More About This Show
The Social Media Marketing podcast
is an on-demand talk radio show from Social Media Examiner. It’s
designed to help busy marketers and business owners discover what works
with social media marketing.
In this episode I interview Peg Fitzpatrick, the co-author of The Art of Social Media: Power Tips for Power Users,
which she wrote with Guy Kawasaki. She is also a social media
strategist and an expert in visual marketing. Her clients include
Motorola, Audi, Google, Virgin and others.
Peg will explore Instagram marketing ideas that are easy to put to use right away.
You’ll discover tools to use for your Instagram images.

Listen as Peg Fitzpatrick shares what marketers need to know about standing out on Instagram.
Share your feedback, read the show notes and get the links mentioned in this episode below.
Instagram Images
How Peg got started on Instagram
Peg first discovered Instagram
when looking for apps for her iPad. This was shortly after the
iPad first came out. She loaded Instagram and loved it, but no one she
knew was on it.
Then, when Pinterest
came out, Peg, like a lot of people, thought Pinterest and Instagram
were the same, because they were both about images. Although she
initially chose to focus on Pinterest, after she learned more about both
platforms, Peg discovered how different the two were.
When Peg went back to Instagram, she saw it was a great place for people to have conversations.

Peg was an early adopter of Instagram.
Even if you know lots of people on Facebook, Peg believes Instagram is where you can build a community. As a blogger or entrepreneur, it’s the kind of place you want to go to meet new people.
Listen to the show to learn about why more people didn’t get on Instagram immediately.
Instagram challenges for marketers
Peg believes social media is challenging for marketers because they
want to look at things in a more traditional way: how to get people to
do x, y and z. The newer platforms, like Snapchat and Instagram, are even more challenging. It’s not easy to write a viral blog post or post a YouTube video that goes viral.
Instagram is limited, Peg says, because you just get that one link in your bio and there are no links in the comments.
While a blogger might not see the value in Instagram (“Why should my
blog be on Instagram if there’s no link for people to click every
day?”), brands are getting more engagement on Instagram than any other social platform. It creates brand awareness that leads more people to your business, events and products.

Instagram creates brand awareness. Image: Shutterstock.
The biggest mistake marketers make, Peg says, is they aren’t posting
enough. On a recent panel, Peg heard Instagram people who have 500,000+
followers say they post multiple times per day. One of them posts 8 or
10 times per day. And they post excellent content.
It takes more time to create an Instagram post. Although you can share a blog post immediately, with Instagram you have to create the image, write the text and figure out all of the things that go with it.
On Facebook, people don’t post enough either. On Martha Stewart’s Facebook page they post every hour. Of course she probably has the biggest backlog of content of any person ever, Peg adds.
Listen to the show to discover why Social Media Examiner doesn’t do much on Instagram.
Ideas for what to post
Peg says there are basic things to post on Instagram, such as
pictures of what you’re doing or where you are. If you’re at an event,
it’s fun to post pictures of people you meet or do selfies. You can post
a day in the life at your blog or business, pictures of your team or
behind the scenes at your company.
Show pictures of wherever you happen to be to give more of a human connection with your company.

Post Instagram images at events.
For example, Peg explains how she uses Instagram to promote a webinar
before it starts to give people one more chance to click and join.
She’ll share a photo of her computer monitor with something related to
the webinar on it.
Before a Google+ hangout,
she’ll take pictures in the green room to share. She’ll either take a
photo with her phone or do a picture of the screen. For example, if
she’s about to do a Google hangout with Guy Kawasaki and Gary Vaynerchuk, she’ll take a behind-the-scenes photo that’s interesting and funny, and also chronicles what they’re doing.
It’s part of creating and sharing your journey, as well as celebrating the things that go on.
Listen to the show to hear what picture Peg posted when she was a guest at the first Social Media Marketing World.
What to put in an Instagram post
Peg explains her method for creating Instagram posts for her blog content.
She creates a square image
and then treats the description as a mini blog post, rather than a
quick update. It’s important to give enough information in the post that
people will get a sense of it and start a conversation.
Start with a good image. While 640 x 640 pixels is the official
Instagram biggest size, they will scale it down. You never want to have
them scale images up, because that’s when they get blurry. Peg does a
735 x 735 image.
Next, write an intro in the text. Peg will ask a question, add a
couple of sentences and then ask a closing question. She also writes
“click the link in my bio” in the description, as well as in the
“location” for the photo.

