Wednesday, June 16, 2021

How to Use Instagram Insights (in 9 Easy Steps)

Data helps you understand your audience. It tells you how they do things, what they prefer, and who they are. You can certainly make business decisions based on gut feeling, but you're much more likely to hit the mark when you can validate assumptions with cold, hard facts.

Data and analytics help you measure the impact of your marketing efforts across different channels to see if there's something you need to do differently -- like target a different audience, post at a certain time of day, or experiment with a new content format.

Social media isn't any different than other aspects of your marketing in the sense that it can be measured and improved upon. That's why you'll be able to create a more effective Instagram strategy using Instagram Insights.

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Here are the analytics on this channel that marketers need to know and understand -- and how to use them.

View Instagram Insights: Accounts Reached Page on Instagram

To use Instagram Insights, you must first have a business profile. If you're already using a personal account, you can switch to a business profile. Here's how to convert your account in a few simple steps.

1. Create a Facebook Business Profile for the same persona if you haven't already.

An Instagram business profile will allow you to access additional features and tools to help you grow your audience. However, in order to set up an Instagram Business Profile, you'll need to have a Facebook Page for your business. It's through Facebook that you add payment credentials and more. Click here for instructions for setting up your Facebook Page if you don't already have one.

2. Make sure your Instagram profile is public. Private profiles cannot be used as business ones.

You want to grow your audience and have your posts seen by Instagram users who are not familiar with your brand. For this reason, your Instagram profile will need to be made public before you convert it to an official Instagram Business Profile. Here are the steps:

Step One: Navigate to your profile and tap the hamburger icon in the top-right corner.

Convert Instagram to Business Profile: Tap Hamburger Menu

Step Two: Tap the gearshift wheel icon to access your Settings.

Convert Instagram to Business Profile: Gearshift Wheel Icon for Settings

Step Three: Select "Privacy."

Convert Instagram to Business Profile: Privacy in Settings Menu

Step Four: Flip the toggle next to "Private Account" on.

Convert Instagram to Business Profile: Instagram Private Account Toggle

Your Instagram profile is now public.

3. Return to your Settings page and tap "Account."

Return to your Settings page by clicking the hamburger icon and tapping the gearshift wheel icon. Alternatively, you can use the back button on your phone to get there.

Tap Account in the Settings menu.

Convert Instagram to Business Profile: Account in the Settings Menu

4. Select "Switch Account Type" and choose "Switch to Business Account."

Convert Instagram to Business Profile: Switch to Business AccountBy choosing Switch to Business Account, you're effectively converting your Instagram Profile into an Instagram Business Profile.

5. Follow Instagram's prompts to set up your business profile.

You will be asked to review and change details about your business including business category, contact information, and more. You'll also be prompted to select the Facebook Page you want to be associated with your profile (from Step 1).

6. Tap "Done."

Once your set up as a Business Account, you can begin to use Instagram Insights. Here's how to get started.

1. Open the hamburger menu and click "Insights."

To view insights into your overall Instagram account, start by visiting your profile. Then, at the top, click the hamburger icon and select Insights from the menu.

View Instagram Insights: Navigating to Insights from the Instagram Menu

From there, you'll reach the Recent Highlights page where you'll see some general information about how people are engaging with your profile, like how many followers you gained or lost in the past week.

View Instagram Insights: Recent Highlights Page on Instagram

Next, we'll get into the more specific profile insights you can explore.

2. Measure reach.

Click the Accounts Reached section. Reach reflects the number of unique users that have seen any of your Instagram posts.

View Instagram Insights: Accounts Reached Page on Instagram

Within this category, you'll see insights for:

  • Impressions - How many times your posts were seen.
  • Account Activity - Profile visits, website taps, and other activity.
  • Top Posts - The posts that generated the most reach and engagement.
  • Top Stories - The Instagram Stories posts that generated the most reach and engagement.
  • Top IGTV Videos - The IGTV videos that generated the most reach and engagement.

Some of these insights can be expanded for more insights.

3. Track profile visits and followers.

On the Accounts Reached page under Account Activity, you'll be able to see Profile Visits.

Profile Visits reflects the number of times your profile has been viewed.

4. Determine website clicks.

Website Taps can also be found under the Account Activity section. This insight reflects the number of times any links you've included in your business profile have been clicked.

5. Track content interactions.

Navigate back to Recent Highlights and tap Content Interactions. This will bring up a page that shows how your content is performing in terms of engagement, breaking down the metrics by content type.

View Instagram Insights: Content Interactions Page on Instagram

Likes speaks for itself, reflecting the number of users who liked your post. As with likes, Comments reflects the number of comments left on your post. Saves highlights the number of unique users or accounts who saved your post or clicked the bookmark-like icon that appeared below it in their feeds.

6. Track your followers.

Navigate back to Recent Highlights and click Total Followers. You'll then reach the Follower Breakdown page.

View Instagram Insights: Follower Breakdown page on Instagram

This page reflects how many followers you've gained or lost over the past week, as well as the average times of day when your followers are using Instagram — data that can be highly beneficial when planning posts.

7. Learn which actions were taken on your post.

To view insights for a specific Instagram post, start by visiting your profile. Tap on the post you'd like to look into, then click View Insights below the image.

These insights indicate the number of actions that users took on your profile as a result of seeing your post -- things like visiting your profile, then taking an action like clicking on your website link or following you.

View Instagram Insights: Instagram Insights Actions Feature

Source: Instagram

8. Use "Discovery" to see where your post showed up in feeds.

As the name might suggest, these insights indicate where your post was seen -- or discovered -- the most, including how many accounts weren't already following you when they first saw the post.

This section includes metrics on Impressions, which reflect the number of times your post was discovered from a particular place within Instagram, like the user's home feed, a search, your profile, a location tag, or a hashtag.

