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Tag: Locowise

  • Instagram Sees Uptick in Engagement, Follower Growth (Still Way Down From A Year Ago)

    Instagram Sees Uptick in Engagement, Follower Growth (Still Way Down From A Year Ago)

    For months, we’ve been looking at Locowise’s monthly Instagram engagement and growth reports, and things haven’t looked good for quite a while. This week, they released their look at March finding follower growth to be down 83.59% year-over-year, though it did increase by 50% compared to February.

    According to the firm, post engagement in March was 1.1% of the total followers, which is a 30.95% increase from February, but still a 60.71% decline from April 2015.

    It found that 91.23% of all posts in March were images and that images engaged 1.13% of the total followers. Videos engaged 0.91%, it found.

    “You get a 24.18% boost in engagement by posting images rather than videos,” says Locowise’s Marko Saric (via SocialTimes).

    His report references Instagram’s proposed algorithmic feed changes that have had so many people in a panic.

    “Algorithm should be a good move for the platform. It will hopefully bring new life, and more growth and engagement for those that publish great content that people want,” he says. “We can expect something like the Facebook algorithm. Some factors that will impact it would be the format of the post, the organic engagement on the post and the amount of time people spend on the post.”

    The whole point of the changes is to increase engagement, so those who are able to cut through should benefit greatly. Make no mistake though. You’re going to have to spend money to really get ahead.

    Image via Instagram

  • This May Help With The Facebook Engagement Problem

    This May Help With The Facebook Engagement Problem

    2015 wasn’t a great year for Facebook Page like growth, post reach, and engagement. In fact, as more time passes, it’s getting harder and harder to recall the glory days of when these things were at a high.

    Is Facebook an effective channel for your efforts these days? Let us know in the comments.

    Locowise recently shared some data looking at all of these Facebook elements as well as advertising. The numbers for organic growth of Page likes were abysmal in December.

    Post reach has risen over the past couple months, but it’s still well below what it was in May.

    As Pages continue to find engagement levels disconcerting, Facebook just announced the launch of Audience Optimization for publishers.

    This is a set of features aimed at helping publishers reach and engage their audiences on Facebook and better understand what people who click on their posts are interested in.

    Facebook describes Audience Optimization as “an organic targeting tool to help publishers engage audiences on Facebook and better understand their interests.”

    The company says the tool helps publishers improve the relevancy of their posts by indicating who is most likely to engage with it, which can of course increase engagement at both the post and Page levels.

    There are three key features: preferred audience, audience restrictions, and audience insights.

    Preferred audience lets publishers add interest tags to content to help Facebook connect people with the topics and subtopics that are most likely to engage them.

    Facebook already lets Pages target users by topic, but instead of limiting the audience, this prioritizes “uniquely for each person” the topics that are mostly to interest them.

    Audience restrictions, on the other hand, let publishers limit visibility of certain posts by specifying what audiences wouldn’t find a post relevant. This can be based on location, language, age, or gender. While cited as one of the three Audience Optimization features, it’s an existing feature that can be used alongside the preferred audience options.

    Audience Insights let publishers see performance of content down to the post level with breakdowns by interest tag. It’s an addition to the existing Page insights feature.

    “Once a post is published, insights for the preferred audience can help publishers understand how different subsets of people are responding by showing reach and engagement metrics for each interest tag,” says product manager Peter Roybal.

    “The variety and amount of content available to people is growing, so having more information about who is likely to be interested in your content helps us get your posts to the people who will care about them most,” he explains. “We heard feedback from media publishers that they were looking for products to help them better target their posts, so we worked to improve the suite ofPublisher Tools we launched last year and are replacing Interest Targeting with Audience Optimization. Unlike the Interest Targeting feature that preceded it, the tags in Audience Optimization help a post reach the most relevant subset of a publisher’s audience without restricting reach.”

    Audience Optimization can be used through the Page post composer (click the targeting icon like before), the Graph API, third-party publishing tools and through Instant Articles.

    You can find an overview and FAQ section about Audience Optimization here.

    Do you think the new features will help in the engagement department? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Images via Facebook, Locowise

  • Is The Instagram Free Ride Over?

    Is The Instagram Free Ride Over?

