Advertising as a Marketing Tool to Reach and Influence Customers




Advertising. It’s everywhere.

We're exposed to hundreds of advertising messages daily, so our brain starts to filter them subconsciously.

But businesses and brands don't want these advertising communication filtered - they want customers to take in the messages and remember them.

This week’s blog article explores advertising and a range of different advertising approaches that businesses can use to reach their target audience.

The Co-Creation of Value: Everybody Wins

Co-creating value

How the customer and firm can co-create value together to both get what they want.

In 2020, customisation and giving the customer exactly what they want is becoming the norm. How do we give customers exactly what they want? One way is by letting them co-create value.

This week’s article explores the co-creation of value as a strategy and how this approach creates unique value for customers, creating a competitive advantage.

Hashtags: How to Use Them to Engage Your Audience

 hashtags

Anyone browsing Instagram is bombarded with hashtags, but how much purpose do they serve on Social Media? Is less more?

If you browse through Instagram, Twitter or even LinkedIn, no doubt you will come across hashtags. 

They could be used to define a topic like #Marketing, or it might be something a bit more random like #Dansmarketingtips.

But what do they actually do? What is the benefit of hashtags?

Is there such a thing as too many hashtags? 

Yes, there is — and here’s why.


What is a hashtag?

A hashtag is a keyword or phrase preceded by a hash (#). North Americans also refer to the hash symbol as a pound symbol (also an octothorpe), and the original use was to mark numbers.

“Hashtags have been seen as a way of increasing the communicative reach of a social media text by attracting a great audience who might ‘engage” with a post.” (Zappavigna, 2018)

Vastly popular on social media, these hashtags help a piece of content become more discoverable by other users. It is a form of social tagging to embed metadata in posts. Social tagging is “the act of annotating a digital text with user-generated tags so that other users can find it” (Zappavigna, 2018); whilst metadata summarizes basic information about data. A small piece of data about a bigger piece of data!

This social metadata facilitates ‘real-time’ search, which is an essential function of social media. It allows users of a social media website to find other posts containing that keyword. Twitter marketing specialist Chris Messina sent the first-ever tweet containing a hashtag in 2007 after pitching the idea to his bosses to help group related Tweets (posts) together.

Because of the character-constrained aspects of Twitter (also called microblogging), a hashtag was an uncomplicated way to provide more context for a post without using too many characters. The decision to use the # symbol as it was easy keyboard character to reach on a Nokia phone at the time (remember when people used Nokias!?)

Hashtags have since become popular and spread to other social media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn, and have even to television and advertising. Some tags have short life cycles if they are based on a trend or cause, while others are relevant over an extended period.


Functions and benefits of using hashtags

The use of hashtags has grown from the initial purpose of indicating the topic of a post to support visibility and participation, to having the additional function of a social resource for forming relationships and communities. Social media users now commonly use hashtags to give interpersonal meanings to a piece of content. Because users choose their hashtags, they inevitably have become personalised and can even start trends. These two broad functions of hashtags providing numerous benefits.

“Hashtags operate as social metadata in the sense that they are a form of descriptive annotation produced by users, rather than assigned by the microblogging service.” (Zappavigna, 2015)

Indicate topics or themes

Hashtags are an information-organising tool in the same way as keywords are for search engine optimisation (SEO). They add context to a social media post and act like a “decentralised, user-generated tagging, organising, and classification system” (Saxton, Niyirora, Guo, & Waters, 2015). A piece of content is classified into a specific topic, theme or conversation. For somebody browsing their feed, a hashtag might capture a user’s attention enough for them to engage in the content, if the topic is of interest.

Help your target audience find you

Hashtags enhance the searchability of content, by helping people find more content about a topic of interest. Accordingly, it helps a brand create content that their target audience can find.

With an added hashtag, a post becomes indexed by the social media network. People who search that hashtag can then find your content even if they are not following you — using highly searched popular hashtags helps a new audience find your brand. Some social networks even let users follow hashtags to help curate what kind of content they see in their feed and make sure it is relevant.

Interpersonal hashtags

Social media users now often use hashtags to portray an attitude towards a certain topic or current affair. For example, #getoverit or #supportlocal. Hashtags like this are used to engage with other users and form relationships. These are interpersonal functions — the motivation of asserting opinions and negotiating relationships.

This goes against the original function of hashtags, as they provide no value for making a post more findable. However, this makes sense as most social media users are not trying to grow an audience, they want to engage with others. It can show social affiliations, or it can be emphasizing a humorous observation.

