Many marketers understand that some of the most resonant digital marketing tactics are those that give customers a way to connect their favorite brands to their own lives. Marketers learn early that two-way conversation is vital; it’s even more powerful to simply let customers tell their own stories through user-generated content. With its great discoverability and long content lifespans, Instagram offers brands an extremely visible way to interact with and share the story of their customers.
Reposted Instagram photos provide one of the simplest forms of UGC. More importantly, Instagram photos and videos extend beyond the social platform. Savvy brands can enhance their users’ storytelling experience by coupling the excitement and content of branded hashtags with solid digital strategy. These four brands show how utilizing social media, microsites and more can make the best of UGC.
#ShinyPonies
J.Crew has continually inspired customers to post their own photos of J.Crew products with creative brand hashtags. The brand engages its fashion-savvy audience and incentivizes them through contests and the possibility of being featured across J. Crew social accounts.
Through hashtag campaigns like #ShinyPonies, which encourages customers to post photos of their brand’s shoes and #AccessoryFix, which asked customers to post their favorite accessories, the brand motivates its customers to participate in the brand’s marketing story in a way that J.Crew can easily, and powerfully, repurpose. J.Crew even adds print collateral to online orders that are packaged and shipped to its customers encouraging them to participate in the #ShinyPonies conversation.
For each hashtag campaign it runs, J.Crew creates a dedicated landing page to feature user content. This landing page acts as far more than a place to showcase content. It smartly allows J.Crew to bring customers back to its site and reintroduce the shopping funnel with calls to action that point back to the product pages that correlate with the hashtag.
Strategy win: Reward your customers for truly representing your brand message. When your customers create content with the same quality as content you’d produce, simply repurpose it to showcase your customer and encourage others to do the same.
Bonus: J.Crew’s Shiny Ponies landing page is extremely clear on what the brand has permission to do with its customers’ posts. When utilizing UGC, be sure to understand what you can and can’t do with customer generated content and transparently communicate your intent with your customers.
#AllDayBreakfast
It’s rare that brands have the opportunity to launch a new service with instant universal appeal. When McDonald’s announced it would serve breakfast all day long, it did a ton of groundwork to keep it top of mind for customers.
From public and online radio to TV and print ads to social media campaigns, McDonald’s made sure its customers were fully aware of all-day breakfast options (although, no McGriddles at lunch? What’s with that?). It also moved immediately to get customers involved in the marketing push.
McDonald’s frequently reposts the Instagram photos of its customers and has enlisted many brand ambassadors. This serves as an influencer tool, reminding customers that other people like them enjoy all-day breakfast, while also beefing up McDonald’s regularly updated stream of content.
Strategy win: Find ways to get your customers involved through highly visual channels when you’re launching a new product or service. Use their posts as influencer content and find ways to get their feedback, then use that content to further promote your launch. Customers thrive on seeing other people enjoying the same things they love.
#GatorGood
The University of Florida recently rebranded in an effort to bring its academic and research impact to the forefront of its story: the Gator Good. In the process, it also made sure that the brand’s story focused on its people. The #GatorGood encourages students and graduates to tell their story of community success and giving, a platform that activated the new brand through two-way conversation with its audience, particularly on highly visual platforms like Instagram.
By creating an emotional appeal to students, alumni and fans, UF inspired people to respond to the university’s message by utilizing the Gator Good hashtag on multiple social media platforms. It resulted in its largest year of pledged service hours from students after the launch of the campaign.
Strategy win: If you have a highly loyal audience that personally identifies with your brand, appeal to their values and achievements. Think about how you can get them to share their story, then create a theme that resonates and is easy to share via social media.
#NeverStopExploring
Before REI announced that it would shut down its stores on Black Friday in an effort to honor its mission of exploration, The North Face was encouraging its customers to live its values by pushing the limits and exploring the world around them.
The North Face built an entire microsite dedicated to the idea of exploration. Here, they post a variety of exploration-themed content and give customers opportunities to upload photos to win their weekly contest for a $100 gift card. Now, it has expanded the Never Stop Exploring idea into a “Never Stop” campaign that builds upon the message.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1z-36uCr9XIStrategy win: When you can afford to incentivize your customers into creating content that you can reuse on Instagram, go for it. Just be sure that your mission aligns with your brand and really does showcase the customers that are truly living your values.
Multi-billion dollar companies aren’t the only brands that can launch smart user-generated campaigns. All four of these brands share a couple of important traits: they’re willing to give customers a voice in their marketing efforts, and they use technology to create emotional and financial incentives for users to join the conversation.
Your top customers talk about you constantly. It’s easy to give them a platform to speak.
Has your company found success by leveraging user content?