Day three at Social Media Week was all content, content, content from Vice's discussions on long form video to JWT stressing our need to change as images take over the web.
The Social@Ogilvy team pulled together the best five ideas that came out of yesterday's sessions. Let us know what you took away from the penultimate day at Social Media Week New York.
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GREAT CONTENT WILL COME FROM ANYWHERE
We need to be more creative with multimedia in an age of social and
mobile. At one time, text was the main tool of reporting news. But with
more people creating rich media content, mainstream reporting has
discovered new ways to use multi-media.
Anything that doesn’t entertain, engage and inform will not break
through the noise. Ironically enough, the most accessed and engaged
content on the NYTimes.com website isn’t even a feature or news story.
It was a quiz that identified your regional dialect though a clever quiz...
written by an intern!
This is proof that great content can come from anywhere, not just
professional sources.
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THINGS DESIGNED TO BE SHARED WILL HAVE
HIGHER VALUE
Trust is the most profound part of this collaborative economy. In a
sharing economy, buyers and the sellers are peers, and entrepreneurs are
designing things that are more easily shared because we want them to go
through many hands. Thus, things designed to be shared will have higher
value. For example, people drive 80% less when they use Zipcar than if
they owned their own vehicle—and 40% of users have never owned one,
which has led to our streets being filled with 40,000 fewer cars.
As Robin Chase, founder of Zipcar and Buzzcar noted: “You have to be
building community in everything you’re doing.”
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LONGFORM VIDEO WORKS…IF YOU DO IT RIGHT
The whole notion that people don’t want to watch long stuff on the internet
is not true. People are watching longer videos than ever before and not just
the 2 minute plug & play. Of course this only works if they are packaged
effectively. It’s more about how you package and showcase a story than
having a well-known celebrity in your video.
Where do publishers like Vice and Motherboard get their stories for videos?
By reading everything and being early to report. It’s about working with what
you’ve got. If you have a good story, go out and make it.
“When we look for a great character, we look for someone is going to be open
and has a great personality,” said Motherboard’s editor-in-chief, Derek Mead.
A cleverly staged moment in a long form piece, can result in a genuine
emotional reaction from your viewers but if the story drags on, it won’t work
no matter the length of the video. Always leave them wanting more.
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IMAGES ARE SUPPLANTING WORDS
Imagery is supplanting text and changing the way we process the world.
Reading is no longer fundamental. People process images 60,000x faster
than text-- this has enormous implications for our communication.
The web contains 40% images and social has 70%. The popularity of
image-sharing over social media has a great deal to do with the crunch
for time. 60% of social users create and share images on their social
channels and the balance of curators vs. creators is shifting.
Our short visual vocabulary is spurring new creativity - we need to
create something compelling in a glance. What are we losing as we
move toward visual? Context. Images can be taken out of context. The
entire web has been set up to look for words...what happens if the text
starts to disappear? The rise of rich content demands smart tagging and
automated categorization solutions for indexing.
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CONTENT LASTS LONGER ON PINTEREST
Each day there is 60+ million users, 100s million pins, 1B+ connections
on Pinterest. It’s a very aspirational platform and allows you to show
who you want to be. On the other hand, Twitter is about what you are
doing and Facebook is about who you are.
It makes sense that the half life of a tweet is 5-25 mins, the half life of
a Facebook post is 80 mins, and the half life of Pinterest content is >1
week. This means you MUST think about quality rather than quantity
when you pin, and determine what the best content is around the
topic that you can curate? It’s especially important as pins are more
than images. Rich pins provide context, commercial foundation, and
addresses stale links.