Friday, March 15, 2019

Beginner’s Guide to Using Keyword Research As A Powerful SEO Strategy


Everyone in the blogging and online business world seems to be talking about SEO these days, right?
If this term has you baffled and feeling like you kinda missed that point in time where you still could comfortably ask someone what the hell they are talking about, this is for you.

What is SEO again?

I’m sure most of you know this already, but let’s start at the start. SEO stands for Search Engine Optimisation.
Basically, when you implement SEO strategies you are trying to optimize your website to be found and ranked by search engines.
When you think search engines, I bet Google is the one (and only?) you think about. That’s because Google is the biggest and therefore most powerful of them.
But there are others like Bing or Yahoo that you might be familiar with. And then there are even more search engines like DuckDuckGo, which you probably never heard of.
Anyway, though all these different search engines run on different algorithms, in the end, they all try to do the same thing: Find and deliver the most relevant and most helpful content and show it to the people searching for it.
Now, this is your chance to shine! Instead of aimlessly writing content and hoping for the best, you can use SEO strategies and keyword research to reverse-engineer the process.
By figuring out what people are actually looking for (= keyword research), you can create content that answers their burning questions, helps them solve their biggest problems or satisfies their curiosity.
They find what they are looking for and you get tons of targeted traffic to your website. Bingo! 🙂
Today’s post is going to give you a quick introduction to keyword research, so you can go ahead and use this simple SEO strategy to plan your website or blog content like a pro

White Hat SEO vs Black Hat SEO

Another little bit of terminology that you might have come across and wondered, what the heck people were talking about.
White Hat SEO? Black Hat SEO? Sounds like some weird wizardry is going down, doesn’t it?
I see Gandalf the White pointing his wand at Google and sending you unlimited page views whilst saving the world from orcs and other monsters…
Seriously, who comes up with those terms?? You have my permission to wear whatever hat you fancy, as long as you play by the rules. And that brings us to the actual meaning of those phrases:
“White Hat SEO” simply refers to using SEO strategies that respect search engines’ terms and conditions (= playing by the rules).
“Black Hat SEO” on the other hand refers to using shady tactics that ultimately violate those terms and conditions. Those could involve strategies like buying links, redirecting traffic or cloaking techniques. Applying those strategies is short-sighted and you risk being banned from search engine results. You do not want this.
Therefore, all the SEO strategies we’ll look at in this post are the “white hat SEO”-play-nice kind of strategies, because I don’t want you to get banned, I want you to get found!
Creating a solid keyword strategy is one example of implementing white hat SEO tactics on your website

Keyword Research Meaning: What is Keyword Research?

Everybody keeps talking about keyword research — but what is it and why is it important?
Essentially, keyword research is the process of identifying relevant terms or phrases (= keywords) that people are actually searching for.
Just from your own experience, what would you type into a search engine? Say for example you want to learn about keywords. Then you might start by searching for the broad term “keyword”.
Depending on how much you know already, you might be more specific and type in “keyword research tool”. Or even more specific “free keyword research tool”. Those are your search terms aka keywords.
Today, we’ll focus on keyword research as part of your SEO strategy, because it helps implement three SEO techniques at once:
  • structure your website logically around your core topic
  • use relevant and descriptive keywords in your meta descriptions (the snippet that shows up in search results below the page title) to tell search engines and people what your site is about
  • provide quality content that people are actually looking for

Long Tail Keywords vs Short Tail Keywords

The single word keywords (aka head terms or short tail keywords) like “keyword” are usually pretty hard to rank for and have a lot of competition.
For the sake of argument, I googled “keyword” and Google found 572.000.000 results. o_0 Wow. That’s a lot of results, isn’t it?
The more specific long-tail keyword “free keyword research tool” only (LOL) yielded 39.200.000 results. Yeah. I know. Still a lot.
Nevertheless, it only about 1/15th of the number of results for the short tail keyword. Making it even more specific “free keyword research tool for bloggers” brings it down to 15.200.000 results.
As you can see, the more specific, the smaller the number of search results. Makes sense.
Ok. So you get lots more results for broader search terms. What about searches though?
When you run a search volume analysis (more on that later), you’ll find that the broader single word terms usually also have a much higher search volume. That means that more people are searching for those phrases.
Hang on — isn’t that a good thing? You might be wondering: “Why not go for the search term that more people are looking for?” Very good question my friend.
The first point I already mentioned: Your content — especially when you have a brand-new website — is likely to drown in a sea of competition. Therefore focusing on search terms with a smaller search volume and less competition can be beneficial in that respect.
Moreover, going after the more specific long tail keywords should result in much more targeted traffic to your website. If someone is looking for “free keyword research tools for bloggers” and you have a post exactly about that topic, people are more likely to click through to your website, because your offer matches their search.
That’s what you want! You want your content to be the perfect fit for someone’s search

