Does your brand’s activity on its social accounts impact its search rankings? Maybe. Maybe not. But does it matter anyway?
I shouldn’t have to convince you that investing in a social media for your company is worth it; even in light of Facebook’s recent data breach, we are so reliant upon our social profiles for real human interaction that leaving them is not a real option. In fact, the below statistics from Pew Research Center’s 2018 Social Media Use Survey indicate that we’re not going to give up our social media profiles any time soon.
Humans are social creatures. It makes sense that we love being on social networking sites. We crave interaction with fellow humans. We’re also highly likely to trust the recommendations of our friends and family (Nielsen) and those recommendations often influence our purchasing decisions. We ask our loved ones for advice on where to put our dollars in myriad ways, all at different price points:
- What coffee shop do you like to go to?
- Which mascara is that?
- What are you reading right now?
- Where’d you get that tie?
- What neighborhoods are you looking to move to?
- What schools are you looking to send Anna to?
Yes, those same searches occur online. They also frequently occur in tandem with testimonials from the people in our lives (depending on how thorough we want or need to be).
So if you have a thing that you want to sell to a group of people and you’re still not pursuing a social strategy, I don’t understand what you’re doing. Yes, it’s 2018 and I still find myself trying to persuade clients to proactively use (the right) social networks to promote their brand.
For the sake of this piece, we’re going to focus on organic usage (read: free, not paid advertising) of Instagram. Why just Instagram? 35% of US adults say they use Instagram as of 2018, up from 28% in 2016. This was the greatest growth across top social networking sites reported by Pew Research Center. Additionally, its 35% usage puts it at the third most popular social networking platform, behind only Facebook and YouTube.
Other good news? It may be easier for brands’ posts to appear in users’ Instagram feeds than on their Facebook feeds: Facebook still wants to prioritize your family, friends and groups, while The New York Times reports that Instagram is updating its algorithm to favor newer posts rather than limit the accounts in your feed.
So should every brand have an Instagram? Maybe? But notice I’ve been primarily using the word “brand,” not “company” or “business.” That’s deliberate. Companies (only) provide customers with a service or sell a product. Brands provide customers (followers) with an identity. (If you want to dive further into this, I highly recommend this presentation by former Distiller Hannah Smith.)
The best companies are brands: they’ve got identities with which consumers align themselves. We become loyal to them. We may even use the brands we purchase from and follow as self identifiers to other people (“I’m a Joe & the Juice kind of guy, but not Starbucks,” “I never use MAC, only NARS,” “Me, shop at Banana Republic?! I only go to Everlane!”). Not every company should be on Instagram — it doesn’t make much sense for B2Bs to invest time and energy into building their company’s presence on Instagram.
Instagram is not for your consulting firm. And probably not for your SaaS company, either (but prove me wrong)!
It’s for celebrities. It’s to show off your enviable trip. It’s for fashion blogs. Sneakerheads. Memes. Art. Beauty brands. It’s really great for beauty brands. Why? Instagram is obviously great for sharing pretty photos — and if you’re a beauty company, well, it’s a no-brainer that you should have an active account. And it also has incredible built-in features to organically promote your posts, engage customers, and sell products with actual links to those products on your photos.
So, if you’re going to use Instagram, do it right. If you want to do it right, do it like a beauty brand.
First things first: Why do beauty companies’ IG posts look better?
Let’s get the obvious out of the way: each account features beautiful models, pretty sceneries, and cosmetics in clean packaging. That said, it’s not just the subject of the IG photos that matters: each of these IG accounts’ photos have been curated and edited together, so that their photos look cohesive when you view them in IG’s grid format. How do they do that? Let’s look at three posts from these accounts.
It’s hard (for me) to pick apart precisely why these photos are aesthetically pleasing — and it doesn’t help that I’m neither a photographer, nor a designer. That said, here is my rudimentary, non-designer take on why these photos look great together:
#1: Their subjects are beautiful (duh)
#2: There are limited primary focal points, and tons of negative space (though the medicine cabinet and floral arrangement photos are arguably “busy”)
#3: Their hues are complementary (pinky-pearlescent-pastels, anyone?)
There’s a lot of pink. And white. And pastels. And more pink. And then, occasionally, pops of color (think: a new violet lipstick shade).
Color schemes remain consistent across Onomie’s, Milk’s, and Glossier’s photos — these beauty brands don’t suddenly change their color palettes from one photo to the next. In fact, they are most likely implementing the same Instagram filters for each photo, or at least editing the color balances so that the photos complement each other. They are deliberately catering to Instagram’s 3x3 grid photo format (or 3x4, or 3x5, depending on your screen size). While many users do see IG posts in their “feeds” when they open the app, users are still motivated to look at IG accounts’ for a number of reasons: IG profiles are the only place where you can add hyperlinks on Instagram, and is also where accounts can pin stories for users to revisit.
