Sunday, 23 November 2014

7 Ways You’re Missing Out on Attracting More Loyal Subscribers

7 Ways You’re Missing Out on Attracting More Loyal SubscribersIt’s frustrating, right?
You want more loyal subscribers. You know that the more subscribers you have, the more sales you could potentially make.
But for some reason people just aren’t signing up for your email list as much as you’d hoped.
You’ve listened to the experts. You’ve started blogging, created a freebie, and been active on social media. But you’re just not attracting as many subscribers as you thought you would.
What gives?
Well, you might be making some (or all) of these seven mistakes.

1. Avoiding asking people to share your freebie

According to a survey by Nielsen, 92% of people say they trust word-of-mouth marketing and recommendations by friends and family more than any other form of marketing.
This is a huge deal.
This means that the easiest way to get more subscribers is to make your current subscribers happy, and then get them to refer other people to you.
How can you do that?
Just ask.
An effective, yet often overlooked strategy to get more subscribers is to ask your current subscribers to share your freebie. All you have to do is send them a follow-up email, after they sign up, asking them to share it.
If someone likes what you’re offering, they’ll probably happily refer other people your way.
For example, when someone signs up for one of my freebies, I send them an email with the link to download my freebie and I also include this…
Ask people to share your freebie

2. Not having opt-in boxes all over your website

There are at least 5 places you can have opt-in boxes on your website.
Now, I get it. You don’t want to come across as a sleazy, flashy sales person. And you don’t want to overwhelm your website visitors with too many “in your face” opt-ins.
But here’s the truth – people have short attention spans and sometimes don’t notice the obvious.
So you want to boost your chances of actually getting more sign-ups by having opt-in boxes in lots of strategic places.
You don’t absolutely need to have opt-in boxes in all these places all the time.
But, if you want more subscribers, test how well different places on your website convert visitors to subscribers by putting opt-in forms in these 5 places.

On Your Sidebar like SocialMouths

If someone comes to your blog for the first time and they’re enjoying your posts, they’ll probably want to sign up for your email list.
So make it easy for them by having an opt-in form in your sidebar.
Blog sidebar opt-in box

On Your Homepage like Marie Forleo

When someone finds you on Google and comes to your website, you want to make sure that your homepage is set up to capture subscribers.
This means giving people a clear reason to subscribe to your list. Promise to help them get something they want or need when they sign up – like Marie does when she says, “Get anything you want”.
Email opt-in box on homepage

On Your About Me Page like Social Triggers

Did you know your About Me page is one of the most visited pages on your website?
People want to know who you are and why you do what you do. So take advantage of all this traffic by putting at least one opt-in form on your About Me page.
Email opt-in on about page

On The Bottom of Your Blog like Nathalie Lussier

If people get all the way to the bottom of your blog post, that’s a sign that they liked what they read.
This means they’ll probably wanna read more. So give them the opportunity to do just that by encouraging them to sign up for your email list.
Email opt-in box at blog bottom

On a Landing Page like Jeff Walker

Landing pages (sometimes also called squeeze pages) are so effective because they get rid of any distractions.
There’s no navigation bar, sidebar, footer or anything else that might distract people. This means there’s literally nothing for the person to do other than sign up, or leave.
Try making your freebie sign-up page a landing page so you avoid distracting people with other content. You might find you’ll get more email list sign-ups.
Email opt-in box on landing page

3. Failing to get people to “Tweet That”

Whenever you write a blog post, you want to create captivating snippets – pieces of text that people will want to share.
Whether it’s a motivational quote, an eye-opening statistic, or something unexpected that you say, make it easy for people to tweet a sentence or two of your blog post.
The key is to make sure they include a link to your blog post in that tweet so that it drives traffic back to your blog.
Lucky for you, you can use a plugin like QuotableEasy Tweet Embed or Click To Tweet. These are simple tools that’ll allow you to grab whatever text you want and create a tweet out of it.
Here’s an example – from Forbes.com – of how it might look on your blog…
Tweet this in content
This is an easy way to drive more traffic to your site. You’re just getting your existing readers to encourage other people to come check you out.
If they like what they see, and you have compelling opt-in forms in easy-to-find places, you may just end up with more subscribers.

