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By Cecily Mauran

Words of wisdom from the viral aperitif brand.

While scrolling through Instagram, if you’ve ever come across images of a laid-back yet sophisticated cocktail party filled with effortlessly cool people drinking colourful cocktails and spritzes, that’s probably because of Helena Hambrecht.

Hambrecht is the CEO, co-founder, and branding mastermind of aperitif brand Haus. Before Haus, Hambrecht cut her teeth in brand consulting for big names like Facebook, Google, Twitter, Uber, and Airbnb. In other words, Hambrecht has “this really weird, but useful skill set of learning how the internet sausage is made.”

Haus isn’t like other alcohol brands, it’s a cool brand

“Historically, there just hasn’t been a lot of innovation in liquor,” says Hambrecht. From ingredients to distribution, Big Liquor is very much a gatekeeper industry that Hambrecht and her co-founder saw an opportunity to shake up. (Pardon the pun.)

Other brands add sugar, preservatives, aren’t transparent about their ingredients or where they’re sourced, and have high alcohol content, which is a pretty nasty combination for a hangover. Instead, according to the website, Haus uses responsibly-sourced “natural fruits, herbs, and botanicals,” has lower alcohol content (more than wine, less than whiskey), and is made sustainably.

But it’s not just a better-tasting booze with less of a hangover. According to alcohol distribution laws, aperitifs that are mostly grape-based, like Haus’s product, can be sold online. And that’s how Haus became a business-to-consumer brand for the Instagram era.

“Because we have the freedom to sell online, we just re-thought what a brand could look like.”

The Instagram effect

Since launching in 2019, Instagram was an inherent part of brand strategy. Today, Haus has 65,000 followers. “I wanted to make something that you could recognize from 200 feet away,” says Hambrecht. “That has made Instagram really successful for us, because when you see the Haus bottle, there’s nothing else that looks like it, even if it’s 10 pixels high, you can recognize it.”

Image of a bar cart filled with bottles that people are picking up
From day one, Instagram was a part of Haus’s strategy. Credit: Haus

Building an online presence had a major advantage of working with distributors that normally wouldn’t give indie alcohol brands like Haus the time of day, said Hambrecht. “We could go to them and be like, ‘Look, we built the brand for you. We already have this national audience that knows who we are and they’re all waiting for us to get into wholesale. So all you have to do is clear it for us and take a chunk of our money.”

Currently, Haus is in the middle of launching wholesale in 24 states.

Yes, TikTok is currently the most popular app, but Instagram is a key asset for consumer brands who want to build a following. We asked Hambrecht our burning questions about the importance of promoting your business on Instagram and here’s what we learned.

1. Define an aesthetic.

Instagram is all about aesthetics, which is why it works best for consumer brands like Haus.

“A big reason why people will buy food or beverage or really anything online is that they can see how it lives in the world,” says Hambrecht. “For us, we’ve been able to use photography on Instagram to show, ‘this is how you drink it, this is where you drink it, this is who you invite over, where you put the bottle.’ All of those things can be answered visually and that’s where Instagram is just so much better at education and brand marketing than most social channels.”

Hambrecht says they wanted to create a visual style that was aspirational, but attainable. “What we found is it resonates a lot with people, it makes it feel approachable, it makes it feel like maybe something that they could bookmark as inspiration.”

2. ‘The less you sell, the more you’ll sell.’

Sound counterintuitive? Allow Hambrecht to explain. “It’s obvious that you want them to buy [the product], you don’t need to say that.” Customers should want to buy a product based on what they see and feel, Hambrecht explains. “It’s less about selling and more about how can we use this as a brand extension to give our community what they want?”

3. Give the people what they want.

A key part of promoting your business on Instagram is figuring out what your followers may want. “You may not even have a community yet, but say you’re making a food product. You can take a wild guess that the community might want to have some food recipes, or they may want to have your recommendations for other products that could accompany food,” says Hambrecht.

“What can you give your community that isn’t necessarily tied to your product, but makes them really love your brand and think of you as creative and generous and thinking about what the community cares about,” she continues. “That’s how you build that brand loyalty and that’s going to make people want to follow you.”

If you’re thinking of Instagram as more of a content and community engagement channel instead of a sales channel, your posts will be genuine and align with the followers you’re looking for.

4. Build community around your brand.

According to Hambrecht, Haus learned from its customers that they loved seeing other members of the community, so the company started featuring them in more Instagram posts. “It’s really awesome for our audience who wants to see who else is part of this community, who else is drinking this product and they can follow them or they could reach out to them.”

