Thursday, May 11, 2017

Why Company Culture is MVP of adidas’ Content Strategy: Q+A with Frank Thomas

For the past several months, adidas has built up GamePlan A, its digital magazine focusing on the intersection of sports, business, and lifestyle. 
The goal of GamePlan A is not, however, to drive readers to eventually purchase running shoes or track jackets. 
Rather, it’s to engage and retain employees, and build a unifying company culture through content that “tackles work-life with an athlete’s heart,” according to Director of Content Strategy and Content Marketing, Frank Thomas.
 frank-thomas (1).png
Frank Thomas, adidas’ Director of Content Strategy and Content Marketing
We connected with Thomas for a pre-game chat (before his upcoming talk at #ThinkContent Summit) about GamePlan A’s content strategy as it approaches its one-year anniversary.
Most content marketing is geared toward the consumer. What was behind adidas’ decision to focus inward?
Adidas also has content that is consumer-facing, but what our team deals with is the company behind the brands. We’re focused on a very different, but just as important, target audience.
In the past, we tried to serve all target audiences through content marketing, from investors to journalists, employees, and potential candidates. But we realized we were all over the place. We rethought the entire setup and who we needed to address, and decided it is the employees, potential candidates, and, in general, like-minded people who can become advocates for the brand.
We had to figure out the link between all of these groups, and we identified it’s the culture that unites them. We’re lucky to have a culture where people from all around the world come together, inspired by sports. Even outside of the company, there’s definitely a target audience of people like us, and nobody was really addressing them. 
We’re not defined by demographics. What’s more important is the audience’s values and the convictions they live by. We can create pride internally for our employees, address the culture we want to foster even more, and at the same time, speak to an external audience.
And that’s how we came up with GamePlan A – if you are an athlete, you don’t stop being an athlete at the office. It’s an approach to how you work, and that’s the community we want to build.
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What are your goals since you’re not directly trying to drive sales or conversions like many other content marketers?
We are genuinely interested in driving relationships with like-minded people who have a culture that is compatible to ours. The ultimate goal is to build advocacy. That’s also a key goal of our strategic business plan, “Creating the New.”
The other thing that plays into that is our core belief that through sports, we have the power to change lives. We can express that belief by focusing on working life. It’s had an effect on our own culture and built the basis for long-lasting relationships outside the company. It opens up the advocacy funnel.
So how can you measure success when you’re talking about advocacy?
Overall, advocacy is tough to measure. We just launched in May last year, so we want traffic, but more importantly, quality traffic.
We care most right now about on-site engagement – so things like time on site, achieving a good bounce rate. Community growth, on-site behavior, and attention, in general, are the main metrics we are measuring.
What kind of buy-in did you get for this strategy, and were there challenges?
It was both a challenge and an opportunity for us. Our ambition was to live up to a strategic business plan that was still fairly new when we were in the development phase of our content marketing strategy (in 2015). By documenting our strategy, it created more clarity for our work as a corporate communications department. The alignment with the business plan also created more buy-in for the work we do.
For instance, a key pillar of the “Creating the New” plan is the people and the culture. This is clearly something we speak to.
As for challenges, as a big organization, it’s not always easy to make it all work and it was important to us, to not only re-work our strategy but to also reflect this change in our department’s processes. It requires a continuous dialogue to explain all of this and why we are actually making the shift from branded content to content marketing­ – that we may not necessarily talk about adidas at all, as long as it’s related to the idea and culture we want to promote.
What’s your distribution strategy?
On social media, our most important channel is LinkedIn for the moment, and the company pages that we have.
The second most important is Twitter. We try to use our resources efficiently so we stick to a few channels and try not to be all over the place.
We’re working on improving our email marketing, and are also doing paid, like sponsored content on LinkedIn, as well as a bit of native advertising. There are a lot of tactics we use, but those are the main ones. We’re currently testing and looking into working with content discovery partners as well.
What advice do you have for other content marketers?
What was really important for us was to take a step back and rethink how we do things and what we want to stand for, and to document the strategy. That’s not new advice, but not many people are doing it.
I strongly believe that if we as content marketers make culture the driving force of strategy, we will be rewarded with longer-lasting relationships. The most efficient way of doing it is to connect your target audience to your organization’s culture.
In content marketing, we always try to create short moments of relevance, but relevance is fleeting. When my favorite soccer team scores a goal, it is only exciting until the other team scores. In other words, relevance comes in waves – all short moments. But if you don’t want to lose the audience in between, give them something to hang on to. The best way to do that is to connect your target audience to your organization’s culture – your values, ideas, convictions, and behaviors.

