Tuesday, February 28, 2017

11 Storytelling Formulas to Supercharge Your Social Media Marketing

Legendary marketer, Seth Godin, describes marketing as  “the art of telling a story that resonates with your audience and then spreads.”

If you look at some of the biggest brands around, you might notice that they are often amazing storytellers.

  • Apple tells stories of people challenging the norms
  • Nike tells stories of people doing the impossible
  • Airbnb tells stories of travelers living in homes around the world and belonging anywhere.

But how do you tell compelling stories? How do you tell stories that your audience wants to hear? And how do you tell your brand story?

While researching on the topic of storytelling, I discovered several tested-and-proven storytelling formulas —  formulas used by companies like Pixar, Apple, and more.

These formulas can be applied to your company’s overall marketing, content you produce, social media updates, copy on your website, and more.

Ready to jump in?

11 Storytelling Formulas to Supercharge Your Social Media Marketing header image

11 storytelling formulas to supercharge your social media marketing

1. Three-Act Structure

Setup — Set the scene and introduce the character(s)

Confrontation or “Rising action” — Present a problem and build up the tension

Resolution — Resolve the problem

The three-act structure is one of the oldest and most straightforward storytelling formulas. You might recognize this structure in many of the stories you come across.

In the first act, set the stage and introduce the character(s) of the story. In the second act, present a problem faced by the character(s) and build up the tension. In the third act, deliver the climax of the story by resolving the problem (with your product or service).

Example:

Emily turned her passion into a business. She enjoys every moment of it... apart from the bookkeeping, financial statements, and taxes. But, she doesn't have to do them herself.

2. Freytag’s Pyramid: Five-Act Structure

Exposition — Introduce important background information

Rising action — Tell a series of events to build up to the climax

Climax — Turn the story around (usually the most exciting part of the story)

Falling action — Continue the action from the climax

Dénouement — Ending the story with a resolution

The Freytag’s Pyramid is created by Gustav Freytag when he analyzed the stories by Shakespeare and ancient Greek storytellers.

It is a more elaborate form of the three-act structure, which puts emphasis on the climax and the falling action of the story as much as the other parts of the story.

Example:

As a fast-growing startup, we work on many things at once. Emails and personal to-do lists were great when we were smaller. As we grew, collaborations became messy. Where's that file? What's the progress of this project? Who's working on this? Then, we discovered Trello! Now, we have everything in one place — comments, files, to-do lists, and more. Team collaboration has never been better before.

3. Before – After – Bridge

Before — Describe the world with Problem A.

After — Imagine what it’d be like having Problem A solved.

Bridge — Here’s how to get there.

This is our favorite storytelling and copywriting formula. We have been using it for our blog post introductions but it can be applied to social media updates, email campaigns, and other marketing messages.

Set the stage of a problem that your target audience is likely to experience — ideally a problem that your company solves. Describe a world where that problem didn’t exist. Explain how to get there or present the solution (i.e. your product or service).

Example:
Creating great social media images takes time. Imagine taking only 15 minutes to design one. With Canva, you can make stunning graphics in just a few clicks.

4. Problem – Agitate – Solve

Problem — Present a problem

Agitate — Agitate the problem

Solve — Solve the problem

This is one of the most popular copywriting formulas, which is great for storytelling, too.

The structure is quite similar to the Before-After-Bridge formula. First, you present a problem. Second, instead of presenting the “After”, you intensify the problem with emotional language. Finally, you solve the problem by offering your product or services.

Example:

Video calls aren't always fun. Distracting background noises, no video images, and poor connection. Unless you are using Zoom.

5. Simon Sinek’s Golden Circle

Why — Why the company exists

How — How the company fulfills its Why

What — What the company does to fulfill its Why

Simon Sinek’s TED talk, How great leaders inspire action, is one of the most viewed TED talks ever, with more than 30 million views so far. He explained that great companies like Apple inspire people and succeed because they use the Golden Circle formula.

Always start with your Why — Why are you in this business? What motivates you? Then, explain how your company will achieve your Why. Finally, describe in tangible terms what your company does to bring your Why to life (i.e. your products and services).

