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A Brand’s Guide for 2023

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A Brand’s Guide for 2023

If you’ve been caught up in a goofy dance challenge, know what a negroni sbagliato is, or recently rediscovered your love for corn, you probably have TikTok to thank (or blame?) for it. Despite proposed and actual restrictions in the US, TikTok was the most downloaded app in the world last year and has woven itself into the very center of pop culture.

Contrary to its early reputation as the former Musical.ly and the spiritual heir to Vine, TikTok isn’t just for teens. Its 1 billion monthly active users span all demographics, with 35-64-year-olds among the fastest-growing age groups (though Gen Z is still dominant on the platform). This makes it a vital advertising marketplace for companies across industries and sectors. And as the first US Independent Agency to receive the TikTok Campaign Management Agency Partner badge, Tinuiti knows a thing or two about how to help brands create engaging and successful TikTok advertising and marketing campaigns.

Here’s a look at how to advertise on TikTok, some of the platform’s key features and best practices, and how you can get started with TikTok ads.

“TikTok is the #1 downloaded platform across mobile. It’s no longer the best-kept secret for advertisers, but the platform is spreading its wings against wider demographics, and we expect this to continue.”

– Avi Ben-Zvi, VP of Social at Tinuiti

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Table of Contents

  • How does TikTok work?
  • Is TikTok’s audience a good fit for your brand?
  • TikTok Ad Types for Your Campaigns
  • How to Start Advertising on TikTok: Step-by-Step
  • How Much Do TikTok Ads Cost?
  • 7 Creative Best Practices for Your TikTok Advertising Initiative
  • 6 Successful TikTok Ad Campaign Examples
  • Final Takeaway

 

How does TikTok work?

 
TikTok is a channel designed for short-form video content. Users can choose from thousands of audio clips and record videos of themselves lip-syncing, dancing, or acting along to the sound bites. Videos can also be edited, sped up, or slowed down, and users can add stickers, activate a special effect, or use filters to change the video’s look. When you log in, a recommended video on your For You Page (FYP) will start playing right away, as determined by the TikTok algorithm.

You can also follow other users to stay up to date on their content or use the search function to look up specific challenges, keywords, hashtags, and more. There’s also a trending area to find up-and-coming videos.

TikTok logo

 

The TikTok app isn’t just for individual users, though. Companies use TikTok ads to boost their brand awareness, promote new products or sell directly to TikTok users. But to advertise on TikTok effectively, brands must understand the platform’s audience, ad formats and the process of creating a TikTok ad that will resonate.

“What I love most about working on this platform is how advertisers are rewarded for enhancing the user experience rather than disrupting it. We see much stronger engagement and touchpoints to purchases when we embrace TikTok trends and the native content experience that the consumer leads,” said Haley Kimmen, Senior Specialist, Paid Social at Tinuiti.
 

Is TikTok’s Audience a Good Fit for Your Brand?

 

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TikTok, in some version or another, is currently available in 150 markets worldwide and 75 unique languages. Its most popular posters have millions of followers and billions of views per month.

graphic showing multiple examples of TikTok creative
 
TikTok has become popular with all age groups. Though teens were the original cohort to catch on, TikTok videos are now a part of the mainstream social media diet for people worldwide, including 138 million Americans from all walks of life.
 

Interesting Statistics About TikTok’s Audiences, Reach and Impact

 
TikTok has extraordinary potential to reach young people while they’re highly engaged. We’ll let these statistics speak for themselves:

 

  • Of TikTok’s 1 billion monthly active users (MAUs) across the globe, over 63% of users in the US are between the ages of 10 and 29, and nearly 60% are female. 
  • TikTok (37.3 million) recently surpassed Instagram (33.3 million) in popularity among Gen Z users.
  • TikTok has the second-most engaged user base when compared to its competitors, with 29 percent of its active worldwide users opening the app every single day each month in Q2 2022 and spending nearly 1.5 hours per session when they do.
  • For brands, TikTok is one of the fastest-growing channels for product discovery. According to TikTok’s research, nearly 15% of product discoveries began on TikTok in 2022, up from 4% in 2021.
  • Some retail brands estimate that advertising and marketing on TikTok is responsible for 30% to 40% of their offline sales lift.
  • TikTok is expanding into social commerce at a rapid pace, including partnering with Shopify to make purchasing via the platform more seamless.

 

Given that reach and impact, it’s hard to think of a brand for which TikTok’s audience isn’t a good fit. To borrow a phrase popular on the app, TikTok can offer a huge W for marketers if their content aligns with what users are looking for.
 

TikTok Ad Types for Your Campaigns

 
 
Today, TikTok offers a variety of robust ad types ranging from simple in-feed ads to complex video shopping ads. Let’s dive into how each type of ad works and what your brand may need to get started.

 

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In-Feed Ads

 
As the name suggests, in-feed ads appear in the feed as part of the FYP video queue and redirect to your website or app. Each in-feed ad video can be 5 to 60 seconds long, and a profile photo, brand name, and text description accompany each video. Users can also interact with these ads, liking or sharing them or leaving comments. Each in-stream video ad can use one of three available action models: CPC (cost per click), CPM (cost per mille), and CPV (cost per view). To count for CPV, a user has to watch your ad for more than 6 seconds.

 

Spark Ads

 

Spark Ads enable brands to leverage existing organic videos that align with their campaign aims by amplifying them. Spark Ads use posts from real TikTok accounts (either the brand’s or another creator’s, used with permission), which ensures that all views, comments, shares, likes, and follows gained from boosting the video during the promotion are attributed to the organic posts.