View Instagram Insights: Instagram Insights Discovery Feature

Source: Instagram

Discovery insights also include data on a post's reach -- which reflects the number of unique accounts that saw your post.

9. View Story insights.

Finally, Instagram users with a business profile are able to view insights into their ephemeral Stories.

To view your Story insights, navigate back to Insights and scroll down to Content You Shared section on the Recent Highlights page.

Scroll down to the Stories section, and you'll be able to see insights for older stories, as well as any that have not yet expired.

Next, we'll get into the more specific insights you can explore.

Impressions

This insight represents how many times your Story was seen.

When viewing these insights, keep in mind that you're able to add multiple images or videos to your Story. When you do this, every piece of visual content in your Story is counted as a single photo or video in your post.

Let's say you add six photos to your Story. Whether someone only views one or views all six, Instagram only counts your entire Story having received one impression.

The same goes for Story content that has been viewed by a single user more than once. Instagram still only counts that interaction as the entire Story having received one impression.

Reach

This insight reflects the number of unique users that have seen your Story.

Taps Forward

This insight reflects the number of times a user taps your Story photo or video to skip to the next piece of media.

Taps Back

This insight reflects the number of times a user taps your Story photo or video to go back to the previous piece of media.

Replies

This insight reflects the number of times users send messages through the Send Message text box on your Story.

Replies on Instagram Stories

Swipe Aways

This insight reflects the number of times users swipe to skip to the next account’s Story -- not to be mistaken for "tap forward," which reflects users skipping ahead to your next piece of Story media.

Exits

This insight reflects the number of times a user leaves the Stories section entirely to return to the home feed.

Measuring Your Effectiveness With Instagram Insights

Now that you know how to access data to inform your strategy with Instagram Insights, you can analyze that data and determine what's working for your audience (and what's not). From there, creating content that gets a ton of engagement will be a lot easier as you consider those benchmarks.

Editor's Note: This post was originally published in January 2018 but has been updated for comprehensiveness.

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How to Use Instagram Insights (in 9 Easy Steps) was originally posted by Local Sign Company Irvine, Ca. https://goo.gl/4NmUQV https://goo.gl/bQ1zHR http://www.pearltrees.com/anaheimsigns

The Beginner's Guide to Brand Pillars

Although the practices of marketing and branding have been around for centuries, the industries started to shift in the 1990s.

The digital age came about and companies began to market their brands more than their products with the goal of giving their company a personality.

As a millennial born in the early 90s, I grew up at the same time as the digital revolution. In fact, millennials have a reputation for spending all day on their phones and being lazy.

However, I'd argue that as the digital age and technology began to evolve, so did society's work expectations. Businesses, and even employees, are expected to be a brand in and of themselves that has value and positively impacts society (instead of just selling products).

As a marketer or business owner, you might be wondering, "How can I create a brand that my audience connects with?"

In this post, we'll discuss how to create brand pillars that clearly communicate your brand identity to your audience.

For example, brand pillars can be core values, important strengths, or aspects of a brand that support or add dimension to the core idea of "Who are you?"

Essentially, these brand pillars can be anything that your customers find important -- perhaps it's innovation, reliability, on-time delivery, etc.

Brand pillars are meant to differentiate your brand and should be valued and endorsed by your customers. When someone asks why your customers like your brand, they'll probably be able to list off your brand pillars if you're clearly communicating your brand well.

These pillars should be decided on strategically to provide better products or services to your customers.

I know this might sound slightly conceptual. Brand pillars can be easier to understand when we break them down into categories.

Below, let's learn about the five brand pillar categories you can use to determine your own brand pillars.

What are the five brand pillars?

The main brand pillars are purpose, perception, identity, values, and brand experience.

1. Purpose

Purpose can be described as the mission and foundation of your company. It will answer questions like "Why did you start your company?" and "What are you hoping to achieve?"

Think about this strategically. What do you want to communicate to your audience as your purpose? What do you want to communicate to employees or potential employees? Knowing your purpose will help you hire employees who align with your mission and correctly target your audience.

Purpose can even be described as the culture of your company. For example, at HubSpot, our culture is about growth-minded individuals who have HEART (they are humble, empathetic, adaptable, remarkable, and transparent). The acronym HEART is one of our brand pillars as a company.

2. Perception

Perception is about how your customers perceive your company/brand. You'll want to either evaluate how current customers view your brand, or if you're a new company, write down some characteristics that you'd like customers to associate with your brand.

This could be something like hospitality or leadership. If these are your perception brand pillars, then you want customers to view you as a leader in your industry that is a trusted, good host (this makes sense for a hotel, for example).

3. Identity

This brand pillar is about who you are as a brand. A brand is something you are, it's not something you have. It's all about your personality as a company.

For example, an identity brand pillar could be something like "cheeky" or "bold." This means that you want customers to see you like a cheeky personality. The reason to define this brand pillar is so you have a guiding light for how to be human and interact with your customers.

4. Values

Your values are about communicating your overall position to your audience. What's important to you as a company? How do you want to make a difference? This could be something like valuing integrity and ownership.

5. Brand Experience

Lastly, brand experience is a pillar that will help you promote your products and services. People use products and services when they like a brand. When there are so many options to choose from these days, customers will choose to buy from companies they like. This means you need to create a positive customer experience and association with your overall brand.

By using these brand pillars as a basis, you can create a brand identity that sets you apart from your competition. Companies that fail most likely haven't considered what their brand pillars are and how they align.

If you have a robust strategy, but you don't have a purpose or identity, people won't feel compelled to purchase from you. On the other hand, if you promise that you value user experience, but the perception is off, then you also won't find success.

In the next section, let's review how you can use these categories to define your brand pillars.

How to Determine Your Brand Pillars

To determine your brand pillars, you should ask yourself a series of questions to come up with the top characteristics that you want to communicate to your audience.