Example:

At Basecamp we want to do everything we can to help restore work-life balance. Work has a way of encroaching. Work calls on Friday at 9 pm or pings on Sunday at 6 pm as you’re sitting down for dinner with the family. It’s time to take a stand. So we’ve built a feature into Basecamp 3 we call Work Can Wait™.

6. Dale Carnegie’s Magic Formula

Incident — Share a relevant, personal experience

Action — Describe the specific action taken to solve or prevent a problem

Benefit — State the benefits of the action

How to Win Friends and Influence People is one of our favorite books at Buffer. After studying many great leaders, the author, Dale Carnegie, developed this simple three-step storytelling formula that can help you persuade your audience.

Open your story with a personal experience relevant to your point to grab your audience’s attention. Describe the actions you took chronologically, showing that a change was needed. Wrap up the story by connecting the change to its benefits. (This could be a customer’s testimonial, too!)

Example:

I've tried many to-do list apps, and none have ever worked for me. Then I discovered Omni-Focus thanks to a recommendation from a highly-respected startup founder. My productivity has skyrocketed since I started using it, and I now feel calmer and happier at work, too!

7. Dave Lieber’s V Formula

Introduce the character

Bring the story to its lowest point

Turn it around and finish with a happy ending

Dave Lieber is a keynote speaker and the Dallas Morning News Watchdog columnist, who has been telling stories for almost 40 years. In his TED talk, The power of storytelling to change the world, he shared the story formula he has been using for his stories.

Once you introduce the character of the story, describe how things went awful for her, using emotions to draw your audience into your story. At the lowest point of the story, turn things around, describe how things improved, and end the story on a high note.

Example:

Jane was an accountant for 20 years. During the recession, she lost her job when her company went bankrupt, and she couldn't find a job for months. What started as a much-needed way to stay afloat, became a new way of living. Airbnb connected her with the world and inspired her to become a tour guide, sharing the wonders of her city with visitors from around the world.

(Inspired by a true Airbnb story)

8. Star – Chain – Hook

Star — An attention-getting, positive opening

Chain — A series of convincing facts, benefits, and reasons

Hook — A powerful call-to-action

This formula is developed by, I believe, a Chicago consultant, Dr. Frank W. Dignan.

The star grabs your audience’s attention. The chain turns your audience’s attention into a desire. The hook gives them something actionable to fulfill their desire.

Example:

Learn to code and build your own app in 30 days. 100 other students learning together. Exclusive access to a private Slack channel. More than four hours of step-by-step video guides. Reserve your spot now!

9. Pixar’s award-winning formula

Once upon a time there was ___. Every day, ___. One day ___. Because of that, ___. Because of that, ___. Until finally ___.

Former Pixar storyboard artist Emma Coats shared 22 narrative rules she had learned during her time at Pixar. Among the 22 rules was this simple storytelling formula that has helped Pixar win countless awards, including 13 Academy Awards, 9 Golden Globes, and 11 Grammys.

You don’t have to follow the wording exactly. The idea, as I see it, is to introduce a character or a group of character, describe their usual routine, present a twist that disrupts their daily lives, explain how they overcome it, and celebrate!

Example:

Buffer is a fully-distributed company with team members all around the world. To keep track of who's on leave, they created a shared Google calendar where team members can add their vacation dates. In 2016, the company grew more than three times to almost 100 people, and the shared calendar system broke. It's a struggle to find out who's away and for how long. They needed a better system that can handle the growing team. After trying several solutions, they found Timetastic. Now, requesting and tracking time off is a breeze. They even know who's away from within Slack by using the Slack integration to pull the information in. Here's to a better work-life balance!

10. The Hero’s Journey

Departure — A hero receives a call to go on an adventure, receives advice from a mentor, and heads out on her journey.

Initiation — The hero meets a series of challenges but eventually completes the mission.

Return — The hero returns and helps others with her new found power or treasure.

The original hero’s journey is made up of 17 stages which are organized into the three acts described above. This formula is used by many of the greatest storytellers including George Lucas for his Star Wars films!

The hero of your story would often be your customers. They experience some tricky situations in their lives or work but eventually solve the problems with your product or service, improving their lives or bringing results to their company.