 

Search Ads

 

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In 2022, TikTok began testing search ads or sponsored in-feed or spark ads that appear in the first few search page results. This allows brands to toggle on search placements for existing campaigns, helping them target users with high interest or purchase intent. However, this placement isn’t available to the general public yet. For now, you’ll need to work with one of TikTok’s marketing partners (like Tinuiti!) to run these ads. 

 

Brand Takeover

 
A brand takeover is when your ad appears immediately after a user opens the app, “taking over” the opening screen. Once opened, the brand can bring users somewhere else, whether it’s a TikTok profile or an external site.

example of a TikTok brand takeover ad by Vans

Source: TikTok

This TikTok ad type has a high barrier to entry, as it’s more expensive than in-feed or spark ads, and the fact that only one advertiser can leverage this ad per day.
 

TopView Ads

 
Similar to Brand Takeover, this ad appears when the app is opened. However, TopView allows videos such as In-Feed Video to be used as advertising material.

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Branded Hashtag Challenge

 
TikTok’s user-generated content is unique, clever, and remarkably shareable, and the Hashtag Challenge ad format takes full advantage of this. Users are asked to participate in a challenge campaign that will last for six days, where they post their own videos based on the suggested theme. This is an easy way to make your brand go viral if you leverage your ad creative correctly.

TikTok also offers a subset of the Hashtag Challenge called Hashtag Challenge Plus, which allows users to shop for products featured in a Hashtag Challenge without leaving the app. This will help your Hashtag Challenge generate sales and brand awareness at the same time.

“TikTok hashtag challenges leverage a user’s tendency to create and share content around unified themes. Brands can build affinity by turning users into co-creators. TikTok understands the ripple effect one challenge can have, so incorporating brands elevates the idea even more!”

Kiana Corpus, Senior Digital Marketing Specialist at Tinuiti

Portrait of Kiana Corpus

Branded Effects

 

Brands can create sponsored augmented reality effects, filters, lenses or stickers that users are free to use on their own organic content. A product or logo is often incorporated into these effects, meaning your brand will appear on each video, encouraging users to interact. If your branded effects add enough value to user’s posts, you can expect to see your brand featured in troves of user generated content.

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Video Shopping Ads

 
In the beginning of 2023, TikTok retired Dynamic Showcase Ads and Collection Ads, and reincorporated them into a new format called Video Shopping Ads. This ad type requires brands to create a catalog within TikTok and populate it with products, allowing users to shop and purchase within the ad itself. This also allows brands to automatically retarget people with products according to their online behaviors.

User-Generated Content

 
Getting your audience to post videos of them interacting with your brand or product will go a long way to making your branding goals a reality. You can encourage this through your profile and videos or partner with influencers with a large following that may fit your target audience. Many brands have had success with this through “unboxings” or “hauls,” where a user explains, tries on or demonstrates a variety of items bought from or provided by a single brand.
 

Influencer Marketing

 
Just like other platforms, influencer marketing is a powerful tool. As long as there are influencers with a following similar to your target audience, you can partner with them to create content promoting your brand to the right users. 

You’ll have to choose the right influencers and communicate effectively for influencer campaigns to be successful. They need to maintain their personal style and be trusted to make content that appears authentic to their followers.

 

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How to Start Advertising on TikTok: Step-by-Step

 

Setting up your TikTok advertising campaign and running TikTok ads is a straightforward process that allows advertisers plenty of options for reaching their desired audience and driving engagement. Here’s a step-by-step guide to setting up a TikTok advertising campaign.

 

1. Start a TikTok Ad Account

 

To get started, create a user account through the TikTok for Business website by clicking “create an ad.” Then, submit the following information to TikTok:

 

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  • A business name that matches the information you supply TikTok
  • A link to your business’s website that displays product or service information
  • Additional business information, such as your industry, street address, state/province, postal code, and contact information
  • Tax and payment information
  • Assurance that you’re not promoting prohibited products or services

 

After verifying the account and agreeing to TikTok’s terms of service, a TikTok ad campaign can be created.

For some campaigns, brands may benefit from setting up a TikTok pixel on their owned platforms. The pixel is a small piece of code that you place on your website to help you track visitor actions, like page views or purchases, and create audience segments to re-engage previous site visitors or model lookalikes to find new customers. TikTok’s tracking pixel is also key if you’d like to run conversion-focused campaigns.

 

2. Create a TikTok Ad Campaign

 

Once you have an account, you can begin to build a campaign. Choose “Campaign” from the top tab of the TikTok Ad Manager to start the process. Then select “Create,” and provide details regarding your objectives and budget. Let’s take a closer look:

 

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Setting Objectives

 

As the first step in the campaign creation process, you’ll be prompted to choose from three objectives: Awareness, Consideration, or Conversion. Awareness will maximize the number of TikTok users who see your ad, helping new brands develop brand awareness. TikTok’s metric for this is Reach. Consideration is better for established brands, as it encourages users to seek more information and cultivates interest in their offerings. TikTok offers five sub-objectives to Consideration, including:

 

  • Traffic: drives users to a specific URL
  • App Installs: encourages users to download your app
  • Video Views: gets more users to view your video content
  • Lead Generation: collects contact information from potential clients
  • Community Interaction: getts more users to interact with your brand’s TikTok account

 

Conversion is designed to help organizations improve sales through their TikTok ads and requires brands to install a tracking pixel on their owned properties. Once a pixel is in place, brands can choose from one of three sub-objectives:

 

  • Product Sales: encourages sales of products from your TikTok catalog, website or app
  • Website Conversions: encourages users to take specific actions on your website, like adding items to a cart or completing a registration form. 
  • App Promotion: drives new app downloads or existing user log-ins 

 

The right objective for your brand will depend on your internal business goals and what your team hopes to gain from advertising on TikTok.

