PLS

Tuesday, 16 February 2016

How Not To Ruin Instagram (Now that the Ad Floodgates Are Open)

Instagram Handley
“Deciding what not to do is as important as deciding what to do.” —Steve Jobs
The news broke last week that Instagram will expand its advertising service to all marketers, not just a chosen few (Disney, The Gap, Ben & Jerry’s) it’s been working with since first rolling out ads in the fall of 2013. That means the popular photo-sharing app is opening up to zillions of advertisers, who’ll be flocking there to take advantage of more ad styles and sophisticated targeting tools developed by Instagram’s Facebook sugar daddy.
The marketer in me is psyched: The in-app purchasing features on Instagram’s new ad format is great news for companies that have struggled to convert followers into buyers, or have developed convoluted, inefficient workarounds.
The Insta-Fan (InstagrAnn?) in me is less excited: Well, damn. Here comes everybody. Here comes the push. Here come the product-centric ads and the sponsored posts and the companies I don’t follow offering stuff I don’t care about. Here comes the clutter.
I ask this with love in my heart: But do marketers have to ruin everything?

The Biggest Budget Doesn’t Win

The only way to make your game strong on Instagram (and any other social platform, for that matter) is to not regard Instagram (or any other social platform, for that matter) as a place where the one with the biggest budget wins.
In other words: the most successful companies advertising on Instagram won’t be the ones with the most money to spend.
They’ll be the ones that understand the inherent strengths of the platform, and use it as a place to tell stories that make people feel something.
Companies and their agencies are scrambling now to design ads that blend as seamlessly as possible with photo feeds you and I actually follow because we want to. They are trying to create ads that don’t disrupt the Instagram experience.
So the biggest question for brands even now, in this next era of social, still remains: How do I produce the kind of visual content that inspires? Whether or not you’re paying to get your post seen.

Good content is table stakes.

So, what’s good content and community look like on Instagram?
Here are five of my favorite Instagram accounts of all sizes (listed from smallest to biggest) that nail it, and what you can steal from them.

1. Small Chalk (2,800 followers)

Ashlee Arceneaux Jones is a New Orleans-based illustrator who creates exquisitely stylized, hand-lettered designs for brands, business, publications, and events via her company, Small Chalk.
On Instagram, Ashlee could just share her designs—because they’re amazing. But I love the way Ashlee gives a little bit of the backstory on any image she creates. She lets you inside her world a little more than just a picture would, creating a richer experience for her followers. For example, here’s the full description on the image above:
“Working outside in the quarter is always a juggling act—keeping one eye on your work and the other on your bags and things below the ladder. Checking every 5 minutes to make sure your car doesn’t have a boot on it, trying to be polite to every stranger that walks by with the classic, ‘you spelled that wrong’ joke, general heckling, and the occasional but reliable request from a stranger for your contact information, because they want to hire you to make them a logo. ‘It’s gonna go on the side of my truck, so maybe it can look like the whole thing is moving all the time.’ #great #havingfunoutside”
Idea you can steal: Go beyond the obvious. Instagram is a visual channel, of course. But the description is to the photo as hot fudge and whipped is to your Pinkberry. Ashlee isn’t unlike a beat reporter from a city newspaper, giving you a feel for the neighborhood she’s working in and what it’s like to work there. So, don’t just share WHAT the image is. Share the WHY or the HOW or the WHERE to bring it home—and relay your fuller, richer story. Is what Ashlee sharing a story… or is she marketing? Yep. Who else does this well: The TSA, JClarkWalker the barber, the New York Public Library.

2. Crema (10K followers)

A few weeks ago I was in Memphis, Tennessee, where I visited a coffee place called Tamp & Tap. I went there because my friend Blaine Loyd of archer>malmo told me it was the best coffee in Memphis. He was right; the coffee was pretty perfect. But so was the vibe of the place: All raw wood edges and stonework and recycled materials… and a vibe that gave me the itch to Instagram. I checked out Tamp & Tap’s Instagram account because this is gonna be good! But nope. I was underwhelmed. It’s probably annoying to Memphis when I say that a Nashville coffee shop kicks its Insta-ass. But Nashville’s Crema just does. “Coffee is our one thing,” says Crema on its Instagram feed. (And not (more typically): “Official account of Crema, located….” Or “Founded in 20xx, with shops in…”). Coffee is their one thing. And then they live it. Like this:
“What happens when it’s National Donut Day but you sell out of @utterly_nash donuts and it’s 9 million degrees outside and it’s Friday and you’re tryna celebrate? COFFEE SODA. That’s what happens.”
Idea you can steal: Your product is fantastic. Your brand is top-shelf. Your store makes me want to Instagram the stuffing out of it.
So: Make sure you nail brand voice, too. (This isn’t a knock on Tamp & Tap, by the way. But lack of brand voice is an issue I see all across the social Web.)
What’s brand voice?
It’s not just what you say—but how you sound when you say it.
Crema might’ve said, above, “It’s hot outside, but we’re inside celebrating National Donut Day with coffee soda.” It says essentially the same thing as the post above, right? But that sentence could’ve been posted on a Dunkin Donuts or Starbucks or insert any other coffee shop here feed.
Instead, Crema’s voice tells you who they are and what they’re like to deal with. If you covered up Crema’s logo and just read the description, you’d still know it was Crema speaking.
Who else does this well: Oreo has moments of brilliance with voice, even if its Instagram feed feels uneven to me.
But I do like its occasional clever use of puns. “Don’t forget the suns-crème,” is the description on this photo, introducing their newish blond Oreos. Nice.

