Bullhorn Media https://bullhornmedia.tv/ Data-Driven PPC Advertising Mon, 18 Nov 2019 21:29:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 Advanced Audience Research for Facebook Ads https://bullhornmedia.tv/facebook-unique-audiences/ Sun, 06 Oct 2019 15:55:41 +0000 http://bullhornmedia.tv/?p=4237 It’s easy to get stuck in a rut when it comes to audience targeting on Facebook once you get past all the “obvious” interest and demographic settings.  In this video,...

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It’s easy to get stuck in a rut when it comes to audience targeting on Facebook once you get past all the “obvious” interest and demographic settings. 

In this video, I outline 4 unique audience research methods you can use to more efficiently target on Facebook Ads.

Hey everybody. Chris Raines here with Bullhorn media with some more digital advertising talk. Uh, today I want to talk about Facebook ads targeting. Now Facebook has a huge list of available targets that you can do. If you go to the ad set level on Facebook and just type in anything, you’re bound to find a lot of things underneath that are targetable. Uh, there’s lots of categories, uh, but sometimes you can get stuck, you know, once you get past the usual sort of your, your own category or your own product or your own target market, just putting in very obvious keywords there, you might get stuck and figure out how in figuring out how to find new audiences. And, uh, you know, I’m a big fan of going, having lots of different audience pockets to go after, even if you don’t launch with all of them all at once.

 

It gives you a fallback if your main audiences falter or regress over time. So I want to go over for audience research methods that I’ve discovered and used in the past. And that hopefully can be helpful for you when you’re going out there and trying to figure out how to dial in your targeting on Facebook. So the first one I want to cover is books, celebrities, movies, et cetera, related to your niche. So I’m going to go here the screen and kind of tell, tell you what I’m talking about here. But okay, so here we are. And this is just a simple Google search for books about leadership. So maybe you’ve got a product or service that’s geared towards a leadership or training people on leadership. So you can target leadership as an interest. That’s fine. Uh, but there’s all kinds of other ways you can go at it.

 

And one of them is books about leadership. So here you go. You’ve probably noticed a lot of these books. Here’s good to great. Um, who’s that? Jim Collins. You’ve got the Sheryl Sandberg’s book here. Lean in, you’ve got Drive by Daniel pink. All these popular, your seven habits, Stephen Covey. You know, and so, uh, what I would recommend is going out there, if you’re doing someth ing on this niche and just typing in these authors and maybe even these book titles, maybe those are targetable as well. So that’s one way you can, and you can do the same for, you know, let’s go, uh, speakers. Um, let’s go like leadership speakers. See what that gives us. Boom. So like Google makes it easy for you, right? So you’ve got all these people, I would just go to all of these and, and not all of them will be targetable, right?

 

But some of them will be. So these are people that are domain experts in on leadership and you could replicate this for any, uh, any niche that you have. So, uh, that’s, uh, method number one of trying to find influencers that write books and do or do seminars. You can do the same thing for seminars, conferences, et cetera. You get the picture, um, ways to find little pockets of interest that you might, that might not be immediately that, but that Google will let you know about. Okay. Method number two is life events. So, depending on what you sell, and this might, this is not useful for every single you know, business category, but it is for some and it’s worth exploring if it, if it’s relevant to you. So here’s what I mean by that. Uh, here, here we are in the Facebook ads interface and if you twirl down here to detailed targeting, you can see life events.

 

So let’s just scroll down here and see what’s going on here. Okay, you’ve got anniversary, okay, cool. Anniversary within 30 days. So if you’re in jewelry or if you’re in gifts, you might target that for someone that’s super relevant. If you’re targeting someone to, if you’re, if you’ve got a product that’s a good gift item for an anniversary. Cool. Uh, let’s see what else we have here. We have away from family away from hometown. So this is pretty interesting. And so what if you’re in the tourism industry and you want to target people that are in your area but are away from hometown. So if you live in a, uh, an area that has high tourism, uh, you might want to target those people that Facebook knows are away from their home town or they’re in their city. So they’re there. If you’re in a tourism city, they’re likely there to do touristy things and spend money.

 

So, you know, uh, that’s something to consider. Let’s see what else we have here. Let’s just do one more here just for, just for giggles. Here’s a birthday, upcoming birthday. Okay, cool. Uh, so what if you’re a restaurant and you’re running a promotion that offers a free, a medium sized pizza on your birthday. Okay. So you could target that and make that an ongoing promotion, right? And offer, offer someone a free pizza if they come in on their birthday and show their ID. Right? So that’s pretty cool. It could be like an evergreen campaign cause your ad sets always refreshing. People are rolling off, uh, when their birthday is not coming up anymore and they’re coming on when their birthday is coming up. Uh, so that’s just a few ways that you can use, um, life events to actually go out there and target on Facebook.

All right, number three is audience insights. And so if you’ve never used this tool before, this is a really powerful tool and it’s basically exactly what it sounds like. It’s Facebook. Um, ha, you know, has all this data on what people are interested in and what related things people are interested in. So you could put in one, uh, interest or product or brand and you can see what those people are also interested in. So let me show you what that looks like. Okay. So here we are and audience insights. And so let’s pretend that you can see here this interest area. You can type in anything in this area and it will show you related things to that. So let’s pretend that your selling a product that’s related to running. Okay, so here we go. Running and up pops all of this. So the first time you’ve got demographics that tells you who might be more.

