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Creative work is challenging work.
You might feel full of great ideas one day. The next day, however, you might feel completely uninspired.
As content marketers, we’re required to be creative every day. That’s because consistency and creativity are essential for social media success. Our audiences will not accept sub-par content or inconsistent posts. Readers want quality they can count on. If you fail to deliver, they’ll stop following.
That’s bad for business.
Fortunately, creative professionals tend to thrive under this kind of pressure. It’s what keeps us motivated. When you’re inspired, planning creative social media campaign ideas is a rush. When you’re feeling stagnant, however, it can feel stressful and anxiety-inducing.
Even if you consider yourself creative, you can’t count on spontaneously having great ideas all the time. What you need is a dependable process that will help you:
- Be truly creative, even when you don’t feel like it.
- Save time on ideation so you’ll more time for execution.
- Effectively execute your ideas for maximum success.
How To Generate Better #SocialMedia Campaign Ideas Like A Creative Genius
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In this post, we’ll show you how to apply old-school creativity to new-school social media marketing. We’ll also provide you with two free downloadable assets:
- A free proposal template to help outline your campaign (and present your campaign idea to your boss or client).
- A campaign content template to help you write and organize your campaign in one cohesive document.
Anyone can be creative. We’ll show you how.
But First, Check Out Social Campaigns: The Newest Feature In Your Favorite Social Media Calendar
Once you have an awesome idea, you need a tool that will help you organize your campaign process behind the scenes. Social Campaigns in CoSchedule will help you easily group your social messages together in a single project for easy project management, collaboration, and scheduling.
Forget about trying to remember when and where to post during your social media campaign. Just use the Social Campaigns feature in CoSchedule!
5 Creative Social Campaign Ideas That Worked (And Why)
Before getting started, let’s look at some successful social media campaigns to inspire your creativity.
These five brands show how to do social media right
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Honest Tea: “#RefreshinglyHonest”
Honest Tea’s brand is built on the idea of, well, honesty. They use real ingredients with no hidden sweetener or weird stuff you can’t pronounce.
This campaign found a unique intersection between their product’s value proposition (a bottled drink without artificial who-knows-what in it), and their customers’ values (honesty and authenticity).
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The campaign set up pop-up shops in major cities. Each shop offered tea samples in exchange for donating $1 to charity.
That sounds simple enough. However, there was one interesting twist.
The tea stands were unstaffed.
Would people pay for tea even if no one was watching? It’s easy to think a high number of people would simply steal a free drink. However, the results contradicted that assumption. It also challenged participants to prove their honesty by sharing their experience at each shop on Twitter and Instagram using the #RefreshinglyHonest hashtag. At the end of the campaign, the results were posted to a landing page.
This campaign successfully achieved all of the following:
- It got Honest Tea’s audience involved, leveraging the ubiquity of smart phones and social media.
- It tied the brand’s cause back into its product in a creative way.
- It combined offline and online strategies well. Folks often use social media on their phones, and this campaign leveraged that effectively.
GoPro: “Didja The Skateboarding Cat”
Cat videos make up 99% of all online video content (Note: This statistic is completely made up). That may be an exaggeration.
However, people really like their cat videos, and GoPro knows it. That’s why they strapped one of their cameras to a skateboarding cat and let it do its thing.
The results were a wildly successful campaign that was widely cited as one of the best of 2015. It worked because it showed off an interesting application of their product, and tied it into something their audience is interested in (gotta have more cat videos).
A video posted by gopro (@gopro) on
Spotify: “Year In Music”
Spotify allows users to share a landing page that displays what you listened to in the previous year. It shows some cool stuff, like what you listened to at the start of the year, which artist you streamed the most, and more.
You can then share the interactive page on your social media channels.
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This campaign works well because it allows users to express their individuality on social media through Spotify. It’s also a unique feature their competitors don’t have.
Best of all (for us data nerds): It’s all data-driven, with data you’ve generated yourself.
The message: If you want a streaming music service that lets you express yourself, there’s no better choice than Spotify.
Ritz-Carlton: “Memories”
Vacations are all about making memories. Ritz-Carlton, a chain of luxury hotels, understands this. Their Memories campaign taps into this well by encouraging users to share photos of their experience at Ritz-Carlton hotels.
