As we mentioned earlier, we need to be growing a harvest of content and storing it to use later.<\/strong><\/p>\nTake whatever photography and video you can when you are at a wedding, working with a client, or just out and about, to build that bank to share when you are too busy to create content. Show restraint by rationing your content to maintain longevity all year through. Your algorithm will notice, and so will your followers. Lean on scheduling tools like Later to pre-schedule content that can be created and uploaded in bulk.<\/p>\n
Don’t shy away from creating templates or re-using content. Templates create consistency and make it easy for anyone in your business to grab an image or video, add some text and stay on brand.<\/p>\n
Consider multiple ways you can repurpose one single piece of content. Take, for example, our recent Digital Marketing webinar. First, we shared the full replay link, then this recap article was created with the content from that video.<\/p>\n
We’ve also created a second article focusing on Google Analytics, and made some Reels. For your business, this could come from a video you take at a wedding, a long-form internal office review, speaking opportunity, behind-the-scenes moment, or venue tour. There are many opportunities to cut up a piece of content to distribute later.<\/p>\n
You can tend to struggle a bit on social media if you don’t get it perfect. My recommendation is to build a solid organic presence first, then supplement that with a bit of paid content to test. People are becoming less attentive to paid advertising because they know it’s sponsored. So creating high-quality content for free is an incredible way to keep people coming back to you whenever you have any new updates or ideas to share.<\/p>\n
Building that trust and redeveloping your social media strategy to be more consistent is one of the most substantial ways to see growth, particularly on Facebook and Instagram \u2014 if you are making great content for non-paid activity.<\/p>\n
“The important thing that you think about, when you do your paid strategy, is what are my people there to see? And you need to provide them with something that they want to see. So as long as you’re matching that intent, you will do just fine.” \u2014 Dan Wild<\/em>.<\/p><\/blockquote>\nTikTok is an incredible platform for ‘how-to’ and research intent. Despite not being the intent of the people on the platform, they just want to be entertained. If you provide great ‘how-to’ content, you can really blow it up, and that’s incredible. <\/span><\/p>\nT<\/span>ikTok’s secondary push at the moment is relatability. Someone who does that well is Emma Woythaler, our Social Media Manager. She’s incredible at getting into the mind of a couple planning their wedding. Be aware that the relevance of experiencing a shared problem is a great way to build engagement.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/p>\n
The reach that Instagram Reels have is unparalleled. There’s no other place pulling this much organic view for someone mindlessly scrolling. Instagram is competitive with TikTok and YouTube Shorts, but it has a strong market in Australia. Instagram is video-first, so you will see a lot more reach and engagement on any Reel than you will a standard photo post.<\/p>\n
For Emma’s crash course on creating Reels, read our article\u00a0How wedding suppliers can level up on Insta<\/a><\/strong> and watch her three-part webinar\u00a0The Basics<\/a>, Let’s Create<\/a> <\/strong>and Repurposing<\/a><\/strong>.<\/p>\nAnd finally, it’s great to provide inspiration and solve a user’s research intent, but don’t forget to lead them to your website!<\/p>\n