4. Forgetting to ask people to share your posts

Remember, when people like what you’re doing, they’re happy to share. But sometimes they need a gentle nudge.
You probably already know that you should ask people to tweet, like and share your stuff at the bottom of your blog posts. But why not ask people to share your post right in the email you send with the link to the post? Whether you ask them to forward the email to a friend, or just remind them to share the blog post once they get to your blog?
Sometimes people need to read or hear something more than once before they actually take action. So it doesn’t hurt to ask people to share your blog post at the bottom of it and in your emails.
Just like Jon Morrow – from BoostBlogTraffic.com – does in his email here…
Ask people to share your post

5. Not getting influencers to help

You’ve probably noticed that I’ve used a lot of examples from other experts to demonstrate my points throughout this post.
A smart way for me to potentially drive more traffic to this post would be to reach out to those people and let them know they’re featured here.
They might come check it out, and then share it with their community if they like what I have to say.
Ask influencers
You can use this strategy too.
Whenever you use another expert as an example in a post you’ve written, reach out to them – via social media or email – and let them know you’ve featured them.
You can even directly ask them to share the post with their community if you’ve built a relationship with them, or if you feel like it’s appropriate to ask.

6. Ignoring your email signature

Do you just put your name at the end of your emails? You might be missing out on potential subscribers if you do.
Try including a link to your free offering – with a clear, compelling reason to sign up – in your email signature like Jenny Shih does. You never know when someone you’re emailing might be the ideal subscriber (or knows someone who would be).
Sign up call to action on email signature

7. Overlooking your social media profiles

You’ve probably heard that you should put a link to your freebie in your social media profiles.
But what about making your freebie the focus of your about section?
Call to action on social profiles
Amy Porterfield knows that if someone stumbles on her Facebook page they’ll know who she is from her cover photo. It says, “Amy Porterfield. Facebook Expert + Author + Trainer”. Pretty straightforward, right?
So she doesn’t have to repeat that information in her about section. Instead, she can use that piece of prime real estate to drive people to sign up for her email list.
You can use this strategy on your social media platforms – like Twitter, Facebook and Google+ – too.
Tell people who you are and what you do in your cover photo, and then invite them to join your email list in your about section.

Stop missing out

Did you find some ways you might be missing out on attracting more subscribers?
Well, now that you know, it’s time to take action and make some important changes.
I know it’s not always easy. And it can feel frustrating and overwhelming trying to grow your email list.
But you and I know that the only way success happens is by taking small steps that lead to big results.
So stop missing out by picking one of these tips. Implement it right away. And go get more subscribers.
What tip are you going to implement? Tell me in the comments below.
Image credit: GraphicLoadsmarfis75
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10 Mistakes People Make on Facebook Pages and How to Fix Them

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6 Google Analytics Terms Explained for Bloggers

Google Analytics is fantastic but it can be really confusing!
Is average time on site really average time on site?  No
Is session duration the total amount of time a user spends on your site: No
Surprised?
There are limitations to what Google Analytics can track and these limitations are definitely great sources of confusion!  Let’s take a look.

An Important Thing to Know that Google Analytics Cannot Do!

One major limitation that affects some of the confusing terms we’ll go into below is that Google Analytics does not record you exiting a website.
When you access an website, there is a log of this with a time stamp created, which indicates when you arrive at a website.  But what happens when you close down your browser window when you’re finished browsing through a website?
No log item can be created, so Analytics cannot report everything correctly.
This affects some of our terms of confusion listed below!

Session Duration

The session duration metric does not reflect not how long a visitor spends on your site.  This is because Google Analytics doesn’t know when your visitor exits your site!
When someone browses to your website, a new session is started.  The session ends when there is 30 minutes of inactivity.
Inactivity is when someone doesn’t view any other sites or when there isn’t an event that triggers an engagement.  For example, if they play a video on your website this could be tracked as an engagement.
Here’s an example of how sessions work.
User A browses one page on your website and then leaves immediately.  This is classed as one session and it is finished 30 minutes after the last engagement, which could be when the page was opened.
User B browses your website and clicks on a link to visit another page.  After this, they leave the site.  30 minutes of inactivity is calculated from the last engagement on the final page they visited.
User C browses a website at 11.50 and there is no further activity on the site.  The session ends at midnight.