 

It looks like more women are interested in running than men relationship status. So you’ve got all these kind of interesting things that’s less interesting to me. Then this next tab, which is categories and page likes. So let’s look at this. Okay. Mint, Juliet women’s clothing store. Okay. Color. Here’s the color run. Okay. So this is cool. So you could, this could like kind of get you on a path of a dif, different research methods. So the color run is a, you know, one of these, a fun, let’s go to the page and see what it says here. Yeah. It’s like you’ve seen these, these, uh, bursting colors that people run through. This is a really fun like running event. Okay. So that’s, that’s targetable on Facebook. So you might target that and that might you, that might lead you to other different runs. Different 5k is different marathons that you could see.

 

If you can target for that. We’ll see. What else is there. Um, a planet fitness. Cool. So that might lead you down. Another path of different businesses that cater different fitness gyms. There’s Gold’s Gym, there’s all kinds of other, uh, gGymm franchises that you could target. Let’s see, what else? Clothing, right under armor. Okay, so clothing that people wear and fit. So you’re getting the idea here is all these different categories. Um, even if they don’t give you immediate things that you can target, they’re going to lead you off into different rabbit trails that couldn’t possibly help you find other little pockets to target. The last one I want to go over is the option to target Facebook page admins from various industries. So here’s what that looks like. Here we are in the ads interface and I went ahead and typed in here. Page admin.

 

You can target and they don’t have all the different industries here, but if you’re selling into any of these industries and you want to sell to the business owner or maybe even marketers for that industry, for instance, this might be valuable to you. Here’s travel and tourism pages. Um, retail page admin. So what if you’re selling a credit card processing solution for retail that will be good to target health and beauty. If you’re selling products to the health and beauty for hairstylist, things like that, that might be good for you to target. We’ll see what else. Food and restaurant, if you’re selling supplies, a food restaurant on and on and on. And so the idea here is that if someone is a page admin for that rest for that industry, they’re much more likely to be owner business owners in that industry than say someone who’s just interested in food and restaurants, which should be, which could be a wide variety of people.

 

Uh, so there you have it. That’s four ways. Those, those are four things that I typically go through on top of just regular targeting that I know I’m going to go after. And that’s just ways to not only find targets, new targets that are immediately targeted below on Facebook, but also to just spark ideas for you, for different rabbit trails to run off of that can then lead you to even more things to target that weren’t immediately available. Uh, so there you go. I hope that was helpful and I hope you can take that stuff and use it if you’re ever stuck on your Facebook ad targeting or you just want more options, more ad sets, uh, to go out there with. So thanks for watching.

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3 Audiences Every Facebook Campaign Should Be Using https://bullhornmedia.tv/facebook-3-audiences/ Sun, 06 Oct 2019 15:50:07 +0000 http://bullhornmedia.tv/?p=4233 Facebook has thousands of different targeting options you can use to find audiences for your advertising. Those vary wildly depending on what industry/niche you’re in. In this video, I outline...

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Facebook has thousands of different targeting options you can use to find audiences for your advertising. Those vary wildly depending on what industry/niche you’re in.

In this video, I outline 3 Facebook audiences you can target no matter what industry you’re in. 

Hey everybody. Chris Raines with Bullhorn media here with some more digital advertising content. I wanted to talk today about three audiences on Facebook that every campaign should be using. Now, depending on what you’re selling, there’s a variety of different audiences you could be going after. I mean, you know, you’re going to be, you’re going to be going after different audiences if you’re selling, you know, baby sneakers versus a high end B2B software for instance. 

And so what I wanted to do was to list three audiences that pretty much no matter what you’re selling can probably be be valuable for you. And these are custom audiences. Well two, at least two of the three are custom audiences that you can create using Facebook. And so let’s get into them right now. 

The first custom audience that is valuable for almost every advertiser out there is customer list look alike audiences. You can upload to Facebook a list of your customers with an Excel or CSV file. And it’s typically works if you have at least a thousand customers. So if you only have a hundred customers is probably not gonna work too well for you. But if you have a thousand or more customers, upload that to Facebook and tell Facebook to create a 1% nationwide lookalike audience for that list. And what Facebook’s going to do is going to go out and find people that are similar to your customers, people that have already paid for your product or your service. 

So this is super powerful because you’re basically bypassing the risk involved with all of the targeting options. So maybe you have a product or service that might be a little bit hard to target on Facebook. Well, if you upload a customer list of 5,000 people, Facebook’s on a take that, and it’s going to create your own unique audience that’s just for you based on all the data, all the similarities of all of your customers. 

So this is super powerful. If you have a list of at least a thousand people, you should always be going out on Facebook and creating this, these look alike audiences for your campaigns. 