    Instagram has been something of a social media darling over the past few years, but according to a new report from Locowise, which has been tracking it since April, both follower growth and engagement have been on a downward trend.

    Have you encountered issues growing your Instagram following and engagement? Let us know in the comments.

    According to the report, growth was down 88.21% in 2015 while engagement was down 61.43%.

    “In the nine months of studies the follower growth on Instagram has declined 88.21%. From the high of 1.95% in April to the low of 0.23% in December,” writes Locowise’s Marko Saric. “Engagement rate has decreased as well. From the 2.8% engagement high in April to the 1.08% engagement low in December. This is a 61.43% decrease.”

    “Instagram has gone from one of the most ‘viral’ social networks to a pay-to-play platform during the year,” he adds. “If you want to achieve a great growth on Instagram you do need to consider alternative tactics. Organic growth will not get you far.”

    Well, that certainly sounds familiar.

    It’s worth noting, however, that Instagram still beats both Facebook and Twitter when it comes to follower growth and engagement rate of total audience as of December. For that second metric, Instagram put in a showing of 1.08% according to Locowise, compared to Twitter at 0.1% of all followers and Facebook at 0.37%.

    Images (as opposed to videos) accounted for 91.87% of all Instagram posts, according to the report, which says images also get higher engagement.

    While Instagram is becoming more of a “pay to play” situation, you might be interested to know that Instagram ads deliver clickthrough rates comparable to Facebook ads according to a recent study from Nanigans.

    Instagram itself has recently given businesses some advice on creative and driving brand awareness.

    “Instagram is a diverse, global community of people who have a wide range of interests from lifestyle content and pop culture, to humor and sports,” the company said in a recent post on its business blog. “Now that advertisers have access to the same buying, targeting and measurement tools that they do on Facebook, creative content on Instagram is just as diverse and relevant as those interests. As a result, we’re seeing a range of creative approaches from businesses on the platform—from repurposing creative from other channels to creating unique content specific to Instagram.”

    They gave examples of how several small businesses are successfully using creative on Instagram in different ways. One photo print company ran similar imagery and messaging on Instagram as they did on Facebook to create a “more holistic” campaign, and did so to great effect. According to Instagram, they saved time and saw a 30% increase in performance of the campaign by adding Instagram ads to the mix.

    An apparel and accessories provider created a holiday-themed video ad from scratch, paring a stop motion video made in-house with “clever” copy to spread awareness. Another business ran a series of illustration-based app install ads to tell a story, leading to a 30% increase in app conversion and an improved ranking on the app store.

    Check out the post for more details on each example.

    In a separate post, Instagram discussed driving brand awareness, citing examples from Sony and Blackberry. The company said that across 700 campaigns that have run on Instagram, 98% have generated significant lift in ad recall with an average ad recall of 18 points (2.8 times higher than Nielsen norms for online advertising).

    Have you dipped your toes into the Instagram ad waters yet? What are your impressions so far? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Image via Instagram (Facebook)

  • Report: Instagram Follower Growth, Engagement On The Decline

    Much has been made about the incredible growth of Instagram and the emerging opportunities that come along with that. We’ve certainly done our part in spreading the word.

    Last week, Pew Research Center put out some findings out about social media use, including the stat that 59% of Instagram users use it every day. That’s compared to 49% last September. There’s clearly growth in that department. It also reported that Instagram has increased daily engagement over the past year by 10%.

    Meanwhile, Instagram use in general has more than doubled since 2012, but has only grown 3% since last fall. It does seem that overall growth has slowed.

    That brings us to new research from Locowise (via Social Media Today), which says that both follower growth and engagement are actually on the decline. The firm looked at 2,500 Instagram profiles and their progress in July.

    According to that, average follower growth during the month was 0.34%. The largest profiles (those with over a million followers), it says, had growth of 0.28% while the smallest (those with less than 1,000) had growth of 0.36%. That’s a 77% drop compared to the 1.48% organic growth these accounts saw in May.

    “The general trend we’ve seen in the last few months is that the organic growth is dropping on Instagram,” writes Marko Saric for Locowise. “1.95% in April, 1.48% in May, 0.49% in June and now 0.34% in July. This is still better than the 0.21% organic page likes growth we see on Facebook, or the 0.19% growth on Twitter, but there is a reason to consider that Instagram is becoming saturated as a platform.”