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This achieves two goals:
- It lets hotel patrons show off where they’re staying…
- …while allowing the hotel to show off their luxurious rooms and amenities.
It’s win-win, and it’s also an easy idea to emulate.
KLM: “Happy To Help”
Airline KLM took customer service to new heights with their Happy To Help campaign. They set up a massive control room in a busy airport filled with monitors and staff.
The team watched Twitter for complaints from disgruntled travelers —whether they were KLM customers or not—and then offered to help with whatever problems they were having. This included everything from helping track down lost visas to actually delivering a bed to a traveler stuck overnight.
This campaign was effective because it focused on being helpful. It didn’t matter which airline someone was flying on. KLM understands that air travel is often stressful and fraught with mishaps. By making the experience easier, they earned an incredible amount of goodwill from frustrated flyers.
It turned negative experiences into magical moments people will remember.
How To Find The ‘Big Idea’ For Your Own Social Media Campaign
Now, it’s your turn to start developing your own social campaign.
Each of the campaigns we’ve looked at are based on a Big Idea. A “Big Idea” is an overarching concept designed to leave a lasting impression. David Ogilvy, the godfather of modern advertising, once said:
You will never win fame and fortune unless you invent big ideas. It takes a big idea to attract the attention of consumers and get them to buy your product. Unless your advertising contains a big idea, it will pass like a ship in the night.
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Successful social media campaigns drive meaningful change. Their messaging moves mountains and motivates audiences to take action.
And the best are built on strong ideas.
This doesn’t mean a good idea needs to be grandiose. It simply needs to be memorable and focused on conveying one clear message that will inspire a desired action.
Big Ideas don’t arrive by accident though. They’re the result of hard mental labor, extensive research, and yes, a little bit of serendipity. They exist at the nexus between:
- What your audience wants
- The problem your product or service solves
- The change you want to create
Follow this process to get started.
Start With Strong Research
Crafting resonant messaging requires research. The three areas we’ll look at are:
- Audience research: Who do you want to reach, and what do they want to see?
- Industry research: What important developments are happening in your industry or niche?
- Competitive research: What’s working for your competitors? What can you do different, do better, or do that they can’t?
Recommended Reading:
Audience Research
You may already know who your audience is. If you’re starting from scratch, here are two simple ways to find out:
Use Facebook’s Built-In Analytics
Facebook provides powerful analytics capabilities. Simply visit your page. Then, click Insights, and find the People tab in the left-hand navigation:
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Analyze Your Twitter Following With Followerwonk
Followerwonk is a great freemium Twitter audience analysis tool from Moz. For our research purposes, follow these steps:
- Visit Followerwonk and enter your brand or company’s Twitter handle.
- Select Analyze Their Followers (see below):
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You’ll now have a report full of useful demographic data for your Twitter followers. This includes:
- Geographic location
- Most active hours on Twitter
- A word cloud based on followers’ Twitter bios
- Inferred gender
- Audience breakdown by age group
- Languages used
This information can give you a clearer picture of who your audience is.
Use Twitter Polls
Twitter polls are an easy way to get fast feedback. Here’s how to run one for audience research:
- Log into Twitter via its mobile app or desktop website.
- Compose a new tweet and click the Poll button:
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- Think of two to four topical areas of interest to your audience.
- Craft a question asking which is most interesting to your followers.
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- Click Tweet and you’re on your way.
Run A Survey
This option will pay massive dividends for your marketing, both on and off social media.
- Choose a survey platform. Polldaddy and Survey Monkey are two reputable options.
- Write good questions focused on finding out what your audience wants. Some examples could include questions about:
- Their general interests
- Which tools they use
- Their toughest challenges and pain points
For an example of what kind of insights you can get from a survey, read the findings from our 2016 Better Marketer Survey.
Consider Creating Personas
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A buyer persona is essentially a fictional character description that fits your average audience member. They can be immensely helpful for visualizing and understanding the target of your social media campaigns.
We won’t go in-depth on how to build them here. However, Hubspot has put together a great guide to creating personas you can use.
Competitive Research
The public nature of social media makes competitive research relatively easy.
