Archive for the ‘Social Marketing’ Category

What Gen Z wants from influencer marketing and brand social media – AdAge.com

Gen Z has remained a highly sought-after consumer demographic among brands for the better part of a decade, driving marketers to develop campaigns and social strategies designed to resonate specifically with this age cohort. But many marketers have continued to fall short when it comes to connecting with Gen Zand its often due to the simple fact that rather than working with Gen Z to craft those campaigns and social media posts, marketers look to agencies and consultancies speaking on behalf of these younger consumers.

Thats why, earlier this month, digital marketing agency JUV Consulting set out to reorient the conversation around how brands can best appeal to Gen Z consumers by turning the stage over to the cohort those marketers are aiming to reach.At JUVs two-day, Gen-Z-oriented conference, ZCon, the speaker lineup of marketers, creators and entrepreneurs exclusively belonged to Gen Z, those born between 1997 and 2012.

Recent news: 20 brands catching Gen Zs attention

ZCons nearly three dozen speakers included creators such as Schuyler Bailar and Kahlil Greene and marketers such as Duolingos global social media manager Zaria Parvez; Jacqueline Banal, social media editor at youth media company Complex Networks; and Sol Betesh, co-founder and CEO of social content studio Fallen Media.

For JUV, launching ZCon stemmed from the teams brewing frustration with Gen Z regularly being left out of marketing and strategy discussions that directly relate to the generation, JUVs co-founder and CEO Ziad Ahmed said at the start of the conference.

View post:
What Gen Z wants from influencer marketing and brand social media - AdAge.com

Why brands are still trying to be funny and chronically online even … – Digiday

At this point, social media has become so prevalent that most, if not all, brands have a social media presence and strategy. But as the landscape becomes pay to play, making organic reach less obtainable, brands push for engagement has seemingly led to a trend in social: The Funny Brand Voice.

Meaning, as brands look to stand out by using trending phrases, so-called Gen Z speak and cultural moments, many are inadvertently sounding the same, 10 agency executives told Digiday. In a post on X (formerly Twitter), R/GA marketing agency described The Funny Brand Voice as One voice applied to the same memes, using the same vocabulary.

Ive been seeing for a while, [with] brand accounts on social, Twitter (now known as X) in particular, a convergence of certain styles, joke formats all embracing the same modes of speaking, said Chapin Clark, executive creative director at R/GA marketing agency, who authored the above X post.Meaning, brands are imitating human interactions, leveraging Gen Z and millennial language.

As far as agency execs and strategists are concerned, it seems brands are using similar online personas, namely on text-based social media platforms like X and Metas Threads. Its internet snark or a chronically online style of humor, mirroring how people talk online and centered around things like the TikTok girl dinner trend, engagement posts that pose a question or catch phrases like IYKYK (if you know, you know) or calling users besties. All said, it creates a social media landscape in which many brands sound the same, sacrificing individual brand voice to boost engagement online.

Its all a game of KPIs and metrics. Its really shifted, in my opinion, the way people are interacting online, said Alex Green, a social media manager at an LA-based ad agency. (Green asked that his agency not be listed, citing privacy reasons.)

There are a few things to blame for the shift, strategists and execs say. Firstly, the social media stratosphere has largely become pay to play, making organic traffic and engagement harder to come by. That said, brands are looking for more ways to stand out and gain that organic traffic, using human-like, millennial or Gen Z humor to appear relatable.

Second, as social becomes a staple item in most, if not all, digital marketing strategies, more stakeholders become involved, creating more red tape in the social copy approval process. Sometimes, these tweets go through so many rounds of approvals and edits that by the time the initial idea gets to the actual platform, it just looks like a mashup of every other brand, said Dante Nicholas, a freelance social media manager who has worked with major brands like Spotify and Essence Magazine. The result can sometimes be watered down, after the fact social media posts, or as Gen Z calls it, cheugy.

Third is a case of monkey see, monkey do. The trend originated when brands first flocked to what was Twitter, with brands like Steak-umm, Wendys and Moon Pie leading what would ultimately become the unhinged social media strategy. (Read the case for and against the unhinged social media manager trope here.) Seemingly, its a strategy that worked, racking up not just social media engagement, but sometimes press coverage and earned media. For example, Wendys National Roast Day tweets got picked up by Thrillist, Today.com, several YouTube creator channels and now lives as long form content on Wendys blog.

