Download my buyer persona template!
To get the full benefit of user-generated content, you have to understand your audience. You’re going to need to create your buyer persona. Your ideal customer. Download my buyer persona template and start building.
User-generated content. Consumer-generated content. Earned media.
UGC is, generally, free content that’s created and shared by consumers, and refers to a brand. They aren’t officially representing a brand. They’re not employees, affiliates, or influencers. They’re just like you and me.
If I post a rave review about a restaurant... it’s user-generated content. If I post a critical review about a restaurant… it’s user-generated content.
You’ll find it in the form of testimonials, blog posts, tweets, reviews, images, videos, podcasts, snaps, etc.
Quick Search highlights #ShareACoke, one of the most successful user-generated campaigns in the history of marketing.
Brands realizing the benefits of user-generated content - and there are huge perks - share it on their social media accounts and websites. Why? Because this free, word-of-mouth advertising, is trusted. It boosts a brand’s credibility. Managed correctly… it’s awesome!
78% of millennials rate user-generated content more than content produced by a brand. UGC inspires way more engagement than any other form of marketing content. We trust UGC because it comes from real people. We’re happy to purchase the products they’re happy to use.
It’s called social proof.
Check out Marketing to Millennials | In Their Own Words. It debunks the stereotyping that surrounds this discerning generation. Offering advice on how to reach out, with big brands who've nailed marketing to Generation Y.
Social proof is people looking for confirmation of the correct way to behave in a certain situation, by looking at people they consider to be behaving correctly.
Yep, bit of a mindwarp!
81% of consumers research online before they make a purchase. We listen to users that we trust and take their advice.
Look out of the window and see people using umbrellas, you’ll probably grab yours as you leave. Advice works the same way... Your friend says it’s going to rain, so you take yours.
Examples of social proof include…
Expert social proof - seal of approval from the leading global research and advisory firm.
User social proof - Amazon’s customer reviews and testimonials are effective social proof.
90% of consumers say that UGC influences their purchasing decisions, out ranking all other forms of marketing. 81% are willing to pay more for products that have received positive user-generated content.
What are the advantages of UGC? It should be key to your marketing strategy. Here’s why…
As consumers, we’ve become numb to marketing messages. There are so many brands… they can’t all have the best product on the market. They can’t all be number 1! We don’t believe them anymore. We don’t trust them.
User-generated content is marketing in its purest form. It’s credible. It’s authentic. We believe it.
UGC is proven to increase engagement and conversions. Consumers are 2.4x more likely to see UGC as trustworthy, compared to brand-created content.
Remember the #IceBucketChallenge?
Possibly one of the most effective user-generated content campaigns ever, promoting awareness of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). It went viral in 2014, with over 17 million people posting videos online. It raised more than $115 million for the ALS Association.
Remember how much it cost?
Zero!
User-generated content displayed on a product page can increase conversions by 64%.
Say no more!
UGC is a goldmine of content that can be exploited for content ideation. Be inspired by comments, shared images, videos, keywords, hashtags, etc. It’s what your audience is talking about, so joining the conversation with relevant content, will bring more engagement.
UGC influences consumers’ purchasing decisions. No longer trusting brand-speak, we research review sites and social media. We ask our peers, and we trust them. By including customer reviews, unboxing videos, etc., in your marketing strategy, you’ll help potential buyers make the right choice.
User-generated content encourages conversations with new consumers. Use it to power up your social ads and you’ll attract more consumer engagement. Social ads that use UGC also boosts SEO by increasing your brand visibility online.
Don’t forget to monitor your efforts with a social media analytics tool. Talkwalker’s Quick Search will identify your brand mentions across text, images, and video. Give it a whirl!
5 years on and the Ice Bucket Challenge is still going strong.
제가 지목할 분들은
투애니원의 산다라박 @daraxxi
모델 이소라 언니 @esora777
연기자 홍수현 언니 @soo_hyun_hong입니다.감사합니다#아이스버켓챌린지 #icebucketchallenge #승일희망재단 #박봄 #朴春 #ぼム #2ne1 pic.twitter.com/gzr6UgXEEB— Bom Park (@haroobomkum) June 15, 2018
The spike in June?
South Korean singer, Park Bom, did the Ice Bucket Challenge.
UGC can have mind blowing effects on SEO. It provides a steady stream of engaging and searchable content, and it keeps you up to date on trending tops that your audience is talking about. Here are 5 huge reasons why user-generated content should be part of your SEO strategy...
1 Improve search rankings
Google loves unique, authentic content. It loves it so much that it’ll prioritize fresh and relevant content in SERPs. Use it and you’re speaking to consumers and search engines.
We’re all super busy, and writing unique content takes time. User-generated content is a great source of inspiration for your content strategy. Mine it for ideas. It will identify the questions consumers are asking about your product and your industry.