Haus didn’t spend any money on marketing for the first six months, which Hambrecht attributes to investing in branding and customer experience early on, which generated lots of word-of-mouth buzz. Having a strong engaged community proved to be critical when the worst happened…

 

5. Always be willing to adapt.

Haus was just six months old when the pandemic hit. For a business that built its brand around gathering, Haus suddenly faced huge challenges. Hambrecht says they had to rethink how Haus would live in their customers’ lives during that time. “We shifted our focus to things that were still relevant, like educating our community on the product, how it’s made, the ingredients and where they come from, and recipes they can make at home.”

There was also the practical issue of how to photograph and create new content during social isolation. Hambrecht says they crowdsourced their customers and team about how they were staying connected to each other during the pandemic, which became the genesis for an interview series called “My Haus.”

“We were like, ‘Well, we can’t go and like meet these people in person, it’s dangerous to send a photographer. So why don’t we start sending disposable cameras?'”

“It’s an interview series where we send members of our community disposable cameras, and they photograph a day in the life in their home. We interview them about their home rituals and how they stay connected with the people in their lives in this strange time, whether that’s over zoom, or in person with whoever they live with at home.”

Of course, these were extreme circumstances that forced businesses to adapt for their very survival, but it taught Haus some important lessons.

“Don’t feel so stuck in one strategy. Whatever works today, may need to change six months from now or a year from now,” says Hambrecht. “It’s just a matter of paying attention to what’s going on in the world, and paying attention to what your community cares about or what they need help with.”

6. Play it cool — and be patient.

In other words, it’s all about the long game. “We didn’t take shortcuts, we weren’t begging for followers. You just gotta be cool. Play it cool and be patient.”

Hambrecht built Haus’s following through “building genuine connections,” which has carried the brand through a global pandemic. “Whether it’s with your customers, reporters, retailers, partners, or investors, you’ve just got to play the long game and know that those the relationships you’re making today might come around in two to three years for you.”

Feature Image Credit: Mashable composite: Bob Al-Green / Haus

By Cecily Mauran

Sourced from Mashable

By Stan Schroeder

Wait, Instagram has content that’s not ads?

Instagram is my waiting room app. I don’t use it every day, but when I have a couple of spare minutes, I like to casually check out what the people I’m following are up to.

The problem, lately, is getting to the stuff I actually want to see requires battling through a mountain of sponsored content and suggested posts. When it comes to ads on platforms, there’s a point at which a user inevitably will throw their hands up in the air and say: enough. This level is different for everyone, but for me, Instagram has not only reached it — it’s running circles around it.

Dude, where’s my content?

Let’s test this. I’ve just opened the Instagram app on my iPhone and counted 14 (fourteen) instances of ads, suggested posts, and sponsored content, in the first 16 posts on the top of my feed. I had to scroll past six ads before I got to a post by someone I actually follow. I’m not sure when Instagram became this aggressive when it comes to ads, but I don’t remember it being this bad earlier this year. A month-old Reddit post showcases the same issue, with a seemingly infinite array of ads lined up one after another.

Worse, there’s something deeply insulting by the content of the ads and suggested posts I’m seeing. Yes, I follow a couple of fitness-oriented pages, as well as wrestling pages, on Instagram. So its algorithms have decided that I must be into boxing and bodybuilding (I’m not). I’m constantly being served ads for boxing lessons, which I don’t particularly care about, and I keep seeing muscular men posing on a stage, which, again, is not my cup of tea. Instagram is relentless about this type of content; there’s little variety to it. I’m a human in 2022, which means I have the luxury of having specific, nuanced interests — I’m alright with bodyweight workouts, but not interested in bodybuilding. I can watch Brazilian jiu-jitsu videos all day, but not boxing. Maybe it’s the way I’m engaging with this content that throws Instagram’s algorithms off, but it just seems incapable of accurately predicting what I really want to see.

It’s not just me. Another Reddit thread, also from about a month ago, titled “Okay, we get it. Your feed is entirely ads,” has dozens of users complaining about how bad Instagram’s feed has become.

“60 percent of the posts on my newsfeed are from accounts I do not follow — yet there are accounts I do follow who post regularly and I don’t ever see their posts,” writes user HireLaneKiffin. “It’s gone from all my follows to every other follow and ad to as of today a three to two ratio of ads and promoted follows from the worst people and things,” writes user ilivedownyourroad. I don’t have a scientific method to determine how many ads are too many for the majority of users, but my guesstimate is that Instagram is well past it.