3. Adam Padilla (18K followers)

Adam, a co-founder and the creative visionary of Brandfire, posts a sketch on Instagram daily, usually accompanied by a motivational quote. But what’s also cool is that he creates the sketch real-time on Periscope, and sometimes captures and posts a Hyperlapsed version of the Periscoped sketch on Instagram as well. (Are you still with me?) Sometimes, he gives an art lesson. Other times, he comments on news events.
He’s a good artist creating art using social tools in interesting ways. But more than that, Adam is the poster child for using social media to two things:
1) Focus what you say, and
2) build audience across channels, by engaging directly with almost everyone who comments on his posts. He uses their feedback to adjust what he creates, and how he creates it.
In an interview with MSN, Padilla describes his approach to social media: “[I]f you’re pretty regularly posting…you are a media outlet yourself. You have to be pretty cognizant of what people like, they’re the rating system. @them back, let them know that you appreciate their comment…. [I]t means a lot.”
Idea you can steal: Who says Instagram is just a photo-sharing app? How might you connect social platforms in new and interesting ways, to build and serve an audience?
The opportunity of social channels is the ability to connect directly with those you want to reach. I don’t know why a directive like “respond to your followers” still needs to be a takeaway, here in 2015. I get that scale is hard. But there are ways to solve that problem.
Who else does this well: PrepObsessed, across Facebook and Instagram.

4. Live From Snack Time! (39.4K followers)

Reporting live from kindergarten in NYC, Live from Snack Time follows a simple formula: Collect funny, wise, or memorable things kids say via a Google doc. Curate the best ones. Create image. Post daily.
Like this:
Idea you can steal: So much here to steal… where to start?
1) the smart but simple use of user-generated content;
2) the clear and concise quotes;
3) the bright-color branding that matches the “snack time” preschool ethos.
But probably what I love the most is 4) the way Live from Snack Time takes something many of us see or hear every day and turns it into community.
What’s ordinary to you that might be extraordinary to others? What do see or come across every day that is, when seen through another lens, content worth sharing?
Who else does this well: Cheese Curls of Instagram (44k followers). It’s exactly what it sounds like—cheese curls—posed (but not Photoshopped) for Instagram. This account turns the ordinary Cheeto into social commentary: riffing on things erudite, emotional, or (sometimes) off-color. Like this:

5. ToastMeetsWorld (255K followers)

Toast is a Cavalier King Charles spaniel rescued from a Puppy Mill in North Carolina in 2011. She’s now a model and activist in NYC. Which sounds hilarious. But for real. “My mouth used to smell like what I imagine actual hell smells like until all my rotten teeth were removed,” her site reads. “Now I am toothless and I look like a cute hobo.”
There are lots of pet accounts on Instagram, but what I love about Toast is that she built a following on her looks and wits and funny captions. Now, she uses her celebrity to raise awareness of the horror of puppy mills and to promote an Adopt Don’t Shop philosophy.
Her cause doesn’t just feel bolted on—it’s baked right in to who she is and what she promotes.
I also love the way that her feed could feel bleak and hopeless and sad. But it doesn’t: It’s fun and snarky; and while the message is sometimes dark, it feels more like a rallying cry than a tacked-on, do-good message.
It redefines social responsibility with a new approach. In that way, Toast’s message reminds me of the messaging around that wonderful jerk of a Chihuahua, Eddie the Terrible, by the Humane Society Silicon Valley.

Also, her sister Muppet’s feed consist of her griping about Toast’s celebrity and generally mocking her in a Suri’s Burn Book kind of way. Which is pretty awesome, too.
Idea you can steal: We see a lot of spokes-creatures: spokesdogs, spokescats, spokesllamas. But very few have a unique voice and persona that covers the full range of the human condition, as do Toast’s and Muppet’s.
Who else does this well: I don’t know of others who do this well. Do you? Let me know.http://www.annhandley.com/2015/06/10/instagram-game-strong/

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