Example:

Everyone in the team knows that social media is important and fun. But no one really likes doing it as a job. Posting across platforms takes time and reporting the results is a nightmare. You are different. You read several helpful articles and learned about social media management tools. You know you can schedule your posts across channel easily and know your performance through the analytics. You adopted the tool for your team. Traffic from social went up. Leads poured in. Your manager loved the reports you created and even asked you to build a social media team. Social media management is never the same in your company again.

11. Nancy Duarte’s secret structure of great talks

What is — The status quo

What could be — The future that could be possible

Go back and forth between the two and end off with a …

New bliss — The wonderful future with your idea/product/service adopted

Nancy Duarte’s TED talk, The secret structure of great talks, has been viewed more than a million times. In her talk, she revealed the secret formula that Steve Jobs and Martin Luther King might have used for their famous speeches.

Start by describing the current situation and then contrast that with a future that’s way better. Make the present unappealing and the future attractive. Go back to the present and then point to the future again. End the story with the new state where your product or service is adopted.

Example:

Email. Imagine if there was a saner way to communicate. Receiving endless email chains when the discussion is no longer relevant to you, and missing important discussions because you were not CC-ed in the conversation. Only if you can control what you want to receive. Yes, you can. Slack brings all your communication together — collaborations, file sharing, integrations, and chat history. Here's how the best companies communicate in the 21st century.

5 storytelling tips from amazing storytellers

Armed with these 11 storytelling formulas, you are ready to tell your brand stories. To help you tell even better stories, I curated advice from several amazing storytellers. Here’re five tips from them:

1. Don’t complicate things

(by Lindsay Smith via Buffer)

Lindsay Smith is a producer at National Geographic Travel, who was awesome to join us for a podcast episode recently. National Geographic Travel has more than 25 million fans across their social media accounts.

One thing that’s very important for social media and storytelling in general, is to not complicate things unnecessarily. While we want to be very thoughtful about the stories and posts that we’re sharing, we don’t want to muddy that story up with irrelevant information. What’s important is that you keep it simple.

(Emphasis mine)

2. The 3 things to ask

(by Lindsay Smith via Buffer)

Here’s another advice from Lindsay that I love:

To tell a great story you must ask three things:

  1. Is this story going to be interesting? (Gut Check)
  2. What is the best way to tell this story? (Format)
  3. How do people want to see this story and how are they going to consume it? (Visual Element)

(Emphasis mine)

// To be updated: In terms of storytelling format, here’re 20 creative ways to use social media for storytelling for your inspiration (link).

3. Create detailed imagery to craft the setting you want

(by Gregory Ciotti via Sparring Mind)

Gregory Ciotti is one of my favorite marketers. When he was at Help Scout, he helped grow the company blog to almost 4 million unique visitors per year.

In his article, The Psychology of Storytelling, he shared the importance of storytelling, ways to create better stories, and characteristics of highly persuasive stories. Here’s my favorite advice from his article:

Creating detailed imagery helps craft the setting YOU want

Want to get people swept up in your stories?

Tell them what they are getting swept up in to, and they will respond.

Could any of us relate to the heroic deeds in tales like those of the Lord of the Rings without Tolkien’s exquisitely detailed descriptions of the dangers of Mordor or the perils faced by Frodo and Sam?

The imagery paints the picture of any good story, we could say that [Spoilers if you haven’t read/seen Lord of the Rings] “Frodo and Sam fight a giant spider,” but Tolkien spends an entire chapter on the ordeal, taking the time to help the reader visualize the ferocious nature of the enemy and the bravery of our heroes who persevere despite their many weaknesses (doubt, fear, dismay, etc.)

Implementing the “real” into a fantastic setting often helps create a better connection with the reader.

I don’t know the feeling of encountering a spider the size of a house, but I do know what terror feels like, and I also know how hard it can be to persevere in the face of immense doubt of your abilities.

These “all-too-real” elements of a fantastical story make it easier to relate to.

(Emphasis mine)

The awesome thing about storytelling on social media is that you can use multimedia such as images and videos to complement your words. Instead of asking your audience to imagine, you can show it to them.