This behavior is spilling over to Meta’s other property, Facebook. On this platform’s feed, you’ll see at least some content from the pages and people you follow on top, but there will be a ton of ads in between, and every now and then you’ll see a suggested post from a page you don’t particularly care about — I’m looking at you, Nick’s Strength and Power. In fact, this particular page which serves bodybuilding-related content, probably has little to do with it; Facebook has decided that I must be into bodybuilding, and bodybuilding videos I will watch, so help me the almighty algorithm.

Instagram ad
But I don’t wanna watch what Simon did next. Credit: Instagram/upromototraining

The sponsored overload is not as bad on Facebook as it is on Instagram, but Instagram may be an early warning here. A few months down the road, you might have to jump through the hoops of switching to chronological post order every time you open the app (to do that, tap “Menu,” then “See more,” then “Most recent” on the iPhone).

Can you help it? Yes, but not quite.

There are ways to alleviate this influx of ads, but Instagram is quite cunning about it. Once you’ve opened the app, there’s a little white arrow that appears next to the Instagram logo on top, letting you see content only from the accounts you’ve set as favourites. But the little white arrow only appears once you’ve scrolled past the first post — a way to force you, I reckon, to see at least one ad before getting to the content you want. Furthermore, you have to do it every time you start the app, and you also have to ardently add all the content you want to follow to your favourites, which is an additional hassle.

You can also get an Android-only unofficial app for Instagram that lets you get rid of ads altogether, but unofficial apps, besides probably being against Instagram’s terms of service, can be a way to get malware on your device.

The bottom line is that, for the majority of users, the Instagram experience is severely tarnished when you’re force fed stuff you don’t want. There’s a point at which even advertisers will start to complain, as they inevitably see engagement numbers fall from their tired and resigned audience. I’ve asked Instagram whether they think they’ve gone too far with sponsored content, and will update this article when I hear back.

UPDATE: Jun. 9, 2022, 12:21 p.m. EDT An Instagram spokesperson got back to me, saying that my feed having so many ads and suggested posts is “not the intended experience.” The company will look into it and get back to me with more information.

I know the mantra: If you’re not paying for it, you’re not the user, you’re the product being sold. But for me to consent to being sold, I need to get something back from the app or else I’ll just give up. Right now, Instagram is working very hard to make me give up.

Feature Image Credit: Sopa Images / Getty Images

By Stan Schroeder

Sourced from Mashable

Sourced from KHTS Hometown Station

Are you unable to bring UK Instagram followers to your business profile? Then you must be lacking something, and it needs your consideration. We have collected the top branding plan after detailed research to boost your brand on the photo-sharing application.

Many businesses feel the urge to showcase their products on every social media stage. And in the wish of more, ignore the policy. Never do such mistake if anyone desire to approach the right audience. Because Instagram is so different from other famous social sites, it needs a perfect marketing policy.

What are the top Instagram Branding Plan to bring sales

Start here to create your unique style for our brand and bring more engagement and interaction to your post. Yes, you can buy real Instagram likes UK and followers for the marketing plan but how. Stay tuned; you will also learn this.

  • Set your aims for Instagram:

Before posting on Instagram, you must verify one thing: Why are you on Instagram? Do you have any goals here? As famous as the site is, your answer must be no, “because everybody else is.” To be growing on Instagram in the long term, you need to set goals and objectives to explain your time, energy, and financial investment. It is essential for businesses.

Be sure to specify your Instagram aims first. And guess what? Your Instagram can have several aims — you can also post product pictures while sharing user-generated content (UGC). It’s more about the type of your posts and more about why you are sharing them. If you know the reason, you can learn how to achieve your achievement and use Instagram features to achieve your aims.

  • Decide your Instagram targeted followers:

Before you start marketing on Instagram, determine the audience you want to reach. If you have other marketing plans, use them to keep up your attempts. Consider age, gender, interests, motivations, income, location, and pain points. Your post style, captions, and Instagram features depend on the target market

  • Conduct a competitive research about your competitive profile:

After you decide on your Instagram audience, do detailed research to see what other firms post in your sector.

Quickly view the relevant accounts to find which posts are having the high interaction:

  • What are their captions are
  • What popular hashtags they are using
  • How often they post and how often.

So, having all this data help you to create the right content and compete with the others.

When reviewing your competitors’ content, note the chances they missed. Using content that other profiles; will help your business be distinct from the others.

  • Create a logical brand on Instagram:

Random or interrupted content can confuse your audience, and you may lose UK Instagram followers. To avoid this, maintain a permanent brand image on your Instagram account. Consider posting pictures with your brand in mind. Adding great stories to your captions can make your business more related.