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

How to Create Content for Instagram Stories

http://www.flashstock.com/blog/how-to-create-content-for-instagram-stories?utm_content=buffer46379&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Instagram Stories was rolled out in 2016 as a feature to help Instagram (and Facebook) compete directly with Snapchat.
Over the last year, numerous updates were released by Instagram to better optimize Stories for social media experts (marketers and everyday users). Among those updates are:
  1. The launch of geostickers, allowing users to customize their Stories with geo-targeted creative stickers.
  2. A new and improved Instagram Direct feature, allowing brands to engage in exclusive conversations with followers.
  3. The release of Instagram Live for social marketing gurus to engage in real-time conversations with audiences.
  4. Instagram’s release of Ads in Stories to the global marketplace, allowing marketers to insert single media ads into their Stories content.
How do those updates affect your plans for Instagram Stories content? Let’s take a deeper look into Instagram’s latest releases and what those new features mean for your business.

1. Customize with Geostickers

Source: Instagram
Source: Instagram
Begin by taking a photo or shooting a video, and then tapping the sticker button at the top of your screen. A list of geographically-precise creatives will appear that are custom to the region or neighborhood you’re targeting with your content. The more neighborhoods you target, the more creatives you’ll have available for your content.

Why you should use geostickers in your content

Geostickers allows you as a marketer to really stretch your creative muscles on Instagram Stories. You can add as many stickers as you like to your content and use Instagram’s various tools to adjust things like the sizing or placement of the stickers on the screen.
While you should always strive to include the most high quality visual or video content in your Stories, there’s even more value in customizing your assets with unique stickers. These stickers add more personalized and localized touches to your content, allowing people within the targeted community to feel intimate connections with your brand.
People are clearly responding to personalized Instagram Stories content.
Instagram is betting that people will continue to flock to Stories with the ability to further customize content with geostickers. The usage base is organically expanding at a fantastic rate, and the response to customized assets is nothing short of extraordinary for Instagram.
Why not further diversify your brand by customizing Instagram Stories content with geostickers?

2. Get Personal with Instagram Direct

Instagram released its Direct feature in December 2013. The initial goal with Direct was to challenge Snapchat and other messaging services with its own private messaging application. The platform allowed friends to share photos that could sustain within private conversations.
Three years later, Instagram updated Direct by combining the feature with Stories. Users can now choose whether their content is permanently embedded within the conversation or if the photos and videos will disappear after the recipient views the content.
Source: The Verge
Source: The Verge

How the new Direct impacts social content

Given that Direct content can quickly disappear, you could use the feature to message a very targeted group of followers about sales, upsells, or even pending product updates. The notifications will soon fade from the conversation stream, but you can navigate people to a related post where you want them to take action.
Think of this as your Direct CTA!
Look at the example of J. Crew. The company is one of the several brands credited for their creative Instagram Stories, and J. Crew has built a reputation of using powerful CTAs within their Stories content. They created a story informing followers about “limited time only” offers on sunglasses in short supply, and drove people to a specific landing page where they could purchase the products.
You could develop a similar strategy for your own brand. Incorporate the J. Crew model into a private message sent to exclusive followers through Instagram Direct. Your offer should be available for a limited window, and drive recipients to follow the CTA to the end destination.
Make sure you have a custom CTA inspiring people to take action by visiting your site. According to a study by MarketingLand, 15 to 25 percent of people who see a link in an Instagram Story follow the link to the other side. Make yours count!

3. Hold Conversations with Instagram Live

The updates to Direct were very significant, but that wasn’t the only change Instagram made to Stories last fall. In November, they launched Instagram Live and created a teaser video informing followers of what to expect from the new feature.
Instagram described the live video feature as an opportunity for people to connect with their friends and followers at any given moment.
Live video on Instagram Stories helps you connect with your friends and followers right now. When you’re done, your live story disappears from the app so you can feel more comfortable sharing anything, anytime.
— Instagram
Instagram’s Help Center offers a brief summary of how you can create and share a live video in Stories. Also, remember that you can record your video for up to 60 minutes at a time.