“Hashtags remain a popular means of coordinating social media discussion, referencing ideas, cracking jokes and producing metacommentary… The act of tagging, once an act of classification, has emerged as a means of forging and contesting social bonds.” (Zappavigna, 2018)

Hashtag communities & branded hashtags

Popular hashtags and especially those created around a specific cause or event often have communities developed around that hashtag. Large scale participation in the sharing of memes, for example, #nekminnit (only New Zealanders may know that one). Organisations can create these hashtags for a specific cause to help raise awareness, such as #BLM or #BlackLivesMatter.

Creating a personalised branded hashtag can be an effective way to start conversations, personalise your content and make it easier to find. This is a great way to grow your personal brand.

For example, I hashtag some of my LinkedIn content with #brandwithdan, so if people click on that hashtag, they find more of my content about marketing. I run a networking event called LinkedIn Local Hamilton, and I hashtag those posts with #LinkedInlocalHamilton, so people can find more event content. If people start to follow those hashtags, they automatically get their content. The goal is to start communities around these branded hashtags. But do not use too many, one a post is enough.

“These networks/communities can be ephemeral and arise in response to emergencies and crises, or they can be more stable, long-term communities of practice or knowledge that develop to spread ideas, news, or opinions on a given topic.” (Saxton, Niyirora, Guo, & Waters, 2015)

How to choose hashtags

Now we know the benefits of using hashtags, here are some guidelines to help get the best result from using hashtags. Stuffing a post with 20 random hashtags such as #likeaboss or #dansrandomthoughts is not going to do a post any good. Choosing the right hashtags can be quite strategic. At one end of the scale is using random personalised hashtags that nobody would search for is at one end of the scale, while at the other end are generic and common hashtags.

Just using the most popular hashtags is not going to do much good either. For example, if a hashtag has 10 million search results, then the chances of people finding your content are extremely low. They also do not add much meaning to a post or say much about your brand. Use these popular hashtags sparingly.

The first way you can research hashtags is to check out relevant influencers in your niche as well as your established competitors and see what hashtags they are using often.

There tools such as Hootsuite, that analyse current social media trends and what hashtags are the best fit for your brand. Other research tools that will help you find relevant and effective keywords in your niche are RiteTag and Hashtagify.me


Hashtags best practice

Knowing how to use hashtags will help boost your brand’s social media engagement. The annoying part is that every social media platform treats hashtags slightly differently. However, some general rules apply across platforms.

People can use a hashtag anywhere in a post — in the body of text to emphasise a certain keyword, or at the end to provide context to that post. You cannot use spaces, punctuation or symbols in a hashtag. Posts must also be public — if it is private, only followers can find the post, defeating the purpose. Also, do not string too many words together — the best hashtags are short and easy to remember. If a word is difficult to spell, it will not make for a highly effective keyword either. Detailed and specific hashtags will lead to better results than broad ones.

More is not better when it comes to hashtags, contrary to widespread belief. The world of Instagram has popularised the use of numerous random hashtags across other platforms, even though they provide no benefit or function. Some people on LinkedIn finish a post with 10–20 personalised hashtags. To me, it just seems vain and spammy. Some platforms even penalise content for using too many.

Limit the number of hashtags you use. More is not always better. It looks spammy and people tune out from spam.

social media

Here are some guidelines for hashtag use on the major social media platforms.

Twitter

Research has shown one to two hashtags on Twitter is optimum. Engagement reduces when you include more than two. It can be valuable to search hashtags to find conversations related to your niche to be involved in — type the hashtag into the search bar. You can also click on explore and then trending, to find current ‘hot’ hashtags, use any that are relevant to your content to reach a wider audience. People and businesses can also add hashtags to their bio/profile.

Facebook

On Facebook, it is again important not to use too many hashtags. One or two is the recommendation again. There is no real use in using them on your private personal account as people who are not friends will not find your content, but on a public business page, they can. Because of the privacy of personal accounts, it is also hard for brands on Facebook to monitor the performance of branded hashtags.

Inside Facebook groups, hashtags are useful for grouping together content by topic.

LinkedIn

Hashtags have only been utilised by LinkedIn over the past few years. LinkedIn does not have privacy on personal accounts which means there is a lot of value in using hashtags to make content more findable by people outside your network.