Number two is another custom audience that you can build on Facebook, but it’s website look alike audiences. So this is another look alike audience, but this, this is not based on your customer list but it’s based on your website audience. So what if you have the Facebook pixel installed on your site, which you should if you’re advertising on Facebook, Facebook can take the visitors from your audience and the more visitors you have, the better it’s going to be, right? 

It’s just like the customer list. You can give Facebook that data, so whether it’s 90 days, 180 days and tell it to tell Facebook to find more people exactly like your website visitors. And so this is powerful for the exact same way that customer lists lookalikes are powerful and that people that visit your website are there for a reason, they are have some degree of interest in your product or service. You’re going to get more tight targeting on that than you would for just a broad audience. 

And a bonus tip for this is if you have a website that gets a large amount of traffic, you can actually target based on time spent on your website. So you can tell Facebook, I want to look alike audience from the past 180 days, but only the top. But I only want to create the audience based on the segments of my audience that spent the top 25% time on site. So if you think about this, the more time, the more people, the more time people spend on your site, the more valuable they are to you. They’re there for a reason. They’re getting, they’re browsing, they’re looking at different pages, they’re more interested, right? So you can tell Facebook, take the top 25% of my visitors based on time on site and create a look alike audience for them.

So it’s just a more potent audience. Now this only again works if you have a large amount of website visitors. But if you do, this is super, super powerful and you can create a really, like, it’s almost like an audience within an audience. So you have your website visitors and then you have the cream of the crop of your website visitors, which is the people that’s stayed with you the longest. So that’s just kind of a bonus option for a website lookalike audiences. 

All right, number three, friends of page likers. Okay, so this is probably best for local businesses. All I can see it for maybe nationwide businesses too. But selecting the little selector at the the very bottom of the ad set setting where you can select based on your connection to the page. So you can target your own page likers and there’s another selector where you can select friends of page likers.

Here’s why this is so powerful. When people see, if you select that, when people see the ad coming up in their feed, they will see the text out to the side that says, you know, Barry and Susan and whoever like your page, right? So this is kind of the power of the social proof where if people see that, if they see your ad and they see that this friend, this friend, and this friend all like your page, they’re going to be more likely to, they’re going to be more curious. They’re going to be more likely to check out what you’re doing, the product or service that you offer, because someone that they like and some of them they care about also likes your page. So this is super powerful and it’s something that a lot of campaigns miss, and it’s kind of like this easy win that you can go out there with.

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How To Be Persuasive In Digital Advertising https://bullhornmedia.tv/persuasion-in-digital-advertising/ Sun, 06 Oct 2019 15:39:33 +0000 http://bullhornmedia.tv/?p=4229 Persuasion is more of a science than an art. In this video, I break down the basic prinicples of persuasion popularized by Robert Cialdini and how you can apply those...

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Persuasion is more of a science than an art. In this video, I break down the basic prinicples of persuasion popularized by Robert Cialdini and how you can apply those same principles to PPC and digital advertising.

Hey everybody. Chris Raines here with Bullhorn media coming at you with some more digital advertising talk. Today I want to talk about persuasion and the art of persuasion and I read a good book years ago by Robert Cialdini called influence. And if you, if you’re in sales and marketing in general, any, any field that deals with persuading people to do something or take some action. This is an incredible book to read. Robert CLD any influence, and today I want to talk about specifically the principles of this book. There’s six different principles of influence and it’s basically these the six reasons that anyone takes any action or is persuaded to do anything and it’s boiled down to these six reasons according to rubber Cialdini’s book. And I want to, I want to share with you how to use each one of these in your digital advertising. And these are things that I look at.

Every time I launch a Facebook campaign, a Google campaign, I look to these principles and I go back and and read these principles and see how can I change my ad copy? How can I change my landing page? How can I position things in such a way to tap into these six reasons? And so let’s get into it. I want to share it, six of these with you on how to use them in your digital advertising. So let’s get started. Okay, so the first principle in Robert Cialdini’s book is reciprocity. And so basically this means people are more likely to give you something if you’ve already given them something first. And this is essentially the whole platform that content marketing is based on, right? So you share content, share content, add value. If you follow Gary Vaynerchuk, it’s the jab, jab, jab, right hook.

The giving is in the jab, jab, jab, jab. And so people, or if you’ve already helped people accomplish something or taught them how to do something, then they’re more likely to respond to you when you ask them to do something. It’s reciprocity. If you’ve if you’re old enough to have lived through the what, what’s it Arbitron ratings. Radio ratings. Arbitron was the big, and I think it’s they were bought by Nielsen, but they are Arbitron was the top ratings organization that determined how many people were watching specific radio programs. And they used to do this thing where they would mail out mailers that would ask you to literally fill out a time log for what radio stations you listened to and when you listened to them. And the interesting thing is that within their little envelope they would include like I think two $1 bills, right?

 

Just free money for you. And the idea there is, you know, it takes time to fill this stuff out. And so the idea here is that when you, if you give people money upfront, they’re more likely to fill it out. So so that’s the whole principle reciprocity. So here’s how you can use that in your digital advertising. And it’s basically using education upfront literally in your ads. And I’ve seen this a lot in especially high ticket sales where you want to show people that, you know what you’re talking about a, but you want to add value up front. So I’ve seen long form ads on Facebook where you’re going out there with a huge amount of value for free upfront. And then on the back of that you’re asking them to maybe attend a webinar where there’s more free content. So you’re giving value, value, value in.