What Instagram Live means for social media marketers

One of the best ways you can use Instagram Live is for engagement and community development rather than as a sales tool.
A live video allows people to see you discussing the merits of your brand and why your audience should care to learn more about it. Brands like Shopify have used Instagram Live to host Q&A sessions to describe products for sale or highlight the Shopify user experience. Links embedded on strong CTAs periodically appear throughout the sessions that direct people to other channels where they take action. This is a great example of cross-platform promotion.

4. Insert Ads in Stories Within Your Content

On March 1, Instagram released Ads in Stories and confirmed that the ads are available to businesses all around the globe. The release followed a preliminary test conducted by Instagram, which involved 30 of the world’s largest brands inserting ads into their own Stories.
Many of those brands calculated significant returns on the ad content. For example, Airbnb reached 125 million people and saw notable lifts in purchase intent throughout coveted target markets by running a series of Airbnb Experiences ads.
Airbnb’s Eric Toda and Jasmine Atherton, who head the company’s social marketing and editorial content, said creating content specifically for Facebook and Instagram Stories was paramount to the campaign’s success.
Repurposing any asset not created for these two important platforms would not do the campaign justice. This campaign didn’t just show our dedication to storytelling, but storytelling on two of the most important platforms today.
— Eric Toda & Jasmine Atherton, Airbnb

Why you should create Ads in Stories content

Creating Ads in Stories content is as simple as creating content for your main Instagram feed.
Simply visit Ad Creation or Power Editor to decide on your target audience, the duration you want the ad to run, and how much budget to allocate for the content. You’ll be prompted to insert single media ads in between your Stories content in the form of full-screen photos (for up to 5 seconds) or vertical videos (up to 15 seconds in length).
There are plenty of use cases for Instagram Ads in Stories. Airbnb featured exotic or enticing destinations to travel, which plays to the lifestyle of typical Airbnb followers.
You can use Ads in Stories for your own brand in ways such as:
  • One-time or seasonal sale promotions, both in-store or online
  • New product features or updates to your existing merchandise
  • Exclusive experiences and opportunities for a very targeted niche of customers
  • Promoting how-to guides demonstrating why customers should use your products or services
  • Behind the scenes images or videos showcasing life behind your brand to your prospective group of followers
Decide which use case is best suited for your social needs at a given time of year and run the campaign. Make sure you have a system in place to create the most high-quality custom content for Instagram Stories, and you can strive to match (or exceed) Airbnb’s achievements with Stories content.

Instagram Stories is one of the most powerful channels available to social marketers today. Download our webinar recording on “How to Think About Instagram Stories” for detailed tips and best practices for optimizing content for audiences and creative considerations on the channel.
 

Monday, May 1, 2017

#SocialSkim: LinkedIn's Major New Milestones, Twitter's Growth Rebound:

This week's 'Skim covers all sorts of LinkedIn goodies and social networking milestones: LinkedIn officially hits a half billion users globally, rolls out new Matched Audience features for even better ad targeting; Instagram's growth accelerates dramatically, nears 1 billion users; Twitter reports its strongest growth in over a year, reveals plans to livestream content 24/7; Pinterest calls it quits with social networking; Facebook's new split-test feature for ads; and much more…
Skim to stay a step ahead of the rest!
1. LinkedIn hits new milestones
LinkedIn announced it's hit a major milestone and threw around some interesting new figures that show just how global a player the professional social network has become. It now only counts 500 million members across 200 countries but also plays host to more than 10 million jobs, boasts more than 100 million published articles per week, and provides users access to more than 9 million companies worldwide.
The announcement, made via blogpost by the vice-president of growth and international products, also includes some interesting information about the most connected cities, countries, industries, and job functions. Go ahead and check them all out.