Purpose

  • Why did you/are you starting your company?
  • What do you want to accomplish?
  • How do you want to serve your customers?
  • What value do you offer to customers that support your mission and vision?

Your purpose should serve as a magnet for employees and customers who share similar values. It will also provide a hook to tell your company's story and differentiate yourself from your competition.

Perception

  • What role do you play in your customer's mind?
  • What do they perceive your value to be?

This pillar could be something like education. Perhaps people view you as a place they go to learn about your industry. This is completely owned by your audience and how they interpret your brand through messaging and reputation and management.

Identity

  • What's your culture like?
  • What's your point of view?
  • What kind of tone of voice do you use in communication?
  • What are your convictions and behaviors that define your brand?

Defining your voice and brand is about strategizing how you want to speak to your audience on several platforms. The brand personality signals what employees might be like, how they behave, who your customers are, etc.

Values

  • What's important to you in your interaction with your audience?
  • What do you value above all else, even before your own financial interests?

Again, this pillar will help define what you care about as a company.

Brand Experience

  • How do customers interact with you at each touchpoint?
  • What kind of experience do you want customers to have?
  • What makes your customer experience better than your competitors?

This pillar will define much of your perceived personality and reputation.

When creating your brand pillars, think about what your customers get from you. Do they get convenience, higher quality, time savings, etc.?

To determine your brand pillars, think about your brand strategy and come up with things that clearly define your personality, voice, customer experience, your purpose, and how people will perceive your brand.

Brand Pillar Examples

1. Hilton Brand Pillars

Hilton's brand pillars are very clearly stated on its website. They value hospitality, integrity, leadership, teamwork, ownership, and now (sense of urgency).

These are stated as their values, but they're really brand pillars that showcase how the company wants to be perceived, what their identity is, what the customer experience is like, and what they value.

2. Patagonia Brand Pillars

Patagonia is a brand that has personality and purpose. Their mission is to inspire and implement solutions to the environmental crisis (this is their purpose). Additionally, Patagonia offers a minimalistic style and values simplicity and utility (this is their personality and values).

3. Nike Brand Pillars

Since it was founded, Nike has been consistent in its brand pillars. They are all about competition and surpassing one's limits. All the company's advertising, messaging, and investment decisions support that personality and value.

Brand pillars are a great way to define and differentiate your company from the competition. It's not just about making products anymore -- it's about having a voice and point of view that offers value to its customers.

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The Beginner's Guide to Brand Pillars was originally posted by Local Sign Company Irvine, Ca. https://goo.gl/4NmUQV https://goo.gl/bQ1zHR http://www.pearltrees.com/anaheimsigns

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

What Netflix Bingeing Taught Me About Digital Experience

Next time you open Netflix, I want you to try something.

When you see your tailored suggestions, as the platform starts the video right where you left off on your iPad, stop and take note of that experience.

How do these experiences actually make you feel?

Does the device handoff give you a rush of excitement and gratitude?

Probably not.

Start over. Imagine opening Netflix again.

Your recommendations are gone, replaced with an unfiltered list of content. The list feels random, but then you'd expect at least a couple of shows to be of random interest. They're not. That episode you're halfway through on your iPad? You'll have to scroll back and forth to find your place. Ultimately, you'll probably just rewatch parts of the episode “just to be safe”.  

Download Now: Digital Experience Audit [Free Workbook]

If you're like me (my apologies if you are), you'll react more to this moment of friction than the moment of seamless performance. The seamless experience is largely invisible — it's unfelt — while the bad experience is impossible to ignore. Based on how bad it is, it'll haunt you and sometimes make you question your life choices.

It may even push you toward Hulu or Disney +, or another platform that you trust more.

The same dynamic is at play for the digital experiences you deliver to customers.

2020 and 2021 accelerated digital transformation across industries, creating a new set of expectations in your customers' personal and professional lives.

For them, being delighted isn't a capstone to their experience as your customer; it's the cornerstone your relationship is built on. Today's buyers have more options, and disruptors are acquiring — and retaining — new business through the experience they provide their customers.

These new expectations present huge opportunities for those who are willing to rethink their digital experiences and a huge risk for those who are not.

So, why are so many businesses failing to meet these expectations?

Is it because they just don't care about the customers' experience? Sometimes — but not usually. A vast majority of businesses would love to deliver a delightful experience.

The reason they don't is mostly because cobbled-together point solutions can't deliver a clear view of the customer.

After all, scaling companies are in a constant state of adaptation. As new needs and opportunities arise, companies introduce a network of individual solutions that solve discrete problems: a CRM to manage customer data, a CMS to build their website, and marketing automation to scale their efforts.

Over time, as you add more solutions, your company's tech stack grows so unwieldy it becomes a barrier between you and your customers instead of a bridge. It keeps you from the agile reporting you need and makes automation way more complicated than it should be. It makes personalization unreliable and messaging fragmented.

Since the dawn of the digital age, the status quo has been to rely on a separate CRM, CMS and automation tool. It's what many marketing leaders have accepted as a necessary evil — despite the friction it causes for customers.

So, how do today's companies win?

By delivering a best-in-class, unified digital experience that exceeds customer expectations. Doing this requires two foundational elements.

1. Information

Any marketing based on assumptions is doomed to failure. To get the digital experience right for every individual customer at scale requires reliable, organized and actionable data.

Not just ‘who are your customers?' but ‘who is this customer?' How and where have they interacted with you digitally? What do they need from you right now, and more importantly, what will they need from you next?

At HubSpot, we built the Customer Code with this philosophy in mind: Use the data you have access to, don't abuse it. But in order to leverage the data you gather to create better digital experiences, all of your customer-facing teams need a single source of truth for that data — a key ingredient that's beyond the reach of companies that still use cobbled-together solutions. That's where centralization comes in.