 

And of course at the end of the webinar you’re probably going to ask them to participate in your program or sign up for a sales call or a strategy call or something like that. But there’s a reason why a lot of people do this and this because of this principle of reciprocity. The more that you can add value to people to get in front of them and solve their problems and give them new knowledge, new perspective, things that they hadn’t thought about before, the more likely they’re going to be to respond to you when you ask them to buy whatever it is that you want them to buy. So that first principle, reciprocity is just in general aim for helping people first aim for helping first. And if you go out there with with that first, they’re going to be more likely to come back to you when you ask them to buy.

All right? Number two is scarcity. So the idea here is people are, people want more of things that they can have less of, right? So you can leverage this by anytime you’re selling something that is a, let’s say, so let’s say you’re going out there with a 25% off discount. So rather than making it a a, rather than just kind of making an open ended offer of 25% put a time limit on it, right? So say 25% off for the next six days. And so when people see that time limit on there, they’re going to be more motivated to take action because they know that that period of discount is ending and they need to take action. You can do the same thing if you’re, if you are giving away, let’s say it’s a free offer. So let’s say you’re a med spa and you’re giving away free Botox.

So it’s much more powerful to go out there and say, we’re giving away 15 free Botox treatments for the next 15 people that sign up. Go do that. And just watch people line up, watch people line up because they’re afraid. They know that there is a limit on it and they know that there’s scarcity in the offer. Now you have to make an actual real scarcity. A lot of people will abuse this and they say there’s a time limit and then they extended an extended sentence. So don’t do that. Cause that will that will train people actually to just wait it out and maybe not take action because they know you’re faking it. But you know, if you’re giving away something, put a number on it. Say we’re giving away 15 of these 20 of these 30. There’s whatever makes sense. And putting that limit on it will cause people to take action.

You can do, and you can reinforce this on your landing page. If say it’s a time-based offer, go on your landing page and set the end date and develop a countdown timer that counts down to the end and people see that. They see the seconds going by, the minutes going by, they’re going to be more, more likely to take action when they see that time is scarce. And if they don’t take action now, they might not get it if they wait, if they don’t take action by the end. So that’s how you can use scarcity to reinforce your marketing and cause people to take action. All right, number three, authority. People are more likely to follow the lead of credible and knowledgeable experts. So how do you put this forward in your digital advertising, in your marketing? Well, you can do that in a few ways.

You can highlight the number of years experience that you’ve had. If you are a home remodeler, how many homes have you remodeled over the years? If you’re a advertising agency, have you won any awards or any accolades throughout the years? How can you bring that in to establish that authority in the side of others? In a way that makes you more credible. Businesses do this all the time with especially homebased businesses. With badges like better business Bureau badges or this could be the case with any field where association with another entity or another certification entity that can lavish on you their authority by their badge of trust. So bringing those badges in, better business Bureau or whatever, whatever organization is relevant to your industry, bringing those in can make people feel at ease cause because they think if this company, if this offer is, is blessed by these other organizations with whom I grant, I accept their authority, then I know that I can trust this company as well.

So that’s one way you can use authority to increase your persuasion in your marketing. All right? Number four, commitment and consistency. Or I call this the momentum of yes. So if people say, the basic principle here is that if people say yes once, they’re more likely to say yes again. And if they say yes a second time, they’re more likely to say yes a third time. And so the one way you can implement this is, this is especially true for eCommerce businesses and this is, this is something that a lot of people do. This is no secret, but there’s a reason why a lot of people do it because it works. This is one, this is what one click upsells do, right? So if you’ve got a shopping cart, people have put in their credit card info and they’re ready to checkout, they’ve already said yes to the point of giving you their payment information.

If you at that point in time put a onetime offer in front of them and offer them to upgrade their order at that moment of time, the power of that previous yes is going to be way more likely to carry over and caused them to say yes again. And this is why this stuff works so well in a while. Why a lot of eCommerce businesses use this is because this, this commitment and consistency, people feel the need to say yes if they’ve already said yes. If they’ve already committed, they’re more likely to commit again. And so that’s one way to do it. And another way to do this, and this is what you see a lot of times with longer funnels that will offer a free download, a free checklist, a free ebook at the beginning, and then follow up with those people with more offers that are paid.

If they’ve already said yes to a free offer, a download, a checklist, an ebook, they’re going to be more likely to say yes to the next thing. And this is why people go out there with free content. It’s this power of commitment and consistency. So wherever you can try to leverage people’s previous yeses with future yeses. All right, number five is liking or likeability. So what this says, what this principle says from rubber seal Deni is we are more likely to comply with requests made by people who we like. Okay? So one very basic way to use this in your digital advertising, and this is really simple, is to use human faces in your landing page and your advertising and your videos and your images wherever possible. Why? Because people connect more with human faces. This is, this seems really simple, but a lot of times people don’t implement this.

