A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Sep 2, 2012

Content Is No Longer King? The Rise of Visual Social Media

Content was supposed to be king.

But then a funny thing happened on the way to our love affair with literacy. Or, more accurately, our fling.

Actually, two funny things happened: Steve Jobs reminded us that design and visual presentation can sell; while mobile phones changed the way we look at the world.

Smaller screens, on which we have begun to view everything, made it harder to read both the fine print as well as the large. How things looked, how they grabbed our attention and communicated their essential being, became more important than what was said about them. And in our ADHD world, Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and even Instagram reminded us that the unique essence of any message could be condensed with a bit of effort, a camera and a smattering of creativity.

Will it last? Whatever does? It's here now and businesses have to respond. Marketing and communications companies - and their clients - have begun to register that simply making an add small enough to fit on the screen of an Android or iPhone does not make it effectively mobile. In fact, it may be the opposite of what is required.

Fortunately, we homo sapiens have gotten pretty good over the centuries at figuring out how to communicate representative messages using illustrations rather than vocabulary. The combination works even better, if that can be managed, but we've had a lot of practice what with war, religion, family, emotion, work and entertainment to stimulate demand. Iconography R Us.

Businesses that adapt will probably flourish. Those that remain wedded to the beauty of their own verbosity may be in for an unpleasant surprise. JL

Ekaterina Walter reports in Fast Company:
Social media sites like Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest have ushered in visual marketing as the breakout trend for 2012. When it comes to their products, businesses are learning to show, not tell, and visual content sites are fueling our desire for beautiful photography and sensational design.

Two years ago, marketers were spreading the maxim that "content is king," but now, it seems, "a picture really is worth a thousand words."
Blogs were one of the earliest forms of social networking where people were writing 1,000 words," says Dr. William J. Ward, Social Media professor at Syracuse University. "When we moved to status updates on Facebook, our posts became shorter. Then micro-blogs like Twitter came along and shortened our updates to 140 characters. Now we are even skipping words altogether and moving towards more visual communication with social-sharing sites like Pinterest."

This trend toward the visual is also influenced by the shifting habits of technology users. As more people engage with social media via smartphones, they're discovering that taking a picture "on the go" using a high-resolution phone is much less tedious than typing out a status update on a two-inch keyboard.

A 2012 study by ROI Research found that when users engage with friends on social media sites, it's the pictures they took that are enjoyed the most. Forty-four percent of respondents are more likely to engage with brands if they post pictures than any other media. Pictures have become one of our default modes of sorting and understanding the vast amounts of information we're exposed to every day.

Detavio Samuals is the EVP and Director of Client Services at GlobalHue, one of the nation's top market advertising agencies. He explains that pictures are a bit like movie trailers for written content--they provide a snippet of what an article, brand, site or other piece of content is about, so that you can quickly decide if it's what you wanted or not.

"Pictures have also become a short form way of communicating lots of information quickly and succinctly," says Samuals. "The need for publishers to get to the point quicker than ever came about as humans became more pressed for time and content became more infinite. For publishers, it was evolve or risk losing their audience, and the only thing shorter than a tweet or post is a picture."

So what does all this visual stimulation mean for brands?

Fashion designer Kahri-Anne Kerr uses visual social media sites like Pinterest and Facebook to market her Kahri collection. In the fashion world, visual fantasy sells product, as customers need to see the cut of a garment on a model and feel as though they could make that item work in their own wardrobe. "When I post pictures on Facebook, they get the most feedback of all my posts," says Kahri. Visual media is a great way to share more about what inspires the designs, as well as linking to your online store and straight product shots."

"I am just getting into Instagram, which I use to give a personal look at the person behind the label by taking shots around my studio and in my everyday life."

Designer paper/analog brand Moleskine has harnessed the power of visual media to create one of the world's most active, prolific, and creative online communities. Their visual content strategy focuses on user-generated content: They create large-scale projects that users participate in by posting their own images and videos.

A popular campaign called What's In Your Bag? had users update pictures of the contents of their bags into a Facebook album. The project generated thousands of likes and comments as readers looked at the contents of other bags (which included Moleskine notebooks, naturally), and shared photos with their friends.

Inspiring fans to create and spread images, customize their notebooks, organize online competitions, and otherwise engage with the brand on a creative level has set Moleskine apart in its highly specialized market.

Search engines now rank content based on social conversations and sharing, not just websites alone. Brands can use visual content on their social media to increase engagement and inspire sharing and viral marketing. The rise of platforms like Pinterest and Instagram, and Facebook's multimillion-dollar acquisition of the latter, shows how visual content is becoming an increasingly important force for communication online.

Brands that can rock visual media will find themselves market leaders

3 comments:

Steven Spenser said...

You do realize that fotos and graphics *are* content also, don't you? Which means that content--in *all* its forms--is still "king."

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