2. Centralization

Providing a seamless experience across touchpoints is really a matter of shifting from ad hoc point solutions to a crafted, unified platform that provides a single view of the customer. When a CMS sits alongside key sales, services, and marketing tools in a centralized system, every customer-facing team knows how customers are interacting with their business and — more importantly — how they can help.

And this is the key: if you want your marketing, sales and service teams to deliver a great experience, you have to give them a fighting chance. You do this by having the systems and data they use aligned and unified.

For example, consider a repeat visitor to your pricing page. If both marketing and sales can see this activity, the marketing team can send a discount code or helpful resources that contextualize your pricing while sales can reach out to offer guidance or a product demo.

With this centralized platform and toolset, you can see and anticipate customer needs and take action immediately. You can tailor digital experiences on an individual level, across touchpoints, using the most up-to-date insights on customer needs, questions or interests — just like they expect you to.

The CRM for Today's Customer Expectations

The answer to these business challenges isn't just to use a CRM. You probably already have one of those. If you're really unlucky, maybe even two. It probably doesn't allow you to easily do any of what I just described, and it likely can't deliver the seamless experiences your customers expect.

Instead, you need a CRM platform that has been designed specifically to meet today's sky-high customer expectations; one that you can adapt to changing customer expectations, align your teams around, and adopt without an uphill change management battle. (And no, there are no change management battles that are downhill).

To pull off this digital experience at scale, you need to rethink the underlying components of the experience itself.

The customer-facing pieces — your website, email content, advertising, member portals — are front and center. But only touchpoints that are powered by a modern, purpose-built CRM provide the personalization and timeliness that distinguish an average digital interaction from an elite one.

And whether it's Netflix, HubSpot or your corner cafe, delivering elite customer experiences is the key to navigating uncertain times, thriving in the digital-first era, and ultimately, growing better.

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What Netflix Bingeing Taught Me About Digital Experience was originally posted by Local Sign Company Irvine, Ca. https://goo.gl/4NmUQV https://goo.gl/bQ1zHR http://www.pearltrees.com/anaheimsigns

Monday, June 14, 2021

How 3 New Facebook & Instagram Shopping Features Could Help Marketers Boost Sales

For years, millions of brands have flocked to Instagram and Facebook to spread awareness to millennials, Gen Z, and members of other generations on the app.

And, at this point, marketing on these platforms has proven to be a smart tactic. On Instagram alone, 90% of its 1 billion-plus users follows a Business page on the platform.

Now, with Facebook's launches of Facebook Shops, Instagram Checkout, and Live Shopping in the last 12 months, many of the tiny remaining friction points between discovering and buying products on social media platforms have been eliminated.

In this blog post, I'll highlight the newest free features that brands can use to make sales directly from Instagram's or Facebook's platform, as well as any brand requirements for using them.

Click here to access a month's worth of Instagram tips & free templates.

3 New Instagram Shopping Tools to Know About

1. Facebook Shops

Technically, this tool was launched by Facebook, which owns Instagram. However, your Instagram followers won't need a Facebook account to make purchases with this feature.

Facebook Shops, launched in May, enables brands to create online stores that link directly to a brand's Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger, or Facebook Business Page.

When creating a free Shop, brands can upload bulk or individual product listings with photos, prices, and descriptions; change the store's button colors and text to make it consistent with their brand; and choose to have visitors buy products directly from the shop or through an integration with an ecommerce website they already use.

Facebook Shops can be created on Facebook Commerce Manager. To get started, you'll need admin privileges to the Instagram Business or Facebook Business account you'll be linking the Shop to -- as well as admin privileges for your brand's Facebook catalog.

Once a Shop is created, it can be linked directly to your Instagram Business profile. When this is done, an icon that says "View shop" will appear on your mobile profile under your bio. At this point, you can access Facebook Shops on desktop from Facebook Business profiles, but not from Instagram or WhatsApp desktop sites.

Here's what the Shop experience looks like when an Instagram app user visits the account of Ink Meets Paper, a printing company which offers a Facebook Shop:

Ink meets paper facebook shop link on instagrqam bioink meets paper facebook and instagram shop

Facebook Shops, which is free to all businesses that fulfill the business page requirements noted above, could be a great option for small or medium-sized businesses that are interested in ecommerce but don't have the time or bandwidth to create and promote a full ecommerce site around their brand.

To learn more about how Facebook Shops works and the background of why Facebook launched it, check out this post.

2. Instagram Checkout

For brands that want to sell a few select products on Instagram, or don't have time to create a Facebook Business Page or catalog to open a Shop, Instagram also now offers an in-app Checkout experience that links to Instagram Shoppable posts.

Before 2020, several brands were already using Shoppable posts. These posts, which often highlighted an image of a product or experience, allowed users to tap the content to view it in an online catalog outside of the platform.

Instagram shoppable post

But, in March, Instagram launched a Checkout feature that allowed Shoppable purchases to happen directly in the app.

In an announcement, Instagram explained that it launched in-app Checkout to keep users on the platform when they were inspired to make a purchase.

Instagram also adds, "Businesses can truly leverage the full ecosystem of Instagram Shopping features to build experiences that drive awareness and transactions all in one place.

Currently, Checkout is free to brands through until at least 2021. However, there might be selling fees for businesses after that.

"We also want to help reduce the cost of doing business during this tough economic time, so we’re waiving selling fees for businesses that use Checkout on Instagram through the end of the year," Instagram's post said.

Now, when users click on a Shoppable post that links to the Checkout feature for the first time, they'll be asked to give their name, billing information, and shipping address and can then click "Place Order" directly on Instagram. To further eliminate friction, users can set the app to remember purchasing information so they don't need to submit it each time they place orders.

Instagram shopping post and store

Image Source

At this point, you might be wondering, "How is this different from Facebook Shops?"