But how on earth do they do it? They may have professional photographers, or graphic designers they can beg to normalize their color balances across photos. However, I don’t think that most companies necessarily need this mastery in-house in order to have an Instagram profile that looks good to mere mortals.
What I can assure you is that they plan, plan, plan out their posts in advance. In order to do this effectively, of course, you need the right tools. Here’s your starter pack of IG apps:
- VSCO
- Freemium phone app
- Enables you to edit photos like a master — VSCO goes way beyond a small set of filters
- Has its own community and image feed within the app, separate from IG
- VSCO can’t post directly to IG (yet), but you can easily download any edited photo
- Planoly
- Freemium desktop tool and phone app
- Can visualize your photos in a grid format with your other IG photos
- Built-in analytics
- Can schedule and post directly to IG, with captions and hashtags
- Unum
- Free
- Offers some photo editing tools
- Can drag and drop photos to plan out how they will appear alongside your other uploads, in grid format
- Can post to IG, but no scheduling features
This may sound like a lot of work, and for non-designers in particular it’s pretty challenging. That said, the fruits of your labor can be used again and again. In fact, that’s precisely what these beauty brands do on IG: if they’re featuring a product (again, hello lipstick shades), they show off that product’s different colors, on different skintones. Basically, rinse and repeat with your IG photos: this repetition is great for those with sparse content calendars, and still looks great.
Okay, but they’re not popular just because of their looks, right? Why are beauty brands on IG so damn popular?
Yes, looks matter. IG is a visual platform. Sorry not sorry. And yes, we’re talking about beauty brands that have budgets to advertise their accounts and products on IG, which also contributes to their popularity. However, that’s not the whole story.
They use hashtags and photo tags.
Hashtags
Just like on Twitter (and Facebook, to a degree), hashtags are a natural way to boost exposure and get “discovered.” That’s largely because IG users can also follow hashtags, in the same manner as following a handle. And, just like on Twitter, it matters which hashtags you use. IG also allows users to add up to 30 hashtags per post — and yes, this can look spammy, but if you’re using IG like a beauty brand, you’ll separate your caption from your hashtags with periods-used-as-line-breaks or as a separate comment after you post.
So, where should you begin hunting for hashtags? Unfortunately, the Cambridge Analytica debacle has extended to Facebook’s other properties, including Instagram. It seems like one direct response to this is to limit the number of API calls we can make of IG. This means awesome services like websta.me can’t serve up the same amount of information around hashtags as they once did.
That said, Tagboard is one option for content and social media marketers to use. I like to use it to suss out hashtag intent (in answering whether this the right hashtag to use for this post). *Readers: if you’ve got tools you love to find hashtags on IG, add them in the comments below for us, please!
Otherwise, your best bet (as far as I know) is to search for hashtags directly in Instagram’s Discover area, under Tags. There, you can see how many times those hashtags have been used (what’s popular?) and then click through to see what photos have been tagged.
Photo tags
Beauty brands also take advantage of photo tagging on their posts when they can: if they are featuring a celebrity (like the magnificent Tracee Ellis Ross), they can tag her IG directly onto this post. Not only does this let Tracee (or, more likely, her social media manager) know, but depending on her settings this photo now shows up under her tagged photos on her profile — for her fans to discover.
Similarly, if you’re a business selling products and you’ve been approved for shopping on IG, you can also tag your products in your photos so that users can click through directly to their product pages. This is a no-brainer. Just do it.
They talk to their followers.
We already know that it’s best practice to engage and respond to followers on social media (within reason), and IG is no different. Onomie, Milk and Glossier all have downright spirited conversations in their photos’ comments sections by prompt fellow ‘grammers to participate in a few ways. They:
- Host contests for product giveaways, which is an easy way to grow their followers on Instagram while also attracting new, potential customers.
- Ask their followers questions (“which are your faves?”) or simply prompt them to react to a photo (using emojis in the comments).
- Share company and product news with their followers, and also answer questions their followers pose in response to that news.
They add stories.
IG’s “Stories” feature is another great tool that Onomie, Milk, and Glossier all use. They’re like IG posts, but ephemeral (they only last 24 hours) and do not live in your main feed: users can access these stories from the top of their IG feeds, and from the account’s main icon. In some cases — especially brands selling products — these accounts may choose to “pin” evergreen stories to their IG profiles, so that users can access them beyond the 24-hour lifespan.
Stories are an excellent way to gather additional insights from followers (outside of comments) because you can run polls (with clickable elements) to collect simple data (“Should our next product help alleviate dry or oily skin?”). What’s more is that, depending on users’ notification preferences, stories automatically push notifications to followers’ phone screens. This means that even if a user is not using the app, they will be notified of new, temporary content.
