Matt Navarra on the social media trends for 2020
The tenth episode of the Reclaim Social Podcast is now live! đ Weâve talked to Matt Navarra, Social Media Consultant and Expert, about the social media trends for 2020 and how to make the most of our social media presence on each platform.
In case youâve missed it, weâve also talked to Matt Navarra for our ninth episode of the #ReclaimSocial podcast to find out more about his experience and passion for social media.
This time weâre focusing on the social media trends for 2020 and how they could affect our work around social media, digital, or comms and marketing. Enjoy the episode!
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Matt Navarra and the social media trends for 2020
Here are a few excerpts of the things that weâve talked about on our latest episode.
What are the key social media stories from 2019?
Well, thereâs quite a lot thatâs gone on the majority of the news headlines, unsurprisingly, and based on previous years has been the same as well, is about Facebook. Weâve also seen a lot about TikTok. Is it going to have the same challenges and problems that other social platforms have faced? Thatâs been an interesting area of development this year, as well. And also just seeing how the other platforms start finding new ways to keep our attention on their platform because itâs a constant challenge. Theyâre always competing with new apps and new messaging products that are coming out.
How should we prepare our strategies for 2020?
Well, some of the main things now are still relevant from last year. Thatâs around private messaging and groups. These are areas that are continuing to be the destination of choice by many social media users to share things and to engage with friends family and people they donât know, but theyâve met online. So working on developing a community on a platform that you think is best for you, that is more private and more kind of closed is something that people should be considering if they havenât done already.
I think that short-form video is going to have an interesting year because we not only have we seen the rise of TikTok with its kind of more irreverent fun style short-form videos. And weâve also now got an app thatâs going to be launched shortly, more publicly too called Byte, which is by the creators of Vine. For those that remember, it was a short form six-second looping video app that was eventually bought and owned by Twitter but was killed. It was good but the Byte is In the final stages of testing, and that will come out and so thatâs at the end, thatâll be, you know, two or three platforms out there, then that are more around the short-form video. I suspect that those platforms will actually go towards offering longer-form versions of the content as well.
And I think that itâs going to be a lot about niche apps that weâve had these big platforms that everyone knows and most people love it the people have a favourite whether itâs Instagram or Snapchat versus Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn, whatever else. But there are also lots of apps that are coming out that are for more niche users. So weâve seen Twitterâs always been quite popular, but thatâs increasingly becoming popular for those interested in gaming, of course, and then there are apps like Nextdoor, which is more about your local community much more where you are geographically around your neighbourhood, for managing and social and discussing things around things that going on in your local area.
And I think that there seems to be some also a shift towards the creative tools that are coming out. The last year or so weâve seen platforms, particularly Facebook and Instagram, providing a much more of a service to the content creators. So weâve seen the Creative Studio launched. Weâve seen a lot more tools within Instagram Stories and other platforms to not only just stick stickers on now and draw over your images and clip videos, thereâs just a whole massive range of other things as well that you can do to make your content really interesting and stand out but also to manage it. Theyâre making it even easier and cheaper and quicker for those that are in the social media industry to manage their content and also develop relationships with brands for creating influence, so kind of content as well. So weâve seen the brand collaborations tool from Facebook as an example of that. So all of these things are in the pipeline. And I think weâll see more of in the year ahead.
What do you think of the idea of Facebook and Instagram hiding the number of likes?
I get the impression that theyâve already been testing it in a certain number of areas or countries. And then theyâve expanded that test wider and wider, which to me gives me the sign that theyâre seeing that it is having a positive effect or is not having a damaging effect on the experience or on their businesses, because clearly, itâs not just about what we want, itâs also what makes the business generate profit for them. So I think from that point of view, weâll probably see them expand it and see more of it.
As regards the other platforms, I would suggest that if one of them does it, the others will slowly follow in terms of how successful it will be in terms of what itâs trying to achieve, which is to take peopleâs focus off of like counts and seeing which is the most popular and actually focusing on the content. So itâs not so much of a competition for likes, and making sure that the platforms are less addictive in terms of trying to be better than other people and things. I think it is a positive step. I think to some degree it will have positive results. It will achieve what it sets out to achieve. There are people who are shouting about the fact that itâs not great for creators and influencers, we donât know what content weâre doing is working and itâs going to damage our industry, I think if theyâre missing the point slightly because this is not stopping them from seeing how successful their content is in terms of likes, because you can still see that for the platforms that testing it. This is more for those that are looking at your content from the outside in and viewing the like counter, which will no longer be there. So I think the worries that those people have expressed unfounded at this stage.
Another app thatâs really growing especially the last year was TikTok. Why do you think is it so appealing?
Itâs been successful for a variety of reasons. And some of them are the fact that the company that owns it, a Chinese company has spent a fortune, millions and billions of pounds in advertising and marketing it to get it in front of people. And that has had a huge success for them to get new users. I think that it also plays on all the things that have been successful in similar platforms like whether it be Snapchat and Vine and others in terms of the kind of quick and snackable content that is easy to get into and get out of.
I think also that TikTok got a really good algorithm. It seems to be a common kind of remark about TikTok that itâs incredibly good at learning what you tend to like on the field that youâve set up. And then when you go back there, it gives you more and more of it and it becomes dangerously, I guess, addictive to some people. But sometimes, thatâs quite a nice thing. Itâs addictive because it means itâs good. Itâs dry. It is interesting to me. So I think that thatâs part of the reason why itâs also been successful. And I think also, one thing thatâs different from other platforms is that itâs not the polished, perfected Instagram style Story videos that we see. Itâs about actually people thinking, âI donât care if Iâve got makeupâ, and they look the best and âI donât care if I look stupid and sillyâ.
I donât know, I wouldnât want to say in five years time, whether it will still be around. Thereâs a good chance it will see in a couple of years time that the novelty does wear off. But certainly, itâs concerned the likes of Facebook enough that theyâve created their own version of a TikTok. And it hasnât been that successful for them yet, but Iâm sure that Facebook will continue to throw new features or new versions of something similar to see if it can make its own version of it because thatâs how Facebook tends to work. It either copies or it buys it or abandons it.
Social media success comes down to two things. Knowing your audience and creating well-made content.
How can we educate people expecting big social media success from one day to another?
When everyone asks you whatâs the most important thing and everything else is always about? Well, two things. One is knowing your audience because if you know what your audience is, who they are, where they are, what they like and what theyâve liked in the past, and then you pair that with very, very well-made content that doesnât mean very well made in the sense it has to be well polished and produced thatâs high end expensive, it can be you can do it for less than a couple hundred pounds. It doesnât always matter about the production value. Itâs more about it matching up with both the expectations and what your audience enjoys. If you make really good content and post it in the right places at the right time, to the right people, then content and audience are the main things to focus on.
More questions
- Whatâs everyoneâs role in staying more protected after the era of Cambridge Analytica?
- Is Instagram taking over Facebookâs popularity nowadays?
- Whatâs the actual difference between Facebook and Instagram Stories?
- Have you ever had questions from younger social media managers or those who are considering jumping into the industry on the kind of skills that they need to have in order to start getting into that field?
- How do you see the future of social media? Can we actually be optimistic about it?
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