Industry wide we became victims of our own success, said Amanda Domuracki, global social lead for League of Legends at Riot Games. Meaning, the formula for viral engagement has seemingly become a staple in social strategy across the industry.

Finally, theres the rise of Threads, Metas response to Xs flailing since Elon Musks takeover and never-ending changes to the platform. Having only recently launched, the platform doesnt have a real vibe yet, leaving users and brands alike still finding their footing. Thus far, brands have either adopted a tongue-in-cheek approach or a more so-called unhinged approach to the platform.

People get so enamored by impressions and views, but I dont know the bottom line, why that matters, said Codi Johnson, a freelance social media strategist who works with public health and tech clients. It seemed like everyone on [Threads] was trying to chase some sort of virality.

As it stands, Threads has yet to launch ad units and is almost exclusively an engagement play until users dictate what Threads is whether that be a true X alternative for news, real-time conversations and cultural moments, or a platform more centered around positive engagement as opposed to politics and hard news. (The platform has said it aims to keep a light tone, but publishers say audiences are ready for news.)

Mostly, brands seem to be looking to play it safe on Threads, chasing mainstream cultural moments, trending memes and taking fewer risks than whats historically been seen from maybe Wendys on Twitter or Duolingo on TikTok to avoid public backlash. Meaning, brands arent arriving to Threads to rock the boat, according to executives at Creative Theory Agency, a marketing agency.

We are in late stage social media, where theres more reference points. People have data on what works. We can bottle that and replicate it, said Candace Carrington, director of social media at Creative Theory Agency.

Blame it on the fear of missing out. When social media first gained steam, sans ad units, brands dragged their feet in joining these platforms, missing out on opportunities to authentically connect with audiences and go viral, according to Rachael Kay Albers, creative director and brand strategist at RKA Ink. Hence, why so many were eager to join TikTok, in the hopes of creating viral moments.

These days, brands are very aware that they can have their big moments on these platforms, where they can get into the news on these platforms, she said. But, the industry may soon find itself at an inflection point that ends one of two ways, strategists and execs predict.

Either organic reach on social becomes a matter of survival of the funniest, or most unhinged, or brands comedic players taper off, giving way to social posts centered around education, information and brand purpose.

When asked the anatomy of a good text-based social posts, the 10 agency execs and strategists echoed the same sentiment: Relatability, originality and timely.

The content is less about being jokey and snarky only. Its more about, lets have discussions, said Janni Widerholm, creative director of earned media and social at TBWAChiatDay LA. Thats been something that brands are not as comfortable with, but now theyre starting to understand the value of doing that.

Original post:
Why brands are still trying to be funny and chronically online even ... - Digiday

How Teletubbies is leveraging TikTok to bring back Gen Z audiences – AdAge.com

WildBrain has also since launched TikTok accounts for other childrens series owned by the company, including Strawberry Shortcake.

Also read:20 brands catching Gen Z's attention right now

Segedin, wholeads the team creating social media content and growing online communities around these shows, sat down with Ad Age to discuss her team's strategy.

This interview has been lightly edited and condensed for clarity.

How do you and your team create social content? Is it planned out far ahead of time or typically more reactionary?

We plan both in the short- and long-term with a 12-month digital editorial calendar that covers key beats, partnerships and tentpole moments. Our activations and partnerships provide a rich source of content for social, which really allows us to be creative and tap into the Teletubbies' playful tone. Our recent appearance at Miami Swim Week with The Blonds to launch a swimsuit collaboration, for example, gave us some really strong visual content that perfectly captured the joy of the brand.

We also leave plenty of room to jump onto spontaneous trending momentsfor example, the recent Girl Dinner trend, whichfor the Teletubbies meant giving Po and Laa-Laa the spotlight to explore their love of Tubby Toast. That video has gotten over 1 million views each on TikTok and Instagram so far. And we tie our social media strategy into our ongoing strands like our Belonging campaign, which brings the Teletubbies to global Pride and DragCon events and generates some really stand-out moments for our audience.

See the rest here:
How Teletubbies is leveraging TikTok to bring back Gen Z audiences - AdAge.com

Typeface, Reveal Mobile, Calendly, Minute Media and Yahoo are … – Digiday

Micro-personalization with AI, e-commerce technology, privacy compliance and partnerships proved the driving factors for success in this years Digiday Technology Awards shortlist.

As the judges choices illustrate, the submissions that came in a cut above demonstrated brands passion for balancing data privacy and highly effective personalization adopting technologies and integrating with partners to achieve both.