Manually Monitor Competitors’ Social Accounts
A quick look at your competitors’ social accounts can tell you a lot. Pay attention to the following:
- Their creative messaging
- Their visual style
- Their engagement levels with their audience
Use Social Media Monitoring Tools To Track Industry Keywords On Social Media
Tools like Mention make it easy to see what’s being said around any given keyword on social media.
Industry Research
This doesn’t need to be too complex. Just follow these tips on a consistent basis to ensure you’re always on top of what’s happening.
Read Industry Publications
Follow reputable magazines, websites, blogs, and news sources related to your industry. This may seem like obvious advice. However, it’s one of the best ways to stay current with what’s relevant to your audience.
Follow Industry Thought Leaders On Social Media
Identify and follow leaders in your industry across their social channels. There’s not much more to this than that.
Brainstorm Your Creative Campaign Ideas
Crafting campaign concepts is a collaborative process. Whether you’re working alone or with a team, there are ways to get the most from your available brainpower to generate awesome ideas.
Apply CoSchedule’s 30-Minute Blog Brainstorm Process To Social Media
We recently published a blog post outlining an effective 30-minute brainstorming process for generating blog content ideas. That same process works for standalone social media campaigns, too. Here’s a breakdown of how this process works.
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1. Have your team write down as many campaign ideas as possible in ten minutes. This can be done silently using notecards or on their computers in a shareable document format (like Google Docs or Office 365). Alternately, team members can say each idea aloud, and one person can write them down.
Don’t worry about whether your ideas are good or not (yet). Just get what’s in your head out into the world. You can refine your concepts later.
2. Then, place your ideas on a wall. Review them one at a time. Assign each a score from 1 through 3:
1’s: Weak. Throw these out.
2’s: These are ideas that could work, but need polish or the right angle. Save these for future reference.
3’s: Ideas that get unanimous 3’s across the board are winners. These are the best campaigns you should consider creating first.
3. Gather all your 3’s, and choose which you’ll work on first. Place them on your social media calendar to stay organized and prevent them from getting lost.
This process can yield awesome results fast. Devote 10 minutes to each step, and you’ll have plenty of creative ideas to choose from.
Recommended Reading:
Here’s how to generate social campaign ideas fast:
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Use Mindmaps
Mind maps are like visual idea trees. They’re made up of bubbles and arrows connecting different words and thoughts to a central concept. According to Lifehacker:
Mind mapping is one of the best ways to capture your thoughts and bring them to life in visual form. Beyond just note-taking, though, mind maps can help you become more creative, remember more, and solve problems more effectively.
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The easiest way to get started is to select a mind mapping tool. Here are some popular options:
Each of these apps have different features. However, they all essentially operate like this:
- Start with a core concept, topic, or idea.
- Write down more ideas and keywords in bubbles.
- Draw lines between related ideas.
This video from iMindMap demonstrates how to put one together (it’s specific to their tool, but it’s informative enough to apply generally):
Get Out The Whiteboard Markers
If you’re a visual thinker, then a whiteboard can be an indispensable creative tool. It’s likely you have one somewhere in your office (and if not, you can always order one).
- Get some markers.
- Free-write thoughts and ideas related to your potential campaign. These could include:
- Hypothetical headlines or campaign titles
- Ideas for messaging
- Ideas for what your campaign could promote
- Sketch out rough drawings of what your visuals could look like.
There’s no secret formula here. If you’re used to doing all your work on a computer, a whiteboard offers some advantages. These include:
- Getting you away from the screen.
- Allowing you to move around as you think.
- Forcing you to create with something other than a keyboard and mouse can motivate and inspire creativity.
Find The Intersection Between Your Brand And Your Audience’s Interests
Your audience likely has diverse interests. You know this because you’ve conducted surveys and scanned keywords from their Twitter bio boxes using Followerwonk. They hold these interests in addition to your brand.
Finding where your brand and those interests overlap can inspire amazing ideas for social campaigns.