  • Listen to Your Customers:

As you increase your Instagram presence, you will search for more and more users raising their voices with questions and proposals.

For example, Instagram is used as a user facilitate channel to answer your users’ questions to help them decide on an appropriate purchase.

As a result, Instagram is another site for gathering responses and understanding what people want from your store. These beneficial visions can help you to better your products and significantly improve your Instagram marketing plan

  • Create Instagram-Specific Landing Pages:

Only Instagram provides the option to reach the landing page. Go for the valuable bio link to drive traffic directly from this platform to your site.

We never lost this real estate.

For example, do not just post a simple homepage link in your Instagram bio. But be sure that your landing pages and website are also mobile-friendly. So, make sure that your landing pages are suitable for most of Instagram mobile user support.

That’s why many brands assist with landing pages specific to Instagram or, at the very least, landing pages suitable for cell phones. The advantage here is two-fold:

  • you create complete shopping skills for viewers
  • It provides you the chance to measure how well your Instagram followers turn.
  • Build up your Instagram follower base:

It takes serious time and energy to increase your following. Many businesses buy real Instagram followers UK to kick start their game on this photo-sharing application! Buying followers from an authentic seller will increase engagement and brings more likes.

More to add: This is what you can focus on to follow the right path.

  • Confirm your username is identifiable and searchable. If people fail to search for you, they cannot follow you! Complete your bio. It is the last thing anyone sees before they decide to follow you, so make sure to know who you are and what are you doing.
  • Once your profile is improved, begin posting. It’s a good plan to expand your catalogue with 15 to 20 excellent posts before you seriously start attracting people. If customers visit your profile and find it blank, then it is possible that they may not be following you.
  • Then, start following accounts of interest to you and link them with your business. Think of Instagram as a community and find other companies or influential people in your area who may entertain your products.
  • Inspirit others to share your content. Contact the influencers to share your account and products.

Sourced from KHTS Hometown Station

By Arol Wright

Instagram is a powerful tool for both established and up-and-coming businesses. Here are a few tips on how you can use it better.

For any company or business, it is of utmost importance to maintain a presence on social media, and do so in the most efficient way possible. Nailing down your internet strategy is as important as ever, and if you’re a business, it can score you a lot of points to get things right.

One of the biggest social networks around right now is Instagram. It can be a daunting platform to get into, but if you use it properly, it can be a powerful tool for your business. Here are a handful of tips on how you can boost your presence on Instagram.

1. Get the Basics Right

Phone Showing Instagram Insights

When first creating an Instagram account for your business, there are a few things that you need to do before kicking it off other than just putting a name, a profile picture, and a bio. These will be essential for your journey later on.

The first one is to switch your profile to an Instagram business account. This will allow you to access juicy metrics later on, and use some of the tools we’ve detailed later on in this post—and it will also make prospective customers take you more seriously. To do so, go to Settings, tap on Account, then tap on Switch to Professional Account and follow the steps—select the category that best suits your business, and click OK to confirm.

The second one is to put action buttons on your profile. You can add info to your profile, like a phone number or an email, and make it easily accessible via call-to-action buttons on your profile, so people can quickly reach out to you. Create a Linktree link and put it in your profile, too, as this will allow you to both add extra buttons not supported by Instagram and also link to your other social media accounts.

Also, while we’re on it—even if you do all of this, keep an eye on your DMs, because you’ll almost certainly still have people message you there, and you don’t want to lose out on them.

2. Use Facebook Creator Studio

Facebook Creator Studio

To manage both your Facebook account and your Instagram account, this is one of the best options around. It’s an official tool developed by Meta itself, first launched in 2018. A mobile app was also launched in 2020.

Facebook Creator Studio tool allows you to schedule posts on both social networks, and lets you monitor statistics on your profile to know how well your posts are performing. Being a tool developed by the parent company of both Facebook and Instagram, it stays constantly updated and relevant with the latest additions to the platform. And for Instagram, in particular, it’s a very powerful tool, allowing you to do mostly everything short of posting stories. You can post pictures/videos, schedule content, and look at stats on everything from followers to post metrics.

It can do many things, but don’t go overboard, either. If you’re just getting into this tool, in order to make it much more bearable to use, make organizing content your priority and take into account the fact that you don’t need to check out all the metrics or use all tools at your disposal. Stick strictly to what you need.

If you’re an entrepreneur looking to grow their social footprint, you should adapt to what you really need inside Creator Studio. You don’t need absolutely everything—the key is to make things easy, and for that, it is best to use only what is really necessary.