Bounce

A bounce is when someone arrives on one page of a website and leaves from the exact same page, without visiting any other pages.
Different websites’ bounce rates vary a lot, depending on the type of product or service you offer.
If you have an e-commerce website, a high bounce rate on product pages is not good – this means most people didn’t click on the ‘buy’ button to move through the purchase process.
On a blog, the bounce rate is typically quite high (above 70%) because people come to your website to read an article they’ve heard of and then they are likely to leave.

Average Time on Page

The average time on page metrics are not actually the same as the average time users spend on a page.  The statistic really means the average time on a page for people who didn’t bounce!
Let’s look at an example:
Your visitor arrives on a page and leaves 60 seconds later.  The average time for this page is not recorded because there is no way of recording when they exited.
Your visitor arrives on page at 5pm and then clicks on a link to go to a different page at 5.05pm.  The average time on the page is the difference between the time they landed on the first page and the time they went to the second page (i.e. 5 minutes).
You can’t look at average time on pages in isolation.  You need to look at your bounce rates, too.  The metrics for the average time on your pages could be really high but, if your bounce rate is also really high, it means the statistics you get for the average time on your pages is based on a small percentage of your visitors.

Engagement Rate

Google Analytics’ engagement rate can be described as the opposite measure to its bounce rate.  You want to figure out how many pages people are visiting on your website.
One major limitation of the engagement rate stats in Google Analytics is that it has no idea how long someone spends on a site if they bounce.

Google-analytics-engagement

Imagine someone visiting your website and spending 10 minutes reading your content.  Then they leave.
From an an engagement point of view, Google considers this to be one page and puts it in the 0 to 10 seconds category (i.e the amount of time they spent on your site).
If you have a high bounce rate, you will see that a lot of your visits are in the 0- to 10-second category.

Exit Rate

This is a useful term that is often ignored and is also easy to misunderstand.  It means the number of visitors that exit from a particular page.
Imagine you had a hotel booking site and you found that a high percentage of people exited your site on the booking page.  That’s a key factor that you’d want to track, because it’s something you can work on and improve.

Direct Traffic:  Audience -> All Traffic -> Direct

This is normally explained as the traffic you get when people type in your website name into the browser.
But direct traffic could mean many things, for example:
  • Typing the website name into a browser
  • Clicking on a link within an email (unless you have campaign tracking codes added)
  • Clicking on a link within PDFs,  Word docs etc
  • Your site is bookmarked and the visitor selects the bookmark.
Direct traffic is like a bucket to put things in that don’t fit into other buckets.  So, don’t think direct is just people typing in your website name.  It could be one of several options.

Summary

Google Analytics is great, but you need to understand the limitations of what it’s reporting.
Which terms do you find confusing with Analytics?
We’d love to hear from you!
Analytics image by Shutterstock

