how to put the tactic to work in your next campaign.

9. Right Relevance Pro

This app identifies and ranks industry influencers and uses their inherent trust to discover content relevant to your audience. This makes it easy for you to find and share content that will help expand your businesses’ reach on social media.

10. Insightpool

Do your busy @mention streams make it more difficult to engage with influencers? InsightPool’s single-click response interface makes it easy to cut through the noise and connect with key individuals.
Make your influencer marketing activities easier with Hootsuite. Schedule posts, engage with influencers, and measure the success of your efforts. Try it free today. 

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Snapchat's new world lenses are its biggest push into augmented reality

Snap Inc. is a camera company, and on the day of F8, Facebook's annual conference for developers, they want to remind the tech industry, Wall Street, and their loyal users of that mission. 

Snapchat is launching new world lenses, an expansion of its world lens feature (released just ahead of Spectacles in November) that puts animated objects like vomiting rainbow clouds in the real world, as seen through your smartphone. The big change is that these lenses (and the images in them) move and change as you move, making them slightly interactive.
The feature means Snapchat users can interact with their surroundings similar to how they would on Pokemon Go, but this time with a little less Pokemon and much more Snapchat. One lens, for example, allows you to plant seeds on the ground, which then turn into flowers. Another lets you add an "OMG" sticker. 
You can see other examples in their short 30-second promo video: 
With this update, Snapchat is proving its strength in augmented reality (AR) and other camera-based technology. Facebook, the social networking giant and owner of Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp, has been on an aggressive quest to slaughter Snapchat's growth. It mimicked Snapchat's signature Stories feature, starting with Instagram Stories in August 2016. 
But Snapchat is much more than Stories. The app launched lenses, animated filters for your face, in 2015. It soon bought Looksery, a startup to help with that AR technology, and also introduced sponsored lenses. Snapchat gained fandom among millennials for its iconic rainbow vomiting lens and puppy face lens
Still, Facebook followed that feature. In March 2016, it acquired startup MSQRD that offered similar video filters. Those have since been incorporated into the Facebook Camera
The next battle is over rear-facing AR, like what captured the world's attention with Pokemon Go last summer. As seen in the videos below, Snapchat user can augment their surroundings with these 3D effects and watch them change as they move. 
Here's how it works in three steps:

1. Open the Snapchat app and take your surroundings to open the lens options. Select one of the new world lenses. Drag and drop, left and right

 

2. Drag and drop, close and away 

 

 3. Step through 

 
Snapchat isn't just about selfies anymore. It's transforming itself to provide an outlet for millennials (and anyone) to share and view the world, and their world as they see it, via an app on their smartphone as well as with its video-camera tool called Spectacles. 
These new lenses will change every day. We can only hope one day Snapchat will let us augment our surroundings with 3D puppies. Your move, Facebook.