The most-entered category this year was Best AI Tool.

Typeface, a major standout in the category, is a generative AI application helping businesses create personalized content quickly and effectively. Typeface combines AIs speed with meaningful brand personalization and control, meaning companies can generate personalized content at scale but not sacrifice privacy assurances.

Reveal Mobile boasted the greatest number of finalist nominations four in total. As a provider of location intelligence, geofencing and campaign attribution solutions, it partnered with Offbeat to run a paid social campaign on TikTok that drove location visits for one of the agencys national restaurant clients. With Reveal Mobiles geotargeting platform and foot-traffic attribution reporting, the TikTok campaign provided a 30X ROI, helping to prove the value of these tactics in the brands media mix.

Calendly received a nomination for Best Sales Automation Tools and Platform for its launch of Calendly Routing, which helps pressured, time-strapped sales and marketing teams to qualify, route and book meetings quickly, speeding up the sales cycle, increasing conversion rates and providing a better customer experience. Users of Calendly Routing have created an automated, effective inbound sales process that yields conversion and drives alignment with marketing teams. Some have reported gaining 1012 hours back each month that was previously spent manually managing the scheduling process.

Minute Medias Asaf Peled secured a finalist spot for Founder of the Year. As a leading technology and digital content company, Minute Media provides its clients with the tools to succeed in an ever-changing digital environment by leveraging its experience as a publisher. Asaf has led the company to tremendous success, including launching its own SSP, leading to an integrated partnership with Amazon Publisher Services TAM. Asaf also guided Minute Media into commercial partnerships, including collaborations with WhatsApp, Pennington, Pepsi, Kay Jewelers, Kia, Expedia, DoorDash and more.

For Best Buy-Side Programmatic Platform, Yahoo, in partnership with Marriott, snagged a finalist spot for the Where Can We Take You campaign. Marriott leaned further into its existing partnership with Yahoo to increase brand awareness, attract new customers and drive bookings with increased campaign efficiency and return on investment. By leveraging a wide range of Yahoo services from an interactive mobile trip planning tool and shoppable video to impactful DOOH in luxury fitness and gold environments the campaign resulted in 2x consumer engagement and a 50% increase in return on ad investment.

All in all, what the judges selected in 2023 shows that tech companies are empowering advertisers and publishers to offer more targeted, personalized campaigns, resulting in better returns and elevated customer experiences.

See the complete list of finalists below.

Best Affiliate Marketing Platform Hilton & Rakuten Advertising impact.com Litter-Robot & Partnerize

Best AI Tool BENlabs Dstillery LivePerson & Virgin Media Papercup Pixability + McGarrah Jessee Typeface

Best Attribution Tool Dominos Experian Marketing Services Fetch Measured Incrementality Platform PulsePoint Reveal Mobile Spectrum Reach

Best Buy-Side Programmatic Platform AdTheorent Atlas by Talon MediaMath Nexxen DSP Vistar & Church Yahoo & Marriott

Best Content Management System eMagazines

Best Content Marketing Platform Critical Mass Curacity Issuu Linkwell Health Nativo Optimizely

Best Cookieless Identification Technology fullthrottle.ai Havas and ID5 Ogury Quantcast SORT by Perion Wunderkind

Best CRM Platform Act! stc NAWAQL Merlin

Best Customer Data Platform Decile Epsilon Lytics & Land OLakes MongoDB and Twilio Segment Olo & BelAir Cantina Treasure Data

Best Data Lead Jonathan Zile, PulsePoint Will Sach, Director of Data Strategy at News UK

Best Data Management Platform Audigent Club Carrefour News UK Permutive

Best Data Team Demandbase Fifty & Avalon New York Times Advertising News UK Ovative Group PulsePoint

Best E-Commerce Technology Bambuser Best Buy GroupBy LivePerson & Virgin Media RevLifter Yext in partnership with Casio

Best Esports/ Gaming Ad Technology Equativ Gamelight OneFootball, SPORTFIVE and Bidstack TrafficGuard VDO.AI

Best Event Platform Kaltura Events Wistia Live

Best In-Store Technology Cooler Screens The CR Recommended Mark

Best Influencer Marketing Platform Brandwatch Gumball Influencity Spectrum Brands and Mavrck Tagger

Best Location Data Platform DAC & TransparenSEE Foursquare InMarket and Bob Evans Farms Lastmile Locala & Captura Group Reveal Mobile