    As far as engagement goes, the average rate was 2.12% of all followers in July. For the large profiles, it was 2.33% while for the small ones it was 4.14%. That’s down 19% compared to the 2.61% engagement rate in May.

    “Similar to organic growth, we are seeing a continuous decline in engagement on Instagram too,” says Saric. “From 2.8% in April, to 2.61% in May, 2.14% in June and now 2.12% in July. Looking on the bright side again, the 2.12% engagement on Instagram is 308% higher than 0.52% of your total page likes that engage with an average post on Facebook. It’s also 1313% higher than 0.15% of total followers that engage with the average tweet.”

    Check out the report for more insights and advice to brands. We also looked at some highlights from their report on Facebook engagement here. Engagement is on the decline there as well.

    Selfstartr put out an interesting infographic about why brands should embrace Instagram instead of Facebook as the latter has plateaued and the former is “just getting warmed up”.

    If this early research from Salesforce is any indication, Instagram is going to be a pretty good advertising option going forward.

    Image via Instagram

  • Facebook Pages Are Seeing Increased Organic Reach

    I realize this isn’t the type of headline you’ve become accustomed to over he past year or two. Facebook Pages have by and large seen the organic reach of most of their posts fall considerably as competition for News Feed space has increased and Facebook itself has repeatedly adjusted its algorithm.

    How have your organic reach numbers been in the past month or two? Have you seen any improvement? Let us know.

    A new study, however, finds that he average reach per post for Pages has increased by 103% month-over-month. More interesting yet is that this has occurred while there has also been a 58% decrease in engagement per post.

    These numbers come from Locowise, which analyzed 5,000 pages and their growth, reach and engagement results in May.

    “The average reach per post for pages we looked at was at 8.34% of all page likes in the month of May. This is a 103% increase compared to the 4.11% in April, and is very positive news for brands struggling to reach their audience organically,” the report says. “The larger the page the less organic reach there is per post though. For pages with over 1,000,000 likes the average reach was 6.62% while for the smallest pages the reach was 14.88% of their audience.”

    “The reach per post may be up but the engagement per post is down,” it continues. “The average engagement per post was at 6.61% of people reached. This is a 58% decrease compared to the 15.58% engagement we saw in April. The largest pages (those with over 1 million likes) had an above-average engagement of 8.92% of people reached. This means that the average engagement per post is at 0.55% of all page likes, which again is poor compared to the 2.81% engagement of total following that we see on Instagram.”

    This certainly isn’t the first time in recent memory we’ve heard about how much better engagement has been for brands on Instagram compared to Facebook.

    The study found that Pages saw an 11% increase in Page likes from April to May. Over 43% of Pages are using Facebook ads. They’re effectively buying nearly 32% of their reach.

    “Brands are realising that paid advertising is a great solution for their goals of growing a page and reaching a new audience,” the report says. “This is actually a 503% increase compared to only 7.19% of pages we saw using ads in April.”

    Facebook announced in February that it had over two million active advertisers (here’s a look at some improvements it has made to its ad products on the way to that number). Just this week, it made its Ads Manager app available on Android, enabling many more of their advertisers to manage their ads from their mobile devices (it was previously available for iOS). This will likely only contribute to increased Facebook advertising.

    When it comes to organic reach, videos are reaching more users than any other type of post. In February, Socialbakers shared some data showing this:

    organic-reach_1502174

    If the Locowise study is any indication, videos are only doing better than they were then:

    resource-fb-may-reach

    It’s definitely worth comparing the other post types in these two charts. Status updates seem to not be going so far, while links appear to be doing better. Facebook recently launched an “Add a Link” feature, which will only encourage more link sharing.

    While videos may lead the pack in reach, they’re still not seeing the engagement of photos, according to the study, which have 7.06% of people reached engaging on average compared to videos at 6.61%. Links are at 4.37% with status updates at 3.34%.

    It’s worth noting that since the month when these numbers were collected, Facebook has announced that it will begin taking some other things into account when ranking content in News Feed. These include the time people spend on posts and specific video actions, such as unmuting and enabling HD.

    Have you seen increased organic reach on your posts? Have you increased your Facebook advertising efforts? Let us know in the comments.

    Images via Facebook, Socialbakers, Locowise