Today in Digital Marketing - Will Short-Form Video Take a Back Seat in 2024?
Episode Date: December 13, 2023How advertising may have killed the growth of short-form video. Threads and Mastodon are joining forces. Instagram makes going live much easier. All the links on X were broken today. And guys: is Chat...GPT okay? Has someone checked in on it lately?.📰 Get our free daily newsletter📈 Advertising: Reach Thousands of Marketing Decision-Makers🌍 Follow us on social media or contact us.GO PREMIUM!Get these exclusive benefits when you upgrade:✅ Listen ad-free✅ Back catalog of 20+ marketing science interviews✅ Get the show earlier than the free version✅ Story links in show notes✅ “Skip to story” audio chapters✅ Member-exclusive Slack channel✅ Member-only monthly livestreams with Tod✅ Discounts on marketing tools✅...and a lot more!Check it out: todayindigital.com/premium·GET MORE FROM US🆘 Need help with your social media? Check us out: engageQ digital🎙️ Our other podcast "Behind the Ad"🤝 Our Slack community⭐ Review the podcast·UPGRADE YOUR SKILLS• Inside Google Ads with Jyll Saskin Gales• Google Ads for Beginners with Jyll Saskin Gales• Foxwell Slack Group and CoursesSome links in these show notes may provide affiliate revenue to us.·Today in Digital Marketing is hosted by Tod Maffin and produced by engageQ digital on the traditional territories of the Snuneymuxw First Nation on Vancouver Island, Canada.Our Sponsors:* Check out Kinsta: https://kinsta.comPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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It is Wednesday, December 13th. Today,
how advertising may have killed the growth of short form video. Threads and Mastodon are
joining forces. Instagram makes going live much easier. Why has chat GPT gotten lazier?
And a big announcement about the future of this very podcast.
I'm Todd Maffin. That's ahead today in digital marketing.
Didn't think I'd see this coming, but one respected industry watcher says the social
media platform's obsession over short form videos will cool a bit next year.
E-marketer says the sites may talk a big game, but they're still trying to figure it
all out. Quoting a report they put out today, quote, reports hint that Meta is struggling to
convince advertisers that Reels can drive performance. In Q3 earnings, Meta suggested
it will pivot its strategy from Reels to video more holistically. Meanwhile, Alphabet's Q3
earnings implied that YouTube's shorts
had trouble growing beyond the 2 billion users it announced in Q2.
Even TikTok is toying with 15-minute videos, and by ending its creator fund,
the app will only pay creators for videos longer than 60 seconds,
another sign of short video monetization problems.
Unquote. So what will be on the upswing?
Well, the continued shift to closed circle sharing, specifically group chats.
Videos are still getting shared, but increasingly via DMs.
That's a problem for advertisers since there's not really a video stream to interrupt there.
Videos shared privately are usually just watched on their own. Where do
you put an ad? Before they watch? No, they'd hate that. After? No, they'd just turn it off.
E-marketers suggest this might be why Meta is prioritizing its business messaging tools
in WhatsApp and in its other messaging apps. In the end, they think longer-form videos
could get more attention next year than short-form.
Quote,
But this isn't the first time the platforms have tried.
TikTok's attempt at 10-minute videos was deprioritized, and IGTV and Facebook Watch were abandoned.
Plus, the platforms must contend with the reality that consumers still love short videos.
Many short-form creators will have a learning curve in a pivot to longer-form content, and viewers are already starting to max out on social video time, unquote.
eMarketer's report is called Top Trends to Watch in 2024.
We have a link to it in today's newsletter if you'd like more information.
There are a bunch of apps vying to fill the hole left by Twitter,
and soon the two most popular will be connected
and interoperable. Mastodon uses a protocol called ActivityPub that lets independent servers
share content. So, for instance, there is an independent version of Instagram called PixelFed.
Both PixelFed and Mastodon use this ActivityPub protocol. And that means you can follow someone's Pixelfed account even if you don't have one.
You'd follow them and see it in your Mastodon account.
To translate, imagine if you could get YouTube shorts from your favorite YouTuber while scrolling through your TikTok feed.
Or subscribe to a Reddit post's comments and get updates in your messenger app of choice.
That's ActivityPub.
A bunch of platforms used by marketers already support it.
Most notably, WordPress, which powers most of the websites on the planet.
And now, Threads will hook itself up to the growing protocol as well.
This is something Meta announced when they launched Threads.
But if I'm honest, many people expected this to be something they would just drop. But today, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said they're already testing
it. Quote, making Threads interoperable will give people more choice over how they interact,
and it will help content reach more people. I'm pretty optimistic about this. Unquote.
So here's how it would work. If your brand has a Mastodon account, people on both Mastodon and Threads will be able to see your content, follow your account, engage with your posts, and see your profile.
So which should you choose?
Honestly, if you're still on the fence about where to start a post-Twitter personal account, I personally think Mastodon is the place.
There are no ads, which threads,
of course, will get. You get a true chronological feed without any of that suggested posts nonsense.