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Setting a Budget

 

When setting up the budget for an ad campaign, there are three choices: No Limit, Daily budget and Lifetime budget. No Limit is essentially an unlimited ad budget; the Daily and Lifetime budgets are the maximum amounts set to be spent daily or on an entire campaign. If you’d like to target your budget on a more granular level, you can set a Daily or Lifetime budget for specific ad groups, too.

Keep in mind that TikTok ads have a minimum budget requirement depending on the user’s choices. The minimum for both daily and lifetime budgets is 50 USD, but ad groups can run on a daily minimum of 20 USD.

 

3. Create an Ad Group & Choose Placements

 

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After setting a budget for the campaign, the TikTok Ad Manager guides you through creating ad groups. Each campaign can contain one or more ad groups. Ad groups consist of:

 

  • Placements
  • ​Creative Type
  • ​Target Audience
  • ​Budget & Schedule
  • ​Bidding Method & Optimization

 

The first set of choices to make is about ad placement. Advertisers can choose to advertise directly on the TikTok app, or place ads on one of TikTok’s affiliated properties. These include BuzzVideo, TopBuzz and Babe, for example. TikTok also offers a feature allowing the app to choose ad placement on its own, running ads where they would likely perform better.

 

4. Identifying Your Target Audience

 

Every campaign and ad group has a particular customer or set of customers in mind, and the app allows the advertiser to target specifically based on specific characteristics. Typical demographic options available include:

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  • Age
  • Gender
  • Language
  • Location 

 

Advertisers can also target their audience by what devices they use and their interests. For more specific targeting and retargeting, TikTok allows advertisers to upload the IDs of existing TikTok users from previous engagement through ZIP, CSV, and TXT files.

TikTok also provides advanced targeting options that dynamically optimize target audiences to lower cost or maximize conversions (Automatic targeting), automatically expand the target audience if the selected targets are predicted to be too hard to reach (Targeting expansion) or recommend interests and behaviors to include in the ad group (Targeting recommendations).

 

5. Finalize Campaign Details

 

The final step before pushing your ad live is to set your campaign’s bidding strategy and optimization goal. Optimization goals are straightforward. You can optimize your campaign for conversions, clicks or reach, and depending on the objective you set when creating your campaign, your optimization setting may be preset by default. 

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The bidding strategy on TikTok is similar to other social media platforms. Here’s a quick overview:

  • Bid Cap: Brands enter the maximum cost per result based on their chosen objective or billing event. Then, TikTok will deliver ads that do not exceed your desired cost.
  • Cost Cap: Advertisers can set an average cost per result they’d like to spend for a given objective. This acts as a more flexible version of bid cap, since costs may be higher or lower than your desired bid.
  • Lowest Cost: Instead of setting a bid, this option will place your ad as often as possible at the lowest feasible cost. While this is great for maximizing reach, it may result in a high cost per action depending on your target audience.

 

Whichever bidding strategy you select, you can choose either standard or accelerated delivery. Standard delivery means your ad budget will be spent evenly during the scheduled campaign time. Accelerated means your budget will be spent as quickly as possible, and your ad will be exposed to your target audience in the shortest time frame. 

 

6. Create and Ship Your Ads

 

Now for the fun part – creating your ad. First, choose a video or spark ad (or if you’ve selected TikTok’s affiliated regional feeds for placement, image ads are also an option). For video ads, simply add your photos or video, or create a video within the Ads Manager using the variety of video creation tools TikTok makes available. For spark ads, you’ll have to contact the creator whose content you want to leverage, and TikTok has a mechanism for doing that. 

TikTok will review each ad to ensure it complies with its guidelines, including the caption or text, images or visual content, audio content and the targeted region and age group. You’ll be prompted to upload or create a thumbnail and to insert any relevant links, and you’ll be able to preview your ad before submitting it for approval. Once approved, your ad will ship according to the schedule and volume dictated by your campaign set-up and budget.

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7. Increase Visibility with TikTok Promote

 

Dedicated ads aren’t the only videos TikTok can amplify for a fee. You can also boost your brand’s existing organic TikTok content to a broader or more relevant audience using TikTok Promote, similar to how you can boost organic content on other social media platforms.

Here’s how to use TikTok Promote:

 

  1. Find Creator tools on your TikTok profile under settings
  2. Select Promote 
  3. Choose the video you’d like to promote
  4. Pick an objective: More views, more web visits, or more followers
  5. Select your audience, budget, and the amount of time you’d like your video promoted
  6. Enter your payment information
  7. Select “Start Promotion”

 

TikTok Promote can help drive traffic to your website, reach more TikTok users, or accelerate your conversion rate. If your brand is already active on TikTok, the Promote feature is like a shortcut through the ad-building process. You’re using your own content as a Spark ad.

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8. Continuously Measure and Optimize Ad Performance

 

As with all social media advertising strategies, it’s absolutely crucial to test, measure and iterate your TikTok ads to optimize performance. The TikTok Ad Manager provides many tools to help you track key metrics like views, interactions and click-through rates, and the TikTok pixel will help you track off-platform activity. Adjust your content strategy if you’re not seeing the engagement and results you expect. 

 

How Much Do TikTok Ads Cost?

 

Because of the bidding and budget process, the cost of any individual TikTok ad or campaign will vary. However, there are minimum budgets at the campaign and ad group levels. For campaigns, the minimum daily budget and lifetime budget are $50. For ad groups, the minimum daily budget is $20.

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TikTok offers its own set of recommendations for beginning budget sizes, generally, at least $100 and around 20x what you think the cost per action (a click, conversion or sale) should be. For example, if spending $10 for each additional widget you sell through a TikTok ad is reasonable, then the simplified recommendation would be to budget $200.