Thursday, 20 November 2014

How To Make Your Facebook News Feed More Relevant

About every four to five months I notice that my personal Facebooknews feed is rather noisy. There are posts from people I don’t really know, few from those I really do and a handful of posts that are connected to my friends, but aren’t really posts they wrote or have anything to do with other than liking them. When that more-noise-than-signal problem arises, I typically cull my friend list.
Now, this is quite hypocritical of me in many ways. I’ve always been rather open with my social connections, even on Facebook. I mean, I have more than one friend on Facebook named after a weather condition, which is technically against my religion. Heh. I reserve Path for close friends and private conversations — we all need a place to bitch about family and co-workers — so I’m far more liberal with connections on the largest social network than others.
But there is great wisdom to be gleaned from weeding the friend garden, too. You can infer how Facebook decides what appears in  your stream. You can check with connections you haven’t heard from before to see if they’re now seeing you more or less — I suspect my friend count affects how they might see my content — and more.
As I sifted through Facebook friends this morning, I decided I would share my approach to culling your friends list. My hope is that you can use it to make  your Facebook news feed more relevant and that you’ll spot the fakes in the list:
Here’s my thought process reviewing my friends:
  • If I cannot immediately remember who they are, where we met or how we’re connected, they’re gone.
  • If I am unsure, I will see how many mutual friends we share. If it’s more than 75 or so, they can probably stay.
  • If it is less than 75 or so, I will click through to their bio page and make sure they’re not a friend from school who has changed their name (marriage or witness protection) and that they do not appear to be a serial killer. If they are then familiar to me, or have killed two or fewer people in their lifetime, they can stay.
  • Anyone whose profile picture contains more cleavage than shirt has to go. Nothing good will come of this connection.
  • Anyone whose name is “Michael” but is spelled with Ks, Ys or extra Es … gone.
  • Anyone whose profile picture is them holding their crotch or pointing directly at the camera — gone. If they’re doing both, that’s talent. They can stay.
  • Anyone who has a picture of bourbon, is sipping a cocktail or mentions either in their short bio paragraph stays, but is immediately routed to my AA lead-gen list.
  • If the person is from a foreign country and has not interacted with me or my content in the last six months, they can go.
  • If I cannot pronounce their name, they probably fall under the first round of omissions, but they’re not likely to stay. Keep in mind this isn’t a racial or national origin thing. I have high school friends whose names I can’t pronounce. Example: Clintanya, who, fortunately for all of us, went by “Skeeter.”
  • If they have a blue checkmark icon — meaning they have a “verified” account — they automatically go unless I decide I can tolerate their gratuitous ego. (That one is for Peter ShankmanBrian CarterRobert Scoble and Jeremiah Owyang, whom I have on a special filtered list called “Douchebaggery Suspects.” And yes, they’ll see this. They have vanity search alerts set for their names. If they didn’t, they wouldn’t have verified accounts. Heh.)
Keep in mind that about 1-2 percent of the people you unfriend are also ego-sensitive and have alerts and tools set up to tell them when someone unfriends them. You’ll get a note from them asking what they did to offend you. These people don’t realize your social feeds are for you, not them, and you are allowed to filter them however you like. They can follow your content without friending you. And Facebook friendship status has nothing to do with whether or not you like or value them as a person.
Do not re-friend these people. They are needy and will only constantly look to you for validation of their own lives or work, which you don’t have time to notice. If you do notice it, they won’t be that needy. Politely explain you’re conducting a timeline experiment and it’s only temporary. They’ll likely forget.
Try those filter parameters on for size and see if you don’t get a more satisfying Facebook experience. If you don’t, then go back and add all the ones with gratuitous cleavage or holding their crotches. That should fix it.

My New Blog

I have created another blog. You can check it out here ===>  My New Blog  <===

Saturday, 15 November 2014

I Tell My Story of Trying To Build A Business Online

In this short 4 minute video I tell of my story of trying to build a business online in the Social Media Marketing World. I have been trying for quite a while and was beginning to question if I was in the right business when Zukul came along. Since joining Zukul in September 2014 I have at last started to generate quality FREE TRAFFIC. I also tell how I won $100 from Zukul after only being a member for one week.



If after watching the video above, you would like more information i have provided this link

===> Start Zukul For FREE <===

And see for yourself just how easy this is. I am sure once you see it you will want to become a paid member.

Wednesday, 12 November 2014

How I Am Getting Over 200 Traffic Hits Per Day

This is how I am getting over 200 clicks per day and I only started just under one month ago.

Watch the Google Hangout and you will find out what I am doing to achieve this.

Then if you are interested in learning more, then please click on the link below

http://nothingbeatsthis.365.pm/


Thanks Guys For Inviting Me Onto Your Hangout To Tell My Story.