Best Marketing Analytics Platform Digital Remedy Known and AMC+ Ovative Group Pecan Pickaxe Upwave + TheTradeDesk

Best Marketing Automation Platform Club Carrefour Cognitiv Dominos Flight Control Fluency GetResponse Inuit Mailchimp

Best Measurement Solution Bombora Fospha & Huel LoopMe Measured Incrementality Platform DISQO Reveal Mobile

Best Mobile Marketing Platform Adjust Suite AdTheorent AppsFlyer Gamelight Liftoff PLAYSTUDIOS

Best Monetization Platform for Publishers Adtelligent Chartboost Keystone by Outbrain Nucleus & Vouchercloud Playwire PubMatics OpenWrap

Best Native Advertising Platform AdAdapted Taboola

Best Partner Clean Room Disney InfoSum MiQ and BASK

Best Personalization & A/B Testing Platform Amplitude Dugout Flight Control JibJab KFC Philippines x Braze Optimizely

Best Podcast Platform Gumball

Best Sales Automation Tools & Platform Calendly Conga Impartner Seismic stc

Best Sell-Side Programmatic Platform Beachfront Magnite Nexxen SSP Permutive Publica Reset Digital

Best Social Marketing Platform Brandwatch Evocalize Khoros

Best Subscription Platform Best Buy Fooji Reveal Mobile

Best Sustainable Ad Tech Platform AY Duration Media Good-Loop OpenX Sharethrough Viant Adtricity

Best Video Ad Server Beachfront Publica

Best Video Management Platform Bambuser Emplifi & Bensons for Beds Endeavor Streaming Partnership with Feld Entertainment Kaltura TV Platform Peerly Inc. Wildlife Studios & tvScientific

Founder of the Year Allego Revenue Enablement Platform, Yuchun Lee Asaf Peled, Minute Media Audigent Founder and CEO, Drew Stein Erik Requidan and Justin Hansen, Media Tradecraft Sabio Holdings, Aziz R.

See the original post:
Typeface, Reveal Mobile, Calendly, Minute Media and Yahoo are ... - Digiday

How to Handle Lack of Engagement With Your Brand on Social Media – CO by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Your brand's social media content should aim to inspire, educate, or otherwise provoke positive associations in the minds of your customers. Getty Images/RealPeopleGroup

If youre an entrepreneur or small business owner, theres a good chance you understand the importance of social media for your brand. It can help you engage with your audience and land new customers while retaining current ones.

The one aspect of social media that you might not have thought about is disengagement. Why would your customers distance themselves from your brand and what can you do to reduce their risk of doing so? According to researchers at University of Arkansas and Northeastern University, many consumers choose to disengage from a brand if they see socially unacceptable mentions of it.

When you put yourself in a customers shoes, it makes sense. If youre loyal to a brand and frequently spend your hard-earned money on their products or services, a socially unacceptable mention will likely rub you the wrong way. It can invoke feelings of shame and motivate you to unfollow the brand. You may disassociate yourself with them anymore and turn to a competitor. Of course, this might not be the case if your brand connection isnt as close and you can simply move on.

No matter your industry or how long youve been around, you should anticipate negative brand mentions.

Fortunately, entrepreneurs and small business owners like yourself can take certain actions to keep your highly connected customers happy and engaged on social media:

No matter your industry or how long youve been around, you should anticipate negative brand mentions. Even if you do everything right, there will likely be a brand mention or two that plays on a loyal customers heartstrings and results in vicarious shame followed by disengagement. By being aware of this and taking steps to mitigate it, you can set your brand up for success.

CO aims to bring you inspiration from leading respected experts. However, before making any business decision, you should consult a professional who can advise you based on your individual situation.

COis committed to helping you start, run and grow your small business. Learn more about the benefits of small business membership in the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, here.

A message from

Should you claim the ERC?

Small businesses looking to take advantage of the Employee Retention Credit (ERC) must carefully evaluate all eligibility requirements and closely follow IRS guidance. It's imperative to choose the right advisor who can help you assess your eligibility, understand limitations to eligibility, and educate you about income tax implications. Trust Experian tax experts to help your business navigate the complex ERC landscape.

Expert business advice, news, and trends, delivered weekly

By signing up you agree to the CO Privacy Policy. You can opt out anytime.

Published August 16, 2023

Original post:
How to Handle Lack of Engagement With Your Brand on Social Media - CO by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce