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š§ You're "Sleeping on Snapchat"
+ more from the Creator Economy Summit
ā° 1-SECOND SUMMARY
Instagram now allows up to 5 links in bio ā brands are going to want those spots!
Report: Brands earn 5x the engagement from creators vs what brands receive on their own*
Charli and Dixie DāAmelio are just some of the creators embracing Snapchat
Thousands of people lost their Twitter verified checkmark Thursday, including me š¤·š¼āāļø
š» ROADMAP
š² Meta Updates:
Instagram will now allow you to include up to 5 links in your profile section!
Mark Zuckerberg announced the news on his broadcast channel Tuesday, saying it was one of the most requested features theyāve had.
On the pro side, PR pro-Alice Moon: āIām excited because now influencers I hire can add links to their bio for client campaigns to boost visibility to the clientās websiteā
On the con side, brand builder Sandra Colton Medici: āIāve had the option for links for months & I went back to having a singular link to redirect to multiple links. I just think it does a better job to get people off platform than making them pick a link and then go back to the others on IG.ā
My take: This seems like good news for creators and brands who want multiple links in their bio ā but it doesnāt signal the end of services like Linktree or Linkind bio just yet:
There is no analytical data available for the links yet, though Instagram told me analytics will be added under Insights.
Instagram likes to drop new features and then forget or remove them. Iād like to see more commitment to the feature before endorsing it wholeheartedly.
If you use a link in the bio tool on other platforms, like TikTok, Twitter, or Snapchat, itās probably a cleaner and more consistent experience to keep using a service cross-channel.
Final thought: Regardless of what creators think, brands will be all over this. Sponsors are going to insist on being on your list of native links, like the business version of getting a spot in your MySpace Top 8. Start including those placements in your media kits and rate sheets.
š² Snapchat Updates:
Snapās Partner Summit on Wednesday revealed several creator-friendly updates, including:
A public Stories option (you must be 18+)
A Stories revenue share program for creators (criteria: 50K followers, 25M monthly views, and 10 Stories a month)
Creators will get more exposure on Snap Maps
Exclusive Linktree partnership as the link in the bio option
š§® DATA OF THE WEEK
Vogue Scandinaviaās Avg. Percentage Viewed on YouTube is 108%, meaning that, on average, every viewer watches the brandās videos to completion!
Dash Hudson just unleashed a TON of useful insights you can borrow in their 2023 Cross-Channel Social Media Benchmarks reports (like going to check out Vogue Scandinaviaās channel!).
It includes engagement and growth trends across Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, plus a deep dive on specific platform trends and brand examples across categories including Beauty, Fashion and Luxury, Media and Publishing, CPG, Food, and Beverage, Retail, and Home. For example:
š² On Instagram:
Brands earn more meaningful engagement from creators, with an average Engagement Rate 5x higher than what brands receive. Nano and micro creators receive strong Engagement and Effectiveness Rates, compared to mid and macro creators.
š² On TikTok:
Brands grow faster on TikTok than they do on Instagram and YouTube. Growth on TikTok is 181% higher than on Instagram and 107% higher than on YouTube.
š² On YouTube:
Brands are still slow to adopt Shorts into their strategy even as Shorts have strong engagement. And brands arenāt posting them nearly as often ā for every Short, brands post 3 Reels or 4 TikToks.
šš» CLICK THRU
šļø Creator Economy Summit Recap
The Information news organization hosted a Creator Economy Summit in LA that was a meetup of some of the smartest and funniest people in this space. If you werenāt able to make it (or following along on Twitter), hereās a recap:
What happened: The Creator Economy newsletter writer Kaya Yurieff and The Informationās CEO Jessica Lessin brought together a bunch of smart folks at the London Hotel in West Hollywood for a day of panels and networking sessions.
Who was there: A mix of entrepreneurs, investors, media people and creators such as Hank Green, Jon Youshaei, Amanda Diaz, Samir Chaudry, Heidi and Marc DāAmelio (Charliās parents) and more.
Why: It was a business-forward look at the issues creators and companies are facing, from new technologies and tools to platform trends (donāt sleep on Snapchat) and the future of creator economy startups.
Top Takeaways:
ā AI is top of mind for everyone and being incorporated everywhere, especially as it helps with content creation, distribution and aggregating data. But companies are also being super cautious how they speak about it:
āWe think a lot about trust and safetyā -Descriptās Michael Sippey
āWeāre thinking about it ethicallyā -Adobe Expressā Ian Wang
āWe should embrace it and try to control it at the same timeā -Visaās Marie-Elise Droga
ā Reps for TikTok and YouTube were on hand but Snapchat seemed to be the sleeper hit of the day. TikTokers āDixie and Charli are always snapping their friends,ā their dad and business partner Marc DāAmelio told the audience.
The sentiment was later echoed by creator Jon Youshaei, who said, āPeople are sleeping on Snapchat. We pitched a show six months ago and thatās been a great source of revenue.ā
ā Creator Economy startups are in for a reckoning, according to the VC panel: āWeāre all super duper f**ked,ā said Cleo Capital founder and general partner (and v. funny investor) Sarah Kunst, who explained that the market was getting corrected for bad ideas that had been funded.
āVenture is a gravity game, what goes up tends to go down. Weāre in a down-ish moment. It has little to do with the company youāre building or the needs of creators or brands and advertisers. Youāre caught up with gravity now.ā
ā TikTok really wants to make Shop happen and part of that includes the TikTok Affiliate program thatās live in the UK but still being tested in the US.
āWhat the affiliate platform does is it enables brands to put products out to creators for creators to then earn commission on those products. Creators can then use links in videos or go live with those products and earn commission on it,ā explained Sandie Hawkins, TikTokās general manager of US e-commerce.
The criteria for eligibility in the affiliate program is the same as the threshold to join TikTokās Creator Marketplace.