4. Parachute in, don’t preamble

(by J.D. Schramm via Harvard Business Review)

J.D. Schramm is a lecturer on Organizational Behavior at Stanford Graduate School of Business, where he teaches effective communications.

In his Harvard Business Review article, A Refresher on Storytelling 101, he shared seven advice on successful storytelling, and this is my favorite:

Parachute in, don’t preamble. The best storytellers draw us immediately into the action. They capture our attention and set the tone for a unique audience experience. Avoid opening with “I’d like to tell you a story about a time when I learned…” Instead, drop us into the action and draw the lesson out later.

As people on social media tend to have short attention span, your stories have to grab their attention immediately or they might just scroll past your post.

5. Get Personal

(by Kathy Klotz-Guest via Convince & Convert)

Kathy Klotz-Guest is the founder of Keeping It Human, which helps companies create compelling stories.

I read her article, 7 Ways to Make Your Business Storytelling Awesome, and this point stood out for me:

3. Get Personal

Great, emotional brand storytelling must be told through the lens of a person: a specific customer, a passionate employee, or a dedicated partner. Every great company story must be anchored in a human story and told through a personal human lens. Anchor your stories through real people, and you’ll see a big difference in your storytelling.

(Emphasis mine)

This reminds me that the stories we tell should seldom have our company as the main character or the hero. The hero of our stories should be our customers and community. The best example is the stories told by Airbnb, which are often about their hosts or guests.

What’s your favorite way of telling stories?

Whenever I write, I often find it easier when I have a structure in mind already. I hope these storytelling formulas help you in the same way when you craft your amazing social media stories.

I’m sure there are many other ways of telling stories. Would you be up for sharing your favorite way? Thanks!

Some of the icons in the header image are from Iconfinder.


Thank 11 Storytelling Formulas to Supercharge Your Social Media Marketing for first publishing this post.

Monday, February 27, 2017

Social Media Algorithms: How They Work and How to Use Them in Your Favor – Michael Stelzner [SSM032]

Social media algorithms are a lot like “Dog Years.”

They seems to progress and change at a rate of seven years for every one year on the human calendar.

We’ve seen first-hand the dramatic declines in traffic and organic reach over the last two years as so many businesses have.

But despite the challenges that marketers face with social media algorithms, there is still a way to overcome them and share your content with the world.

Michael Stelzner, CEO and Found of Social Media Examiner, has been in the business of social media since 2009 (when organic reach and traffic numbers were going strong). We had the pleasure of chatting with Michael all about how social media algorithms work and how marketers and businesses can implement strategies to use algorithms in their favor to get great content seen.

A huge thank you to Michael for jam-packing this episode with actionable wisdom and takeaways for social media managers and marketers alike looking to understand how and why social media algorithms are in place and how to use them in their favor.

How to listen: iTunes | Google Play | SoundCloud | Stitcher | RSS

This episode is available on:

In this episode, here’s what you’ll learn:

Michael Stelzner shares all of his insider secrets and knowledge on how social media algorithms work and how you as a marketer or business owner can overcome them. You’ll also learn tips like:

  • Why algorithms are important for consumers
  • What Live video is the darling of algorithms right now
  • How the Facebook and Twitter algorithms work
  • How to overcome social media algorithms
  • Michael’s most important steps for small businesses and brands

Social Media Algorithms: How they Work and How to Overcome Them

3 Key Takeaways for Marketers Looking to Use Social Media Algorithms in Their Favor

In Michael’s words…

1. Rethink

Rethink is the keyword here. Rethink your posting strategy on social media – Less is actually more!

2. Live video is the flavor of the day

Live video is currently the flavor of the day with algorithms and so figure out a way to do it. We have nearly 13 sessions on live video at Social Media Marketing World 2017. We’ve got some preliminary research that marketers are all in on live video and so it’s time to do it – do not delay.

3. Refocus

Refocus on the reason why you have a social community in the first place. There’s a community there and so it’s important to refocus on community development. Stop worrying about the numbers and stop worrying about the traffic. Start focusing on cultivating the right people to build a strong affinity and relationship with your business so that they become evangelists.

