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Here in my 'expert' opinion are the best Vines created by brands in 2013....
The best branded Vines are funny, creative, innovative and have one simple message delivered clearly. They also tend not to go for the ‘hard-sell’ of traditional advertising, and treat the product or brand in a playful or cheeky manner.
Even at their most imaginative, Vines tend to be of a lower budget, and are created quickly, so branded Vines can be quite inspiring for the everyday, agile Viner on a budget.
These low-budget, creative and humorous twists on the brands we know, create a personal connection with the viewer and the best of them become endlessly sharable, and live on far longer than their initial upload.
So, bearing all of that pre-amble in mind. Here are the best branded Vines of 2013.
Honda, in an effort to promote its national Honda Summer Clearance Event, took to the Internet to engage people and offer them some special deals.
I'm always looking for ways that brands can use social media applications to engage their customers and fans. Honda just set the bar high for anyone looking to use Vine as a means of communication and engagement.
The Honda #WantNewCar PromotionHonda, in an effort to promote its national Honda Summer Clearance Event, took to the Internet to engage people and offer them some special deals. Users were encouraged to tell Honda why it is they want a new car, and to do so by using the hashtag #WantNewCar. Now, this in itself would have been a good promotion. A huge name like Honda branding its own hashtag would have given them a ton of insight into their Twitter following and why their users want a new car. It's like free market research....
I confess, there are plenty of things that make Twitter's six second video service, Vine seem to be utterly dismissible. But that just may be its paradoxical strength, after all... Vine is the shallow end of a bigger movement There are three big changes (call them macrotrends if you like) that Vine and other services are driving. Good online experiences contain fewer words and richer content Christopher Baily, Chief Creative Officer for Burberry, says his fashion line is more a content and media company than a design firm. He is describing how content increasingly creates the context for consumer experiences....
Data from Unruly shows that five Vine clips are shared every second on Twitter and branded Vines are four times more likely to be shared than branded online videos. It’s also interesting to note that weekends are the most popular time to share Vines and in most cases they are more popular than all the previous weekdays combined. We’ve previously looked at fashion brands and football teams that have begun using Vine, as well as highlighting both good and bad uses of the platform. As with any new technology it’s good to keep experimenting and work out how it can benefit your brand, but there are a few guiding principles that it’s worth considering....
Although Vine was only released in January, it’s already made an impact in the world of citizen journalism, and it’s easy to see why – its ease of use, length constraints and accessibility make it the perfect platform for people to capture their own news, ready to share it with their friends and family on social media. In fact, Vine users have already made a start – in February, a Turkish journalist used the app to document the aftermath of a suicide bombing outside the U.S. embassy, barely a week after the app was launched. More recently, Vine user Doug Lorman shared a clip of the explosions at the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Timeliness played a part – the video was shared thirty minutes after the explosion, and was quickly disseminated online with over 100 RTs on Twitter alone....
Just about the time a client becomes proficient using Facebook and LinkedIn, another new social media platform comes along to complicate things. Pheed, Snapchat, the new and improved MySpace, Thumb…not every platform is right for every business, and a few are a guaranteed waste of time for some. So what about Vine? Vine is an application from the makers of Twitter that allows you to create 6-second looping video using your iPhone or iPad, and share using Twitter and/or Facebook. You don’t need any editing skill to put something together – just your iPhone or iPad and your thumb (your digit acts as the camera’s start/stop tool). Posting to social media is easy, too, and explained below. We think this latest entry into the social media universe is both viable and valuable to business, if used properly...
There always seems to be some hot, new social network on the block, gaining popularity among consumers and media. With each, marketers ask how the platform will benefit their businesses — and whether they should even be on it at all? When brands create presences on new social platforms, what’s important isn’t registering an account, but rather, the innovative ways they choose to use the tools. Here are five new social platforms gaining traction with consumers. Learn how your brand can best leverage them....
By now most of us content marketers have heard of, and probably already started using, Vine, the new app from Twitter that allows users to easily produce and share six-second videos. When it comes to adding the new tool to our content marketing toolbelt, how do we avoid misusing Vine? I say the answer is the same for producing six-second videos as it is for producing sixty-second videos – you need a plan. Or, since Twitter is a micro-blogging platform, let’s say Vine is a micro-storytelling app and you actually just need a micro-plan. Download a free copy of a printable Vine micro-planning tool, check out the whiteboard video below, or read the transcription to start planning right away....