LSI Keywords

Another term that created quite a bit of buzz recently is LSI keywords. LSI stands for Latent Semantic Indexing. I know. This doesn’t really make for any light bulb moments yet.
Basically, it’s a high-brow expression for keywords that are often found in the same context. Not necessarily synonyms but terms that share a contextual relationship. Still confused?
Think of words that can have different meanings. Let’s choose the word “date” for example. You could either go on a date or eat a date. And I sincerely hope, that only the first one involves another human being…
Now that’s exactly the kind of context that search engines need as well to figure out what you are actually talking about.
When you mention restaurants and movies in the same context, the “going on a date” option is plausible. On the other hand, if the rest of your content focuses on different kinds of fruit and their health benefits, the second option becomes more realistic.
So yes, you should use LSI keywords to make your content clear.

How to Use Keywords on Your Blog

Now to the practical part — how and where should you use keywords on your website?
First of all — if you haven’t installed the free Yoast SEO plugin yet, go ahead and do it now.
This will make things so much easier for you, as it shows you how to optimise your post or page for your keyword. The free version on the plugin analyses your content for just one keyword.
If you wanted, you could upgrade to the paid version though and optimise your content for synonyms and related keywords as well.

Keyword Density

In general, from what I’ve read the keyword density in your post should be about 3%. Just in case you were wondering — the Yoast SEO plugin will show you the keyword density for your post.
Don’t sweat it though. In the end, you write for real people, not (only) search engines. And keyword stuffing just for the sake of it won’t do you any good.

Where to Place Your Keywords

There are many places on your website where your keywords should appear. Let’s have a look at the most important ones, shall we?

Your Domain Name

As I mentioned before, if you are just starting out, choosing a domain namethat contains your keyword is a great idea. If your website has been around for a bit, don’t worry too much. There are still lots of options to position your keyword!

The Permalink

That’s the permanent URL for a specific post or page. When you use WordPress to write your content, you can change the permalink at the top of the page, right below the title for your post. Remember not to change it afteryour content is published (unless you use a redirect to the new page).

Title Tag

That’s the title that will show up in the search results when your content is shown to the people searching for it. It’s also what will show up in the browser tab when people click your link. When you use the Yoast SEO plugin, you’ll get a box at the bottom of the page where you can change your title tag.

Meta Description

That’s the short snippet right underneath your search title in the search results. Again, if you use the Yoast SEO plugin, you can change this description at the bottom of your page. If you don’t search engines will just pull a few lines of content from your post and use this instead.

Headings

Use your keywords in your headings and sub-headings.

In Links

You can also use your keywords as anchor text in internal and external links.

In Lists

Use your keyword in lists included in your post.

In Image ALT tags and titles

When you upload an image, you should change its title tag and ALT tags.
ALT tag stands for alternative tag and is shown when the original visual element can’t be rendered.
It’s also the description that is read by screen reader software for visually impaired readers.
Therefore you really don’t want to force your keywords in there. If possible, use the keyword naturally when explaining what the picture shows.