A Great Moment

Michael Stelzner Quote on Social Media Algorithms

“The moral of the story is that there were the “good old days,” but the good old days are over. They’re never coming back and we need to accept that.”

– Michael Stelzner

Awesome People and Stuff Mentioned in the Show

Favorite Quotes

  • Traffic has been going down, down, down and down. For years! That’s the challenge – you’re not getting the reach or visibility and we have to be OK with that reality.
  • With the algorithms in place, high-quality content can be seen at any time. This is important.
  • The old mentality of ‘scheduling when people are there’ has been thrown out the window. The whole idea of algorithms is that posts are not in linear order… these are like radical re-thinking strategies.
  • Due to the implementation of algorithms over the last year or so, we’ve completely gotten rid of our evergreen reposting strategy on Twitter and LinkedIn and only selectively repost to Facebook.
  • We know that the more we go live, the more our non-live content get exposure in the Facebook News Feed.
  • We are refocusing a lot of our efforts on community development with social media. We are actively doing things with our community to provide value to them.
  • Facebook is like the Hotel California – you can come anytime you want, but you can never leave. And they don’t want you to leave, marketers!
  • First and foremost, if you’re a small business with little traction on social media or on your blog, you have to figure out your email acquisition strategy.

How to Say Hello to Michael (and us)

Michael Stelzner is the go-to resource for everything social media – especially when it comes to staying on top of the latest trends. You can follow along with Michael on Twitter here or check out Social Media Examiner on Facebook here. And don’t forget about Social Media Examiner’s Award-Winning Blog.

Thanks for listening! We’d love to connect with you at @buffer on Twitter or with the hashtag #bufferpodcast.

Enjoy the show? It’d mean the world to us if you’d be up for giving us a rating and review on iTunes!

About the Show

The Science of Social Media is a podcast for marketers and social media managers looking for inspiration, ideas, and results for their social media strategies. Each week, we interview one of the very best in social media marketing from brands in every industry. You will learn the latest tactics on social media, the best tools to use, the smartest workflows, and the best goal-setting advice. It is our hope that each episode you’ll find one or two gems to use with your social media marketing!

The Science of Social Media is proudly made by the Buffer team. Feel free to get in touch with us for any thoughts, ideas, or feedback.


Thank Social Media Algorithms: How They Work and How to Use Them in Your Favor – Michael Stelzner [SSM032] for first publishing this post.

Monday, February 20, 2017

Proven Instagram Stories Strategies from the Experts at Bustle – Hannah Caldwell [SSM030]

Instagram Stories is quickly becoming one of the go-to marketing channels for some of the world’s top brands.

Take Bustle, for example, with more than 1.4 million followers on Instagram alone, they are seeing incredible results from investing in a consistent and thoughtful Instagram Stories strategy.

In fact, they’re seeing so much success that they’ve dedicated an entire position to creating beautiful Stories 5-6 times per week.

Behind those Bustle Instagram Stories?

Hannah Caldwell. Hannah shares her expert strategies on how you can create simple, yet beautiful and engaging Stories that will help to grow your account and “wow” your audience.

Hannah also digs into the nitty gritty of what it take to produce great content on the platform. A huge thank you to Hannah for jam-packing this episode with actionable wisdom and takeaways for social media managers and marketers alike looking to take their Instagram Stories content to the next level in 2017!

How to listen: iTunes | Google Play | SoundCloud | Stitcher | RSS

This episode is available on:

In this episode, here’s what you’ll learn:

Hannah Caldwell shares her expert insights into how marketers and businesses can create unique and share-worthy Instagram Stories. You’ll also learn tips like:

  • The process of creating Stories from start-to-finish
  • Ideal length and format of their top Instagram Stories
  • Developing content ideas and executing on them consistently
  • How Instagram Stories helps to grow your overall Instagram account
  • The most important metrics to measure success and growth

Instagram Stories at Bustle

3 Key Takeaways for Marketers Looking to Create Quality Instagram Stories for their Brand or Business

In Hannah’s words…

1. Think about what you like to watch

What do you like to watch? That’s a great starting point for you to begin to create relevant and engaging Instagram Stories. And if you’re not within the demographic of your target audience, then you can talk to people who are about what they would like to see.