Today we may have witnessed a first: a press release delivered via 6-second Vine mini-video. The makers of Sonar, a “social discovery app” that allows users to find others by geographical proximity (which Mediabistro profiled in this Elevator Pitch video), just received a big investment from Microsoft‘s Bing Fund–and they chose a unique way of letting the world know about it....
How could you use Vine for marketing? Viddy thinks that 15 seconds is the right length for a video short message while Vine has chosen 6 seconds. Maybe there is some science behind both but let’s look at some possible ideas for marketing with a short video. Here are 6 ideas...
If you missed the social media news last week, Twitter launchedVine; a standalone IOS app allowing users to share 6-second video clips in an Instagram-esque way. The Vine iPhone app has rocketed up to the 14th most downloaded free app; so many brands have begun to take notice. With all the buzz, I decided to take a look at Vine’s engagement numbers over the weekend to see how many public tweets contained a Vine link, if use increased since launch and to determine what the major conversation themes were. In order to pull all of the public tweets I searched for the term “vine.co” using the Cision Social Media Dashboard. This pulled all the tweets that contained the unique URL associated with a Vine video. While this won’t give us every Vine video that was produced (not all content is shared publicly or on Twitter), it can be a nice indicator on how often and what content was shared. As of this morning over 100,000 tweets were sent containing a Vine URL since the January 23rd launch, when Twitter’s Dick Costello sent out a tweet of steak tartar. As you can see from the graphic below the total amount of tweets containing a Vine link increased fairly drastically throughout the weekend with the coverage spiking on Saturday, Jan. 26 at noon, with over 11,000 tweets sent!...
Whenever a new platform launches these days, brands are instantly checking them out to see how they can “become a part of the conversation.” What that really means is how they can use a site like Twitter, or its new app Vine, to get your eyeballs, interact with you and, of course, sell you more stuff. There’s nothing wrong with that. It’s commerce at its purest. The story isn’t that brands try out new platforms. That’s boring. The interesting part is how they approach them and why. Now that consumers have the power to skip through commercials on programs that they record, creative advertisers have to start pushing the envelope on generating interesting and persuasive messages outside of the television set. I spoke with VaynerMedia founder Gary Vaynerchuk, and his firm urges their clients to test new things out. When he says test it out, he means it: "I tell our companies that there’s a 72 hour rule where you’re not even thinking about an ROI or how you can generate business. They should just try things out"....
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The first step is to get involved in what is already going on and jump into the stream of conversation that is taking place. In my last article, 3 Tips for Vine App Users, I suggested that you have to participate and get involved in the conversation while creating some content that helped connect you at a deeper level to the community. In this 4 part series we are going to take a deeper look at how to do just that....
Vine's microvideos have rapidly waned in popularity following the debut of Instagram's competing service. But don't count it out yet. The competition continues...
The Twitter-owned microvideo service Vine has had better days. Earlier, Marketing Land revealed that user sharing of six-second Vine videos plummeted after Instagram debuted a competing service last week. But Vine isn't Internet roadkill quite yet. Marketing Land conjured data from Twitter-metric firm Topsy, comparing how many times people shared instagram.com links on Twitter against the frequency of vine.co links.
Its most stunning revelation: Sharing of Vine videos dropped by almost 40% on June 20, the day Instagram launched its video service. So far, there's no turnaround in sight....
Vine is the hottest new kid on the block, and although people are still a little tentative about using anything that involved video, this is really helping to introduce a new medium to people in the least intimidating way possible. The thought of creating a 10-minute video is terrifying to a lot of people. A 6-second video? Well, that’s not so bad. Using Vine can be fun, but it can also be a promotional tool for your brand or content. So this week’s Brilliant Bloggers is filled with advice on making the most of this new platform....
The next shiny new thing in social media isn't necessarily a slam dunk.... Looking at Vine, there are some trends indicating that the Twitter-owned product has established itself as a worthwhile endeavor for communicators. Unruly recently conducted a study using 10 million Vine submissions as its data set and determined the following: - An average of 5 Tweets per second contain a Vine link. - 4% of the top 100 tracked Vines is branded content. - Weekends are the most popular time to share Vines. - According to Unruly co-founder, Matt Cook, vines that evoke emotional response are shared most frequently. On the flip side, Facebook has demonstrated how a new social-media product can land with a veritable thud. The company’s Home app has been described as a “flop,” and many are describing the smartphone home screen app as “too intrusive” and “pushy.”...