And there are lots of different apps you can use to access it. And it has an API that's supported
by some third-party platforms like Buffer. Most importantly, you have account portability there.
On Meta's platforms, if an AI enforcement bot bans your account, well, you'll probably never get it back.
On Mastodon, you just pick up your account and move with all of your followers to another account.
But regardless of where you choose, having the two platforms become interoperable is definitely a win-win.
It's already been a busy week at Instagram with three reports to update today.
First, they are rolling out new tools to catch and stop spam.
They say they're getting better at detecting what's spammy,
and the automated filters in your brand's Instagram account will become a bit more accurate.
They'll also be more granular, introducing a new potential spam bucket that you can check in on from time to time.
Second, they're updating their notes feature to let you post videos.
Notes are tiny little status updates you can put on your profile photo.
Until now, it's only been text or emoji, but now you can post a two-second looping video.
Of course, it's not meant to be a video people would watch that would give them any
information about your brand. Think of it more like an easier way to put in an animated
GIF. Plus, you can't upload a video. You have to use your phone's front-facing camera. Definitely
more a user feature than a marketer feature, though I'm sure the clever of you will find a
way to use this. And third, they've made a big update to live streaming. You can now use popular third-party
tools like OBS or Streamlabs to send a live feed to your Instagram channel. If your account can go
live, you'll find a special code called a key in your settings. You give that key to the third-party
app, and then you can use it to broadcast live on your Instagram account. This lets you add things
like text boxes, images, overlays, videos, and all sorts of extra items to make it much more of a polished broadcast.
A former Meta executive this week pled guilty to embezzling millions from the company.
Barbara Furlow-Smiles worked there from 2017 to 2021. Quoting Business Insider, quote,
Furlow-Smiles diverted more than $4 million from Facebook by linking payment apps to her Facebook credit card and paying out charges to fake vendors.
She'd submit the charges as false expense reports, then have the vendors give her the money in cash or by transferring funds to her husband's account. Prosecutors said associates paid cash kickbacks in person and by FedEx or mail,
sometimes wrapping the cash in other items like T-shirts, unquote.
She is scheduled to be sentenced in March.
Do you have business insurance?
If not, how would you pay to recover from a cyber attack,
fire damage, theft, or a lawsuit? No business or profession is risk-free. Without insurance,
your assets are at risk from major financial losses, data breaches, and natural disasters.
Get customized coverage today starting at $19 per month at zensurance.com. Be protected. Be Zen.
If you are still posting on X and have some links to your store or website or something,
you may have noticed those links were not working earlier today.
Anytime users tapped a link, they got a page that read,
I scream, you scream, we all scream for us to fix this page,
which they did after about an hour.
TechCrunch had some context about this.
Quote, If this sounds familiar, it's because something similar happened in March. which they did after about an hour. TechCrunch had some context about this.
Quote, if this sounds familiar,
it's because something similar happened in March,
taking down links and images across timelines for around an hour.
Twitter blamed that on an internal change
that had some unintended consequences
before Platformer reported the bug occurred
because of a mistake by the site's
single remaining site reliability engineer
who was operating solo after Elon Musk instituted massive layoffs.
If you've been using ChatGPT for some of your marketing tasks,
you may have noticed it's been getting a little, I don't know, lazier?
More uptight? We noticed it here. For a while,
we had it give us ideas for titles for our newsletter issues, until one day, a couple
of weeks ago, it just started refusing to do it. Until, that is, we typed in, try again,
and then it was fine. At some point late last month, say some users,
ChatGPT started refusing to do tasks or outputting oddly linked or simplified results.
OpenAI posted on social media, quote,
we've heard all your feedback about GPT-4 getting lazier.
We haven't updated the model since November 11th,
and this certainly isn't intentional, unquote.
So what's causing it?
Well, some people believe the AI has some kind of seasonal affective disorder,
a low-grade depression brought on by the winter months.
How would an AI get depressed?
Remember, all these bots are trained on millions of documents and posts from around the web. Maybe somehow, in its vast reading,
it's learned that people tend to slow down this time of year.
Maybe it's the dark days.
Maybe it's close to the holidays and people are taking time off.
Is it possible that ChatGPT has gotten to know us humans so well
that it is emulating us right down to our moods?
After all, some people have tested very human-like inputs with it
and found that GPT responds.
One guy tested telling GPT that it would get a tip if it did well,
and he discovered that GPT-4 did indeed give longer responses
when it thought it was going to get a gratuity.
One fellow shared his favorite prompt on social media.
It reads,
quote, you are very
capable. Many people will die
if this is not done well.
You really can do this and are awesome.
Take a deep breath
and think this through.
My career depends on it, unquote.
Someone remind me, where's that link
for the waiting list to colonize another planet again
and finally a small correction in yesterday's podcast we mentioned some of the leading places
that teens were spending their time tiktok snapchat and so on we failed to mention the top
place which of course was youtube with 93 of American teens saying they spend time there.
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