TikTok also shares some real-world examples of how much their ads cost specific brands, including:

 

 

7 Creative Best Practices for Your TikTok Advertising Initiative

 
The most successful ads on TikTok don’t look like ads. The more fun you have making your TikTok ad, the more successful it will be. Forget stuffy corporate branding for a minute. Channel your inner performer, and you’ll have a better chance of connecting with your TikTok audience.

 

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1. Use trending sounds

 

Use commercially licensed tracks to make music an essential part of the storytelling. One of every five ads with the highest view-through rates leverage popular trends, effects, or music. And according to TikTok, 93% of top-performing videos overall use audio.

 

2. Use captions for accessibility and sound-off users

 

While audio is what makes TikTok TikTok, the text is important too. Text overlays or captions are considered best practices for multiple reasons. Text can help improve accessibility, allow users with silenced phones to better understand your post, and help every user better internalize your messaging. On top of that, TikTok claims that 40% of auction ads with the highest view-through rate have text overlays or captions.

 

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3. Use text overlays to highlight main takeaways

 

Just as an attention-grabbing headline will catch a reader’s eye, punchy, to-the-point text on top of your TikTok ad video will immediately alert the user to your intent. Using text overlays for your call to action is the best practice here.

4. Get the brand message out early

 

Again from TikTok itself: “… over 63% of all videos with the highest click-through rate (CTR) highlight their key message or product within the first 3 seconds.” So get to the point… and keep it short. Shorter videos – 21 to 34 seconds – are best for boosting conversions.

 

5. Think like a creator

 

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Users and content creators are the ultimate drivers of TikTok culture and trends. As an advertiser, consider yourself a guest in their home. Before you post, spend some time on TikTok and get a feel for the place. Use the native interface to find the right balance between authentic-looking content that fits in with user-generated content and the look of polished advertising.

 

6. Update your creative often

 

While it’s important to mix up your content styles and formats (within reason!) on other platforms, it’s downright critical on TikTok, where repetitive content quickly becomes boring and skippable. Use a variety of scenes, subjects and colors, and update your creative often. TikTok ads with varied scenes see a 40.6% lift in impressions.

 

7. Test and learn

 

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Always measure, track and adjust. Use the tools TikTok makes available and conduct your own A/B testing on ads. Don’t be afraid to move on from content if it’s not performing well, and be consistent with your metrics.
 

6 Successful TikTok Ad Campaign Examples

 
Many brands are finding success advertising on TikTok using video ads, spark ads, video shopping, influencer marketing and hashtag challenges. Let’s take a look at a few examples:
 

1. e.l.f’s #eyeslipsface Campaign

 
Animation of E.l.f’s #eyelipsface TikTok ad using a music video

 

“Elf’s music video went viral on TikTok, and since it became so known on TikTok, it brought significantly strong performance when incorporating it across other channels, specifically Instagram,” says Corpus

 

2. Chipotle’s #Boorito Challenge

 
Chipotle has been capitalizing on Hashtag challenges for a while now, using holiday promotions like the #Boorito challenge during Halloween and celebrating national Avocado day with the #Guacdance challenge.

Example of TikTok Boorito branded hashtag challenge for Chipotle

 

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While some may find it silly, these challenges grab attention and get users involved in their brand persona.
 

3. Kool-Aid’s #ohyeahchristmas Challenge


Like Chipotle, Kool-Aid used hashtag challenges to their advantage during a holiday, launching the OhYEAHChristmas challenge.

 

example of Kool-Aid TikTok ad for #OhYEAHChristmas challenge

 

They took a well-known part of their previous traditional ad campaigns and made it into something their audience could directly participate in. Influencers also brought in millions of views when they participated in the challenge themselves.
 

4. Walmart’s #Dealdropdance Challenge


Like many retail giants, Walmart looked to social media to promote Black Friday deals with influencer marketing and a hashtag challenge called the #DealDropDance.

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Walmart TikTok ad example with Terry Crews reading #DealDropDance

 

They worked with six influencers, including Terry Crews, to reach more of their audience to get a combined 17 million users.
 

5. The NBA’s TikTok Ad Campaign


When sports organizations advertise, they often display player stats, highlight reels, or gameday predictions; the NBA has used TikTok to show the organization’s more human side.

graphic reading “NBA teams on TikTok” highlighting NBA TikTok advertising

Music-backed clips of inspirational messages from players or funny clips of mascots help engage their audience in more endearing ways and make the brand more relatable.

6. The Washington Post’s TikTok Campaign


While it started as and still is, a part of printed media, the Washington Post has not ignored the digital landscape. After creating their TikTok account, they began to post funny behind-the-scenes videos of their journalists in the newsroom.

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tiktok washington post ads

 

While this isn’t the hard-hitting journalism that the Post is known for, it’s funny and engaging, fitting perfectly into the social media landscape. Not only does it help to drive awareness, but it also allows them to keep in touch with the younger demographics.

Final Takeaway

 
TikTok has grown from its origins as a short-form video app for teenagers into a genuine juggernaut of a social media platform. Its global reach and growth rate alone make it a lucrative opportunity for advertisers, but its unique audience and a particular set of ad formats make it an especially high-potential space to explore. 

While Facebook has historically been the king of direct response, each social channel has a unique offering that aligns with real business goals. TikTok should be considered when pulling together a holistic paid social strategy.

Ready to fuel your TikTok advertising strategy? Download our guide today!

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Editor’s Note: This post was originally published in August 2021 and has been updated for freshness, accuracy, and comprehensiveness.