If your brand (or your client) isn’t taking advantage of IG’s great marketing tools, it’s time to stop waiting and get ‘gramming. Especially if your target audiences are using the platform, there is no reason not to test out all the ways it allows you to engage its community.
Share your favorite IG tools, tips, and accounts below, so that other Moz readers can get inspired. And if you’re passionate about marketing, come join our team, and help me convince more awesome brands to take over Instagram. (JK. Kinda.)
Instagram is growing non-stop and its resources for SEO are still to be explored, for Google it is already the third largest in importance.
Good post!!!
Great post! Instagram is growing everyday and its resources for SEO are still to be explored, but it is a very important tool to build your brand and connect with your audience. I really love it!
Thanks for sharing!
Good post Zee, we are not on Instagram, but I do not know if we are losing potential customers. It is difficult for companies with fewer resources to carry so many networks. Anyone have experience with Instagram in the decoration sector?
Thank you very much!!
Hey Jonathan–totally hear you on the limited resources. It's so hard to justify starting from scratch with a new social platform when your team is already spread thinly.
Before you prioritize IG over other marketing tactics, what social networks does your decor brand use now? Have you analyzed what types of content tend to perform best? (Do pictures or videos get you more "likes" and/or shares? Followers? What types of content actually lead to clickthrough to your site? Which social platforms tend to send you more quality traffic?)
Hi Zee.
I don't use Instagram and my website is in content writing/SEO niche.
However, I read the whole article because I believe that every post has a nugget or two to extract from it; And I aam on a mission to conquer white hat SEO and internet marketing.
So my site is far removed from the beauty and fashion niches.
I want to ask you if there is a way to have at least limited Instagram presence if your website is focused on a thoroughly unsexy SEO space?
All I can think of are cool infographics. Any suggestions?
Thank again Zee!
I'm inclined to pose the same questions to you as I did to Jonathan (above): what social networks are you active on currently? Which ones are meeting the KPIs you've set for your marketing strategy? (Are you trying to build "awareness," and are thus O.K. with keeping your social engagement on their respective platforms? Or are you trying to find and drive new audiences to your company's site?)
FWIW Distilled (the SEO agency where I work) doesn't spend time on Insta, because it just doesn't make sense for our needs–our target audiences' social networks are primarily Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook, so those are the platforms where we invest the bulk of our time and energy.
Thank you very much for your help Zee. My brand uses Facebook, Twitter, Google plus and YouTube. The videos work quite well on YouTube and Facebook, and on Twitter the mentions and Google + the groups that we are members. Followers will be over 2000 all together. Facebook, worked very well with that of adding photos and products at once, but due to the scandal of data information has dropped many these weeks ago.
Maybe it's good to try instagram?
Thank you!!!!!
If you still do not have a well-known brand, you can try with Pintarest, for me it is the visual social network of the future.
@Jonathan I would (most likely) persuade you not to invest your time into IG, however feel free to prove me wrong :) if your SEO company does cool, creative campaigns that give you good photographing and hashtagging opportunities (cute animals? Fashion/style pieces? Memes? Beauty?) then you may be able to find a niche.
The challenging thing for you may be finding what the value add is of investing time into IG: I doubt that if you have a small IG following that you'll see much SEO benefit. I'd only recommend that you use the platform if you can use it as a traffic acquisition tool.
Thank you very much for your advice @estentor and @Zee. We will value both Pinterest and Instagram.
Best regards!!!
Hi Zee,
Thanks for these beautifully presented ideas of using IG. I work with a IT Services company and I have run some IG ads for them as well, resulting in a positive outcome. You it would be great if you can share some ideas for using IG to boost the social presence organically. Thanks again for the awesome post.
Nice that Insta is getting a little spotlight time on Moz!
We use Instagram for Retargeting in multiple niches with great results. Don't just think Beauty and Celebrity are the only peeps / niches that work on Instagram.
Use it in your Retargeting strategy with Facebook and keep an eye on the Placement stats and you may be surprised!
We typically don't create a 'separate' Instagram ad, we just check it as a Placement to use and use the same ad we're Retargeting with on Facebook.
Nice peace of advice Jason! I'll try to implement this retargeting mentality at my store. This should reduce costs of creating diferent posts for diferent social media and at the same time increase it's effectiveness.
I have my company account, but I can not put links in the instagram stories, how can I solve it?
If I'm not wrong you need at least 10.000 followers on your instagram account, also you can pay an Instagram ad Stories and there you can put links
Precisely–if your company's IG doesn't have at least 10K followers, you cannot add links for clickthrough. However, what a lot of smaller IG accounts do is update their BIO links and direct their followers to click through from there. Thus, your call to action on an IG story or post would include a statement like "(link in bio)"
Thanks! go to 10000!!
thanks jcobo! :)
With 700 million monthly active users, there’s no denying Instagram’s power and reach. What was once a simple photo sharing app has transformed into an immersive experience that allows users to explore a company’s visual identity.