Two to five hashtags are the recommendation, and the first three used in the posts URL to help with search engine optimisation. LinkedIn even suggests keywords for you when you write a post and you can also follow hashtags. Use one personally branded hashtag so people can follow your content is beneficial but use specific hashtags that indicate the topic of a post for your others.

Instagram

Using multiple hashtags on Instagram is more embraced than any other social media platform and even encouraged. In posts, you can use up to 30, but around 10–12 is the sweet spot. In stories, you can use up to 10. People do not use hashtags as a keyword as was their initial intention on Twitter, instead, hashtags such as #picoftheday and #instadaily have become some of the most popular hashtags. Hashtags are more lifestyle based.

Unlike other platforms, people on Instagram often use hashtags in their comments. Because of the vast number of content (over a billion users) and keywords, it is important to know what hashtags are popular in your niche. They are likely to be far different to LinkedIn for example. You can also use hashtags in your bio, so use them more like a keyword there.

YouTube

As well as adding tags to a video on YouTube, you can also use hashtags in the title and the description. Clicking on one of these hashtags helps a user find more content with that hashtag. Again, there is no point using random personalised hashtags, instead, use them as a keyword. The optimal number of hashtags to use is less than 10, and YouTube will penalise any video that uses more than 15 — ignoring the hashtags and the post may be flagged. YouTube views this as spam. If you do not include hashtags in the title, the first three hashtags in the description will show above the title of your video.


That is the lot for this week’s blog about Hashtags. I hope you learnt something new about Hashtags and implement some changes into your social media strategy that helps you get more engagement.

#Seeyounextweek,

Dan.

This content was originally posted on our website blog.

Influencer Marketing in 2020 - Are We Sick Of It Yet?


Influencer Marketing is one of the biggest marketing trends for the past five years. 

If you spend much time browsing Instagram or YouTube, no doubt you will have come across an internet celebrity with a sponsored post or product placement promoting some random brand. 

So how does it all work?

Are Influencers still relevant? 

Or are we getting sick of unauthentic posts from celebrities endorsing a product they don't use? 

What is Influencer Marketing?

Social media influencers are individuals who create content promoting certain brands through social media sites like Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook. This is a marketing strategy used by brands who hire these influencers to increase their interactions with their target customers online, increasing their brand awareness and recognition, increasing sales.

These influencers have built a following online through their prominent personal branding.
“Influence can be broadly defined as the power to affect a person, thing or course of events. Influence manifests itself in many ways, from direct purchase advice to subtle shifts in perception of a vendor’s credibility.” (Brown & Hayes, 2008)
Influencers are people who have built a reputation online for their knowledge and expertise on a topic or lifestyle or because of their status. This reputation gives them social influence in their specific niche or area of expertise/fame, their followers taking note of their actions and opinions.

An influencer taking a selfie

Unlike celebrities of the past who often lead very private lives, influencers give followers access to a snapshot of their personal lives. This glimpse into the good life creates a bond and helps influencers to win the trust of their target audience.

These social relationships become assets for influencers to collaborate with brands to help them reach their marketing goals, as they have the power to affect the purchase decisions of others through their authority and trust of their following. This provides credibility for brands with a shared target audience.

Social media uses love to feel like they can relate to the people they respect and follow. What better way of doing this than consuming the same products? Because of this, social media influencers can often create trends.

Influencers post content on their social media accounts to advertise the brands through product reviews and endorsements and commonly use product placements. This application of a brand into a “real life” situation (social media is often a little staged) entices their audience to view the product positively.

An influencer can have as little as 1,000 followers, or the top celebrity influencers now have hundreds of millions. Portuguese professional footballer Cristiano Ronaldo is the biggest, now at almost 240 million followers.
“Social media influencers represent a new type of independent, third-party endorsers who shape an audience’s attitudes through blogs, tweets, and the use of other social media channels.” (Freberg, Graham, McGaughey, & Freberg, 2011)

The Benefits of Influencer Marketing

The major drawcard of using influencers in a marketing strategy is their ability to give a brand a wider audience online. The following statistics are an indication of the effectiveness of influencer marketing:
  • 92% of marketers surveyed believed influencer marketing is effective at generating and converting leads in generating leads (Influencer Marketing Hub).
  • One study found that every $1 spent on influencer marketing produced an average return of $18 (Oberlo).
  • 80 percent of consumers surveyed had purchased a product after it seeing it in an influencer’s post (Oberlo).
The use of social media influencer marketing as a public relations and marketing strategy has removed many of the barriers between consumers and brands, changing the way they interact. Brands use influencers as a tool to attract and enhance relationships with their target audience, as many social media users use influencers to help guide their target market with their decision making.