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Effective Communication in Business as a Crisis Management Strategy

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Effective Communication in Business as a Crisis Management Strategy

Everyday business life is full of challenges. These include data breaches, product recalls, market downturns and public relations conflicts that can erupt at any moment. Such situations pose a significant threat to a company’s financial health, brand image, or even its further existence. However, only 49% of businesses in the US have a crisis communications plan. It is a big mistake, as such a strategy can build trust, minimize damage, and even strengthen the company after it survives the crisis. Let’s discover how communication can transform your crisis and weather the chaos.

The ruining impact of the crisis on business

A crisis can ruin a company. Naturally, it brings losses. But the actual consequences are far worse than lost profits. It is about people behind the business – they feel the weight of uncertainty and fear. Employees start worrying about their jobs, customers might lose faith in the brand they once trusted, and investors could start looking elsewhere. It can affect the brand image and everything you build from the branding, business logo, social media can be ruined. Even after the crisis recovery, the company’s reputation can suffer, and costly efforts might be needed to rebuild trust and regain momentum. So, any sign of a coming crisis should be immediately addressed. Communication is one of the crisis management strategies that can exacerbate the situation.  

The power of effective communication

Even a short-term crisis may have irreversible consequences – a damaged reputation, high employee turnover, and loss of investors. Communication becomes a tool that can efficiently navigate many crisis-caused challenges:

  • Improved trust. Crisis is a synonym for uncertainty. Leaders may communicate trust within the company when the situation gets out of control. Employees feel valued when they get clear responses. The same applies to the customers – they also appreciate transparency and are more likely to continue cooperation when they understand what’s happening. In these times, documenting these moments through event photographers can visually reinforce the company’s messages and enhance trust by showing real, transparent actions.
  • Reputation protection. Crises immediately spiral into gossip and PR nightmares. However, effective communication allows you to proactively address concerns and disseminate true information through the right channels. It minimizes speculation and negative media coverage.
  • Saved business relationships. A crisis can cause unbelievable damage to relationships with employees, customers, and investors. Transparent communication shows the company’s efforts to find solutions and keeps stakeholders informed and engaged, preventing misunderstandings and painful outcomes.
  • Faster recovery. With the help of communication, the company is more likely to receive support and cooperation. This collaborative approach allows you to focus on solutions and resume normal operations as quickly as possible.

It is impossible to predict when a crisis will come. So, a crisis management strategy mitigates potential problems long before they arise.

Tips on crafting an effective crisis communication plan.

To effectively deal with unforeseen critical situations in business, you must have a clear-cut communication action plan. This involves things like messages, FAQs, media posts, and awareness of everyone in the company. This approach saves precious time when the crisis actually hits. It allows you to focus on solving the problem instead of intensifying uncertainty and panic. Here is a step-by-step guide.  

Identify your crisis scenarios.

Being caught off guard is the worst thing. So, do not let it happen. Conduct a risk assessment to pinpoint potential crises specific to your business niche. Consider both internal and external factors that could disrupt normal operations or damage the online reputation of your company. Study industry-specific issues, past incidents, and current trends. How will you communicate in each situation? Knowing your risks helps you prepare targeted communication strategies in advance. Of course, it is impossible to create a perfectly polished strategy, but at least you will build a strong foundation for it.

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Form a crisis response team.

The next step is assembling a core team. It will manage communication during a crisis and should include top executives like the CEO, CFO, and CMO, and representatives from key departments like public relations and marketing. Select a confident spokesperson who will be the face of your company during the crisis. Define roles and responsibilities for each team member and establish communication channels they will work with, such as email, telephone, and live chat. Remember, everyone in your crisis response team must be media-savvy and know how to deliver difficult messages to the stakeholders.

Prepare communication templates.

When a crisis hits, things happen fast. That means communication needs to be quick, too. That’s why it is wise to have ready-to-go messages prepared for different types of crises your company may face. These messages can be adjusted to a particular situation when needed and shared on the company’s social media, website, and other platforms right away. These templates should include frequently asked questions and outline the company’s general responses. Make sure to approve these messages with your legal team for accuracy and compliance.

Establish communication protocols.

A crisis is always chaotic, so clear communication protocols are a must-have. Define trigger points – specific events that would launch the crisis communication plan. Establish a clear hierarchy for messages to avoid conflicting information. Determine the most suitable forms and channels, like press releases or social media, to reach different audiences. Here is an example of how you can structure a communication protocol:

  • Immediate alert. A company crisis response team is notified about a problem.  
  • Internal briefing.  The crisis team discusses the situation and decides on the next steps.  
  • External communication. A spokesperson reaches the media, customers, and suppliers.
  • Social media updates. A trained social media team outlines the situation to the company audience and monitors these channels for misinformation or negative comments.
  • Stakeholder notification. The crisis team reaches out to customers and partners to inform them of the incident and its risks. They also provide details on the company’s response efforts and measures.
  • Ongoing updates. Regular updates guarantee transparency and trust and let stakeholders see the crisis development and its recovery.

Practice and improve.

Do not wait for the real crisis to test your plan. Conduct regular crisis communication drills to allow your team to use theoretical protocols in practice. Simulate different crisis scenarios and see how your people respond to these. It will immediately demonstrate the strong and weak points of your strategy. Remember, your crisis communication plan is not a static document. New technologies and evolving media platforms necessitate regular adjustments. So, you must continuously review and update it to reflect changes in your business and industry.

Wrapping up

The ability to handle communication well during tough times gives companies a chance to really connect with the people who matter most—stakeholders. And that connection is a foundation for long-term success. Trust is key, and it grows when companies speak honestly, openly, and clearly. When customers and investors trust the company, they are more likely to stay with it and even support it. So, when a crisis hits, smart communication not only helps overcome it but also allows you to do it with minimal losses to your reputation and profits.