Categories

You can use related keyword as your blog or website categories and sub-categories to build a keyword taxonomy on your website.
A what? Remember back at school when you learned about the origin of life and how species developed from one common ancestor, evolved and then split up into “the tree of life”?
That’s one example for taxonomy. Now applying this to your website structure means you have one main topic and then related topics that branch off.
Those related topics might have more sub-topics and so on. Getting more and more specific the further you move away from the base topic.
Let’s look at an example. If your website was all about art, you could have a sub-category like paintings, which might then be further divided into let’s say impressionistic and expressionistic.
Those, in turn, might have sub-categories for specific time periods. You see where this is going.
By having broad as well as very specific topics, you can curate content for a great mix of short — and long tail keywords. Which is great in term of user experience, because they can find all the relevant information in one place.
Search engines also like when your website has a nice logic internal structure.
Photo by Le Buzz on Unsplash

Conclusion

Quick recap for all who just skimmed to the bottom of the page:
  • Keywords play an important role in a successful on-page SEO strategy.
  • Keyword research is vital to identify what people are actually searching for.
  • This, in turn, helps you create useful, demand-based content.
  • Keywords also help you structure that content.
  • Use keywords in all the right places within your content to help search engines find and show your content.
  • Thus optimizing your content for strategic keywords generates free targeted search engine traffic right to your website. *happy dance*
So how do you identify those useful keywords? Short answer: You use keyword finders aka keyword research tools.

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

10 New Social Media Products and Platform Updates Marketers Need to Know About


1. LinkedIn Video For Business

Get 5x more engagement on your videos
By one study, videos are being interacted with on LinkedIn twenty times more than other types of content on user feeds. To meet that demand, and to adapt to the form in a way that other platforms haven’t, LinkedIn has gone all-in on videoas a key part of their strategy for business and company pages.
The strategy seems to be working: according to their beta testers, Company Page video is 5x more likely than other types of content to start a conversation among members.

2. WhatsApp for Business

New features specifically designed for business users
Just over a year after its official launch, WhatsApp for Business has topped 5 million monthly users. The differentiated platform, at times described as a Facebook Page-like business hub on WhatsApp, “helps companies better connect with their customers and establish an official presence on WhatsApp’s service.
Its Quick Reply, auto-reply, and away messages make it easier for business owners to manage communications with curious customers or leads.

3. TikTok Ads

Ads are now on TikTok. Are you?
TechCrunch’s Sarah Perez wants you to pay attention to TikTok. Given their meteoric rise and unique interface, we’re inclined to agree. And if you’re a brand who is aiming to grab the attention of Generation Z, you’d be wise to listen. Ad “units” are being introduced to a subset of users, with an ad placed by Grubhub appearing for the first time in late January.
The type of engagement it cultivates by allowing users to work together to create content, is highly attractive for advertisers aiming to target younger social groups. And given its dominance in an app ranking that’s otherwise flooded by Facebook-owned products, the ability to effectively bring in advertisers will allow it to stay competitive in the popularity contest it’s currently in…and improbably holding its own.

4. Instagram Stories Editor

Design, beyond the platform basics.
Instagram Stories have skyrocketed in popularity, quickly surpassing its inspiration Snapchat and now reportedly twice as popular. With that spike, apps are proliferating to allow creators to develop standout stories and polish content for the fast-moving space.
Our favorites include InShot (designed to help you format content for the vertical medium) and Hype Type (which can handle some of your more rudimentary video captioning needs). Check out these roundups from Later and Refinery29 for even more ways to help your content stand out in this highly trafficked space.

5. Instagram Stories Direct Links

Spread your stories far and wide.
Instagram is rolling out a “Share Link to Entire Story” feature, allowing accounts to share direct links to full stories. In this way, self-contained features like user takeovers or Q&As can live a life beyond Instagram Stories alone. This feature can also be boosted with their “Promote” feature, which allows users to follow a CTA to the account’s website, profile, or Direct Messages. If stories-style sharing truly is the future of social media, this ability to spread its influence will become more common…and more essential to success.

6. LinkedIn Ads

Coming soon to a feed near you…ads for movies, products, and more.
Speaking of spreading influence, look for LinkedIn to take advantage of this trend in ways you might not expect. The platform, often thought of as the “professional” social network, is expanding its view on the type of ads that can appear on its platform. Users can be targeted in their professional areas of interest, like “arts and entertainment,” “marketing and advertising,” “and “business and management.” The result? Ask users who saw ads for the Paramount Pictures’ film What Men Want on their feed, an example that previously would have felt out of place on the platform.