2. Make sure it feels native to the platform

Make sure that everything feels native and natural to the platform. For example, I use my phone to film and shoot everything for our Stories even though I am not a video producer. That helps it to feel native and organic on Instagram.

3. Let it change and grow

Let your Instagram Stories change and grow as the platform changes and grows. It’s a new thing and they’re launching new features all of the time which is amazing for marketers. Make sure that you move and change with them and adapt to the changing landscape that we’re all a part of.

A Great Moment

“It’s fun for the Instagram Stories to reflect a little bit more of what our site might look like. In other words, the experience you might get on our website is reflected in our Instagram Stories.”

– Hannah Caldwell

Awesome People & Stuff Mentioned in the Show

Favorite Quotes

Quote from Hannah Caldwell of Bustle on Instagram Stories

  • We’ll create Instagram Stories that are anywhere between 5 slides and 30 slides – total. The most important part is that it is based around what type of content it is.
  • To produce as much content as we do at Bustle, it’s definitely is a time commitment, but, truly anyone can create beautiful Instagram stories with just a few inexpensive tools.
  • Completion rate and direct messages are the metrics that I watch closely and the ones that I really trust. Some days the views are high because we happen to be at the front of someone’s feed that day because of how the algorithm works.
  • We’re trying to create content that we want to be watching. Our own employees at Bustle are the target audience, so we try to create Stories that we as a team would watch. And also, we want to have a direct link to our users through messages and connections.
  • You have to think about the platform and you have to consider what it allows you to do and what it doesn’t allow you to do. So if you only have 10-15 second clips, community well within that 15 seconds.

How to Say Hello to Hannah (and us)

If you’re looking for some awesome Instagram Stories inspiration – check out Bustle on Instagram! You can also say hello to Hannah on Instagram and read more about Sunny’s journey at bustle.com

Thanks for listening! We’d love to connect with you at @buffer on Twitter or with the hashtag #bufferpodcast.

Enjoy the show? It’d mean the world to us if you’d be up for giving us a rating and review on iTunes!

About the Show

The Science of Social Media is a podcast for marketers and social media managers looking for inspiration, ideas, and results for their social media strategies. Each week, we interview one of the very best in social media marketing from brands in every industry. You will learn the latest tactics on social media, the best tools to use, the smartest workflows, and the best goal-setting advice. It is our hope that each episode you’ll find one or two gems to use with your social media marketing!

The Science of Social Media is proudly made by the Buffer team. Feel free to get in touch with us for any thoughts, ideas, or feedback.


Thank Proven Instagram Stories Strategies from the Experts at Bustle – Hannah Caldwell [SSM030] for first publishing this post.

Thursday, February 16, 2017

50 Video Marketing Stats to Help You Create a Winning Social Media Strategy in 2017

Video is taking over social media.

In our end of 2016 social media survey, 83 percent of marketers said they’d like to create more video content if they didn’t have restraints such as time and resources. We also found that 30 percent of marketers are looking to spend more time focused on Facebook video in 2017.

To help you make the fullest use of video marketing on social media and create a successful social media strategy for 2017, we’ve pulled together 50 of the most relevant video marketing statistics for social media marketers.

Did you know, for example, that Facebook video receives, on average, 135 percent more organic reach than a Facebook photo? Or that 73 percent of B2B marketers say that video positively impacts marketing ROI?

Check out more fascinating video statistics covering topics like marketing trends, user behavior, engagement, and much more below!

video-stats@2x

50 Statistics About Social Media Video Marketing for 2017

The statistics are categorized into:

  1. Trends
  2. Marketers’ Usage
  3. Video Watching Behavior
  4. Engagement
  5. Live Videos
  6. Video Ads
  7. Purchasing Behavior
  8. ROI

Feel free to use the quick links above to jump to the section you’re most interested in. There are also three detailed infographics about video marketing at the end of the post.

Let’s jump right in!


1. Trends

1) Online videos will account for more than 80% of all consumer internet traffic by 2020 (CISCO, 2016).