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Should Your Brand Shout Its AI and Marketing Plan to the World?

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Should Your Brand Shout Its AI and Marketing Plan to the World?

To use AI or not to use AI, that is the question.

Let’s hope things work out better for you than they did for Shakespeare’s mad Danish prince with daddy issues.

But let’s add a twist to that existential question.

CMI’s chief strategy officer, Robert Rose, shares what marketers should really contemplate. Watch the video or read on to discover what he says:

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Should you not use AI and be proud of not using it? Dove Beauty did that last week.

Should you use it but keep it a secret? Sports Illustrated did that last year.

Should you use AI and be vocal about using it? Agency giant Brandtech Group picked up the all-in vibe.

Should you not use it but tell everybody you are? The new term “AI washing” is hitting everywhere.

What’s the best option? Let’s explore.

Dove tells all it won’t use AI

Last week, Dove, the beauty brand celebrating 20 years of its Campaign for Real Beauty, pledged it would NEVER use AI in visual communication to portray real people.

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In the announcement, they said they will create “Real Beauty Prompt Guidelines” that people can use to create images representing all types of physical beauty through popular generative AI programs. The prompt they picked for the launch video? “The most beautiful woman in the world, according to Dove.”

I applaud them for the powerful ad. But I’m perplexed by Dove issuing a statement saying it won’t use AI for images of real beauty and then sharing a branded prompt for doing exactly that. Isn’t it like me saying, “Don’t think of a parrot eating pizza. Don’t think about a parrot eating pizza,” and you can’t help but think about a parrot eating pizza right now?

Brandtech Group says it’s all in on AI

Now, Brandtech Group, a conglomerate ad agency, is going the other way. It’s going all-in on AI and telling everybody.

This week, Ad Age featured a press release — oops, I mean an article (subscription required) — with the details of how Brandtech is leaning into the takeaway from OpenAI’s Sam Altman, who says 95% of marketing work today can be done by AI.

A Brandtech representative talked about how they pitch big brands with two people instead of 20. They boast about how proud they are that its lean 7,000 staffers compete with 100,000-person teams. (To be clear, showing up to a pitch with 20 people has never been a good thing, but I digress.)

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OK, that’s a differentiated approach. They’re all in. Ad Age certainly seemed to like it enough to promote it. Oops, I mean report about it.

False claims of using AI and not using AI

Offshoots of the all-in and never-will approaches also exist.

The term “AI washing” is de rigueur to describe companies claiming to use AI for something that really isn’t AI.  The US Securities and Exchange Commission just fined two companies for using misleading statements about their use of AI in their business model. I know one startup technology organization faced so much pressure from their board and investors to “do something with AI” that they put a simple chatbot on their website — a glorified search engine — while they figured out what they wanted to do.

Lastly and perhaps most interestingly, companies have and will use AI for much of what they create but remain quiet about it or desire to keep it a secret. A recent notable example is the deepfake ad of a woman in a car professing the need for people to use a particular body wipe to get rid of body odor. It was purported to be real, but sharp-eyed viewers suspected the fake and called out the company, which then admitted it. Or was that the brand’s intent all along — the AI-use outrage would bring more attention?

To yell or not to yell about your brand’s AI decision

Should a brand yell from a mountaintop that they use AI to differentiate themselves a la Brandtech? Or should a brand yell they’re never going to use AI to differentiate themselves a la Dove? Or should a brand use it and not yell anything? (I think it’s clear that a brand should not use AI and lie and say it is. That’s the worst of all choices.)

I lean far into not-yelling-from-mountaintop camp.

When I see a CEO proudly exclaim that they laid off 90% of their support workforce because of AI, I’m not surprised a little later when the value of their service is reduced, and the business is failing.

I’m not surprised when I hear “AI made us do it” to rationalize the latest big tech company latest rounds of layoffs. Or when a big consulting firm announces it’s going all-in on using AI to replace its creative and strategic resources.

I see all those things as desperate attempts for short-term attention or a distraction from the real challenge. They may get responses like, “Of course, you had to lay all those people off; AI is so disruptive,” or “Amazing. You’re so out in front of the rest of the pack by leveraging AI to create efficiency, let me cover your story.” Perhaps they get this response, “Your company deserves a bump in stock price because you’re already using this fancy new technology.”

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But what happens if the AI doesn’t deliver as promoted? What happens the next time you need to lay off people? What happens the next time you need to prove your technologically forward-leaning?

Yelling out that you’re all in on a disruptive innovation, especially one the public doesn’t yet trust a lot is (at best) a business sugar high. That short-term burst of attention may or may not foul your long-term brand value.

Interestingly, the same scenarios can manifest when your brand proclaims loudly it is all out of AI, as Dove did. The sugar high may not last and now Dove has itself into a messaging box. One slip could cause distrust among its customers. And what if AI gets good at demonstrating diversity in beauty?

I tried Dove’s instructions and prompted ChatGPT for a picture of “the most beautiful woman in the world according to the Dove Real Beauty ad.”

It gave me this. Then this. And this. And finally, this.

She’s absolutely beautiful, but she doesn’t capture the many facets of diversity Dove has demonstrated in its Real Beauty campaigns. To be clear, Dove doesn’t have any control over generating the image. Maybe the prompt worked well for Dove, but it didn’t for me. Neither Dove nor you can know how the AI tool will behave.

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To use AI or not to use AI?

When brands grab a microphone to answer that question, they work from an existential fear about the disruption’s meaning. They do not exhibit the confidence in their actions to deal with it.