Monday, 10 November 2014

4 Reasons Social Media Is Here to Stay

4 Reasons Social Media Is Here to Stay

You’ll hear it from time to time: “social media is a passing fad.” While it sounds like a hip and cool judgment, it’s actually a pretty ignorant comment offered by individuals who probably haven’t studied the subject very closely.
You only need to spend a few moments researching the value of social media marketing and its service to businesses of all types and sizes, and you’ll quickly recognize that social media is destined for additional growth — not decline.
The proof is in the numbers
As a business-minded individual, you likely appreciate hard facts and numbers, so let’s take a look at some of the statistical evidence that social media is thriving:
  • According to SocialTimes, social media marketing budgets are set to double within the next five years.
  • An incredible 83% of B2B marketers are investing in social media as a way to increase their brand exposure, 69% to get more clicks, and 65% to gain additional market insights.
  • Google+ and Facebook receive an incredible 2 billion combined visits every month.
  • Nearly two-thirds of global Internet users research products online prior to purchase, and much of that traffic moves through social media channels.
  • Approximately 83% of marketers believe their social media profiles are important to their business; and 42% assert that Facebook is critical to their success.
Reasons social media is here to stay
While the numbers firmly indicate that social media marketing is alive and well, numbers don’t tell the whole story. To get the clearest picture of the value, it’s necessary to uncover the bigger ideas.
Here are a few specific reasons that social media — and therefore, social media marketing — is in it for the long haul.
  • The mobile movement. It’s unbelievable to take a step back and study the growth of the mobile movement over the past five, ten, and fifteen years. What started with huge phones and clunky PDAs has turned into sleek, smart, sophisticated devices that are capable of doing anything a computer can do and more.
As a result, an increasing number of people are transitioning from wired desktop technology to mobile devices. Along with this shift comes the increase in social media activity and on-the-go connectivity. Unless you assume mobile devices are a fad, it’s difficult to believe social media is apt to disappear any time soon.
  • Social media’s reach. If social media were only popular in certain geographical regions, or among people of a particular ideology, it would be more reasonable to assert its value would fade over time. However, it’s statistically established that social networking engagement transcends regional, political, and religious beliefs. In fact, it accounts for 19 percent of all online activity, which makes it the most popular online activity in the world.
  • Ability to target. One of the reasons social media marketing will not likely go away is its unique ability to target particular customers through sophisticated segmentation capabilities … which is the goal of any marketing efforts.
  • According to Magicdust, a full-service web design and marketing agency, “In today’s ever evolving world, where we’re more connected to our devices than ever before, it’s never been more important for businesses to devise smart marketing strategies that are able to cut through to a targeted audience.” The folks as Magicdust, like so many others, believe social media offers the best chance to do that.
  • Word of mouth. People love and trust other people; it’s that simple. While the Internet is useful for researching information, reading news stories, and learning new trades, it’s best at bringing people together. That’s especially what social media does. When it comes to purchasing goods and services, social media empowers brands to spread positive word of mouth.
So let the uninformed claim that social media will soon be a thing of the past. You can smile, knowing your business understands the incredible value social media brings to the table.

Key to successful social media campaign

Clear ‘Call-To-Action’, Timing, and Engagement are a key to every successful social media campaign
successful social media campaign
We all hear about campaigns with meagre budgets creating rampage and other well invested campaigns taking a toss. To demystify such polar results, we decided to invest in analyzing several successful social media campaigns. During this process we discovered following three ingredients to ensure campaign's success:
 

1) Clear ‘call-to-action’: Take your fans to the right path

Social media cause campaigns are most effective when there’s a simple call-to-action and a creative idea.” – Jones, Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation

2) Time your content: Form time and content synergies to match the expectations of fans

Weekends are much more popular than weekdays for sharing posts” – Dan Zarella, Social Media Consultant

Keep an eye on Google trend results, and follow a calendar to post on a day and time when fans are most active.

3) Engage:  Acknowledge, be transparent, and solve problems faced by customers

Engaging in an authentic, meaningful conversation with consumers will be the key to marketing success and growth, even if that means acknowledging negative feedback; transparency is paramount.” – Ron Blake, President and CEO, Rewards Network

Initiating open ended discussions have demonstrated encouraging results

Marketers please create a social media calendar and use applications such as ‘Welcome Tab’ to define a clear ‘call-to-action’.

Friday, 7 November 2014

5 Video Apps to Boost Your Social Media Reach

Do you want to increase your Social Media reach and make your message go viral? Are you tired of Facebook limiting the reach of your posts?
Video content is one of the best ways to increase your followers’ engagement on Social Media; and when engagement rises, your reach will also grow. The power of video as highly engaging content is the reason why most Social Media platforms are implementing new video products: video ads on Facebook, animated gifs on Twitter, the launch of Hyperlapse for Instagram, etc…
However, if you just create the same type of videos as everyone else, chances are, your followers will also ignore these posts. Users pay more attention to content that is unusual and unique. Posting another video is not enough. It needs to be different from what others are doing.
In this article, I will describe some apps for smartphones that will allow you to create outstanding and unique videos that will surely increase your engagement by making your videos stand out of the mass.

