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Snapchat for Marketing [Part 1]

Snapchat. Currently at 200 Million active monthly users worldwide, it’s one of the most popular and quickly-growing networks out there.

It’s also one of the most confounding.

I’ve been on Snapchat for ages–a couple of years at least. Launched in September of 2011, Snapchat is really popular with millennials, which, I guess, is part of the reason I didn’t “get” it, but over the last year or so, it’s beginning to be more popular with the “up to 40” age-range. On top of that, I was kinda frustrated by it. If I can’t use a social networking tool for marketing, I don’t use it. Period. So, while I’ve been on it for a while, I haven’t been using it.

About a month ago, I decided to give it the old college try. For a month, I decided, I’d immerse myself in it, follow influencers, learn, and see if there was, indeed, some way that you could actually use Snapchat for marketing.

It’s been an interesting month, and I wanted to share with you what I learned.

Snapchat Basics

But nothing remains?

And there’s the rub: the maximum amount of time that one of your snaps has to live is 24 hours. And this is the part that, I think, marketers struggle the most with. If, as a marketer, I can’t create a message that will get my audience to answer a specific call-to-action (like clicking a link, for example), what use is it? My Snapchat followers can’t even bookmark something to come back to later–it’ll be gone.

This, however, can also create an urgency–it can give the viewer the urge to act immediately.

Snapchat Culture

One incredibly important piece of information that marketers need to know about Snapchat is about the nature of its culture. Snapchat, due to the nature of its self-destructing posts, is a network that doesn’t take itself too seriously. Wanna post a silly photo of yourself? Why not! It’ll be gone in 24 hours, and no one will be any the wiser. It’s much less polished than say, Instagram, where I feel like everything I post has to be perfect in order to get likes. Snapchat, on the other hand, is almost about celebrating silliness, mistakes, the no-makeup selfie. It’s a place where you can really be yourself, and who cares.

Celebs are starting to pick up on it, and if you follow, for example, @EvaLongoria, you’ll see her being silly in the makeup chair, eating sushi, indulging in donuts. It’s real, in a way that many networks were once, but are now carefully curated.

Here’s Part 2 of this post.

 

 

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