Let’s return to Hamlet’s soliloquy:

Thus conscience doth make cowards of us all;

And thus the native hue of resolution

Is sicklied o’er with the pale cast of thought,

And enterprises of great pith and moment

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With this regard their currents turn awry

And lose the name of action.

In other words, Hamlet says everybody is afraid to take real action because they fear the unknown outcome. You could act to mitigate or solve some challenges, but you don’t because you don’t trust yourself.

If I’m a brand marketer for any business (and I am), I’m going to take action on AI for my business. But until I see how I’m going to generate value with AI, I’m going to be circumspect about yelling or proselytizing how my business’ future is better.

Want more content marketing tips, insights, and examples? Subscribe to workday or weekly emails from CMI.

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Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

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How to Use AI For a More Effective Social Media Strategy, According to Ross Simmonds

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How to Use AI For a More Effective Social Media Strategy, According to Ross Simmonds

Welcome to Creator Columns, where we bring expert HubSpot Creator voices to the Blogs that inspire and help you grow better.

It’s the age of AI, and our job as marketers is to keep up.

My team at Foundation Marketing recently conducted an AI Marketing study surveying hundreds of marketers, and more than 84% of all leaders, managers, SEO experts, and specialists confirmed that they used AI in the workplace.

AI in the workplace data graphic, Foundation Labs

If you can overlook the fear-inducing headlines, this technology is making social media marketers more efficient and effective than ever. Translation: AI is good news for social media marketers.

Download Now: The 2024 State of Social Media Trends [Free Report]

In fact, I predict that the marketers not using AI in their workplace will be using it before the end of this year, and that number will move closer and closer to 100%.

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Social media and AI are two of the most revolutionizing technologies of the last few decades. Social media has changed the way we live, and AI is changing the way we work.

So, I’m going to condense and share the data, research, tools, and strategies that the Foundation Marketing Team and I have been working on over the last year to help you better wield the collective power of AI and social media.

Let’s jump into it.

What’s the role of AI in social marketing strategy?

In a recent episode of my podcast, Create Like The Greats, we dove into some fascinating findings about the impact of AI on marketers and social media professionals. Take a listen here:

Let’s dive a bit deeper into the benefits of this technology:

Benefits of AI in Social Media Strategy

AI is to social media what a conductor is to an orchestra — it brings everything together with precision and purpose. The applications of AI in a social media strategy are vast, but the virtuosos are few who can wield its potential to its fullest.

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AI to Conduct Customer Research

Imagine you’re a modern-day Indiana Jones, not dodging boulders or battling snakes, but rather navigating the vast, wild terrain of consumer preferences, trends, and feedback.

This is where AI thrives.

Using social media data, from posts on X to comments and shares, AI can take this information and turn it into insights surrounding your business and industry. Let’s say for example you’re a business that has 2,000 customer reviews on Google, Yelp, or a software review site like Capterra.

Leveraging AI you can now have all 2,000 of these customer reviews analyzed and summarized into an insightful report in a matter of minutes. You simply need to download all of them into a doc and then upload them to your favorite Generative Pre-trained Transformer (GPT) to get the insights and data you need.

But that’s not all.

You can become a Prompt Engineer and write ChatGPT asking it to help you better understand your audience. For example, if you’re trying to come up with a persona for people who enjoy marathons but also love kombucha you could write a prompt like this to ChatGPT:

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ChatGPT prompt example

The response that ChatGPT provided back is quite good:

GPT response example

Below this it went even deeper by including a lot of valuable customer research data:

  • Demographics
  • Psychographics
  • Consumer behaviors
  • Needs and preferences

And best of all…

It also included marketing recommendations.

The power of AI is unbelievable.

Social Media Content Using AI

AI’s helping hand can be unburdening for the creative spirit.

Instead of marketers having to come up with new copy every single month for posts, AI Social Caption generators are making it easier than ever to craft catchy status updates in the matter of seconds.

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Tools like HubSpot make it as easy as clicking a button and telling the AI tool what you’re looking to create a post about:

AI social media caption generator step 1

The best part of these AI tools is that they’re not limited to one channel.

Your AI social media content assistant can help you with LinkedIn content, X content, Facebook content, and even the captions that support your post on Instagram.

It can also help you navigate hashtags:

AI social media hashtags generator example, HubSpot

With AI social media tools that generate content ideas or even write posts, it’s not about robots replacing humans. It’s about making sure that the human creators on your team are focused on what really matters — adding that irreplaceable human touch.

Enhanced Personalization

You know that feeling when a brand gets you, like, really gets you?

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AI makes that possible through targeted content that’s tailored with a level of personalization you’d think was fortune-telling if the data didn’t paint a starker, more rational picture.

What do I mean?

Brands can engage more quickly with AI than ever before. In the early 2000s, a lot of brands spent millions of dollars to create social media listening rooms where they would hire social media managers to find and engage with any conversation happening online.

Thanks to AI, brands now have the ability to do this at scale with much fewer people all while still delivering quality engagement with the recipient.

Analytics and Insights

Tapping into AI to dissect the data gives you a CSI-like precision to figure out what works, what doesn’t, and what makes your audience tick. It’s the difference between guessing and knowing.

The best part about AI is that it can give you almost any expert at your fingertips.

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If you run a report surrounding the results of your social media content strategy directly from a site like LinkedIn, AI can review the top posts you’ve shared and give you clear feedback on what type of content is performing, why you should create more of it, and what days of the week your content is performing best.

This type of insight that would typically take hours to understand.

Now …

Thanks to the power of AI you can upload a spreadsheet filled with rows and columns of data just to be met with a handful of valuable insights a few minutes later.