Ian Lurie, CEO of Seattle-based marketing agency Portent, has built an excellent presentation explaining how this concept works. It’s well worth taking the time to read and digest all 150+ slides:
Here’s the short version: Target your campaign’s messaging toward where your brand’s value proposition and your audience’s interests intersect. Think of it like a Venn diagram:
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Here’s how to apply this principle to creating a social media campaign:
- Identify an interest that’s common with your audience. It bears repeating: The Twitter bio box info you can gather with Followerwonk is a great place to start. Lean on any survey data you might have as well.
- Think about how that interest overlaps with your product or service. For example, if you sell board games, you might discover your audience likes a particular type or brand of snacks (you can’t play board games without snacks).
This could open a few possibilities:
- You could reach out to that brand that makes that snack and collaborate on a campaign.
- You could build a campaign around a giveaway offering that type of snack as a prize.
- You could create a campaign that leverages interest in that snack to raise your brand awareness (eg: posting clever photos with board games and said snack).
These are generic examples to get your mental gears turning.
Think Outside The Box (For Real)
People commonly say “thinking outside the box” to describe innovative ideas. However, it’s often not clear exactly what that means. It’s a vague and clichéd phrase to be sure, but the thought behind it is sound.
Be remarkable.
Great social media campaigns demand an audience’s attention. They command engagement because they’re inherently remarkable. In order to be remarkable, you first have to do something worth remarking on. This is easier said than done, but worth the effort.
Here are some examples to follow for inspiration:
Add An Offline Component To Your Social Media Campaign
One way to create compelling campaigns is to add a social component to an existing campaign. Combine this concept with some “outside the box” thinking, and some crazy cool things can happen.
Example: Brew Dog’s Sunk Punk
Few brands are as audacious as BrewDog. The Scottish craft brewery is renowned for pushing the edge with innovative marketing campaigns. Case in point: Who else has ever brewed a beer on the ocean floor?
This stunt not only produced a unique beer, it also generated tons of publicity. Its corresponding social media campaign also generated strong engagement.
How To Apply This Inspiration:
Okay, so you probably don’t have the resources to travel to the ocean floor. That’s okay. The key takeaway here is to:
- Identify something big and challenging.
- Go do it.
- Talk about it on social media.
What this ends up being, and what it looks like, will differ depending on your company, audience, and available resources. What’s important, though, it to get rid of the idea that difficult things aren’t worth doing.
Get rid of the idea that difficult things aren’t worth doing.
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If you want to be truly remarkable, you need to push yourself past the status quo. If you don’t think you can do something, relentlessly ask yourself why you feel that way. Here’s how:
- In his book Linchpin, author and entrepreneur Seth Godin talks about “the voice of resistance.” This is the voice in your head that says you can’t do what you dream of doing. It’s what causes you to make excuses instead of making progress.
- When you hear your voice of resistance pushing back against your campaign idea, ask yourself, “Is this idea really impossible? Or is my voice of resistance at work here?”
- Acknowledge your doubts exist. Proceed with passion anyway.
Find Ways To Get Your Audience Involved
It’s easy to forget social media is about being social (ironically enough). Here are some great examples of brands engaging with their audience in creative ways.
Example: Band Together Against Bullying
Social media campaigns can have an immense impact on changing social attitudes. The Band Together Project, an anti-bullying campaign from acne medication provider Epiduo, is an excellent example of how to not only promote a great cause, but also get the target audience involved in a helpful way.
The anti-bullying campaign worked by getting teens to share their own experiences with bullying via social media. They could submit videos, essays, or anything else they could think of.
Their input was then used to inspire an original song and music video.
The campaign was a success for several reasons:
- It got Epiduo’s audience involved in raising awareness of a real problem.
- It was a creative example of a brand helping solve an unspoken problem their product helps solve (getting rid of acne to help kids feel more confident).
- It got high-profile partners involved (popular musicians) who were familiar to the target audience (middle and high school students).
- The brand’s presence wasn’t front and center in the campaign’s creative pieces. Instead, Epiduo smartly put their audience first.
How To Apply This Inspiration:
You can apply a similar thought process to your own campaign ideation process. Here are a few ways:
- Build a social media campaign asking followers for input on new services or product features you can build.
- Run a contest asking your audience to pitch content ideas or finding creative uses for your product or service.
- Share great content from your followers using a consistent campaign hashtag.