Both tools similarly allow consumers to make purchases directly on Instagram. However, a Shop is a mini-online store where you can purchase one of many products listed by one brand. Meanwhile, Checkout allows consumers to buy a product they happen to see on an Instagram Shoppable post within their feed or a brand's profile page.

Additionally, to use the Checkout feature, you'll need to fulfill the same requirements as Facebook Shops, plus approval for Instagram Shopping.

Checkout might be a good option for your brand if you want to dabble in internet sales but don't want to monitor how multiple products are selling in a wider shop. With Checkout, you can choose to sell one or two products within a few posts, and monitor your content for engagements and sales metrics.

3. Instagram and Facebook Live Shopping

While the features above integrate with Instagram and Facebook to allow audiences to buy products from posts or pre-published stories, Facebook has also unveiled live shopping features for both of its platforms.

Instagram Live Shopping

Aside from adding Checkout to posts within a feed, Instagram Live Shopping, the first live shopping feature launched by a Facebook-owned brand, brings a similar purchasing experience to live content streamed on the app.

Essentially, Instagram Live Shopping lets brands or Instagram influencers present a small CTA for a product at the bottom of an Instagram Live stream. Below is an example where an influencer discusses a product live as its Checkout CTA is highlighted at the bottom of the screen:

Instagram live shopping content

Image Source

When an Instagram Live viewer sees the Checkout CTA and clicks "Add to Bag," they can either save the order for later if they want to continue watching the stream, or they can purchase the product immediately via Checkout.

If a user places a product in their Instagram Bag, they can find it by going to the app's Explore tab and tapping "Shop" in the top navigation. Fram the  Shop page, they can then tap the bag icon in the upper right corner to see carted products:

Instagram shopping tab of app

Because users who purchase items via Instagram Live Shopping will be directed to Instagram Checkout to finalize the purchase, brands will need to gain access to Instagram Checkout before using Live Shopping.

Facebook Live Shopping

If your audience is primarily on Facebook, you can also leverage Facebook's new live shopping feature -- which was unveiled in spring of 2021. 

Facebook Live Shopping feature

Image Source

Like Instagram Live Shopping, this feature allows audiences viewing Facebook Live streams to see related products pop up. From there, the user can click the pop-up to buy those products while still watching Facebook Live videos. 

The process of promoting your products during a Facebook Live stream is similar to promoting in Instagram:

  • First, you'll need to start a Facebook Shop for audiences to buy seamlessly through Facebook Live. 
  • Once your shop is all set, go to create a Live video for your Facebook account and click the Live Shopping tab, and toggle on "Enable Live Shopping."
  • Once you're live with shopping enabled, you can click or tap a button that says "Products from Shop" and select the products you'd like to feature as you're recording. 

For those getting used to Facebook or Instagram Live Shopping, Facebook offers a helpful list of best practices for streaming on its website. These tips include rehearsing with a private live event, repeating key information about the products, saving the live feed to your timeline, and following up with people who shared comments on your feed after you've recorded.

What to Keep in Mind When Selling Products on Instagram

At this point, you might be ready to sell your brand's products using Instagram's in-app shopping features. However, as you would with any new marketing or selling technique, you'll want to keep a few key things in mind:

Your content strategy is still key.

While it might sound tempting to blast your followers with posts filled with product shots or basic promotional messaging, and hope that users click the Checkout button immediately, some audiences might not respond well to content that feels like a basic advertisement.

Remember, social media users see ads with product shots and bland descriptions daily. If your content doesn't stand out above all the other promotional posts out there, your audiences might disengage from you, even if they like your brand.

Rather than posting basic images or videos of products linked to Checkout, consider going a step further. For example, you could air a live stream tutorial where an influencer discusses your product, or publish user-generated content such as customer testimonials. These types of content will show audiences more valuable details than a basic product shot, while also presenting how real people benefit your product. This could persuade them to click and buy your items much faster.

You'll want to pick the right feature for your company.

While Shops will allow customers to buy a bunch of different products from you all at once, Checkout and Instagram Live Shopping allow you to zone in on specific items or services through your content. While Facebook Shops might be great for brands that can deliver multiple products at once and handle potential high demand, Checkout and Live Shopping could be beneficial for smaller businesses that are more comfortable highlighting one standalone product at a time.

Additionally, if you have a killer supply chain, tons of products to sell, and no time to make content, a Facebook Shop could help you move your inventory. Meanwhile, if you have a great content team, but only have a few key products to sell, you might want to create solid product marketing content paired with Instagram Checkout.

You'll want to monitor your metrics, including revenue.

Although brands don't need to pay for Facebook Shops, Checkout, or Live Shopping, time and effort will still go into creating and maintaining a Shop or content that highlights items sold in Checkout. Because of this, you'll want to monitor the money and engagement-related metrics of each strategy you take on. While these metrics can help you learn what to do, and what not to do, they can also help you determine if these features are worth your team's time.

If you're considering an ecommerce strategy on Instagram or another online platform and don't know where to start in your planning, bookmark our Ultimate Guide to Ecommerce. If you're interested in learning how other brands shifted to ecommerce in 2020, check out this piece.

Editor's Note: This blog post was originally published December 2020, but was updated in June 2021 to add new information about Facebook and Instagram features.

30 days of instagram


How 3 New Facebook & Instagram Shopping Features Could Help Marketers Boost Sales was originally posted by Local Sign Company Irvine, Ca. https://goo.gl/4NmUQV https://goo.gl/bQ1zHR http://www.pearltrees.com/anaheimsigns

13 of the Most (& Least) Successful Brand Extensions to Inspire Your Own

I was in awe of Hailee Steinfeld’s performance after watching her in The Edge of Seventeen. Her performance was so good that it earned her a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress.

But what amazes me about Steinfeld isn’t her acting prowess. It’s that she’s also just as accomplished as a singer. Steinfeld has collaborated with some of the most famous musicians like Zedd, Florida Georgia Line, and Alesso to produce three hit songs that have all reached the Billboard Hot 100 record chart.