7. Reddit Cost-Per-Click Ads

Don’t sleep on Reddit as a home for your ads.
LinkedIn isn’t the only platform looking to rethink their ad strategy. Reddit is gradually introducing cost-per-click ads to its advertisers, and is already seeing their utility through companies like Wayfair and Hired. Though the cost-per-click model is far from new, it is new to Reddit, where ad revenue previously came from a combination of reach, video view, traffic and conversion-based ads. Ad revenue has grown five times over the past three years and sales have more than doubled year-over-year. With this affordable option now in Reddit’s arsenal, that growth seems likely to continue.

8. Facebook Petitions

Bringing people together for a common cause.
Facebook remains in favor as a means of gathering people, a fact that likely informed the company’s recent move to connect Stories to Facebook Events. Another way Facebook plans to capitalize on its people-gathering power? Its recently deployed Petitions feature. Designed to help people reach out to elected officials, Petitions will allow users to rally around a cause, engage in discussion around the issues at hand, and will be connected to Events and Fundraisers for even more involvement potential.

9. Twitter Morning News Catchup

Recaps and reviews to catch you up.
After a brief but unpopular foray into algorithmic feeds, Twitter now understands the appeal of its real-time setup. With that misstep in mind, it wants to make absolutely sure you won’t miss anything newsworthy…and is doing so by testing a Morning News Catchup.
This differs from their “while you were away” feature, in that it focuses on current events rather than popular site content. For brands aiming to capitalize on the news of the day, this feature is a welcome one to ensure that your prospective consumers are as informed as you are.

10. Twitter Auto-Response

Make it easy for them to come back for more.
As you look for new and different ways to engage with your followers and fans on Twitter, we hope you haven’t overlooked the Auto-Response feature. Launched last year by the platform, it allows users to opt into additional contact from an account for a very specific purpose. For example, Netflix’s Stranger Things allowed its Twitter followers to opt in for a “trick” or “treat” from the account- they need only indicate their preference with an emoji. The tool is a fun one for engaging with followers in an unexpected way, and provides the kind of surprise and delight that can feel rare in our often predictable world of social media.

How to Market on Reddit: A Guide for Businesses


Why Marketers Should Consider Reddit

For as much as we, as social media marketers, champion the deep potential of social media to engage and empower audiences, this industry often takes a narrow view of what social media actually entails.
We look at the big platforms—Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, and maybe Pinterest—and view those silos as the only options for social media marketing. Yes, a huge amount of social media activity happens there, but the internet is a big place full of highly social niche communities that might be relevant to the customers you’re trying to serve.
Reddit is one of the largest and most underutilized social media marketing platforms. As of this writing, Reddit is ranked the #6 most visited website in the United States (#17 globally), with an average daily user time of 11:29 compared to Facebook’s 9:34, according to Alexa.com. While it may not beat Facebook in daily traffic, it’s currently ahead of both Twitter and LinkedIn.
Reddit is big. Reddit is active. And you’re probably not marketing there. Here’s how you change that.

How Does Reddit Work?

Reddit bills itself as the “front page of the internet” because its primary focus is on social news aggregation. Though the communities that have established themselves on Reddit often use the site as a sort of internet forum, the core functionality of Reddit is that users submit content and then others upvote or downvote that content. The most popular threads rise to the top.
How to market your business on Reddit, example of Reddit home page and trending content feeds
Reddit as a whole is carved into thousands of individual communities organized around topics or interests. For example, r/politics focuses on worldwide political news and r/dogberg focuses exclusively on footage of dogs haphazardly knocking over people or things. Where Twitter users follow individual accounts to tailor what kind of content appears in their feed, Redditors subscribe to the communities of their choice.
Because of this voting system, opening the Reddit homepage is like getting a snapshot of the internet’s most popular content. If you have an account, your own front page is tailored to the communities and topics you care about. From there, users upvote, downvote, carry on discussions, argue, and answer each other’s questions.
Redditors have the freedom to participate in virtually any way they want, from treating the platform like a news feed to being active participants who submit topics. It should be exciting to social media marketers who love the idea of talking with potential customers and sharing original, high-value content.
After all, Redditors self-organize by interest as well as location, with community subreddits like r/Pittsburgh becoming hubs for news and local discussions. Reddit appears at first glance as if you can dive right into marketing to your target prospects.
How to market your business on Reddit, example post from subreddit r/Pittsburgh
That’s not quite true, however; and this is where Reddit eats social media marketers alive.

How to Engage and Market on Reddit

Redditors are fiercely protective of the communities they’ve built and loathe individuals or brands that attempt to hijack a subreddit for personal gain. Marketers who get it wrong approach Reddit like posting to Craigslist, and give little thought to the values and priorities of the audience they’re engaging.
In the real world, this would be the equivalent of walking into a Magic: the Gathering event at your local comic book store and yelling about how great your t-shirts are. The people in Reddit communities have come together for specific reasons—hobbies, social causes, or just plain fun—and you have to genuinely respect that if you want to find success on this social platform.
If you plan to market on Reddit, you should adopt the following best practices:
  • Be a member first. Few people trust a brand-new user account with no posts save for the ones made to promote products or services. Be a genuine participant before you start marketing and immerse yourself in how things work, from comment threads to inside jokes.
  • Give more than you take. Most Reddit communities ask that you contribute 80% of the time and only self-promote 20% of the time. Depending on your content and your target community, that ratio can go up or down.
  • Post original content and engage in a genuine way. You won’t find marketing success on Reddit if you repurpose your daily Facebook post and dump it into a subreddit. If you can become a valuable, contributing member of the community, however, you can unlock a new stream of fans for your brand.
  • Don’t even think about using shills. Fake accounts, undisclosed paid sponsors, employee upvoting requirements—Redditors have seen it all, and it makes them very angry when marketers try to pull one over on them.
While these norms are universal (for the most part) across the Reddit platform, you also need to understand that your target communities may have cultures of their own.
If you’re a member first and take a sincere interest in the community you seek to engage, that won’t be a problem. You’ll pick up on the traditions and mannerisms of the subreddit with relative ease, discover what kind of content gets the most interest, and learn how to title and format your content for maximum effect. You’ll also pick up on the sometimes-unspoken rules of the subreddit.
To illustrate, r/CatsStandingUp only permits pictures of cats standing up. Over 300,000 subscribers to this community only submit content with the title “Cat.” and post replies with the text “Cat.” That’s it. I don’t know why, but that’s how it is. If you enter that community and do something different, you’ll get downvoted out of viewing range almost instantly.
How to market your business on Reddit, example post from subreddit r/CatsStandingUp
I emphasize all of these oddities because Redditors are quick to ignore or remove obvious outsiders. They place a premium on the quality of their content and the sanctity of their communities. They know that if they’re not diligent about moderating and maintaining community standards, their beloved corner of the internet could be overrun by people who only want to sell things.

How to Create a Successful Reddit Presence for Your Brand

To start marketing your business on Reddit, it’s helpful to follow this roadmap.

Create an Account

First, you’ll need to register for a Reddit account. Consider picking a username that includes a brand keyword as well as a personal name. If you can attach a real person to your marketing activity, everything will feel more authentic.

Set Up a TrackReddit Account to Receive Alerts

TrackReddit (with free and premium features) can send you alerts when your chosen keywords or phrases are used on Reddit. This allows you to quickly jump in when users mention your brand and also to engage in conversations around the exact topics or product types that are important to you.
How to market your business on Reddit, create brand Reddit presence step 1, new TrackReddit tracking campaign

Build Your Feed

Go digging for all of the subreddits that might be relevant to your brand. The default front page is a good place to start. Then to uncover smaller, more niche communities, look at the recommended communities within a subreddit sidebar and do a Google search for “Reddit + [industry keywords]” (swapping in the topics or keywords that matter to you).

Listen and Lurk

How to market your business on Reddit, example post showing upvotes and number of comments
Check in on Reddit daily and browse your feed and view discussions. Start upvoting and adding commentswhere you can contribute. Get a sense of what kinds of content your target communities find engaging and the general average time when top posts are submitted.

Ramp Up Participation

Before you start submitting original content, adopt a regular commenting cadence. No, this is not like an exercise program where you get your 10 comments in a day. You have to actually contribute, taking the time to engage in discussions, answer questions, and share in jokes.

Share Unique, Original Content

Create a piece of content solely for your target Reddit audience (the next section covers what types of content are popular on Reddit), but don’t be upset if it doesn’t get a lot of attention. Just as every Facebook post doesn’t go viral, not every Reddit contribution will become a mega-hit. If you get a few positive comments and a few upvotes, that’s a start.

Be Consistent

Keep at your Reddit activity. No social media platform is an instant ATM machine of ROI, and Reddit is no different. Play the long game and continue being an active, worthwhile contributor to the community.
Once you get through the roadmap above, the next questions brands typically have are related to frequency and volume. Unfortunately, there’s no perfect answer here. Some subreddits are larger and more active than others. Some subreddits expect more or less original content from users than others.
Remember: Using Reddit as a marketing platform is advanced organic marketing, so you need to tap into your marketing experience to figure out the best plan of attack for your chosen audience.

8 Types of Reddit Content for Marketers

Reddit can be a home for virtually any type of digital content, and that includes new types of content you might not have thought of yet. Basically, if you can link to it, it might find an audience on Reddit.
There is, however, a set of content types that tend to get the most engagement on Reddit. I’ve put these types in a rough order based on their potential for engagement, but what works for your brand may be different. Remember that original content—in general—beats everything else.
Here are the types of content that tend to get the most engagement on Reddit.
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GIFs

Reddit loves GIFs, including sports, events, movie scenes, animations, cute animals, and redubbing scenes from pop culture with inside Reddit jokes. GIFs are the bite-sized versions of video, and if your brand features any sort of action, you might find success with a GIF.
How to market your business on Reddit, example post from subreddit r/HighQualityGifs

Video

In general, linking out to platforms like YouTube or Vimeo will yield relatively low engagement. Videos can take too long to load, and that level of upfront commitment isn’t a good fit for many communities. To be clear, this isn’t true for all subreddits, so your mileage may vary, but if you can pull the best part of a video into a GIF and then link to the full source in the comments, you’ll likely see more engagement.

Pictures

Still images are mobile-friendly and require very little attention for initial engagement. Again, the image needs to be interesting and if you can find a way to include a cat or dog, you’re ahead of the game.
How to market your business on Reddit, example image post from subreddit r/aww

Text

Many subreddits thrive almost exclusively on text-based posts and discussions. That can sound counterintuitive in the mobile age, but many Redditors love in-depth content and thought-provoking discussions, making text their preferred format.

Blogs

On the whole, Redditors have a strong distaste for blog spam. To be the exception, you need to be incredibly active in the subreddits where you choose to share blog posts. You should be extra-sure that the content is spectacular and that your execution of the content doesn’t come across as self-serving. If you feel like you have a blog-length piece of content worth sharing, consider making it a text post on Reddit instead of linking out to your site.

AMAs

AMA stands for “ask me anything,” and these threads invite Redditors to ask a person any question they want. People or brands with unique stories to tell or who have a large reputation find a lot of success with AMAs. AMAs often take place in the subreddit r/IAmA, but interest-focused subreddits also frequently host AMAs.
How to market your business on Reddit, example image post from subreddit r/IAmA
Some of the most legendary AMAs include one with Dr. Jane Goodall and some guy who used to play Goofy at Disney World. If you try this approach, you have to embrace the AMA concept for better or worse, so go in with a thick skin.

News

The speed of the internet makes Reddit a powerful hub for breaking news. In communities tied to timely updates (politics, video games, movies, etc.), sharing a piece of news can make you a hit. Sometimes this news is a fresh tweet from a thought leader or the first article on what could become a major issue for a community.

Ads

The Reddit ad platform is a bit of an ugly duckling at the moment. While businesses have found considerable success with it in the past, Reddit has tooled and retooled their ad platform several times over the last few years, making it difficult to talk best practices or how an ad spend on Reddit compares to Google or Facebook advertising.
How to market your business on Reddit, example of Reddit ads new campaign
Speaking in general terms, targeting ads by community has been productive for my clients, whereas broad, digital display-style ads seem to see low engagement.
Remember: When you start to post original content, variety matters, so just because you get a win with GIFs doesn’t mean that you should only post GIFs. Serve your audience and serve them in multiple ways if you can.

Examples of Successful Reddit Marketing

You want to sell things and I’ve just told you that Redditors aren’t fans of being sold to. Here’s the rub: Redditors gladly embrace brands that respect their communities and take an active role in making those communities better. They love original content. They love to laugh. They love to learn new things. And they love brands that take the time to get know them.
I believe that when marketing is done right, customers and prospects benefit. My mindset is that good marketing seeks to serve an audience. Not only should marketing delight customers, but the very act of marketing should bring value to their lives as well.
KFC recently ran a three-pronged Valentine’s Day campaign that featured a drawing, writing, and Photoshop contest. Across three threads, KFC accumulated approximately 900 comments and several dozen submissions.
How to market your business on Reddit, successful marketing example post by KFC showing a contest
The winner in each category got some KFC swag, gift cards, and a Colonel Sanders bearskin rug (a white rug with the face, feet, and hands of the Colonel). It was an awesomely weird campaign carefully targeted at some of Reddit’s most creative communities.
Most importantly, KFC went in knowing that a few internet trolls were par for the course. The marketing team joked along with Redditors, even if that meant poking fun at themselves along the way, and the community produced a slew of original content around the KFC brand.
They took the time to reply to comments and start the conversation by trying to add to a community (offering prizes that users would appreciate for using skills they’re proud of but might not get to show off as often as they’d like). When a major brand like KFC engages an audience on such a personal level, they can ingratiate themselves with Redditors and build up a treasure trove of highly shareable, highly memeable content.
In this case, KFC used sponsored posts to skip to the front of the line for exposure, but Reddit marketing tactics work organically as well. KFC’s sister brand, Taco Bell, has its own subreddit full of organic fan-submitted content.
How to market your business on Reddit, successful marketing example pinned post on r/TacoBell discussing community guidelines
But you don’t need to be a major consumer brand to find wins on Reddit with organic content.
Take Ryan Morrison, for instance. He’s a self-described video game attorney and posts under the username VideoGameAttorney on Reddit. Morrison forged a reputation for going to game development subreddits, like r/gamedev, and offering free legal answers to aspiring developers with the expected disclaimer that it was for education and entertainment only, rather than any legally binding client relationship.
He’s been doing these Q&A sessions on a consistent basis for several years, and his recent r/gamedev posts have averaged a few hundred comments apiece.
That’s pretty good, but his thread in r/IAmA (a subreddit where specialists or people with unique stories field questions from users) generated nearly 1,800 comments and over 15,000 upvotes. That’s a lot of engagement!
How to market your business on Reddit, successful marketing example post with extreme engagement from subreddit r/IAmA
Morrison’s approach to growing his business via Reddit is simple. He goes to the communities where he can be useful and offers up his insights. In reality, only a small percentage of Redditors will become his clients, but he’s built a reputation in the game development community because of his activity and his willingness to be a positive contributor to the audience he cares about.
If you look carefully, you can find hundreds of brands and business leaders doing the same thing. They find communities that are relevant to them and make the effort to be positive contributors in those communities.
Jason Calacanis, the prolific angel investor and host of the podcast This Week in Startups, comments and replies on threads related to entrepreneurship, startups, and investing. He even uses Reddit to field questions for his Q&A advice episodes.
On the DIY crafting side, Christine McConnell built a following for her creative projects on Reddit (and Imgur), catching the attention of Netflix executives. Now she has her own show, The Curious Creations of Christine McConnell.
How to market your business on Reddit, successful marketing example of the DIY crafting feed by u/ChristineHMcConnell
Reddit is largely a blank canvas. Because its users respond positively to creative content, you can take the core pieces of what makes Reddit tick and find unique and new ways to leverage the platform.

Conclusion

Where other social media platforms are built on the premise of centralizing a following around your account (your Facebook likes, Twitter followers, LinkedIn connections), Reddit’s community structure means that it will occupy a very different place in your broader strategy and a different kind of brand engagement.
When I first start to talk to clients about how they can use Reddit, I tend to describe it as an extension of their public relations activity. It’s an opportunity to talk directly with your target audience, be a part of the communities that matter to your brand, and build real relationships with those communities.
Viewed this way, Reddit is an outreach tool. It won’t replace the audience-building you do on traditional follower-based platforms, but it should open a new door for how you create and share original content related to your brand.