Make It Interactive
We don’t mean interactive simply from an engagement standpoint that only benefits your brand. Make it truly interactive in a way that’s entertaining for your audience.
Example: Brewdog’s #Mashtag
Here’s another example from the folks at BrewDog: Their #Mashtag campaign, which led to the world’s first social media crowdsourced beer. Each day for five days, the campaign asked followers to offer suggestions for a different aspect of the beer (style one day, ingredients the next, and so on). Respondents used the hashtag #Mashtag to make their voices heard.
The end result was a special beer crafted by the brewery’s fans.
This a big risk. What if the beer turned out terrible? What if trolls suggested ridiculous things to sabotage the experiment? These are crippling thoughts that would likely stop many brands. BrewDog, however, pushed forward undeterred and were rewarded for their courage and innovation.
How To Apply This Inspiration:
You can apply a similar thought process to your own campaign ideation process. Here are a few ways:
- Build a social media campaign asking followers for input on new services or product features you can build.
- Run a contest asking your audience to pitch content ideas or finding creative uses for your product or service.
- Share great content from your followers using a consistent campaign hashtag.
Tie Your Campaign To Tangible Assets
Once you have your Big Idea, your social campaign will need to be tied to something tangible. Here are some possible options:
Contests: Landing pages make great traffic destinations for social campaigns. Don’t have access to a designer or developer on your team? Consider using a solution like Leadpages or Unbounce to create easy landing pages. Then, include the link to that landing page in your social campaign’s posts.
Cause / Mission: Social media can be extremely effective for promoting beliefs and advancing causes. This can, but doesn’t necessarily, mean things like social or political causes (which can be touchy subjects for brands). It can also mean promoting ideas related to your brand.
Take Nike for example. When the company started, they marketed jogging instead of simply selling shoes. Once people got hooked on jogging, they naturally needed shoes for their new hobby.
The benefits for Nike were twofold:
- They built their customer base first by promoting their cause (jogging).
- Then, they had a large audience and high demand for their product.
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A campaign that promotes your cause or mission could:
- Link to related blog posts, articles, or website pages.
- Simply include visual content that promotes your mission, goal, or belief (without necessarily linking out to an external resource).
Events: Social media is a must for event promotion. If your campaign is centered around an event, make sure you’ve covered the basics:
- Set up an event invitation on Facebook.
- Consider creating a landing page with an event registration form (if necessary).
- Repurpose any flyers, posters, videos, or other marketing collateral for the event on social media.
Blog posts: If you have an active blog, you should be promoting your posts on social media (that’s why you’re using CoSchedule, right?). Rather than just sharing the post with the headline in the social message copy once, consider building full campaigns around each blog post.
New products, features, services: Do you have a new offering for your customers? Find a creative way to promote it. The key to doing this well is to tell rather than sell. Show how your new feature, product, or service will improve your customers’ life.
Let’s Put This All Together: How To Create A Social Media Campaign Proposal
You now know how to:
- Brainstorm ideas.
- Determine what your campaign will promote and its purpose.
- Identify what your audience is interested in.
Now, it’s time to put this all together into a cohesive campaign proposal.
Get buy-in for your next social campaign with this proposal template:
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For in-house marketers: Outlining your campaign this way can help you visualize what you’ll do before you do it. It can also provide you with an easy-to-follow document to pitch your campaign idea to your boss or leadership team (if necessary in your organization).
For agency teams: The benefit is the same as above, except you’ll be pitching clients with this document instead.
Name Your Campaign
A catchy campaign needs a catchy name. A good campaign name should:
- Be directly related to the topic of your campaign.
- Be memorable.
- Be concise.
Identify Your Campaign’s Purpose
To once again quote Ogilvy, “If it doesn’t sell, it isn’t creative.”
When it comes to social media, we can think of “telling” or “engaging” more than “selling” (because while there are exceptions, most social media content doesn’t directly lead from a click to a conversion). Your campaign, then, needs to do two things:
- Have a clear reason for existing. What are you trying to promote?
- Tie back into business objectives. Which overall business goals will your campaign support?
Define Its Mechanisms
Social campaigns can have a lot of moving parts. It’s best to establish all its necessary components up front. This means identifying:
- Which types of content it’ll use (text, images, video, etc.).
