7 Sharp Ways To Boost Your Visual Content With Twitter’s Vine App

This is a guest post from Jasmine Henry of Inbound Marketing Agents.

How to Use Vine App for Social Media MarketingIt was only matter of time before Twitter met users’ hunger for visual social media content.

Following a year when Instagram grew dramatically (subsequently being acquired by Facebook for $1 billion) and Pinterest grew to attract 1,090 visitors a minute, Twitter’s January 24th launch of the Vine app hasn’t been a disappointment.

In fact, Vine has quickly become one of the hottest topics in social media marketing, leaving brands and consumers buzzing about ways to maximize the social experience using Vine’s six-second video clips.

Visual Content is White Hot

There’s an awful lot of evidence that you should include visual content in your social media strategy.

“Sometimes a picture says a thousand words and video says 50,000 words,” says Drew Smith, Director of Online Marketing at Attivio.

Research indicates that visuals are processed 60,000 times faster by the human brain than text.  85% of US online consumers view video content regularly. ”

There’s even a lot of evidence in support of the super brief, six-second format of Vine: Marketing blogger Jeff Bullas is a firm believer that the average attention span is much shorter than it was even a few years ago.

When YouTube first became popular, the most viewed videos were an average of 2–3 minutes long.

Now? Popular content is significantly shorter, sometimes no more than 15 seconds long.

Video abandonment tends to soar to 20% after 10 seconds. By all expert accounts, Vine is perfectly engineered for the bite-sized appetite of the modern consumer.

With all that said, here are seven easy, fun ways you can make those six seconds count!

1. Showcase Your People and Processes

A 15-minute video of your CEO talking?

That might get a little boring. A much shorter clip that showcases the people, animals, and events that make your team tick? That’s actually pretty fun and awesome.

While we don’t recommend that you do it daily or even often, Vine is the perfect format to turn the spotlight on the people behind your product.

It’s an outstanding way to give a brief glimpse into your brand’s personality.

2. How-To Tutorials

Can you showcase how to use your products in six seconds? We bet you can. In fact, Jeremy Cabalona of Mashable used the format to demonstrate how to make a microwaved brownie in a mug:

 

3. Mystery Marketing

Brands who give their fans an opportunity to become detectives can win promoters for life.

Mystery marketing is an effective way to build hype. You can’t reveal too much in six seconds, but sometimes giving just a hint can drive up your engagement.

Even former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney has gotten involved, inviting his Twitter followers to guess a song based on six-second clips in his feed.

4. Spotlight User-Generated Content

Invite your followers to share their Vine clips of your product or venue.  The Four Seasons Hotel chain was one of the first to receive customer-generated content via Vine, which it shared. Free visual content for the win!

5. Strut Your Stuff

It’s definitely possible to be too pushy on social media, but it’s a lot harder be terribly obnoxious with the Vine format (at least for now).

Use the mini-clips to showcase your brand’s latest development, whether it’s a new product, a happy customer, or an all-new website design!

Blogger Chris Brogan highlights the fact that Vine is the perfect format for giving your prospects a 3-D view of your product before they make the purchase.

6. Amplify One-on-One Engagement

Your fans love it when you engage with them.

Is there any way to make your fans feel extra warm and fuzzy than with a customized, six-second video?  Check out this fantastic response to a Twitter follower by Red Vines, an early adopter of Vine:

7. Embed Vine in Your Blog Content

See what I’ve been doing throughout this content?

Vine doesn’t need to be limited to your Twitter feed. In fact, you can and should embed the videos in your blog content.

Marketing Sherpa research has found that blog content with video averages 100% longer views than simple text.

Plus, video content is three times more likely to attract inbound links than other types of blog content.

Share Your Ideas and Experiences

How have you been using Vine so far?  Have you seen any really unique uses from other brands?  Leave your thoughts in the comments!

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About the Author: Jasmine Henry is a writer at Inbound Marketing Agents, where she blogs about social media, content marketing, and SEO. Connect with Jasmine on Twitter and check out her free eBook, The Twitter for Business Handbook.

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This post was written by a guest contributor. The author's information is in the post just above if you would like to connect with them. If you'd like to become a guest contributor at My Social Game Plan, please see our Guest Posting page.

Comments

  1. Jasmine, love the idea of embedding. We aren’t using Vine right now. Trying to get a handle on getting the content we already have, noticed. But it looks easy enough. Do you think the picture quality of vids on it will matter from a viewer’s perspective (iphone vs pro), or is 6 seconds too short to care?

  2. Jasmine Henry says:

    Ryan, that’s an interesting question! I just checked with our resident designer/developer to get his take – he said that he felt Vine videos are more in the realm of gifs than video, which web users essentially expect to be pixelated and low-quality. What do you think?

    • I’m thinking iT might depend on the brand image. Laid back brands might be able to make do. Luxury brands might need to focus on quality. I’m sure we’ll see both ends of the spectrum

  3. Haven’t explored Vine at all yet, really need to push this to the top of my to-do list!

  4. still trying to take a grasp on how to use vine, currently i see this not as a video but a dot gif, i think i need to practice more..

    • The GIF point has definitely been a common comparison. I think it’s a fair comparison. From my perspective, it’s all about telling a story in those six seconds — nobody cares about a six second picture…they can get that anywhere.

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