Click Here!
2. Instagram tops 700 million users as growth accelerates
Helped by Stories, Web sign-ups, and an easier way to onboard users with lower-end Android devices, the Facebook-owned social network is now twice as big as Twitter in number of active users, and its growth is accelerating.
Though it took six months for Instagram to move from 400 to 500 million users, it's taken only four months to make the jump from 600 million to 700 million. Snapchat's growth, on the other hand, has sunk 82% since Instagram unveiled Stories last August.
The United States and Brazil continue to hold the No. 1 and 2 slots in popularity for Instagram, although 80% of the social network's users live outside the US. The app might just be the next Facebook-owned platform to hit the 1 billion club, and it might happen sooner than we think.
3. LinkedIn strengthens ad offering with Matched Audiences
New targeting capabilities on LinkedIn mean brands can now use the platform to home in on website retargeting, account targeting, and contact targeting. The new Matched Audiences is now available for all LinkedIn ad products, including Sponsored Content, Sponsored InMail, and the platform's other native ad formats.
The new features will let marketers show ads to users who've previously visited their websites, market to contacts included in their customer databases, and reach the decision-makers at the desired companies for account-based marketing strategies. With website retargeting and contact targeting leading to 30% and 37% increases in click-through rates, respectively, it's no question that these new capabilities might appeal to your LinkedIn strategy.
4. Twitter reports strongest growth and profit in over a year
Despite all the doomsday news the social network faces, Twitter's stock shot up 11% after the company reported the strongest growth in monthly active users in more than a year and a much better than anticipated quarterly profit.
Monthly active users jumped 6% in the first quarter of 2017, reaching 328 million and beating analyst expectations. Twitter advertising revenue also didn't fall as much as anticipated, leaving markets a bit more upbeat about the company's future than they have been in the past. We'll see if this stretch holds as the social network continues to develop new products and features.
5. Pinterest wants the world to know that it's not a social network
The company—which many consider a social network—will launch its first major US advertising campaign this summer with the goal of convincing people that it's actually a visual search engine.
It's even going to get rid of its "like" button to differentiate it from the Facebooks and Instagrams of the world. Pinterest wants to encourage its users to check out the platform for inspiration, and then get off the Internet and try their hand at creating something in real life. It wants to be the visual discovery tool of choice, and that could just be its ticket to survival in today's age of cutthroat social media competition.
6. Twitter plans to stream live TV 24/7
Before releasing its quarterly report, top Twitter management said the social network plans to eventually air live video 24 hours per day, 7 days per week on both its website platform and its app. Could it be a smashing success? Yes. The only question is whether Twitter can do so before traditional TV service providers make the full transition to digital delivery of their content—something already well under way.
Not many details were provided, but Twitter says it's already working on programming, building on the 800+ hours of live content the platform aired in the first quarter of 2017.
If Twitter can manage to transform into a TV-like media destination that promises around-the-clock breaking news, sports, and information channels, it could be enough give the social network the boost it needs to fight off competition.
7. Facebook tests new way to beat fake news
The social network seems to be testing all sorts of tweaks in an effort to crack down on fake news that could influence its users with false information. A new Related Articles widget in the News Feed, which normally only appears after you've clicked through to an article and then back to Facebook's platform, will now start appearing even before users select a story.
Related Articles will also include third-party fact-checked stories in an effort to provide people with additional information and varied perspectives. The hope is that the new feature might just spark users to think before clicking on and reading through—and becoming indoctrinated by—a falsehood-ridden piece of content.
8. Completed wants to loosen LinkedIn's grip on professional social networking
Completed, a new professional social networking platform, wants to take on LinkedIn, but do so with a Yelp-like twist. Instead of asking its users to rate just a company, Completed also wants its members to rate the business professionals that make up a company.
The social network says the ratings—a sort of "constructive criticism of employee performance"—should create a sense of accountability that can upend the current process businesses use for career development and hiring.
Completed just wrapped up a one-month beta period in which is added 150,000 people to its roster. Do you think the company could take on LinkedIn? Or will the Microsoft-owned social network's iron grip hold tight on professional social networking?
9. How to use Facebook's split-testing feature for ads
Looking to improve your Facebook ad performance, but not sure exactly how to do so? The social network recently introduced a split testing feature to help marketers find out which audiences, delivery settings, and ad placements optimize their results.
From creating new campaigns and tracking conversions by enabling the split-testing option, to deciding which variables to test and setting your budget and scheduling your campaign, Social Media Examiner has a a step-by-step guide to optimizing your campaigns with the utmost efficiency.
10. We'll wrap with the Federal Trade Commission's putting influencers in their place
Influencers are seemingly becoming the norm for brands—big and small—across all verticals, but that doesn't mean using them will result in an endorsement post for your product or service that feels organic and doesn't appear salesy—particularly if the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has its say.
The FTC wants to make sure users know when influencers are being paid for their posts, and thus recently sent out 90 letters to celebrities, athletes, and other influencers to tell them they must "clearly and conspicuously" disclose that they are making No more "thanks Louis Vuitton!"—as if Louis Vuitton just felt the need to ship you a $1,500 handbag because you said you liked it.

The bigger question might be how the FTC decides definitively when someone becomes an influencer, and when the endorsement or post of a product or service was only inspired by free gifts or payment.