The trusting relationship followers have with influencers means their recommendations are almost as trusted as a recommendation from a friend — one study found “56% of users surveyed said they rely on recommendations from friends, while 49% said they rely on influencers” (See Woods, 2016). 

This recommendation from a trusted influencer strengthens a brand’s credibility and reputation, which can form a relationship with the brand.

Influencers help to increase brand awareness of their clients and broaden their audience through the exposure of the brand to their followers. Brands need to choose a relevant influencer who is popular and relevant to their target audience. They give brands a fresh perspective, as they are already regularly creating unique and engaging content for their audience. Their audience perceives this marketing content as more credible and authentic than traditional advertising due to the trust the influencer’s following has.

Brands can now target audiences through influencers that were previously unreachable through mass marketing. Nano and Micro-influencers often have strong followings and credibility in niche markets and communities that traditional marketing cannot reach.
“You log onto Instagram and a celebrity confesses their love of Chipotle with a burrito in their hand. Later you are scrolling through Twitter and one of your friends tweets an image with their Starbucks Frappuccino. Both of these are examples of influencer marketing, the only difference being the first one is paid by advertisers and the second is not. This blurring of the lines between what is a genuine endorsement and what is a paid one through content-rich platforms is what makes influencer marketing so powerful.” (Woods, 2016)

How is influencer marketing so effective?

Social media has broken down the barriers between been brands and their consumers. Influencers have made this even more of a two-way relationship, where previously advertising was one very one way.

influencers promote brands by using them in their personal lives, it does not seem like advertising. The product placements they use in an everyday setting makes brands seem more relatable to consumers. In this sense, influencers serve are a connector between a brand and a consumer.

Through openness and honesty in their social media content, influencers seem authentic, giving them credibility with their audience (We’ll talk about this further later).

Social media followers learn from the example of influencers, and through this observation, people have a higher likelihood of adopting those behaviours. Social Learning Theory (see Bandura, 1969) proposes that people can develop new social behaviours through observing and imitating others.

Electronic Word of Mouth can also explain why using influencers is so powerful — this is any positive or negative statement made about a product or brand online. Word of mouth is one of the most credible and trusted sources of marketing and helps form consumers’ opinions on products and services. Consumers are more likely to have a positive perception of a message from a friend or a trusted influencer than a sponsored post that comes from a company.

Types of Influencers

Not every influencer has celebrity status. There are four broad categories of influencers:
1. Celebrities
2. Industry experts and thought leaders
3. Bloggers and content creators
4. Nano, Micro & Macro Influencers

Celebrities

The top tier of influencers is celebrities. They could be sports stars, actors, pop stars or just people who are famous for being famous. The Kardashian and Jenner family the perfect example of the latter, with three of the family (Kim, Kylie and Kendall) in the top 10 most followed on Instagram.

These celebrity influencers typically have more than a million followers and tend to have a wide range of followers rather than in one niche. The cost to use this celebrity influencers is extremely high, and their followers are not as defined — they often come from all walks of life.


Top 5 Instagram Influencers in 2019 (https://hypeauditor.com/top-instagram/)

top 5 influencers

Industry Experts and Thought Leaders

Influencers can also gain their status by gaining it through their qualifications, position, or experience in their area of expertise. They often gain this reputation and respect through having a prominent role in the workplace. For example, although now you could almost consider her a celebrity, New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Adern, has a large following on LinkedIn and Facebook.

These experts and thought leaders include journalists, CEOs at large corporations, academics and industry experts.

Content Creators and Bloggers

Content creators are everywhere on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok and even LinkedIn. They typically post a variety of informational content about a topic of interest and build a following through this. These influencers differ from industry experts as they are not in a position of power or have widespread credibility because of their professional reputation. They can be small business owners or just passionate about a certain topic.

One such niche which is growing in prominence is gaming. Gaming influencers live-stream their games over YouTube or other video platforms and their fans watch to get better at the game. Brands can promote products and offers through these streams to generate sales. For example, a headset or controller brand. 

A gaming influencer called PewDiePie has over 100 million followers on YouTube.

Bloggers publish content on topics such as travel, marketing, fashion, lifestyle or business and promote their blog content across various social media platforms. Those with a large following become a credible authority in their niche so their audiences are likely to trust their recommendations.