2) Over 8 billion videos or 100 million hours of videos are watched on Facebook every day (TechCrunch, 2016; TechCrunch, 2016).

3) 10 billion videos are watched on Snapchat every day (Bloomberg, 2016).

Over 8 billion videos or 100 million hours of videos are watched on Facebook every day (TechCrunch, 2016; TechCrunch, 2016). 10 billion videos are watched on Snapchat every day (Bloomberg, 2016).

(Image from KPCB)

4) Video views on Twitter grew 220X from December 2014 to December 2015 (Twitter, 2015).

5) Periscope users have created more than 200 million broadcasts (Periscope, 2016).

6) Periscope users watch over 110 years of live videos every day (Periscope, 2016).

Periscope users have created more than 200 million broadcasts (Periscope, 2016). Periscope users watch over 110 years of live videos every day (Periscope, 2016).

7) More than 500 million hours of videos are watched on YouTube every day (Business Insider, 2016).

8) Searches related to “how to” on YouTube grew 70% from 2014 to 2015 (Google, 2015).

9) More than 100 million hours of how-to YouTube videos were watched in North America in the first five months of 2015 (Google, 2015).


2. Marketers’ Usage

10) 60% of marketers used videos in their social media marketing in 2016 (Social Media Examiner, 2016).

11) 14% of marketers used live videos in their social media marketing in 2016 (Social Media Examiner, 2016).

60% of marketers used videos in their social media marketing in 2016 (Social Media Examiner, 2016). 14% of marketers used live videos in their social media marketing in 2016 (Social Media Examiner, 2016).

12) 73% of marketers plan on increasing their use of videos (Social Media Examiner, 2016).

13) 50% of marketers plan on using live videos. (Social Media Examiner, 2016).

14) 44% of SMB owners and marketers plan to spend money to promote their video content on Facebook in 2017 (Animoto, 2016).

15) 83% of marketers said they’d create more video content if there were no obstacles like time, resources, and budget (Buffer, 2016).

16) 43% of marketers said they’d create more live videos if there were no obstacles like time, resources, and budget (Buffer, 2016).

83% of marketers said they’d create more video content if there were no obstacles like time, resources, and budget (Buffer, 2016). 43% of marketers said they’d create more live videos if there were no obstacles like time, resources, and budget (Buffer, 2016).

17) 1 in 4 marketers and SMB owners feel behind on video marketing (Animoto, 2016).


3. Video Watching Behavior

18) Videos up to 2 minutes long get the most engagement (Wistia, 2016).

Videos up to 2 minutes long get the most engagement (Wistia, 2016).

19) 65% of people who watch the first three seconds of a Facebook video will watch for at least 10 seconds, and 45% will watch for 30 seconds (Facebook, 2016).

20) 55% of people consume videos thoroughly — the highest amount all types of content (HubSpot, 2016).

55% of people consume videos thoroughly — the highest amount all types of content (HubSpot, 2016).

21) 85% of Facebook videos are watched without sound (Digiday, 2016).

22) More than 50% of videos are watched on mobile (Ooyala, 2016).

23) 93% of Twitter videos are watched on mobile (Twitter, 2016).

24) Half of 18- to 34-year old YouTube subscribers would drop what they’re doing to watch a new video by their favorite creator (Google, 2016).

Half of 18- to 34-year old YouTube subscribers would drop what they’re doing to watch a new video by their favorite creator (Google, 2016).


4. Engagement

25) Facebook is rated as the most impactful social channel for video — 8.4X higher than any other social channel (Animoto, 2016).

26) A Facebook video receives, on average, 135% more organic reach than a Facebook photo (Socialbakers, 2015).

A Facebook video receives, on average, 135% more organic reach than a Facebook photo (Socialbakers, 2015).

27) In an average week, YouTube reaches more 18+ year-olds on mobile alone during prime-time TV hours than any cable TV network (Google, 2016).

28) 43% of people want to see more video content from marketers in the future (HubSpot, 2016).

29) Native videos on Twitter drive 2.5X replies, 2.8X retweets, and 1.9X favorites than third party players (Twitter, 2015).