Although Steinfeld is mainly known for her acting chops, her singing abilities bolster her esteem as a performer and stretch her brand to more audiences and fans. And just like her venture into music, companies often extend their brand to develop new products in industries where they don’t have any market share.

These initiatives are called brand extensions, and they allow companies to leverage their brand awareness and equity to create more revenue streams.

In this article, you’ll learn more about what a brand extension is and see examples of extension ideas that could inspire you.

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What is a brand extension?

Brand extension is a marketing strategy that involves a company using its well-established brand name or image to introduce a new product or product categories to its customer base.

This strategy works best when the new product category is related to its parent category and is something consumers and customers want.

Many companies use brand extensions because it allows them to leverage their parent brand’s brand awareness and authority to reach new demographics and open up new sales channels.

One company that does brand extensions well is Apple.

Although Apple started as a technology company that makes only computers (Macs), it soon extended its product line to include music players (iPods), mobile devices (iPhones), and tech accessories (Apple Watch and Earpods). Even though all these new products are different, the extension works because Apple didn't drift too far from its parent product category. Instead, it leveraged its brand name to make penetrating the market a success.

What are the types of brand extensions?

Depending on the type of customers you have and what you want to achieve as a brand, you need to decide which brand extension strategy is right for your company.

Here are five different extension strategies that could work for you.

Line Extension

A line extension is when a parent brand launches a new product line in a category already familiar with its customers. With a line extension, brands don't have to create new categories.

An excellent example of a line extension is when soft drink companies introduce new flavors to their existing drink lineup. Other examples could include introducing new scents, sizes, and colors to a product line.

Complementary Product Extension

Another way an established brand can extend itself is by creating complementary products for its main products.

For example, Nike, a sports brand, creates various equipment, wears, and other sport-related products that complement each other. We've also seen toothpaste companies use this type of extension for their original brand by adding toothbrushes and other oral care products as new categories.

Customer Base Extension

A company can create a branding extension for itself by launching different product categories for a single demographic.

Procter & Gamble (P&G), for example, does this well with the Pampers brand. Although P&G specializes in various products, the Pampers line focuses on making products like diapers and wipes for babies.

Company Authority Extension

Companies with high levels of authority in their sector can leverage this authority to create new products.

For instance, Samsung has a huge brand name in the technology space that allows them to launch different products in related categories with a measure of success. And because of its brand image, most consumers wouldn't mind using a new product, whether it's an air conditioner or a mobile phone.

Brand Lifestyle Extension

Who would have thought a tequila line from an energy company would sell out within a few hours? Well, Tesla did it. And it was primarily due to the personality and lifestyle of its CEO, Elon Musk.

However, Elon and Tesla are not the only ones to use a celebrity's lifestyle to extend an existing brand. Other instances include Adidas/Kanye West's Yeezy lineup and Fenty (a brand under LVMH) with Rihanna.

What separates the best brand extensions from the worst?

Historically, the most successful brand extensions are the ones that closely tie to the company’s core brand or flagship product, like Gerber’s baby clothes and Dole’s frozen fruit bars. By entering tangential markets that can preserve their brand’s unique associations and perceived quality, companies can launch new products that consumers intuitively understand the benefits of, even though they’ve never seen them on a shelf.

On the flip side, a company can also exploit its brand and, in turn, ruin it.

Developing a new product in a market that isn’t closely tied to your flagship product or core brand, like what Zippo did with its women’s perfume, could cause some problems.

It could result in undesirable associations to your brand and weaken its existing associations and hurt your established products’ perceived quality.

So whether you’re a SaaS company or a consumer brand thinking about extending your product line, check out our list of the most and least successful brand extensions to help inspire your own.

Brand Extension Examples

  1. Reese's Puffs Cereal
  2. Food Network's Kitchen Items
  3. Gillette’s Razors & Shaving Supplies
  4. Colgate's Toothbrush
  5. Star Wars Action Figures
  6. Honda's Lawn Mowers
  7. Sunkist's Vitamin C Tablets
  8. Cadbury's Instant Mashed Potatoes
  9. Levi's Tailored Classics
  10. Pillsbury's Frozen Microwave Popcorn
  11. Samsonite's Outerwear
  12. Arm & Hammer's Underarm Deodorant Spray
  13. Colgate's Kitchen Entrees

Examples of Good Brand Extensions

1. Reese’s Puffs Cereal

Reese's Brand Extension -- Cereal

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Reese’s Puffs was my favorite cereal growing up, so I might be a little biased here. But with all the chocolate-flavored cereal around in the mid-90s, Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup’s entrance into the cereal market was smart and natural.

Today, with some ad campaigns highlighting how kids can eat their favorite candy for breakfast, Reese’s Puffs has helped General Mills, its conglomerate, capture the second-biggest slice of the cold cereal market share.

2. Food Network's Kitchen Items

Food Network Kitchen Items Brand Extension

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With an audience of over 13 million people, Food Network remains one of the world’s biggest TV channels.

Considering that many people were interested in what it does, Food Network saw an opportunity to extend its brand by partnering with Kohl's Corporation to launch its kitchen and cookware products.

The partnership was a success because Food Network served a specific audience with what they needed.

3.Gillette’s Razors & Shaving Supplies

Gilletes Razors BRand ExtensionImage Source

Gillette’s extension into making shaving products alongside its safety razor blades was a smart move. Why? It’s hard to imagine someone shaving without using shaving cream, foam, or gel?

It was almost a necessity for Gillette to produce this complementary good for its flagship product.

4. Star Wars Action Figures

Star Wars Action Figure Brand ExtensionImage Source

Although Star Wars was popular among adults when the movie was first released in 1977, many children didn't like it as much.

