Chat with us, powered by LiveChat

"Get the essential marketing tips and tricks to give you an unfair advantage over your competitors"

Subscribe for updates and our latest blogs

How to Generate Attention on YouTube as a Small Business

video-editing-icons-vector

Figures show that only 9% of small businesses use YouTube as part of their promotional activities. This points to a major missed opportunity, given that the YouTube community accounts for two thirds of premium online videos watched on devices by millennials. For those that have successfully implemented video marketing strategies on YouTube, the platform has become a lucrative traffic generator and brand awareness tool.

Sometimes the success of a video can be somewhat of a surprise, with viral content capturing the public’s imagination and hitting the magic formula in getting shared across the world. A perfect example of a seemingly inconspicuous message from the ALS Charity Ice Bucket Challenge of share the challenge and nominate your friends, raising £88 million in just a few short weeks.

Investing in content on social network such as YouTube has proven results. Social media guru Gary Vaynerchuk says that due to the advancements in competition on social media every successful company must now also be a media company which means that companies are now spending more time and money to put out great content in their feeds.

Creating compelling content for YouTube is, of course, a goal for many SMEs, who want a share of that viral magic for their own businesses. In this article, we list a few top tips for YouTube success, that any SME can utilise for their own brand.

Highlight your USP

Sometimes the simplest ideas are the best, and Hebridean whisky distillery, Lagavulin, demonstrated this brilliantly with its Christmas YouTube campaign. The firm hired actor and comedian, Nick Offerman, to star in a 45-minute video, in which he does nothing but sit in a comfortable armchair in front of an open fire, drinking whisky. No words are spoken, but the atmosphere is superb, and the message – that you can’t hurry a good whisky – is made abundantly clear. This tactic was repeated over the 2016 festive period, with Nick Offerman again appearing for the whiskey company in an hour-long countdown to New Years to great effect!

It’s a basic marketing principle that consumers like brands that they perceive hold similar values to their own. Lagavulin worked on that principle with this video, to create content that whisky lovers could relate to personally. For SMEs looking for YouTube success, it’s important to find their own unique connections with their customers.

Demonstrate your products’ abilities

A superb example of using videos for product demonstration is CAT, the heavy plant manufacturer. CAT has produced a video that shows mini-diggers playing Jenga, and machines carefully moving around a China shop, amongst other things.

That video is just one in a series of YouTube hits that form part of CAT’s #BuiltForIt campaign. This campaign highlights the precision handling, manoeuvrability and strength of the company’s product range in a fun and engaging way.

Understand what your customers are looking for

YouTube content should always be developed to appeal to the target demographic of the company producing it. Irrelevant or gimmicky content that has little to do with the company’s products or image is unlikely to prove successful.

US toy firm, Hot Wheels has found a way to use YouTube to grab kids’ attention, in order to market successfully in a very crowded marketplace. Hot Wheels’ videos shows action-packed footage of its toy cars racing in realistic competitions, instantly getting across the thrills and excitement of these toys. It’s not particularly sophisticated, but it’s certainly effective.

Answer your customers’ questions

A good example of how YouTube can be used to answer common customer questions is Vape Club. Vaping is a fairly new phenomenon, with many new products appearing on the market all the time. That means that there is a constant stream of questions coming from both existing customers and people interested in trying e-liquids for the first time.

Vape Club saw an opportunity to position itself on YouTube as experts in this field, producing videos that answer those common vaping questions. This is easily replicated using a simple free tool ‘Answer the Public’, which allows the user to further hone in on the core questions being asked within their niche.

Vape Club produced the first ever video guide for e-liquids, which was called ‘A Beginner’s Guide to Vaping’. Providing simple and easy to understand answers to typical questions asked by those new to vaping, the video has now been viewed over 1 million times, and directs more than 2,200 visitors to the Vape Club website every day. Clearly, that one YouTube video is an investment that has paid off handsomely, and one that other SMEs should be inspired by.

As well as using the key points above to guide your YouTube strategy, it’s also important to keep abreast of news, trends and events that might be of interest to your target audience. Tapping into the latest celebrity news or happening can be a great way to create a YouTube buzz around your own brand. If you’re aware of what your target demographic is following and talking about, you can present yourself as being 100% in tune with their needs and interests.

Your first YouTube video is unlikely to be an instant success, but perseverance is key. If you keep a tight focus and produce regular high-quality content, your audience will soon grow. YouTube videos don’t have to be highly-polished, professionally-produced masterpieces, so long as they are interesting and relevant to the target audience. Anyone can produce a viral hit, with potentially huge rewards for online success. For SMEs looking for a low-cost marketing opportunity, YouTube certainly has to be worth a try.

Discover

The 12 Marketing Secrets of Fast-Growth Companies

Find out what they do to achieve outrageous business success

ebook

Get your free copy

Subscribe to our email list and get this special report

Post a Comment