3. Feed Design is Key

photo of a phone showing an instagram feed

Keeping your post feed nice and tidy is something many businesses overlook. And quite frankly, these days, it might very well be one of the most important.

The very moment users click on your profile, they’re going to form their very first impression of your project. And it goes much further than just reading the bio, or looking at your profile pic. They’re also going to take a look at your feed without necessarily looking at each post in deep detail, so make it looks appealing and consistent.

Use websites like Unsplash to get high-quality, free-to-use resources for your content, and use tools like Figma Editor, Canva, or even Adobe Photoshop to create killer images. And while making them, remember to keep a common design language, in order for your feed to have a nice dose of visual harmony.

4. Don’t Be Afraid of Branded Content

Tablet with Social Links

Once you start getting a large social media following, and you’re looking into actually pouring money into your promotion efforts, you can look at branded content.

Instagram’s branded content is pretty much just partnering with influencers and other users for them to promote your product. It’s actually surprisingly effective—things can and often do go viral on TikTok and Instagram, resulting in sales multiplying exponentially. People see their favourite creators using things, and then want to buy those things.

To make branded content, you’ll actually need to reach out to creators. But once you’ve agreed on terms with them, Instagram makes disclosing a partnership to the public quite easy.

Darkposting on social media is another way to serve branded content seamlessly into users’ feeds.

5. Be Customer-Friendly

instagram app

Finally, no matter at which stage of the process you’re in—whether you’re still a growing brand, or if you already have a large following—it’s very important to always be customer-friendly.

Keeping attention to detail, being responsive, and listening to your users are all key parts of not only holding up your social media presence, but also your integrity as a business. If you’re a small or big store selling things, make your price tags visible and be responsive to users looking to buy from you. Keep your catalogue of products visible and easily accessible. Ideally, you only want people messaging you to either buy something or know more about a specific product—always be kind and proactive with them.

Growing on Instagram Takes Time and Effort

The tips we’ve detailed here are not a sure-fire way to grow into a world-renowned brand in a matter of days. That will actually need more dedication and effort. But they’re a good place to start from scratch, or boost things if you’re already established.

Organizing your content better and being proactive will set you apart from a big crowd.

By Arol Wright

Arol is a tech journalist and Staff Writer at MakeUseOf. He has also worked as a news/feature writer at XDA-Developers and Pixel Spot. Currently a Pharmacy student at the Central University of Venezuela, Arol has had a soft spot for everything tech-related since he was a child. When not writing, you’ll either find him nose-deep into his textbooks or playing video games.

More From Arol Wright

Sourced from MUO

 

By Kehl Bayern

Facebook has had a big year. It changed the company name to Meta. It endured multiple scandals.

And its darling division, Instagram, went largely unscathed until just recently. Now it looks like some more stuff is cropping up in the Insta camp as The Wall Street Journal reports the platform is actively pushing users to create multiple accounts. Of course, as anyone who knows anything about social media will tell you, the more usernames, the better, and it looks like Instagram has taken that to heart.

First, the process of creating a second account on Instagram has never been complicated. The only real question is “why now?” For that answer, we have to turn to advertising and the other ways that the platform makes money.

Still, it’s all quite interesting to discover that Instagram is pushing the creation of multiple accounts while also publicly talking about mental health and responsible usage of the app. Namely, keeping yourself off of it and enjoying life; creating multiple accounts, ostensibly geared towards different types of content or followings, somewhat undermines this proposition.

But it seems like that is exactly the goal of prompting users to create more than one Instagram username.

A spokesperson for Meta, Christine Pai, told the WSJ, “We know people come to Instagram to connect with those closest to them and to explore their many interests…By allowing the creation of multiple accounts, whether it be for professional or personal purposes, we hope to give people more ways to express themselves and have more control over the content they see and share.” She added that, with this tool, the process “can be seamless.”

What do you think of Instagram’s push to get users to manage multiple accounts? Savvy business move or sign of desperation? Let us know your thoughts on Instagram’s push to up the number of registered accounts in the comments below.

Check out some of our other photography news on Light Stalking at this link right here.

Feature Image Credit: NeONBRAND

By Kehl Bayern

Kehl is our staff photography news writer and has over a decade of experience in online media and publishing and you can get to know him better here

Sourced from Light Stalking

By Urian B

Instagram is willing to pay from around $600 all the way up to $35,000 for creators to make content on Reels. Reels is Instagram’s app designed to compete with the trendy social media platform TikTok.

Instagram Reels vs. TikTok

TechCrunch and Business Insider reported that Instagram is putting aside a massive amount of money to give to creators to post videos on its own TikTok competitor Reels.