So how did the franchise become popular today? The Star Wars brand extended into the toy market. With action figures from characters in the movies, Star Wars was able to attract a new audience, build brand awareness and make a ton of sales in the process.

5. Colgate's Toothbrush

Colgate Brand ExtensionImage Source

Just like Gillette’s razors and shaving products, Colgate’s toothpaste and toothbrush are complementary goods. But unlike the former example, you literally need a toothbrush to use toothpaste. Otherwise, you can’t brush your teeth.

In my opinion, Colgate’s decision to enter the toothbrush market was a necessity and one of its best moves, helping it secure the third-largest slice of the oral care market.

6. Honda's Lawn Mowers

Honda Lawn Mower Image Source

Honda’s line of lawnmowers might not elicit the most enjoyable memories of my childhood. Still, its entrance and success in a saturated market speak volumes for a company primarily known for selling cars.

By leveraging its expertise in small motors to enter the lawn mower market in 1978, it now boasts the seventh-largest slice of market share in the global lawn mower industry.

7. Sunkist's Vitamin C Tablets

Sunkist Brand Extension

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Featuring orange juice as its flagship product, Sunkist’s brand has associations with oranges, health, and energy. Sunkist produced vitamin C tablets that spawned an entire arm of business dedicated to vitamins and supplements to both bolster and leverage this association simultaneously.

Examples of Unsuccessful Brand Extensions

Not every brand extension can be a hit. Here are a few examples of brands that have made brand extension mistakes — and the lessons you can learn from them.

8. Cadbury's Instant Mashed Potatoes

Cadbury Brand ExtensionImage Source

Cadbury is known for making high-end chocolate and candy. When it started producing low-end food products, like instant mashed potatoes, it’s not surprising to learn that its association with the finest chocolates weakened.

Smash, its instant mashed potato brand, actually reached mainstream success, but it was at the expense of lowering its flagship product’s perceived quality. Cadbury eventually sold Smash in 1986, over 20 years after introducing its instant mashed potatoes to the world.

9. Levi’s Tailored Classics

Levis Brand ExtensionImage Source

When Levi’s introduced Tailored Classics in the early 1980s, it already owned a large share of its target market, so it wanted to enter some new markets to sustain its high growth rate.

One of these markets was men’s suits, but since its brand was heavily associated with a casual, rugged, and outdoorsy lifestyle, Levi’s new product line conflicted with its core identity and failed to catch on.

Consumers trusted Levi’s to produce durable clothing that could endure the wrath of mother nature, but, for that very reason, they didn't trust them to deliver high-end tailored suits.

10. Pillsbury's Frozen Microwave Popcorn

PillsBury Brand ExtensionImage Source

Even though Pillsbury is known for producing foodstuffs, its frozen microwave popcorn couldn’t compete with Orville Redenbacher or General Mills’ Pop Secret because its product positioning of being “frozen for freshness” didn’t offer enough value. Sure, sticking your popcorn in the freezer is convenient (I guess), but that benefit pales in comparison to enjoying a better-tasting popcorn.

11. Samsonite's Outerwear

Samsonite Brand Extension

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While Samsonite’s outwear is more fashionable than Levi’s Tailored Classics, it still suffers from the same problem as Levi’s failed product line the brand extension doesn’t align with Samsonite’s core identity.

Samsonite is known for making high-end luggage, suitcases, and business bags. So unless it thinks its flagship product’s elegant traits can transfer to a completely unrelated product line, its venture into the clothing industry could diminish its brand equity. This is most likely the reason Samsonite doesn’t list outerwear on its website anymore.

12. Arm & Hammer's Underarm Deodorant Spray

Arm n Hammer Brand Extension

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Arm & Hammer has successfully extended its brand from an odor-neutralizing baking soda to laundry detergent, carpet deodorizer, and even cat litter. But one product line that isn’t the best fit for its brand is an underarm deodorant spray. Applying a product that shares an ingredient with heavy-duty cleaning supplies to such a sensitive part of the body doesn’t jive well with consumers.

13. Colgate Kitchen Entrees

Colgate Brand Extension

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Although Colgate did well by extending its brand and creating different oral care products, it failed to enter the food space.

This brand extension was a failure mainly because selling frozen food was in sharp contrast with Colgate's brand identity. Since its audience already associated the brand name with dental care, it was hard for them to see the company differently.

Grow Your Brand

While a brand extension has its benefits, you also need to know that extending your brand into unchartered waters would also come with challenges.

So before you implement any extension strategy for your business, ensure it's in line with what your ideal consumer wants.

Does it make any logical sense to start marketing a new product to my customers? What benefit would a consumer derive from this new brand or product? Have I done enough research to know how a brand extension would affect my original brand?

Once you answer those questions, then you can start thinking about effective ways to grow your brand.

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13 of the Most (& Least) Successful Brand Extensions to Inspire Your Own was originally posted by Local Sign Company Irvine, Ca. https://goo.gl/4NmUQV https://goo.gl/bQ1zHR http://www.pearltrees.com/anaheimsigns

Here's How to Add a Link to Your Instagram Story [Pro Tip]

More than 500 million accounts use Instagram's Stories feature, and one-third of Instagram's most-viewed Stories are created by brands (Instagram). It's clear that this feature has resonated with Instagram's base, and businesses can leverage it to drive awareness and engagement with their audiences.

But with all of that comes the question: How can brands use Stories to their fullest advantage, in the effort of driving traffic and conversions for their businesses? It starts with knowing how to add links to Instagram Stories with the Swipe Up feature so you can promote your website. Let's dive into that now.

New Data: Instagram Engagement Report [2021 Version]

You'll be able to post exciting content regarding a new product, service, or event, and then encourage your audience to "swipe up for details." This gives brands a low-friction way to drive traffic from the Instagram platform, and it allows users to more seemlessly interact with brands directly from those brands' Stories.

Who can use Swipe Up on Instagram?