When sharing a blog post image on Instagram, Peg includes tips from the article in the description.
Instagram allows you to add a location. If you’re somewhere else,
that’s one thing. However, if you’re at home or in your office, you can
put a call to action in the location section manually. It will save to
your phone too, so you can pull it up again.
Another option is to put the link as text in the comments. This is
especially easy, given the way Instagram looks on desktop. Rather than
say “cut and paste this,” write it as a call to action that reads, “If
you’re on desktop or mobile, just cut and paste this.”
When you add that in your comments, it stays on your Instagram post.
So next week when you switch your main link to a different blog post,
someone who’s looking back through your old content will be able to cut
and paste the exact link.
Listen to the show to discover what kinds of behind-the-scenes
photos we took while getting ready for Social Media Marketing World.
Instagram marketing strategy
Peg says you don’t want to build your entire Instagram marketing plan on
quotes, but they really are popular. She tries to put her own spin on
everything, so if she does a quote, she asks a question with it. Just
make sure the content you’re sharing relates to your business goals
somehow. There needs to be a reason to share it, other than to post
a quote.
Infographics and anything with bullet points or lists are also good.
For example, on list posts, share a few tips and tell your audience to
click through to read the rest.
Another idea is to put multiple pictures together using a tool like Canva. If
you take a bunch of photos at an event, just make a collage to share,
rather than overwhelm your audience (and yourself) with tons of photos.
Peg suggests branding your Instagram images.
Unless you do this, when people repost your images, their audience
won’t know they came from you. Include a watermark with your URL or a
line at the bottom with your logo or website.
Listen to the show to learn about Iconosquare and the Facebook Mentions app.
Instagram tools
Peg doesn’t take photos in the Instagram app, because they don’t save
on your phone. If you take a few pictures and only share one, the
others could get lost.
Instead, she takes pictures in SmugMug’s Camera Awesome app
for iOS and Android. It has a grid, plus you can crop and edit photos
in the app. Peg doesn’t spend a lot of time editing. She’ll just take
the photo and use one filter in Instagram.
Peg also likes the Over
app, also for iOS and Android. It takes photos and adds different fonts
and overlays. For example, if you’re a coffee fan, they have coffee
art. They also do seasonal updates for things like back to school or
holidays.
Word Swag,
a popular iOS app, allows you to add your logo to photos. Word Swag
looks templated because there are tons of things you can do with it, and
Over looks more personalized and customized.

Add text to images using Over or Word Swag (pictured).
Peg also mentions a video tool called Phhhoto, which makes animated GIF videos that are perfect for Instagram.
As far as scheduling is concerned, Hootsuite came out with a brand-new Instagram integration. Now, you can load images for your Instagram account into Hootsuite ahead of time.
Although Hootsuite calls it “scheduling,” what it actually does is
send a message to your phone telling you to post. Then you go into the
app, and manually post the image to Instagram. This is great for brands
that have several people posting for them.
Listen to the show to discover how to find people to follow on Instagram.
Discovery of the Week
Katch.me is for all the diehard Meerkat and Periscope
users who want more functionality from those apps, and are frustrated
with some of their limitations. For example, you can’t have replays
after 24 hours on certain apps and there isn’t a quick way to easily
share. Katch offers solutions.

Katch records your Meerkat and Periscope broadcasts and makes it easy to share them.
Sign in to Katch, connect it to your Meerkat or Periscope account or
both, and it will collect your broadcasts in one place with cloud
storage and instant replays.
It works automatically, as long as the account is hooked up. Shortly
after you finish your broadcast, Katch sends out a tweet to watch the
replay.
Katch is a free app.
Listen to the show to learn more and let us know how Katch works for you.
Other Show Mentions
Want to improve your social media marketing? Need to prove your
efforts are working? Join 4,000 fellow marketers at the online
mega-conference, designed to inspire and empower you.
Discover the best and newest ways to market your business on
Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Google+, YouTube, Instagram and Pinterest.
Find new ways to improve your content and measure your results all from
the comfort of your home or office.
You’ll be led by dozens of top social media pros, including Mark
Schaefer, Mari Smith, Christopher Penn, Amy Porterfield, Neal Schaffer,
Ian Cleary, Viveka von Rosen, Jon Loomer, Andrea Vahl, Steve Dotto, Amy
Schmittauer, Peg Fitzpatrick, Brian Fanzo, Sue Zimmerman, Kim Garst,
Andy Crestodina, Pam Moore, Martin Shervington, Donna Moritz, Ron Nash,
Michael Stelzner and more. We have selectively recruited the top experts
on every major social network to share tactical, step-by-step, hands-on
information.
Peg Fitzpatrick is the only person speaking twice at the Social Media
Success Summit. She will be doing the Instagram productivity tips panel
on how to create a workflow that flows. Since there isn’t a way to
schedule, you need to find a great process to create content, manage it
and get it all out on Instagram. The second session is how to create a
visual style for social media images. It’s on how to create brand
guidelines for your blog, so when people go to your blog and see your
social media, you look as professional as possible.
Plus, Vincent Ng of MCNG Marketing will be presenting on how to use Pinterest analytics to grow your Pinterest reach.
One exciting area we will be covering is video. Tim Schmoyer is
talking about how to optimize your YouTube videos for search
, Brian
Fanzo is talking about how to create Periscope and Meerkat live mobile
broadcasts
, Steve Dotto is talking about how to use YouTube to grow
your email list and Amy Schmittauer is talking about how to create video
content marketing plans with YouTube.
We’re not just covering video and visual marketing, we also get into every major social network.
Social Media Success Summit is an online conference. It’s 36
different sessions spread across 4 weeks. There are three sessions per
day, three times per week, over four weeks. And it’s on every
conceivable social media platform you can imagine. Check it out. Visit SMSS15.com for significant early bird discounts.


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