Instagram has just announced its own bonus program for Reels in July. This was the time when Mark Zuckerberg. The CEO of Meta noted that the company would be paying a whopping $1 billion to creators throughout 2022.

Reels Pays Up to $35,000 to Creators

The reports reportedly shed new light on just how much individual creators are now being offered for their own Reels. The report also details how many views are needed to get the maximum bonus pay out.

TechCrunch also points out one Reddit post where a person was offered all the way up to $35,000 if their own Reels reaches 58.31 million views in just a month. This is reportedly in line with what Business Insider reports regarding Sam and Cori Werrell offering to make Reels content for their already significant 283,000 Instagram followers.

Creators Offered Smaller Sums

On the other hand, smaller creators have been offered smaller sums. A creator with about 52,000 Instagram followers, Maddy Corbin, was offered up to $1,000. She noted that she knew people that were offered about $600 to $800.

According to the story by The Verge, TechCrunch now reports that the bonuses look to be increasing over time. Another creator with 24,000 Instagram followers was just offered a higher $8,500 to get 9.28 million views.

Payments are Still Testing

It was also noted that a Verge staff member that had 15,000 followers was also offered the same pay out. It was noted that there doesn’t seem to be any particularly firm rules regarding how payment amounts would correspond to follower counts.

Instagram reportedly told TechCrunch that the whole program was still in its early age and still experimenting with the given format. The company noted that they continue to test out payments towards more creators. The company expects them to fluctuate while they are still getting started reportedly.

Snapchat, YouTube, Reels vs. TikTok

Both Snapchat and YouTube were also offering their very own creator incentives. In August, YouTube actually announced that they would pay up to $10,000 a month for certain popular videos. In September, Snapchat also announced its very own Spotlight Challenges.

Snapchat reportedly offers a prize pool that would range from $1,000 to $25,000. There are now two different possible interpretations of these particular platforms’ bonus schemes. The Meta-owned Instagram currently wants to give more to creators to incentivize them to post more content.

Feature Image Credit: Image from Alexander Shatov on Unsplash Website

By Urian B

Sourced from Tech Times

By Aimee Dawson

The Yours to Make initiative includes an installation at London’s Saatchi Gallery created by digital artist and curator Zaiba Jabbar using Reels

Instagram's “Yours to Make” initiative aims to attract young people to the platform Instagram

Instagram’s “Yours to Make” initiative aims to attract young people to the platform Instagram

In a column about art and Instagram, it’s easy to ignore the other apps scrambling for social media dominance. But the fight for attention is relentless, and while Instagram may be the art world’s social platform of choice, such favouritism tends to be generational. In the mid-2010s, reports started to show that fewer young people were using Facebook while the number of over-55s signing up was growing. It was soon coined “Boomerbook”. Meanwhile, Facebook bought Instagram in 2012 initially to neutralise the threat of competition, but soon the app began to mop up the pool of young people abandoning Facebook.

Now we are facing “Millennialgram”. According to a recent survey

undertaken by the financial services firm Piper Sandler, 35% of US teenagers say Snapchat is their favourite social media platform and 30% prefer TikTok, while Instagram comes in third at 22%. A report from the New York Times

last month revealed internal documents from 2018 in which the company had named the loss of teenage users to other social media platforms as an “existential threat” and a further document from October last year that read: “If we lose the teen foothold in the US we lose the pipeline.”

The latter leaked document laid out Instagram’s marketing plan for this year, and now we are beginning to see it unfold. The platform openly announced what it calls “the next chapter in Instagram’s brand story” on its website in September. Called “Yours to Make”

it aims to “showcase how you can explore who you are with Instagram”. The announcement was accompanied by a video that shows young creatives using the various features and products on the Instagram app, including the hip-hop artist Topaz Jones, the Native American make-up artist Madrona Redhawk and the digital creator Justin Yi—“real creators and everyday users who are using our platform to push the boundaries of creativity and experimentation”, Instagram says.

The New York Times says Instagram has allocated a marketing budget of $390m this year, mostly aimed at wooing teens. In the UK, the Yours to Make film is accompanied by a social-first content series created with Channel 4’s 4Studio, a brand partnership with the culture publication Dazed, targeted digital and video adverts, and “experiential activity” such as an installation at London’s Saatchi Gallery (4-9 November).

The work at Saatchi will consist of a free-to-access, interactive “motion art installation” in the galleries—a “digital portrait of British youth culture” with Instagram Reels video content from 50 handpicked Gen Z creatives. It has been assembled by the digital artist and curator Zaiba Jabbar, who says she has been inspired by “the breadth of creativity” in the Reels. The platform is also inviting users to submit Reels about their own journeys of self-discovery—tagged #YoursToMake—for the chance to be included in the work. Time will tell if Instagram can Reel the kids back in.