So if you’ve got a product for instance, that is used by people, go ahead and show a person using it in your ad rather than just showing the product. And when people see that, they’re going to connect more with how that product enhances and enriches the life of that human. People connect with other humans way more than they connect with objects or ideas or anything else. So anytime you can bring a human or human face in to your advertising or your communication on your landing page, do that. Do that. People connect with humans. And another way you can do that is to show that you are like your customers. So an example might be if you find that the values of your company or the goals or maybe causes that you support, things that you want to see in the world, align with your customers, communicate that with them.

And, and only do this if it really aligns. So don’t be cynical and you know, figure out what your customers love and say, Oh I guess I should love that too. Only do it if it’s natural and organic and it actually aligns. But if it does align, if you are similar in that way to to your customers, lead with that because it’s going to establish with your customer, this isn’t just an, this isn’t just a company, this is a company that is like me, is filled with people like me that care about the things that I care about. That’s going to establish likability between you and your potential customers. And people are more likely to submit to requests that are made by people who they like. So anything you can do to establish that like ability do it, it’s going to enhance your marketing, enhance your persuasion.

All right, and the sixth and final one is consensus. So what this is is people look to the actions and behaviors of others in order to determine what their own actions and behaviors should be. And so this is particularly why things like testimonials, especially video testimonials are so powerful in marketing. People are looking to determine, you know, this is good for, I know this is good in general, this product, the features are good, but I need to see that other people are experiencing this. I need it in particularly other people that are like me. So this is why people do customer testimonial videos. And in a really simple trick, you can do this, and this is specific to Facebook ads, is priming your ads with social proof. And what I mean by social proof is anytime you see a, like a comment or a share on a post, that’s social proof, that’s things that other people see on a post that enhance this idea of consensus.

So try this next time you go out and do Facebook ads before you launch your ad to your general audience. Let’s say it’s a a conversion objective audience, go ahead and launch those ads as an engagement goal to your audience. And what that engagement goal is gonna do, it’s gonna, it’s gonna vastly increase the likelihood of people liking, commenting, sharing, and so on. And so what you do is you spend a portion of your budget upfront to get those likes, comments, and shares, and then you end that campaign and use that same post with all the likes, comments and shares, and then port that over to your cold audience for conversions. And what you’ll find is when that goes into the, that when that goes into people’s news feeds, they’re going to see all of this social proof, these likes, comments and shares, and they’re gonna see that as consensus.

They’re going to see that other people are liking other people are liking this, loving this, or laughing at this or whatever it is. And this is something that I should check out and it’s going to lower your CPMs, lower your cost per click, and so on. So that’s kind of one way to sort of hack this idea of consensus, this principle of persuasion to push forward your ads. And it’s particularly true on Facebook because it’s such a social platform when people, people can see that social proof or that proof of consensus. All right, so that’s all I have for now. I hope this was really helpful. These are things that I look to every time I launch an advertising campaign on Google, Facebook, or any other platform. And this is really a complete list. These six principles are why anyone takes any action that they take or persuaded to do anything. And that book again is Robert Cialdini’s Influence. And if you’re in sales or marketing, I highly, highly recommend this book. Go out and read it, and you’ll come away with really valuable tools on how people think, how people operate, and how to get them to do what you want them to do. So I hope this was helpful. Thanks so much.

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5 Ways to Improve Your Facebook Video Marketing https://bullhornmedia.tv/5-ways-improve-facebook-video-marketing/ Sat, 22 Jul 2017 19:36:13 +0000 http://bullhornmedia.tv/?p=3519 The post 5 Ways to Improve Your Facebook Video Marketing appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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Video is the new king of Facebook content. Ever since the company rolled out the feature in 2013, Facebook video has been on a relentless quest to take over the news feed.

Consider this:

Everybody loves video. We love watching it, and marketers love making us watch it. And as marketers, we would do well to have a strong grasp of best practices to help us make the most out of 2017’s hottest marketing property.

Here are 5 things that you can implement right now that will improve your Facebook Video game.

1. Use Facebook’s Native Player

This one should probably go without saying by now, but I still see Pages embedding YouTube or Vimeo videos, and it makes me want to cry. It’s like telling the world you don’t want them to see your video. Using a YouTube embed cripples your video efforts in three ways:

  • It cuts your thumbnail space in half. See below for how unattractive this is.
  • You’ll get less engagement by design since Facebook algorithmically favors their own player.
  • YouTube videos do not auto-play on Facebook, leaving you at a disadvantage in competition with other native Facebook videos in the news feed.

2. Make the First Five Seconds Count

Facebook is one of the most distracting environments on the internet. An onslaught of other pictures, videos, games, and stupid BuzzFeed quizzes are constantly vying for your audience’s attention. And it doesn’t help that the default behavior of a Facebook user is SCROLL SCROLL SCROLL…

You have to be compelling to hold attention. Here are a couple guidelines for capturing attention in the first 5 seconds.

  • DO NOT start the video with your company or product logo. I don’t care how awesome the logo animation is. Don’t do it. Facebook doesn’t care about your logo.
  • Favor initial images and audio that build intrigue, mystery, novelty, wonder, or danger. Below is an example of the first second of a BuzzFeed video that calls the viewer to wonder what mysteries of their personality a cube test might reveal.