2 Long-tail keywords
Long-tail keywords are search phrases with low-search competition. Use long-tail, and ranking highly is a whole lot easier.
They’re keyword phrases that users are using in their searches. Phrases you may not have thought of.
For instance… your keyword is ‘travel books’ but competition is huge. Users are searching for ‘travel books for Luxembourg’. Less competition, and it’s what potential customers are searching for.
Find users’ long-tail keywords and include them in your website copy. You’ll deliver on their searches and address their pain points, which search engines love.
3 Automated searches
You do know that there are spiders in search engines, right?
One of their tasks is to look for customer reviews and testimonials on your website. Once found, the search engine take over and rank your website.
Search engines also check whether the content on your site is good. Whether it’s relevant. Do you know what you’re talking about? Is it trustworthy? Is it helpful? UGC that you’ve included on your site, legitimizes your brand and will bring big SEO points.
4 Site optimization
You optimize your website by including keywords in content and titles, alt-tabs, metas, getting backlinks from other sites, and cross-linking within your site.
UGC reviews and testimonials talk about your products. As well as increasing trust in your brand, they already include links and keyword phrases. These will strengthen your SEO.
5 Social signals
Don’t forget social media. Adding to your social signals means your search visibility will increase. Use UGC content and images for social media optimization – SMO – on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc.
Trust will be enhanced and happy followers, will share, like, and comment. Increased engagement leads to increased traffic to your website from new consumers.
Listen to online conversations. Find questions, issues, being raised about your brand. Shared user-generated content is a great way of providing answers because, potentially, they’ve experienced similar issues. Use online customer testimonials to boost your followers’ trust in your brand.
When’s the last time you spent money on a product that you saw advertised by a brand, without confirming its authenticity?
Thought so…
We dismiss brand-speak. We check review sites. We research on social media. We ask our peers.
I’m speaking as a marketer and a consumer. So I’m shooting myself in the foot, while patting myself on the back. Hmmm... flexible.
It’s all about turning consumers into brand ambassadors, without spoiling their authenticity. Ambassador marketing, if you like.
Ask yourself what’s the purpose of your campaign. Your goals.
Set a time period for your UGC campaign, and track your performance. Check whether you’re reaching your targets, or not.
For instance... you plan to run a campaign for two months, targeting 600 leads. If after a couple of weeks, you’ve not reached 100, you can assess your campaign and adjust.
Decide what type of content you need. Consider…
Define your goals - be SMART.
You’re creating marketing campaigns that are targeted. Hitting different segments with tailored content. User-generated content you harvest, can then be used to target different segments or new audiences.
To make your UGC campaigns work, you have to understand the content creators, and the consumers influenced by it. To know your customers, use buyer personas. They’ll help you fine-tune your content and marketing campaigns.
To save you time, I’ve created a buyer persona template that you can download for free. Use it to create your dream customer.
Download my free buyer persona template!
Using buyer personas means you can work with your UGC creators, appreciate why they’re happy to share and the kind of content they’ll provide. For those you’re targeting, you’ll discover what it takes for them to engage. To convert.
Do you know where your audience lives? Which social channel is favored? Do you know the networks where your UGC creators have the strongest influence?
Do you know where your audience lives?
While you can collect user-generated content from any of the social media platforms, choose where you’ll share that will work for your business, audience, and campaign.
Okay, this is a silly example, but you’ll catch my drift…
Let’s say you’re B2C. You’re a fashion brand. It’s likely you’ll find UGC on image-based channels like Instagram. Does it make sense to share this awesome, visual UGC on LinkedIn? No. Twitter? Yes.
Get what I’m saying?
While it’s tempting to splash positive feedback across channels, it makes no sense. Plus, it makes you look desperate, random, amateurish, and other negative things.
What UGC works best for each social network
Not sure what kind of user-generated content works to post on your different social media channels? Here’re some tips…
Yes, you’re limited to 280 characters. Let images do the talking. We scroll through our Twitter feeds quickly, speed reading or ignoring text. What does stop us in our tracks are visuals. Images with UGC about brands are readily shared.
A goldmine of consumer-generated content. Videos or photos, Instagram users love to demonstrate products in action. Show off their purchases. You will need to use Instagram analytics tools to find all the awesome UGC.
Stories and videos work well on Facebook, particularly ones that have the potential to go viral. They also bring more engagement. The algorithm means it’s hard to get organic reach, but including UGC in ads works well.
Keep it professional. Keep it relevant.
Finding unexpected user-generated content is great. Of course, you’ll only find it if you’re actively looking for it. Using image and video recognition. Creating Talkwalker Alerts. Dismiss these tools, and you’ll miss all that free advertising.