By Aimee Dawson

Insta’ gratification

Insta’ gratification is a monthly blog by Aimee Dawson, our Associate Digital Editor. Looking at how the art world and Instagram collide, each article tackles a topic around the innovations and challenges that spring up when art enters the digital world.

Sourced from The Art Newspaper

By Sophie Webster

Instagram creators can now use Pearpop, a marketplace for social collaborations, after expanding on the social media site. Pearpop was previously only available to TikTok users.

Instagram Teams Up with Pearpop

The platform, which launched in 2020, allows creators and brands to buy collaborations with celebrities and larger creators. Pearpop will also become available on Twitter this November and on Twitch in December, according to PRWeb.

Last month, the marketplace did a soft launch on Instagram. Pearpop stated that in less than a month, more than 10,000 Instagram creators had joined the marketplace.

The company said that users had requested the feature to be available on Instagram. More than 90% of the creators are already active on Instagram.

The early users of the marketplace on Instagram include Jake Paul, Swae Lee, Paris Hilton, Post Malone, Tom Felton, and Noah Schnapp.

Cole Mason, Pearpop CEO, and co-founder said that the initial concept of the platform came out of an obvious gap within the space because no marketplace existed for creators to monetize through collaborations that are beneficial to both parties.

Mason told TechCrunch in an interview that he built Pearpop as the social capital marketplace that helps creators earn, promote and expand their services across all social media platforms.

Mason added that the company’s vision is to move the industry away from platform-driven awareness marketing and push more for people-driven ones.

The idea brought in athletes, musicians, actors, and entertainers, including The Weeknd, Amy Schumer, Diddy, The Chainsmokers, Gary Vaynerchuk, Josh Richards, Griffin Johnson, Marshmello, Mark Cuban, Moe Shalizi, and Snoop Dogg.

Instagram has been working on helping its creators. In October, the social media platform launched a tool to help creators get monetized.

Instagram also allowed creators to monetize their content through IGTV.

Pearpop Funding

In April, Pearpop announced that it has a funding of $16 million for expansion. The funding was divided between a $6 million seed funding round co-led by Slow Ventures and Sound Ventures, owned by Ashton Kutcher and Guy Oseary.

An additional investment of $10 was led by Alexis Ohanian’s Seven Seven Six. Bessemer also participated, according to KPVI.

Since the platform’s last funding announcement, the company has added other investors, including Lil Nas X, Noah Schnapp, Swae Lee, Dre London, Gabrielle Union, King Bach, YG, Jake Paul, Paris Hilton, and James Corden.

Pearpop has been compared to Cameo since it was launched. Cameo is a popular app that allows users to pay celebrities to create videos with shout-outs and dedications.

Mason said that Pearpop and Cameo couldn’t be compared. Cameo offers personalized video messages that are used for gifting, and this is not what Pearpop does.

Mason said that Pearpop is a social media tool that can help both brands and creators reach their goals.

The CEO also stated that Pearpop would continue to expand to other platforms and focus on refining its current features, like “Challenges,” which allows artists to offer rewards to their creators when they reach a certain number of followers while promoting their work. He also said that the real goal for Pearpop is to see everyone as a social media creator.

Pearpop is not only for those with thousands of followers, but it is also for those who are starting their journey and are looking for a way to monetize it.

Feature Image Credit: (Photo : Unsplash/ Christian Wiediger) Instagram app

By Sophie Webster

Sourced from TECH TIMES

 

By

One of the ways Instagram content creators make money through the app is by looking for sponsors who might pay them for their posts. But how do these creators find sponsors to begin with? There may be an easier way.

It turns out that’s what Instagram thinks too. The company has announced that they are working on tools that will make it easier for creators to be matched with brands who might be willing to sponsor them. These tools will let creators express an interest in the brands that they might be interested in working with, while brands can also use the tool to find creators who they think will match their needs.

Instagram is also working on a separate inbox for sponsors, which means that it will be easier for creators to identify messages sent to them from a potential sponsor instead of getting lost in their messages. These tools are still in the early stages of development and only a handful of brands and creators are taking part in a test, but we can likely expect that these tools will eventually expand to cover more brands and creators in the very near future. This will make things easier for creators.

Source Ubergizmo

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Sourced from Geeky Gadgets

By Zarnaz Arlia

Instagram recently rolled out a new advertising opportunity: It launched ads in Instagram Shop. The new ad placement is the most recent addition in a long line of e-commerce capabilities introduced by the app and a prime example of how Instagram is leaning heavily into social commerce.