3. Use Captions

This one is important. If you have critical sound or dialogue in your video, you absolutely need to use captions. Facebook videos play without sound by default, and according to reports from publishers about 85% of Facebook videos are viewed without sound. If users can’t understand your video without sound they might keep scrolling.

You can do captions in two ways:

  • Use Facebook’s built-in captioning engine by creating and uploading an SRT file. Here’s a link to a tutorial on how to create SRT files for captions.
  • You can also use video editing software to create animated text overlays, as shown below. This accomplishes the communication goal with the added benefit of making the video more visually interesting.

4. Create a Unique Thumbnail

While most people will view your video in auto-play mode, some users will opt to turn that off. Don’t leave it up to Facebook to select a random frame as a thumbnail. Go the extra mile and create your own. A stand-out thumbnail will help to entice those potential viewers. A few best practices for thumbnails are:

  • Use human faces – the fastest way to form an emotional connection through an image is with a human face. Look no further than BuzzFeed’s YouTube channel thumbnails below.
  • Augment with a text overlay in order to add context – A few lines of text can sometimes provide just the right amount of intrigue to nudge someone to click play. If you do use text overlay, make sure your text is large enough to be mobile-friendly.
  • Create a consistent template to reinforce branding – check out what Home Depot does with their “How To” series. This reinforces the brand with the viewer and lets them know what they’re about to watch while encouraging binge-watching of an entire series.

5. Upload Square Videos When Possible (not 16×9)

Okay, this might be an unpopular opinion with creative types and filmmakers, but the reality we are dealing with is screen space on a mobile device. Mobile viewers watch video on Facebook while holding their phones vertically. In order to maximize your video’s space on the newsfeed, you need to edit in a 1×1 ratio instead of 16×9.

Take a look below. When you edit 1×1 square videos, you gain 80% more screen space. That is 80% more of your viewer’s precious attention devoted to your content and not other posts on the page.

Conclusion

While this is certainly not an exhaustive list, these 5 things will set you up for greater Facebook video success.

What about you? What have you been experiencing with Facebook video? I’d love to hear your insights in the comments.

The post 5 Ways to Improve Your Facebook Video Marketing appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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5 Killer Facebook Ads, And Why They Work https://bullhornmedia.tv/5-killer-facebook-ads/ Sat, 15 Jul 2017 19:56:42 +0000 http://bullhornmedia.tv/?p=3483 The post 5 Killer Facebook Ads, And Why They Work appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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Facebook hit a huge milestone recently – 2 billion monthly users. That’s over 1/4 of the population of planet earth, logging in to Facebook every month.

Your customers are on Facebook (yes even B2B customers). The question is – do you have a plan to reach them? (No, the answer is not posting organically and hoping someone sees it. In fact, there’s a convincing argument out there that digital marketers should abandon all organic Facebook efforts.)

The answer is Facebook Ads. Facebook’s Ad platform offers more precise targeting and more customer data than any other platform. Nothing else even comes close.

Let’s take a look at some samples of Pages that are doing great Facebook Ads, and what makes those ads work:

1. Southwest Airlines – Low Airfare Promotion

What makes this ad great :

  • A compelling offer – Southwest has a nearly irresistible offer – The $49 flight. This ad appropriately makes that offer the centerpiece in both the art and the copy
  • Scarcity – You can only book this offer during a 2-day timeframe. This has the effective creating scarcity which drives urgency for the potential buyer.

2. SumoMe.com – Signup Promotion

What makes this ad great:

  • Visuals tailored to the audience – SumoMe.com knows their audience – digital marketers. They know digital marketers see graphs similar to this every day when looking at analytics screens. Showing a graph like this with such a strong upward trend creates a powerful vision of the future to SumoMe’s target customer.
  • Bonus: Social Proof – The description copy that says “Over 175,000 websites grow their traffic with SumoMe is using a social proof as a persuasion technique. This creates an additional layer of comfort and security for the viewer.

3. Shutterstock – Design Smarter

What makes this ad great:

  • Visuals that evoke curiosity – This is a clever use of Facebook’s carousel ad format that allows for multiple square ads in one display ad and gives the user the ability to scroll through horizontally. Connecting all the ads to one image creates intrigue and curiosity. It gives the viewer a reason to scroll through and discover the rest of the image.

4. Quip – Work Less Dumb (this one is my favorite)

What makes this ad great:

  • Irreverence – This is brilliant ad creative. Facebook is a noisy place and you have to really stand out to get attention. Quip does just that with irreverent copy and a headline that’s nearly a curse word. The #FML in the graphic is also another wink in this direction. This approach is a bit more risky and it should always line up with your brand and your image (a funeral home probably couldn’t do this) – but when done appropriately this approach can cut through the clutter like a hot knife.