It’s important to keep in mind that Instagram users value high-quality content. Create photos and videos that provide your audience with interesting information or showcase your brand in a new, unique way. Optimize your content by writing entertaining captions that encourage engagement.
This is one of the well defined blog which I can share with my team to follow the guidelines that you've provided.
Good Post Zee!!.
Regards
The B2B industry faces a few unique challenges since its marketing material leans away from phone capture style images. This is a fantastic post, and I'd love to hear some advice on B2B's using FB/IG. Thanks!
Great post Zee!! Another nice channel (and often over-looked) is Pinterest because it allows users to "pin" a targeted ad to their page for viewing later, which automatically shows your ad/content to their followers/pinners, giving you free exposure and organic traffic for free.
Keep up the good work!
Good post !
There are over 55 million photos shared on Instagram every day, which is another great reason why your business needs to utilize this platform. having an active Instagram account with useful and interesting content can earn you crazy levels of engagement with your audience.
Thank you very much.
For the branding and engagement of a brand, not everything is positioning in google. There are brands, such as Hawkers that became famous thanks to social networks, so it is something very importante.
Great post, Zee! Thanksssss :)
I particularly don't like Instagram, I try to focus my social post at Facebook since it requires less effort on the design of the image and allow me to work faster in this aspect. However, with these nice tools presented here, I might try to increase my Instagram usage to increase my brand awareness. Thanks for the article!
Great post...
It was very helpful to me. I'm sure I'll improve on my projects from now on with your advice!
Good post Zee.
This is an awesome post and very thorough. Thanks for all the insight!
Great post Zee !!
It was very helpful to me. I'm sure I'll improve on my projects from now on with your advice!
I can't stress enough how important it is to not only have great content for instagram but also gain interaction from instagram followers within the same industry.
Followerwonk! Why not learn from others who already did the marketing research! analyze your competitors or brands you inspire to grow to and use their hashtags and insights, from subjects.comments, posting times tags and the list really never ends. my tips is not to analyze a big brand rather analyze someone a competitor who is doing slightly or simply better then you and see what they do to grow.
Followerwonk is great for Twitter, but not necessarily Instagram :)
Good post!!!
Instagram is growing non-stop and its resources for Searching Engine Optimization are still to be explored, for Google it is already the third largest in importance.
Good advice Zee, Instagram has always resisted me because I'm not very good at it, but I'll try to put your advice into practice.
Thanks!
Got me thinking about how I might be able to use Instagram for my own company. I have had a low signal account myself for a long time, but never really got super-engaged in it. I was more active on Pinterest, but this got me interested.
Article is most popular social networking now. It's a best tool for promoting brands. Most of the brands is using instagram for marketing purpose by adding post to their instagram accounts. Beauty products are being promoted by Kylie Jenner, Kim Kardashian and other models who joined the league in promoting beauty products.
Spectacular Post .. !!!
Relevant data that allow us to analyze this great social network, millions of photos per day is a big reason why your company needs to be present in Instagram, you just have to work with the quality of the images that you publish in order to have a great response in this means.
Atte,
Francis Ravello
With the introduction of the company profile on Instagram, the presence of brands in this social network becomes almost mandatory, especially if you want to create community and build loyalty to your users (more interaction = more likes and comments).
Thanks a lot Zee for sharing a nice topic and describe easily important of Instagram in present world. Really I am enjoyed your article and learn little about proper use of Instagram. Thanks again for your informational post.
Instagram is growing non-stop and its resources for SEO are still to be explored, for Google it is already the third largest in importance.
Good post!!!
I will use it on my site propoker.vn
Very good post !, Currently Instagram is the fashion network, let's say among the millenians. I think it is very important to have an active instagram network, since from there we can get many potential customers.
Great read Zee, everyday I wish I could get my feed to look 'prettier' and all the posts to have that similar air to them, but it's just so darn tricky at times! I might try using the same filter for each and see how that goes. I have found Snapseed by Google to be a good photo editing app too :)
It really is–I think the trick is actually SEEING your queued up IG posts alongside your CURRENT IG posts (read: what photos are already on your account? What photos do you want to ADD to your account?). Try out the apps I recommended–Planoly in particular is good for visualizing how your fee will look. Using the same filter for every photo may help you, but the composition of your original photos also matters: if you're taking a photo in a brightly lit room vs. a dimly lit one, it'll take more than a filter to "normalize" these two side by side. As a result, you may really like VSCO to edit your photos with greater precision (yes, there's also always Photoshop, but VSCO is right on your phone, and is less likely to overwhelm average social media managers with fewer choices).
VSCO is great indeed. One of our clients is an avid social media commentator and he lives with VSCO and it's much less expensive than other options.