30) Videos are 6X more likely to be retweeted than photos and 3X more likely than GIFs (Twitter, 2016).


5. Live Videos

31) People spend, on average, more than 3x more time watching a Facebook Live video than a video that’s no longer live (Facebook, 2016).

32) Facebook users comment 10X more on live videos than they do on regular videos (Facebook, 2016).

33) 80% of Lifestream’s survey respondents would rather watch live video from a brand than read a blog (Livestream, 2016).

34) 82% of Lifestream’s survey respondents prefer live video from a brand to social posts (Livestream, 2016).

35) Video of a live event increases brand favorability by 63% (Twitter, 2016).


6. Video Ads

36) Captions on Facebook video ads increase video view time by an average of 12% (Facebook, 2016).

37) Snapchat video ads capture over 2X visual attention than Facebook video ads, over 1.5X than Instagram, and 1.3X than YouTube (MediaScience, 2016).

Snapchat video ads captures over 2X visual attention than Facebook video ads, over 1.5X than Instagram, and 1.3X than YouTube (MediaScience, 2016).

38) Snapchat video ads deliver over 2X the lift in purchase intent compared to TV, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook video ads (MediaScience, 2016).

Snapchat video ads deliver over 2X the lift in purchase intent compared to TV, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook video ads (MediaScience, 2016).

39) Snapchat video ads receive 5X more swipe up rate than average CTR on comparable platforms (Snapchat, 2017).

40) Twitter video ads are deemed to be 10% more relevant, 8% more favorable, and 8% less intrusive, compared to similar skippable pre-roll ads on publisher sites (Twitter, 2016).

Twitter video ads are deemed to be 10% more relevant, 8% more favorable, and 8% less intrusive, compared to similar skippable pre-roll ads on publisher sites (Twitter, 2016).

41) Video ads are nearly 2X as memorable on Twitter than skippable pre-roll ads on premium sites (Twitter, 2016).

Video ads are nearly 2X as memorable on Twitter than skippable pre-roll ads on premium sites (Twitter, 2016).

7. Purchasing Behavior

42) 6 in 10 YouTube subscribers would follow advice on what to buy from their favorite creator over their favorite TV or movie personality (Google, 2017).

YouTube research 2

43) 4X as many consumers would rather watch a video about a product than reading about it (Animoto, 2015).

44) 4 in 5 millennials consider video content when researching a purchase decision (Animoto, 2015).

45) 70% of millennials are likely to watch a company video when shopping online (Animoto, 2015).


8. ROI

46) Companies which use videos in their marketing grow revenue 49% faster year-on-year than those which don’t (Aberdeen Group, 2015).

47) 76.5% of professional marketers and SMB owners are seeing results with video marketing (Animoto, 2016).

48) 73% of B2B marketers say that video positively impacts marketing ROI (Tubular Insights, 2015).

49) Having a brand logo in a video can increase purchase intent by 9% (Twitter, 2016).

50) Companies which use videos in their marketing enjoy 27% higher CTR and 34% higher web conversion rates than those which don’t (Aberdeen Group, 2015).

3 Infographics on Video Marketing

If the 50 social media video marketing statistics are not enough, here are three informative and comprehensive infographic about video marketing. Hope there’s a statistic for whatever you are looking for!

Where is Social Video Heading?

The 2016 Social Video Forecast by Animoto

The 2016 Social Video Forecast

31 Statistics to Up Your Video Marketing Game

31 Must Know Video Marketing Stats by Hyperfine Media

video-marketing-statistics-infographic

How to Make Full Use of Videos for Your Business

The 2015 Video Marketing Cheat Sheet by Animoto

The 2015 Video Marketing Cheat Sheet

What is Your Favorite Statistic?

Wow, that’s a lot of numbers in a post! Hope you are now pumped about video marketing and have found a tip or two (or 50) to improve your video marketing efforts in 2017.

What is your favorite video marketing statistic? If it is not on this list, would you be up for sharing it with us?

Thank you!


Thank 50 Video Marketing Stats to Help You Create a Winning Social Media Strategy in 2017 for first publishing this post.