The best ice cream on earth. pic.twitter.com/05Dz5DnU3u
— Jonathan (@jpboogie2381) March 9, 2019
No brand mention.
Would Ben & Jerry’s have found this great UGC without video recognition?
Doubtful.
Not all UGC is flattering to your brand. Identifying and tackling negative comments must also be a priority.
If you want to generate user-generated content. Force it. You’ll need to tell your audience what you want. Otherwise it could go horribly wrong.
Be clear. Be specific. Provide hashtags, brand guidelines, keywords.
All marketing campaigns have to be analyzed and measured, including your user-generated content campaigns.
Use Talkwalker Analytics to monitor all channels and track engagement. Was your brand hashtag shared? What was the volume? What sentiment was generated by your UGC campaign - positive, negative?
Don’t forget that we’re talking about taking users’ comments and using them as part of a marketing campaign, for free.
There are best practices for gathering and using UGC. Be nice. Play fair.
You must ask permission. Using a branded hashtag overcomes this, to some extent. But, I’d still recommend asking the user if you can share their content. It has been known for people to jump on a trending hashtag, not realizing what it was originally intended for.
If you don’t ask, you risk upsetting the user and could turn a positive into a negative. Asking, keeps them happy and opens the possibility of them sharing your content with their followers.
Tag them. Name them. Mention them.
It’s not just to ‘do the right thing’. If you reference the user in your content, your audience can go to the source and check that it’s genuine UGC.
... or you’ll miss heaps
In an ideal world, users would tag you, mention your brand, use your hashtag. In an ideal world.
In our less than ideal world, your social listening strategy has to include image and video recognition. This means you’ll find the silent mentions. Those under the radar. The posts that show your brand logo, but don’t reference you in the content.
Woah, wait a minute… how can negative user-generated content be a good thing?
Customer insights. Product insights. Industry insights.
Heard enough?
It’s marketing in its purest form, and it’s packed with insights.
Brands, realizing the value of user-generated content, are engineering it. Launching campaigns specifically designed to encourage UGC. Here are two brands - I know you’ve heard of - that rocked UGC campaigns…
Ever doodled on a paper napkin? Back of a menu? Paper cup?
In 2014, Starbucks jumped on this habit that many of us suffer from, and invited people to graffiti their cups...
Customize your Starbucks cup. Photograph it. Share it on social media with the hashtag #WhiteCupContest.
The winning design would be printed on a limited-edition reusable Starbucks cup. Over a three week period, nearly 4000 people submitted entries. Awesome!
From every angle, beautiful.
Congrats to our #WhiteCupContest winner, @blynnxoxo! pic.twitter.com/A0ZRqJWWGr— Starbucks Coffee (@Starbucks) June 19, 2014
#WhiteCupContest winner!
The contest brought Starbucks heaps of positive user-generated content. It also increased trust in the brand, as it demonstrated how much the brand valued customer feedback.
Quick Search - Starbucks’ UGC campaign still going strong five years after launch.
So successful was the campaign, Starbucks hold annual cup customizing competitions.
Coca-Cola took product personalization to a whole new level when it replaced its logo on bottles with 250 of the most popular names among teenagers and millennials. The #ShareACoke campaign launched in Australia in 2011 and increased consumption by 7%. The campaign was spread to the US, UK, and other regions around the world in 2014.
Consumers were encouraged to share a photo of their personalized bottles on social media, with the campaign hashtag #ShareACoke.
In the US, a 10 year decline in sales was reversed. The brand gained 25 million Facebook followers, and more than 500,000 photos that included #ShareACoke.
Such a hugely successful UGC campaign, it shows no sign of stopping. The brand now produces bottles with removable sticky name labels!
#ShareaCoke returns for its fifth consecutive summer with more beverages, packages, experiences, sharing opportunities – and a few surprises! https://t.co/SlnKqWBMY6
— The Coca-Cola Co. (@CocaColaCo) May 8, 2018
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
Let’s take a look with Quick Search for the last year. See how this yearly campaign is performing.
All good, then.
Look at that sentiment! Awesome!
A whopping 124.6K mentions and a 6.5M engagement rate. Countries leading the campaign are the US and India. Supporting that, English and Hindi are the dominating languages.
The top occupation is shown to be social media. Fitting I guess, when you remember the target audience. Looking at this and the age breakdown, it’s a campaign that’s hit its target.
The user-generated stats are so impressive, I’m in danger of repeating myself. But, they’re that impressive!
Phew… thank goodness for image and video recognition.
What do you reckon? Going to try some ambassador marketing? Give user-generated content a spin? It’s free content, talking about your brand, and saying it’s awesome.
What’s not to love?!!
Download my buyer persona template. Rev up your social listening tool. Focus your image and video recognition. GO!