Nano, Micro and Macro Influencers

Nano and Micro-influencers are the other end of the scale from Celebrities. Nano influencers have small followings of under 10,000 and Micro-influencers are the next tier up with between 10,000 to 10,000 followers.

These influencers are typically are normal people with normal jobs, who have become well known because of their content and knowledge in a specific niche. They are credible and their social media following are people interested in that niche and engage often in their content. They have a strong relationship with their following and because of this, they usually do not want to harm their reputation through promoting something that does not fit.

They are likely to become vocal and loyal advocates for a brand and their audience are more likely to perceive their recommendations as an authentic testimonial, instead of the branded endorsement of a celebrity.

These influencers are perfect for small businesses with modest marketing budgets.

Macro Influencers sit between Micro-influencers and Celebrities, sharing characteristics of both, usually having a following of between 100,000 and 1 million people. A bigger audience than micro but not the same loyal following. Often Macro Influencers found their fame online, through being a content creator on YouTube for example.

Current Influencer trends for 2020 and beyond

The use of influencer marketing has exploded over the past five years. But there has recently been some backlash against influencer marketing (more about that soon), however, the online search for “influencers” search term itself has seen a 1500% increase between 2016 and 2019 (https://influencermarketinghub.com/). This shows influencer marketing still has a massive relevance to businesses.

There are still plenty of businesses investing in influencer marketing according to Oberlo:
  • Nine out of 10 marketers believe that influencer marketing is effective
  • 93% of marketers used influencer marketing in 2019
  • 57% of marketers plan to increase their influencer budgets in 2020.

Influencer Fatigue

Even though social media users know that brands pay influencers for their endorsements, many are still able to remain a trusted and authentic source to their followers. However, this is starting to change. People are getting sick of plastic and unauthentic social media posts that are obviously staged, where a promoted product is different from an influencer’s niche that they do not even use it. 

Why would you trust somebody just saying something just for the money?
influencer cartoon

The growing demand for authentic content from Gen Y and Z has means that some brands are starting to move away from the use of influencers. They want REAL content and that is what they enjoy engaging with.

‘Faking’ Influence

The use of fake followers and likes has become increasingly more widespread, where a person pays for artificial engagement and growth to boost their social media accounts. Bots often used to inflate these numbers — Numerous influencers were caught using these services. This artificial following used to ‘trick’ brands into collaborating with them

I too have been approached many times by direct message on Instagram, asking if I want to increase my number of followers and get a certain amount of likes per post, for a fee.
“For social media influencer’s whose focus is on lifestyle branding, authenticity is key… The influencer being genuine, honest, and open with her followers. Authenticity allows an influencer to relate with followers on a new level and aids in building a relationship between followers and brands.” (Glucksman, 2017)

Celebrity Influencers are out, Nano-influencers and Micro-influencers are in

The influencer game is changing. Celebrity influencers are no longer as popular as they used to be, as brands move toward the use of teams of micro-influencers instead of using one or two celebrities. Nearly 80 percent of the brands surveyed by Linqia said they want to work with micro-influencers in 2020.

Celebrity influencers require a large pay-check, sometimes of hundreds of thousands or even a million dollars per social media post. If the content does not come across as authentic, then the return on investment is not going to be as high as using micro-influencers with a more genuinely engaged following.

Contrasting the perfect image portrayed by many celebrity influencers (how can that be real?), micro and nano influencers create content that is not glamourous or staged. This is a lot more believable.

Influencers are employed for their ability to influence people. Not just because they have a following. Having the ability to influence the decision-making of consumers in a niche is key.

Businesses must weigh up an influencer’s following with their credibility with their target audience.

The internet has allowed the fragmentation of media into small niches and communities. Because of this, Nano and Micro-Influencers are becoming more attractive; with their penetration into these communities where they have engagement and credibility.

The use of Employee Advocates as influencers

A study by MSL Group suggests that brand messages are re-shared 24 more often when distributed by employees than by the brand itself.

Employees can be immensely proud of where they work and happy to spread positive messages about their company and brands. They live and breathe the brand, so often have the tremendous insight they can share that does not come across as staged or inauthentic and they become the perfect candidate for an influencer. Therefore, businesses should encourage their staff to be advocates — especially on a platform like LinkedIn. 

They might not have much of a following, but it costs nothing, and a team of enthusiastic staff can have as much reach as one or two paid influencers in their niche.