The Swipe Up feature is intended for brands and Instagram users, so Instagram limits availability to those who fit three criteria: You must have a business profile, it must be a verified account, and you must have at least 10,000 followers.

If you meet this criteria, continue reading to learn how to add a link to your Instagram story. If you don't meet the criteria, click here to find out your alternative options.

1. Check that you have 10,000 followers or a verified account.

You won't be able to follow the steps below if you don't.

I used HubSpot's official Instagram account for these instructions, since my personal account isn't verified (I also, you'll be surprised to hear, don't have 10,000 followers … ).

2. When uploading to your Instagram Story, click the icon at the top right that looks like a chain.

Add a Link to Instagram Story: Click Chain Icon

3. Click "+URL" to add a link to a web page.

This will allow you to designate which link to add to your Story. If you were interested in linking your Story to your IGTV video, you could choose that option instead.

Add Link to Instagram Story: Click +URL

4. Type the URL into the text box.

This will be the page that the user gets directed to when they swipe up on your Story. You'll want to copy it into the text box labeled "URL."

Add Link to Instagram Story: Designate URL

5. Click "Done" in the top right of the screen.

From there you'll be prompted to go through the process of publishing your Story.

6. When you're ready to publish, click the "+ Story" button at the bottom right.

Now, your published Story has a "See More" Swipe Up link.

Add Link to Instagram Story: See More Swipe Up Link

How to Add a Link to Instagram If You Don't Have 10K Followers

If you want to promote products off of the platform, you may have to get a little creative to do it. Here are your options:

1. Directing your audience to an IGTV video.

IGTV (Instagram TV) is an app that allows you to create Instagram videos with a minimum length of 1 minute and a maximum length of 15 minutes (via mobile) or 60 minutes (via web). Unlike regular Instagram posts and Stories, however, IGTV allows you to add clickable links to the video description.

While Stories get more attention than IGTV videos, one tactic you can use is creating a Story that promotes the IGTV video with your link. This will allow you to get some level of click-through from your Story.

2. Directing your audience to the link in your bio.

Instagram also allows you to drop a link in your profile bio. In many cases, this real estate is best used to list the homepage of your website. However, if you want to drive traffic to a particular page, you could conceivably add the promo link and then include "link in bio" language in your Instagram Story to direct people there.

The main downside, however, is that you wouldn't be able to promote multiple links at once, so you'd have to coordinate the link you place in your bio to match the content you're currently creating.

Both of these methods may result in lower conversions because of the extra steps the user has to take in order to access the links. However, they're both excellent ways to earn traffic from Instagram as you build your audience to 10,000 followers.

Instagram Swipe Up Link Examples

1. @Detoxinista Recipes

Food bloggers such as @Detoxinista use Instagram Stories' Swipe Up link to embed recipes on the platform. They wisely post images of delicious-looking food, which incentivizes users to swipe up to learn how to make it themselves. The link isn't a direct advertisement, but users are directed to Detoxinista's website, where they can find her cookbook and become familiar with her brand.

Swipe Up Link Example: Detoxinista

2. @Blavity #worldnotobaccoday

Blavity is a media company "created by and for Black millennials." They provide their audience with news, editorial, and lifestyle content that informs and entertains. In a recent campaign with L.A. Quits, Blavity promoted World No Tobacco Day to raise awareness of the harmful effects of smoking. You'll notice the "Swipe Up" call-to-action on the left. By doing so, users are directed to the L.A. Quits website where they can get resources for living a healthier tobacco-free life.

Swipe Up Link Example: Blavity

3. @Alifedotowsky Clothing Items

If you're a Bachelorette fan, you might've noticed the growing trend among Bachelor and Bachelorette contestants to become product influencers and embed Swipe Up links in their Stories. As a fashion and style blogger, Ali often takes pictures or videos of outfits she's wearing, with Swipe Up links so users can buy the items online. She also often incorporates discounts if users swipe up, further incentivizing a user to purchase an item from a brand's website.

Swipe Up Link Example: Alifedotowsky

4. @Popsugarfitness Summer Sculpt Series

One of the most effective ways to use the Swipe Up feature is to offer your followers something of value, for free. @Popsugarfitness, for instance, introduced a Summer Sculpt series with a tempting offer -- "Swipe Up for a 10-Minute No-Equipment Booty-Shaping Workout". Who could say no to that? Ideally, as users obtain more value from your site, they'll spend longer on it and become stronger brand advocates.

Swipe Up Link Example: PopSugarFitness

5. @TheLipBar Cosmetics

The Lip Bar is a beauty brand that creates inclusive, vegan, and cruelty-free cosmetics products ranging from lipstick to tinted moisturizer. In this Instagram Story, The Lip Bar is promoting their summer sale with the tagline "Are ya'll ready for summer?" By swiping up on the Story, you can view one of their promoted products.

Swipe Up Link Example: The Lip Bar

6. @Reebok Be More Human Campaign

Reebok created a powerful and timely campaign called "Be More Human", celebrating women's empowerment through fitness. On their Instagram Stories, they raise awareness for the campaign by showing famous women like Gigi Hadid or Danai Gurira, and when you swipe up, you learn more about Reebok's campaign and how you can get involved. On the site there are opportunities to purchase t-shirts or donate money, but it's evident Reebok is committed to staying focused on their messaging above all else, a noble pursuit.

Swipe Up Link Example: Reebok

Driving Traffic from Instagram

Instagram is a thriving platform, one that your customers are likely on. It only makes sense to use these tactics as well as other Instagram strategies to build awareness for your brand and grow your business.

Editor's note: This post was originally published in February 2020 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

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Here's How to Add a Link to Your Instagram Story [Pro Tip] was originally posted by Local Sign Company Irvine, Ca. https://goo.gl/4NmUQV https://goo.gl/bQ1zHR http://www.pearltrees.com/anaheimsigns