1. Quick Video-Clips: MAGISTO

Making promotional video clips that include nice music, visual effects, and images that ‘dance’ at the rhythm of the soundtrack could require a lot of time and excellent video editing skills.
Magisto solves this problem by doing all the work for you. All you need to do is select the images and clips you want to include in your video, then select a style and soundtrack and…voilà!
The app is so easy to use, you will get amazing results even if the images and clips used are not too engaging. There are three steps required:
  • Selecting footage: this could include videos or pics you already have in your smartphone. Alternatively, you can record a new video.
  • Choose a style: Magisto currently offers 19 different editing styles. Each of them features a range of transitions, filters, effects, text, etc…
  • Include a soundtrack: There are 16 songs to choose from, however, you can also select one from your music library.
01-Magisto
Touch the ‘play’ icon to preview the styles and listen to the soundtrack before making your selection.
That’s it. No editing, no trimming, no spending hours creating scripts. The app will create a nice clip that you can later upload into your Social Media account to show your followers something different about you.

Price & Platforms

The app is available for iOS and Android. The free version is limited to 10 photos and 10 videos, includes the company logo at the end of the video and, does not allow downloading the final video to your smartphone.
To extend the capabilities, you’ll need to upgrade to the paid version, which is available at $4.99 monthly or $12.99 for one year.
Alternatively, you can download a single clip for as little as $.99

2. Mix Speeds to Get Attention: SLOPRO

Do you remember those fight scenes on The Matrix, where the action passed from super-fast into super-slow motion whilst the camera moved around? That effect was a mouth-opener back then, and still is these days.
You can achieve a very similar effect with Slopro, which will certainly create an impact on those watching your video. In fact this technique is so popular it is used in a new emerging trend in Social Media: the donut-selfie.
Slopro includes only four configuration options that are enough to obtain an amazing final result:
  • Fast motion: with speeds of 1.3x, 2x and 4x
  • Slow motion: slow your video to 50%, 40% or 25% of its normal speed
  • Super-slow motion: with settings of 500 fps or 1.000 fps
  • Render: Recommended setting for super-slow motion effects with three effects to choose from.
After shooting your video, you just need to edit it by selecting the start and finish points where you will apply some speed. Each speed setting is represented in the video timeline with a different colour, which allows you to better select the exact point where you want to apply a speed effect.
02-Slopro
The colour code allows you to easily identify the different speed settings.

Price & Platforms

This app is available only for iOS, with a free version that includes a watermark to your clip and does not allow you to save the video to your camera roll. Upgrading to the PRO version eliminates those limitations for just $3.99

3. Go Vintage: 8MM

People love vintage things. They make us feel like we are capable of time travel, bringing old memories from our childhood or even imagining times we never lived.
Combining the power of video content with a vintage touch is a powerful strategy. You could recreate these emotions in your followers, which will help them absorb your message more easily – since they are in a relaxed state of mind. Furthermore, it could also boost the viral effect of your campaigns.
One of the best apps in the market to do this is 8mm, which as the name suggests is an emulator of the old 8mm recorders and projectors.
The customisation of your video is done combining a set of different parameters:

  • Lens: 7 options that allow you to add different lighting effects in your films by creating fading effects, frames, overexposure, etc…
  • Film: A total of 10 different films styles that create styles from early 20th Century black and white silent movies, to late 70’s style. Each of these includes ‘imperfections’ like dust or lines that appear randomly to make the final movie even more realistic.
  • Sound: You can choose between no sound, normal ambient sound, or make it even more authentic by including the typical reel sound from the 8mm projectors.
  • Jitter: Imitate frame shakes of real 8mm projectors by using this button at your choice.
All settings can be adjusted from the same screen, which will also show the final result as you are recording your video.
All settings can be adjusted from the same screen, which will also show the final result as you are recording your video.
Not enough? You can even add some post editing effects like countdown, silent film opening, end titles and more. Of course, all of them with their appropriate soundtrack music.
Themes can be previewed before being applied or purchased
Themes can be previewed before being applied or purchased