5. Slack – Make Work Better

What makes this ad great:

  • Visuals that stand out – Again, Facebook is noisy. Sometimes you have the ride a pink pony over a rainbow to grab attention.
  • Ad copy that goes directly to the pain point – In 10 words, this ad copy highlights a common pain point for workers in corporate jobs (endless meetings) – AND – brings Slack forward as a tool that can solve that pain. And it even puts a specific number to how much pain they can solve – 25%, making it even more believable. That’s some heavy lifting for just 10 words.

Conclusion

Great Facebook Ads are great on purpose. The key to success is learning what works, then experimenting with A/B tests, then adjusting. Rinse and repeat.

Here are a few more resources to learn more about how to create killer ads on the #1 PPC platform on the internet:

The post 5 Killer Facebook Ads, And Why They Work appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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How To Optimize for YouTube’s Highest Ranking Factor https://bullhornmedia.tv/how-to-optimize-for-youtubes-highest-ranking-factor/ Fri, 14 Jul 2017 21:10:57 +0000 http://bullhornmedia.tv/?p=3462 The post How To Optimize for YouTube’s Highest Ranking Factor appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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For most of YouTube’s history, the most important ranking factor was views. Get enough people to click the play button and watch your video climb in search ranking.

Over time, the net result of this was a diminished user experience, promoting silly things like click-bait cleavage thumbnails and gaming the system by purchasing views from overseas click farms.

More importantly, it pushed genuinely good and helpful videos down in the rankings.

2012 Algorithm Change

In 2012, YouTube made a significant change to the ranking algorithm by emphasizing the metric of “watch time” as a key ranking factor. This change looks at the following:

  1. How long viewers watch a video
  2. How much “site watch time” a video encouraged OR How often and for how long a video bring people to YouTube and keeps them there

Strategies for Promoting Watch Time

This new emphasis on Watch Time means that in order to be successful on YouTube you must focus on retaining viewers and keeping them on your channel for as long as possible.

A good Watch Time strategy should include the following:

  • Create an Open Loop at the Beginning of Your Video. This is a psychological trick that plays into the mind’s desire to resolve tension and mystery. You can create open loops in your video by teasing an idea, not explaining it fully, and then promising that you will explain it later in the video.

Movies and TV shows are fantastic at creating open loops. For fans of the show LOST, Season 3’s famous “We have to go back!” moment is a classic open loop.

“Why does he want to go back? What happened? I have to know!!”

  • Use annotations to tease other videos – This is similar to internal link strategies for written content. The idea is to, wherever possible and relevant, use YouTube’s annotation feature to link to other videos on your channel to encourage viewers to watch more.
  • Use consistent and branded thumbnails – Using a consistent thumbnail design for similar videos will help to drive “linear watching” and encourage viewers to continue watching other videos in the series. Check out how online personality Chase Jarvis does this:
  • Consider breaking up long-form content – If you have 30+ minutes of content for a video, consider packaging this into 4-5 shorter videos. This could encourage continued viewing from viewers that might look at a 45-minute video as too high of a commitment.
  • Always ask for subscribers – YouTube favors videos that are responsible for “session starts” – that is to say videos that mark the beginning of a YouTube view session. Having subscribers increases the chances that one of your videos will initiate a view session.

Conclusion

YouTube is always changing their algorithms. Heck, they probably changed it again while you were reading this article. As is always the case on YouTube or anywhere else on the internet, the best way to avoid suffering from an algorithm change is to focus on your viewer and delight them as much as possible.

The post How To Optimize for YouTube’s Highest Ranking Factor appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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Why Your YouTube Video Has 23 Views (And What To Do About It) https://bullhornmedia.tv/why-your-youtube-video-has-23-views/ Fri, 14 Jul 2017 15:39:58 +0000 http://bullhornmedia.tv/?p=3442 The post Why Your YouTube Video Has 23 Views (And What To Do About It) appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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You know what stinks? When you see a company or brand spend a lot of time, effort, and money to produce a video only to watch it languish on YouTube for weeks with little to no views.

That’s frustrating.

Of all the marketing tactics out there, video is one of the most expensive. This makes it important to have an effective strategy in place before you produce video to ensure that your ROI is positive.

Most low-view YouTube videos suffer from the same 3 problems. Let’s look at those problems and how to solve them.

Problem 1: The Video Was Not Appropriate For YouTube

Most YouTube marketing failures suffer from a lack of understanding of why people are on YouTube to begin with. People go on YouTube for the following reasons:

That’s pretty much it. Notice that list didn’t include your company’s history or updates on your newest product offerings. People don’t care about you or your company. They want to solve the immediate problems in their life or just veg out.

Entertainment – This is sort of a high-risk/high-reward play. Creating inspiring, viral, funny, or amazing entertainment is hard work and expensive.

But it can pay off if it’s done well and if budget supports it. Heck, Dollar Shave Club built an entire business around one viral video.

For another example of a brand doing entertainment well, check out this inspirational Christmas video from WestJet. Or these HGTV-style videos from Houzz.

Education – People love going to YouTube to learn how to do something new. Did you notice the video above about changing a radiator had over 354,000 views? How many views did your expensive marketing video get? Doing educational videos means looking at your audience, finding out what problems they have, and then teaching them how to solve those problems. Rinse and repeat.