- Whether it will use a custom campaign hashtag.
- Which (if any) conversion steps will be implemented (ex: landing page signup forms).
To help figure this out, ask these questions:
- Will this be a standalone campaign that lives completely on social media, or a social component added to an existing marketing campaign?
- Will this campaign direct to a landing page, website page, or blog post?
- Do I have the resources to shoot video, take photos, or design images?
- Are there existing hashtags this campaign could leverage? If not, does it make sense to tie its content together with an original hashtag?
Select Channels And Tactics
Not all campaigns may be appropriate across all your social channels.
Some may be best oriented toward one particular platform. Others might have more opportunity for cross-platform promotion, especially if you’re adding a social component to an existing campaign.
Narrow your channel selection by asking these questions:
- Which networks is our brand strongest on?
- Which are we weakest on where we could improve?
- Is the idea for this campaign best suited to one particular network over another?
- Could this campaign benefit from a custom hashtag?
How To Rock Your Social Media Campaign Execution
The best campaigns are measured by how they perform. Once you’ve actually put your plan into action, you’ll know how big your idea really is. Follow these guidelines and best practices for writing and design.
Social Media Copywriting Best Practices
Writing well on social media is both an art and a craft. It requires unique considerations for length and tone that differ between networks.
Compelling copy is key to success here and there is no room for laziness or cutting corners.
What’s The Ideal Length For Social Media Posts?
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Match Your Copy To Your Network
Different social networks have different standards for style and etiquette. For example, LinkedIn is a serious professional network, so treat it like one. Facebook, meanwhile, makes a great home for fun and friendly content. Twitter does well with a mix of fun, professional, and news-oriented content (which is best may depend on your business and audience).
As long as you understand the basic purpose of each network, then there’s no need to overthink this. Simply apply some common sense.
Understand Facebook’s Promotional Post Guidelines
Facebook’s News Feed algorithm grows increasingly complex by the day. Its guidelines for promotional post content in particular don’t get talked about enough. However, it has serious ramifications for how you write your social media copy.
In simplest terms, Facebook will demote organic content that sounds too much like advertising. This means:
- No content promoting sales, so avoid percent and dollar signs. Content that directly tells users to buy something typically isn’t very creative anyway. That’s why you’re reading this post in the first place, right?
- Avoid hard calls to action. Avoid including terms like “Buy Now” or “Download Here” for the same reasons stated above. Consider running ads or sponsored posts for this type of content.
- Do try to direct users to click on links by being naturally compelling. Write posts that generate interest around the topic of your link without directly telling people to click.
Good Example: What could this blog post possibly contain? {Insert Your URL}Bad Example: Click here to read this blog post now. {Insert Your URL}
To some extent, writing organic Facebook posts forces you to ditch typical copywriting conventions. It’s a place for creativity and connection more so than direct sales (not that direct sales copy can’t be creative, but you get the point).
Match Your Copy To Your Purpose
Make sure your copy is appropriate for what you’re promoting. For example, if you’re building a social media campaign for a serious social issue, make sure your copy matches its seriousness (in other words, avoid jokes and pop culture memes).
Image Sizes And Best Practices
Know Ideal Image Sizes
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Keep Your Visual Style Consistent
Use the same fonts and colors in your campaign collateral. This is design 101. However, if you’re creating images yourself (and you’re not a designer by trade), this is a good tip to remember.
Scheduling And Planning
Once your campaign is off the ground, you’ll need to:
- Keep all your content assets organized (post copy, images, videos, etc.).
- Schedule each post throughout your campaign.
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The best way to keep your campaign organized is with a social media editorial calendar. If you’re a CoSchedule user, you can also use our Social Campaigns feature to keep your campaign organized.
Recommended Reading:
Now, Make Your Next Social Campaign A Success
Armed with the knowledge in this post, you’ll never say, “I’m just not creative” again. You now know the creative processes and techniques used to generate world-class ideas (even if you’re a small brand—for now).
Has this post inspired you to try creating truly exceptional social media content? Is there anything we missed? Sound off in the comments below!
5 Creative #SocialMedia Campaign Ideas That Worked! (And Why)
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