Price & Platforms

The only downside is that this app is only available for iOS. I’ve tried some good alternatives for Android, like ‘Vintage 8mm Video Camera’ or ‘Retro Camera’, but have not found the level of customisation and ease of use as 8mm offers.
The app is offered at only $1.99  and each of the three special themes available has a price of $.99

4. Make Images Come Alive: CINEMAGRAM

Cinemagraphs, those photos that contain some moving elements, have been around for a few years already. And somehow, people still get so amazed when they see one of these animations that it’s quite common they’ll share the content and make it go viral on Social Media.
Originally, creating cinemagraphs was limited only to a few people with good knowledge of Photoshop and a lot of patience. However with the evolution of technology, there are some apps in the market that allow creating these quite easily. One of these is Cinemagram.
Creating cinemagraphs with this app is a simple two-step process. Just shoot a short clip (or import an existing one) and then with your finger, select the area containing the animation. Everything else will remain still, as per a normal photograph.
Use your finger to ‘draw’ the area that will include movement.
Use your finger to ‘draw’ the area that will include movement.
Furthermore, there are other interesting functionalities:
  • Include text as part of the image
  • A range of 10 different filters to apply to your image
  • Loop mode to make the animation move continuously without any breaks or jumps
  • Save as a movie or as a GIF file directly on supported platforms – like Twitter or email
The final result of the previous image would look like this:
Check out how the escalator moves whilst the person remains still.
Check out how the escalator moves whilst the person remains still.

Price & Platforms

This app is available for both iOS and Android and is totally free.

5. Speed up Your Life: LAPSE IT

Time lapses are a technique where videos appear to be hyper-accelerated, by recording a frame every few seconds, rather than the standard 24 frames per second of traditional video. They are really effective in showing things that change very slowly (e.g.: a flower opening) or simply by giving an idea of how life changes over an extended period of time (e.g.: sunset).
The increased interest from users for time lapses is the reason why most smartphones now include a high-speed video option, as well as why Instagram launched the Hyperlapse app. However, all of them are very limited in their capacity, with top speeds of no more than 12x for Hyperlapse (i.e.: a 12 minute recording will be shown as a 1 minute video).
This is where Lapse It becomes the best alternative. Not only is it not time limited, but it also includes other amazing features to make your time lapse videos even more engaging:
  • Shoot from low quality (for quick update and mobile sharing) up to full 1080 HD
  • Auto start allows you to schedule your recording
  • Limit mode stops the video manually, or when the recording reaches a specific amount of time or frames
  • Initial delay removes shaking from pushing buttons or touching the screen
  • Choose frame per second output to suit your needs
  • Include music for more engagement
  • Visual effects and filters
  • Trim and merge different clips in the same project
Music, scheduling, time limit, delay… Lapse It is the ultimate mixing tool to create amazing time lapses.
Music, scheduling, time limit, delay… Lapse It is the ultimate mixing tool to create amazing time lapses.
Lapse It also calculates the required fps rate to adjust the final video to your desired duration. No more maths is required to convert recorded time and fps into minutes.
To create best quality videos use a tripod for smartphones, so the image will remain still throughout the recording process.

Price & Platforms

The app is available for both iOS and Android. There is a free version however it is limited by the quality of the video you can record, and many other effects. The full version only costs $1.99, which is excellent value.

Summary

Long are gone the times in which video marketing was exclusive to large organisations with big budgets and, even though the result that a video professional can achieve will always be much better, anyone using a smartphone can create good quality video content that will surely increase the engagement of those receiving it on Social Media.
With these apps, any simple idea to promote your business could become a powerful piece of content that could go viral easily. Remember, it is also possible to combine some of the videos produced with these apps to create even more amazing effects. For example, you could create a time lapse video effect with Lapse It, and then apply some vintage effects with 8mm.

Have you tried video for your Social Media content? What is your experience and what have you done differently? Let me know in the comments below.
Rocket image by Shutterstock