Ramit Sethi is killing it on YouTube with educational content. His business is selling information products, but he gives a lot of his information away for free on his YouTube channel. This has been instrumental in building his brand and funneling people into his paid courses. Be like Ramit.

Information – Providing information to your audience that empowers them to make better decisions will go a long way toward building trust and increasing the chances those audience members will become customers. Here’s an entire YouTube channel devoted to nails, with lots of information in the form of product reviews, as well as plenty of how-to content. 173,000 subscribers. Not bad.

Problem 2: The Video Wasn’t Findable

Plenty can be said about Video SEO and that’s worth a separate post, but YouTube needs relevant data from your video before it can rank well organically.

YouTube videos with good SEO should include the following:

  • An optimized title that is relevant and contains likely search phrases – like “Best WordPress Plugins 2017” or “How to nail a job interview”. Always use the language your customers use and avoid insider language.
  • An optimized description field that actually contains a detailed description of what the video is about.
  • Appropriate and relevant tags (this helps YouTube categorize the video and will make it more likely to show up in the “suggested videos” area)
  • Closed Captions. Along with being a good idea in that they help viewers that are deaf or hard of hearing – captions provide valuable metadata to YouTube for what your video is about. Rev.com does captions for $1/minute.

Problem 3: The Video Wasn’t Promoted Well

Unless you already have a ton of subscribers and a strong brand you can’t rely strictly on organic views. You need to use either free or paid promotion to get eyes on the video. Twitter and Linkedin are all great ways to promote your video (you should avoid sharing YouTube videos on Facebook, however).

If your organization has a lot of employees, have your team members share on their LinkedIn or Twitter accounts. You can also embed the video on your company blog or on a landing page and drive paid search traffic to it.

Conclusion

Video is expensive. Don’t waste your money. Do the important strategic work before you start the process of producing video and decide what you’re going to produce and why. And then decide how you’re going to promote it.

If you execute on those items, I guarantee your video will get more than 23 views.

The post Why Your YouTube Video Has 23 Views (And What To Do About It) appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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YouTube Is a Library, Facebook Is a Cocktail Party https://bullhornmedia.tv/youtube-library-facebook-cocktail-party/ Fri, 14 Jul 2017 01:54:01 +0000 http://bullhornmedia.tv/?p=3414 The post YouTube Is a Library, Facebook Is a Cocktail Party appeared first on Bullhorn Media.

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There’s a whole world of difference in YouTube and Facebook when it comes to video marketing. To illustrate, we should look at YouTube as a library and Facebook as a cocktail party. (I’ll admit that I’ve stolen this analogy from the whip-smart Wistia guru Phil Nottingham)

So what does this Library/Cocktail Party distinction mean? Let’s explore:

YouTube: The Library

If you’re over 30 years old then you remember having to learn how to use the Dewey Decimal System and those little wooden card drawers in your school library in order to find and discover books. YouTube has the 21st-century version of that with its ever-present search bar.

That search bar is THE key distinction between YouTube video and Facebook video.

I would never go to Facebook to search “How to install a 2003 Honda Civic radiator”. Would I perform that same search on YouTube? You bet your ass I would. I actually have performed that search, and it saved me $250!

When you post a video to YouTube, it lives on way past its original post date. It can be found many months or years into the future via organic search or the “related videos” section on the right-hand sidebar.

So what does this mean for YouTube content strategy?

It means that you can know that even if your video doesn’t get an immediate spike in views when you first upload – it will likely receive a trickle of views on into the future via search and suggested videos (if the content is awesome).

It also means that – since YouTube is owned by Google – there’s always a chance that your video could show up in Google search results. This is actually a pretty clever hack to obtain page one SERP listings for Google. Here’s an article that goes a bit deeper.

Bottom Line? YouTubers come to YouTube with intent. They are there to search for something or browse their subscriptions. When you’re creating content for YouTube, think in terms or what your target customer might search for on Google or YouTube, then create content to fulfill that need.

To win big, make sure you optimize for the watch time, the #1 YouTube rank factor.

Facebook: The Cocktail Party

If people go to YouTube to search and learn, people go to Facebook to hang out with and check in with their friends.

Facebook is a cocktail party.

You aren’t there to discover any one particular thing. You’re there to see what’s going on with your network of friends. This is a completely different intent than YouTube, where you almost always arrive with some specific intention in mind.

Ever gone down a YouTube rabbit hole? Yeah, me too.

Ever gone down a Facebook video rabbit hole? Yeah, me neither.

On Facebook, your video will likely not live long past its original post date if it does not receive likes, shares, and comments.

That’s the difference. It’s all about user intent. To optimize for Facebook, you must create something that is interesting enough for your audience to stop scrolling and watch your video. This means shorter videos, since people are more likely to like, comment, and share on short videos. It also means that it’s even more important to grab the viewer in the first 5 seconds on Facebook.

Conclusion

Think about the real life scenario of a library and a coffee shop. What gets the most attention in a library? The book with the most helpful information. What gets the most attention at a cocktail party? The guy doing amazing card tricks.

Whether your video is going to a library or a cocktail party, optimize accordingly.

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