Improved Customer Service

Want 24/7 support for your customers?

It’s now possible without human touch.

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Chatbots powered by AI are taking the lead on direct messaging experiences for brands on Facebook and other Meta properties to offer round-the-clock assistance.

The fact that AI can be trained on past customer queries and data to inform future queries and problems is a powerful development for social media managers.

Advertising on Social Media with AI

The majority of ad networks have used some variation of AI to manage their bidding system for years. Now, thanks to AI and its ability to be incorporated in more tools, brands are now able to use AI to create better and more interesting ad campaigns than ever before.

Brands can use AI to create images using tools like Midjourney and DALL-E in seconds.

Brands can use AI to create better copy for their social media ads.

Brands can use AI tools to support their bidding strategies.

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The power of AI and social media is continuing to evolve daily and it’s not exclusively found in the organic side of the coin. Paid media on social media is being shaken up due to AI just the same.

How to Implement AI into Your Social Media Strategy

Ready to hit “Go” on your AI-powered social media revolution?

Don’t just start the engine and hope for the best. Remember the importance of building a strategy first. In this video, you can learn some of the most important factors ranging from (but not limited to) SMART goals and leveraging influencers in your day-to-day work:

The following seven steps are crucial to building a social media strategy:

  1. Identify Your AI and Social Media Goals
  2. Validate Your AI-Related Assumptions
  3. Conduct Persona and Audience Research
  4. Select the Right Social Channels
  5. Identify Key Metrics and KPIs
  6. Choose the Right AI Tools
  7. Evaluate and Refine Your Social Media and AI Strategy

Keep reading, roll up your sleeves, and follow this roadmap:

1. Identify Your AI and Social Media Goals

If you’re just dipping your toes into the AI sea, start by defining clear objectives.

Is it to boost engagement? Streamline your content creation? Or simply understand your audience better? It’s important that you spend time understanding what you want to achieve.

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For example, say you’re a content marketing agency like Foundation and you’re trying to increase your presence on LinkedIn. The specificity of this goal will help you understand the initiatives you want to achieve and determine which AI tools could help you make that happen.

Are there AI tools that will help you create content more efficiently? Are there AI tools that will help you optimize LinkedIn Ads? Are there AI tools that can help with content repurposing? All of these things are possible and having a goal clearly identified will help maximize the impact. Learn more in this Foundation Marketing piece on incorporating AI into your content workflow.

Once you have identified your goals, it’s time to get your team on board and assess what tools are available in the market.

Recommended Resources:

2. Validate Your AI-Related Assumptions

Assumptions are dangerous — especially when it comes to implementing new tech.

Don’t assume AI is going to fix all your problems.

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Instead, start with small experiments and track their progress carefully.

3. Conduct Persona and Audience Research

Social media isn’t something that you can just jump into.

You need to understand your audience and ideal customers. AI can help with this, but you’ll need to be familiar with best practices. If you need a primer, this will help:

Once you understand the basics, consider ways in which AI can augment your approach.

4. Select the Right Social Channels

Not every social media channel is the same.

It’s important that you understand what channel is right for you and embrace it.

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The way you use AI for X is going to be different from the way you use AI for LinkedIn. On X, you might use AI to help you develop a long-form thread that is filled with facts and figures. On LinkedIn however, you might use AI to repurpose a blog post and turn it into a carousel PDF. The content that works on X and that AI can facilitate creating is different from the content that you can create and use on LinkedIn.

The audiences are different.

The content formats are different.

So operate and create a plan accordingly.

Recommended Tools and Resources:

5. Identify Key Metrics and KPIs

What metrics are you trying to influence the most?

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Spend time understanding the social media metrics that matter to your business and make sure that they’re prioritized as you think about the ways in which you use AI.

These are a few that matter most:

  • Reach: Post reach signifies the count of unique users who viewed your post. How much of your content truly makes its way to users’ feeds?
  • Clicks: This refers to the number of clicks on your content or account. Monitoring clicks per campaign is crucial for grasping what sparks curiosity or motivates people to make a purchase.
  • Engagement: The total social interactions divided by the number of impressions. This metric reveals how effectively your audience perceives you and their readiness to engage.

Of course, it’s going to depend greatly on your business.

But with this information, you can ensure that your AI social media strategy is rooted in goals.

6. Choose the Right AI Tools

The AI landscape is filled with trash and treasure.

Pick AI tools that are most likely to align with your needs and your level of tech-savviness.

For example, if you’re a blogger creating content about pizza recipes, you can use HubSpot’s AI social caption generator to write the message on your behalf:

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AI social media generator example

The benefit of an AI tool like HubSpot and the caption generator is that what at one point took 30-40 minutes to come up with — you can now have it at your fingertips in seconds. The HubSpot AI caption generator is trained on tons of data around social media content and makes it easy for you to get inspiration or final drafts on what can be used to create great content.

Consider your budget, the learning curve, and what kind of support the tool offers.

7. Evaluate and Refine Your Social Media and AI Strategy

AI isn’t a magic wand; it’s a set of complex tools and technology.

You need to be willing to pivot as things come to fruition.

If you notice that a certain activity is falling flat, consider how AI can support that process.

Did you notice that your engagement isn’t where you want it to be? Consider using an AI tool to assist with crafting more engaging social media posts.

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Make AI Work for You — Now and in the Future

AI has the power to revolutionize your social media strategy in ways you may have never thought possible. With its ability to conduct customer research, create personalized content, and so much more, thinking about the future of social media is fascinating.

We’re going through one of the most interesting times in history.

Stay equipped to ride the way of AI and ensure that you’re embracing the best practices outlined in this piece to get the most out of the technology.

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