Top tips for content success:
- Know your audience
- Know what they like
- Know what shared interests they have with each other
- Know how they consume content
- Fulfill your election promise
- User-generated stuff
- No-one cares about your internal successes
- Personalisation of content, rspb member’s area gives them bespoke videos and tips
- Revival of podcasts
- Make your content actionable
- Measure loyalty in a way that works for your campaign
- One size doesn’t fit all
- Audience insights, including surveys
- Also contact people who are doing what you do and learn from them
- Lovely video from Future Leaders on recruiting heads to schools
Immersive content, RNLI:
- Use immersive content to bring what they do to a wider audience
- Have a strategic set of content principles
- Use hard hitting content to teach young men what happens when you’re drowning, they’re statistically most likely to get into trouble in water
- They have a challenge that everyone wants to get on the boats, they’re trialling Google Cardboard to give people a simulated experience
- Developed an app to give people a virtual tour
- They’re also creating their own versions for schools
- Flikr have just started doing 360 photos
- They use GoPro for 360 videos
- They also get their supporters to help, a lot of video skill there
- Check out Cancer Research 360 lab tool
Social media platforms:
- Seen a movement to smaller platforms
- Use bigger channels for paid reach
- Don’t start anything you can’t commit to
- Is it relevant for your brand, what do you want it for, how will you measure success
- Instagram:
- 40% of Instagram audience are under 24
- Quality over quantity
- High dwell time, high engagement
- Dogs Trust an example of good practice
- National Trust also great, embrace user-generated stuff
- Look at the friends of your followers and be like them
- Is your brand flexible enough to communicate variety
- LinkedIn:
- Content lasts longer
- Pulse is a useful way to connect with people working on similar things
- YouTube:
- Most visits in the world compared to all other social channels
- Video content has a great cpc rate
- Cancer Research example of great video content
- They create useful hygiene content “how does breast cancer develop” etc
- Look at YouTube playbook for how to produce great content
- Learn from successful vloggers
- Thumbnails matter
- Pinterest:
- “If you don’t work with women, don’t be on Pinterest”
- Life stage platform – birthdays, weddings, parties, etc
- Oxfam a great example, help users live their mission “Love your leftovers” etc
- Vine:
- Jokes and pranks = bulk of content, but also great for education, how to content, etc
- Peach:
- Great for gifs and getting user feedback
- Not all platforms have to be massive, quality over quantity
- Sue Ryder did a nice “send a tweet to someone who’s been there for you” curation idea, shared all the texts in a nice video and then did a “can you send one more text” fundraising cta on the back of the day’s buzz
- Amplification
- Keep an eye on Reddit, find things on their way up
- “Stock up” free stock image tool
- “Manage flitter” bulk unfollow tool
Testing:
- “Be careful with sentiment analysis, we’re painfully sarcastic in the UK”
- Social capital – what would someone sharing this content say about them to their friends
- Don’t cut corners, test each change individually
- Readability testing e.g. readability-score.com
- serplab – informs on ranking position per term
- usertesting.com – expensive subscription but you can pay per test. You set tasks and it records users completing them
- They also use survey monkey for user testing
- Google consumer surveys – very cheap! Ask one question at a time so you don’t impact ux too negatively
- Crazyegg – heat mapping and scroll testing
- Evidence is vital for internal culture change
- WhatTestWon – shares results of tests other brands have done
User-generated content:
- Mencap #hearmyvoice
- Had a very stat based campaign that wasn’t cutting through
- They created a microsite for people to share their stories, connected to engaging networks so people could email their MP from the site
- Created a sub brand for it, giving it its own identity
- Pulled out snippets for social media images
- Really visual campaign, great for Instagram
- Also gained content from friends and families too, widened the experiences they could share
- Serialised the key issues “health month” “transport month” “education month” They tied these to calendar hooks e.g. back to school
- Made sure to capture offline content and enabling community involvement for those who weren’t digitally active
- Site allowed MPs to pledge their support for the campaign
- This boosted the ugc coming in, felt it was having an impact
- Had an interactive map of where conversations were happening
Safeguarding and consent, Children’s Society:
- They have a strong church connection, didn’t know that!
- Parents are happy for their kids to be photographed if they believe in the cause
- They drew up a consent policy for photo sharing featuring people’s children
Campaign success with storytelling, Women for Refugee Women:
- #setherfree campaign
- Crowd sourced their whole campaign with focus groups of refugee women on what they thought were the biggest issues
- Shared stories about those women
- Used calendar hooks e.g. international women’s day
- Created an online gallery of “selfie with board” photos
- Branded campaign “99 women” about those detained whilst pregnant
- Facilitated the campaign presentation to Teresa May
- Celebrity and PR support
- Maintain close relationships with the 99 women for future campaign consultation
The importance of tone of voice, WaterAid:
- They create once, publish everywhere
- Single issue means they can be really creative
- Objective, strategy, tactics before they do anything
- Audience motivation, find out what’s stopped them taking action before
- Focus on the people you know you can influence to take action and build from there
- They “tribe” their audiences (Guardian readers, X factor viewers, etc) and create mood boards reflecting those people’s interests
- They reference back to the boards when creating content
- Helps them be more objective “I don’t like it, but this tribe will”
- Do placement stuff in the places those people like to be
- #ifmenhadperiods
- Thought about how they could challenge taboos around periods and toilets, started internally e.g. women in the office putting tampons up their sleeves
- Gave them a relatable news hook
- They didn’t want to alienate men so were careful with messaging
- Manpons film = hilarious, funny for both gendersCreate contrasts between developing and developed world situations, but also highlighted the shared situations e.g. meeting your baby for the first time
- Compared maternity bags from London to Tanzania
- Took people from call the midwife out to Tanzania – linked the programme that section of their audience liked to the cause in a really immersive way
- Created interactive contrast content between the two countries on their site – the user switches between two simultaneously playing videos of women in each country having a baby
- Raised £5m
- 30m FB reach