These moves come as no surprise when you consider the massive growth currently happening across the social commerce landscape. Earlier this year, eMarketer reported that U.S. retail social commerce sales will reach more than $36 billion this year, and Instagram and Pinterest are at the top of the list of social media networks delivering the “most relevant” social commerce experiences. Instagram has been undergoing an evolution by transitioning from its roots as a photo-sharing app to focus on creators, videos, messaging and, perhaps most of all, shopping.

The good news for brands: Instagram’s users seem to be more than happy to go along with these changes. According to Instagram’s data (via HubSpot), 90% of its users follow at least one business. A Facebook-commissioned survey of 21,000 people (via Social Media Today) revealed that two in three people on Instagram said the app allows interaction with brands.

For brands aiming to maximize their e-commerce efforts, Instagram could be key to building a social commerce strategy. The app has multiple features to help brands better connect with their audiences, expand their reach and increase online sales revenue. Here are three social commerce features Instagram has released recently and how to leverage them.

Instagram Shop Ads

After launching Instagram Shop in 2020, an area of the social media app that’s 100% focused on the shopping experience, Instagram has now rolled out ad placements in the Shop tab, which, according to Instagram’s website, makes it easier for users to “discover and shop from brands when they’re already in the mood to browse.”

Like other products, Instagram Shop ads are displayed as tiles on the Instagram Shop home page. A Shop ad tile links to the product details page, where shoppers can learn more about the specific item and browse other products from the brand. Some ways brands can leverage Shop ads include:

• Using look-alike audiences: The audience that engages with your Shop ads likely has a high intent to purchase. You can leverage their data by creating look-alike audiences based on their characteristics to use in your marketing campaigns.

• Learning from insights: Test different types of Shop ads for the same product to learn more about your audience’s preferences and inform future content creation.

• Retargeting shoppers: Create custom audiences in order to retarget customers who have purchased from your shops in the past.

Instagram Reels Ads

In August 2020, Instagram introduced Instagram Reels, which are 60-second video clips that come with a variety of features that allow anyone on Instagram to be a creator. Less than a year after releasing the video feature, Instagram Reels ads were made available in June 2021. They give brands the opportunity to share full-screen video ads that are up to 30 seconds long.

As with Instagram Reels content that users post, people can comment on, like, view and share Reels ads. To maximize engagement and win more conversions, brands should first familiarize themselves with the format: I’ve found that the key is to create Reels that blend seamlessly with native content. Reels ads tend to be more effective when they include audio, like a trending audio clip or audio your brand has produced, along with captions that grab users’ attention as quickly as possible.

Because of their reach — users can find Reels via Instagram’s Explore tab and the Reels feed, as well as within their own feed — Reels ads can be an effective way for advertisers to connect with new audiences. You can also use Instagram’s analytics data to view the number of plays, accounts reached, likes, comments, saves and shares to monitor your performance.

Checkout On Instagram

Instagram checkout, an in-app purchasing feature that allows users to buy a product without ever leaving the app, has been around for years but was initially only available to a select group of brands when it first launched. Last year, Instagram opened access to its checkout feature to all U.S. business and creator accounts that had an Instagram Shop.

As Instagram explains on its website, businesses can use the checkout feature to reduce the friction in the path to purchase, as well as take advantage of other shopping tools: “With checkout on Instagram, businesses can truly leverage the full ecosystem of Instagram Shopping features to build experiences that drive awareness and transactions all in one place.”

But challenges still remain for B2C brands that want to optimize their Instagram advertising efforts within their social commerce initiatives. Emplifi’s recent “State of social media and CX: Q2 2021” report found that ad spend on Facebook and Instagram jumped nearly 50% year-over-year during the second quarter of this year. With so many B2C brands vying for consumer attention on Instagram, one of the primary challenges for brands entering the social commerce market is getting in front of the right audiences at the right time with relevant content that inspires consumers to make a purchase.

Fortunately, because social commerce is still a relatively new and growing tactic, there are many opportunities for marketers to make an impact. Brands should look for ways to use Instagram’s new features to stand out on the platform. For example, they can try taking more creative risks with their advertising content in Reels ads, while they can tailor Shop ads toward the very users shopping for products they offer.

Feature Image Credit: getty

By Zarnaz Arlia

Zarnaz Arlia is the CMO of Emplifi, a leading customer experience platform. Read Zarnaz Arlia’s full executive profile here.

Sourced from Forbes