Khoa's colorful stop motion videos on Vine have boomed in popularity. Here's how he creates those six seconds of imagination.... If you stumble across across one of Khoa's reality-defying stop-motion vines, the first thing you'll ask is, "How in the world did he do that?" Twitter launched Vine on Jan. 24. The next day, 23-year-old Khoa Phan created his first Vine, a simple five-shot video of a Keurig machine brewing a cup of coffee. This was the kind of thing most people were filming when Vine first launched — mundane videos of everyday occurrences. As is the case with Instagram, if users don't think creatively, posts quickly run humdrum. Khoa, however, was not satisfied with the status quo of bland vines. It was his second vine that launched him into the spotlight. In it, he brings whimsical construction paper bubbles to life using stop motion, which gives the illusion that the bubbles are floating across the dark wood table. The bubbles pop to reveal a message: "Have a good day!" (a simple recurring message in his vines)....
"Sometimes it takes the little guy to figure out how to make something like Vine pay." When Vine, Twitter's six-second video sharing platform, first came out in January, brands fell over themselves to embrace the new medium. Red Vines probably got the most capital out of its initial #Vineception video. (It has only posted six videos in the 74 days since.) But four months later, Vine is the number one free app in the U.S. App Store and not showing any signs of slowing down. And while brands have had fun on the sharing tool, it looks like a small peanut butter company is one that's actually going to make it profitable....
There are some really great reasons why you should think about using Twitter’s new video sharing app to promote your business or brand. Vine is already extremely popular, which means it should become a part of your social media plan. Using Vine is also incredibly easy. Create a quick 6 second video, integrate it into your Twitter feed and make your tweets even more interesting. With a few creative yet simple ideas, you can make Vine an effective tool in your social media strategy. Read these 10 excellent tips and get inspired by several videos shown as best practice examples...
Twitter's Vine App is fun but it can also be a great business tool. How is your business using vine? At first glance the Vine App might seem to be more of a toy than a useful business tool, but remember how people viewed Twitter 4 years ago? It’s true that the Vine app only allows you to shoot 6 second video clips but it also allows you to start and stop the video recording, making for some really exciting possibilities such as stop motion and time lapse. Today I wanted to give you some ideas on how Vine can fit into the marketing tool kit for your business....
When life gives you lemons, pour a refreshing glass of science. Better yet, tune into six second science lesson from General Electric on Vine.... In reviewing General Electric’s overall content stream on Vine, it’s filled with highly curated, clever nods to data, science, innovation, aviation, and more. From raining data, to engine testing and even a geeky Valentine’s Day message referencing the periodic table of elements, General Electric has cracked the code on how to diversify its Vine content, while keeping the viewer engaged....
Learn some best practices emerging around Twitter's Vine so you can figure out what works, and what doesn't, for marketing. Vine. It’s the latest social media feature available on Twitter. Released on January 24, companies have already started to cozy up to the new, six second video feature as part of their social media content strategy. With it being so new, however, it may be difficult to tell what the best practices are. I mean, what's working? What's not? Any guidance here, people?! Well, the good news is, a veritable Vine flop isn't going to do your brand a ton of harm -- unless you're like, incredibly offensive or something. But shooting videos can seriously stress marketers out sometimes (Who has the equipment? How do I turn this thing on? Should I write a script? Does it look blurry?). So, a little guidance is what we're here to give. Because while we love to encourage experimentation in your marketing, we hate to see you waste your time. Here's what some brands have been doing that people seem to love, and some of the things that really are best to avoid when using Vine. Take a look, and share your own Vine learnings in the comments so we can all figure this thing out together....
... I’m tentatively excited for Vine’s potentially transformative powers. Its six-second looping films will expand Twitter’s abilities as a broadcast network while arming journalists with greater storytelling firepower in the digital form. Its advantages are already obvious, and they will become only more so if the tool is integrated natively into Twitter’s website and apps, thereby nixing the need to use a separate piece of software. Of course, it is early days for the technology, which is still a long way from confirming its worth, but with Twitter’s distributive power behind it, Vine has a shot at becoming important. Consider the following points....
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This is a very creative collection of Vine videos. Worth watching.