Social Media Marketing and Pinterest

In the world of Social Media Marketing, Pinterest is an interesting beast. Corporations and more conservative organizations (banks, law firms, etc.) are typically under the impression that it isn’t the outlet for them. And on the face of it, that’s true. If your site or blog isn’t the type to generally include a lot of images then you may think that Pinterest is no place for you. After all, Pinterest is essentially an image search engine.

However, there are ways to make Pinterest work for your organization, regardless of your type of business.

This first step may seem obvious – but you’ll need to add a few images to your website and/or blog. Even if your subject matter is very technical or clinical, you can still find stock images to use online and create a Pinterest-worthy image. Using free programs like Canva.com you can create and edit images to add to your blog posts. Canva even has a helpful feature that will allow you to create images in the size that typically get the highest engagement on Pinterest.

Once you’ve created your image, you’ll want to upload it to your site or blog, making sure to give it a name and alt tags that will be helpful to search engines.

Pinterest Strategy

If you aren’t already using Pinterest you’ll want to create an account and begin following other users. Then create boards of your own. For example, if you handle marketing for a law office you will want to create one board for your organization’s blog posts (“XYZ Law Blog”) and then create boards for other topics that might be of interest.

A law firm that handles family law, for example, may create boards (and re-pin content from other users) about parenting and weddings. This is because your blog posts may touch on topics such as how to handle custody situations or how to effectively blend families (parenting), or perhaps you’ll be blogging about broaching the topic of getting a pre-nuptial agreement before a wedding (by the way, the answer is: very delicately). These are posts that may seem a bit sterile for Pinterest at first glance, but if you’re re-pinning content about those broad topics (parenting and weddings) from other users, your posts will blend right in and be considered a great resource.

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By | 2017-05-22T09:53:12-04:00 April 18th, 2017|Digital Marketing, Social Media|Comments Off on Social Media Marketing and Pinterest

2017 Digital Marketing Trends

We’re just a couple of weeks into 2017 and it’s becoming clear that there are some major digital marketing trends that will carry over from 2016 and drastically affect the industry’s landscape and methodologies for the year. These trends aren’t necessarily surprising – marketing automation has been huge for a couple of years and Facebook has been promoting their video feature         for a few months – but they’re certainly going to be making a much larger impact on the marketing landscape and the way marketers do business over the coming months.

Digital Marketing Trends

Facebook Live

Attempting to increase organic reach on Facebook is every marketer’s Achilles Heel. With updates to the algorithm so frequently that it can be a job in and of itself to stay on top of the changes, many brands and organizations have resigned themselves to simply paying to boost posts and giving up on organic reach all together – but there’s a better, or at least another, way.

Last year it became apparent that Facebook was trying to get into the content game – not by creating their own content, but by becoming the go-to destination for users to view content across a variety of sources. With this shift came significant changes in the algorithm, including a huge bump in video posts. This is because Facebook wants users to remain on their site for as long as possible, and people are much more likely to watch the duration of a 2-minute video than they are to click away from the site to read a 600-word article. As a result of creating a piece of content that keeps users on the site, Facebook rewards those content creators with a higher reach on that particular piece of content.

The next phase of the video evolution on Facebook has been, of course, the push to Facebook Live – if a pre-recorded video does a good job of attracting viewers, a livestreaming event will theoretically keep their rapt attention (due to ever-present social media dilemma of FOMO, Fear Of Missing Out).

Facebook initially limited the success of Facebook Live by having it available only on the mobile app – but they’ve since rectified that by releasing Facebook Live for Desktop at the end of 2016.

Working with Co-Creators and Influencers

In a time when marketing every brand is trying to increase their reach and brand recognition, one of the best ways to do this is by partnering with co-creators or influencers. If you can afford it, partnering with influencers is a great way to accomplish this goal. Influencers are influencers because… well, they influence. They have a developed audience that trusts their recommendations and, depending on who you’re working with, their audience-base can range from devoted to downright fanatic in their loyalty. However, that loyalty comes at a price, and the larger and more devoted their audience, the more it will cost you to work with them.

Another option is to work with co-creators. One of the ways that brands are beginning to effectively utilize the co-creator method is to run contests where fans of their brands use their products to create something unique and then ask their personal network of family and friends to vote on their contest entry. By doing this it costs the brand next to nothing to have their product – and a vast array of uses for it – promoted to thousands of people.

Cross-Medium Marketing

Finally, one of the trends that digital marketers will be diving in to in 2017 is working to seamlessly use their data and content across various mediums, and then segment their audiences. By this we mean ensuring that they have email addresses for their social media followers (so that they can send them newsletters), and social media handles for their email subscribers (to keep them engaged with daily content). Many will be segmenting their audience based on traditional demographics or by trigger-events.

Expect that much of this work will take place with marketing automation tools that will capture when an email is opened, what data is already on file for the contact, and continue to populate their profile. From there, automation tools will allow marketers to analyze what types of content resonate best with each specific audiences.

 

By | 2017-05-22T09:53:12-04:00 January 16th, 2017|Digital Marketing|Comments Off on 2017 Digital Marketing Trends