5 Reasons Snackable Content is (Still) Awesome

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If you’ve ever heard the expression “big things come in small packages,” you already know a little something about snackable content. This social media content category might be composed of small, easy-to-consume chunks of information—think a tweet, or a Facebook video, or an Instagram meme—but it is nonetheless a mighty force for the good of your brand. Previously on the Visually blog, we’ve shown you how snackable content not only delivers information that’s easy to consume but also makes the best use of existing content. By breaking an infographic, for example, into a series of memorable quotes and videos, you gain:

  • A longer shelf life for content on social media.
  • The ability to easily tweak content for appropriate platforms.
  • The potential to drive new engagement and brand awareness.

But recently, snackable content has gotten a bad name, and even been left for dead. According to a piece in re/code, snackable content isn’t substantive enough to deliver value to readers. When to comes to generic listicles, we’re inclined to agree, but snackable content in social media? Puh-lease. Social is where people go to snack—or at least to discover the trail of breadcrumbs that leads to a tasty dinner. Using snackable images doubles your social sharing, and videos get 12 times the number of shares (according to Sprout Social). Here are five more reasons snackable content is so successful—and why your content marketing strategy needs it now more than ever. JohnWoodenQuote_VisuallyGuide

1. It’s built around bite-size blocks.

Rome wasn’t built in a day, but you can easily build a whole bunch of snackable content. The Colosseum_Visually Infographic

That’s the beauty of snackable content. Each piece is self-contained. This short-form content is optimized for social media and designed to combat information overload.

McDonald's Geofilter_Daily Dot

Moreover, these content building blocks are valuable because they include information your audience actually cares about, are branded with calls to action, transfer across multiple social channels, and are published on a regular basis–meaning your audience comes to expect them and actively consumes them. You can think of snackable content as storytelling within the rules of social media, because there is a limit on the number of words in a post, seconds in a video and so on. Geofiltering even helps you target snackable content to snack-sized demographics based on location, as McDonald’s did this summer when it deployed geofilters available to Snapchat users exclusively at its stores.

Would you like to learn more about creating awesome snackable content? Download our ebook, The Visual Content Playbook for Social Media Marketing for tips from top brands using snackable content most effectively and actionable strategies you can use right now from the Visually creative team.

2. It works with a little strategic planning.

You need a scalable way to stand out every day, but you also need your social content to lead to measurable results. That’s why making snackable content part of a larger strategy is essential. Snackable content should be a regular part of your editorial calendar, and you should have it in mind when you design infographics, slideshares, videos, and all your other big rock content. For example, consider creating a platform-specific snackable content strategy for the webinars your brand provides. Again, by starting small, you can take a specific long-form content offering and break it into multiple meme-style chunks that can be published over a period of weeks yet continually draw eyes to a single great piece of visual content on your website. If you were leading a webinar about webinar promotion, you could deploy this little nugget—which, in addition to being informative and attention-grabbing, would also demonstrate the value of your content and get people to click: webinarsscreengrab

3. It stands on its own two legs.

Gary Vaynerchuk Tweet

At the risk of sounding like a broken record, snackable content is valuable because it makes sense on whatever platform it appears. It doesn’t need a backstory to be informative. As Gary Vaynerchuk says: “The singular thing that matters is the context of the room you’re telling a story in.” Quality snackable content is subtly adapted for appropriate platforms in a way that minimizes time investment and maximizes the experience of consuming content. For example on Twitter, Vaynerchuk advises crafting content around topics and hashtags that are trending. “It’s low-hanging fruit that literally nobody is doing,” he tells Jay Baer.

4. It’s highly shareable (if you do it right).

Snackable content might get from two to 12 times as many shares, but only if it appeals to people. Unless you own a highly anticipated product (the new iPhone, Jay Z record, etc.) anything that’s self-congratulatory, hard-selling, solicitous or pitchy is probably going to fall flat. For this article, for example, we might use an image like this to get attention: FrankClarkQuote_VisuallyGuide

5. It’s capable of so much more than small potatoes.

Snackable content should tell two simultaneous stories. The first is what’s contained to the visual: an inspirational message, metric or compelling trend. The second is what your audiences might not see consciously—a tie into your underlying brand promise. At that point, you’re no longer dealing with small potatoes: You’re dealing with a massive pile of potatoes that people really, really want to look at. (Or, as happened this summer across the pond, forced to look at because they were spilled all over the road.) Massive Pile of Potatoes_Courtesy of Quirker

If you’re ready to get started with your own snackable content strategy, download our new free guide by clicking here. You’ll find primers on how to use microcontent, see visuals from some of the most successful brands using snackable content today and discover step-by-step strategies to distribute your content to your audience.

Nate Birt is a multimedia journalist, social media enthusiast and copy editor with experience at a variety of print and digital publications, and a Contributing  Editor to the Visually Blog. Follow him on Twitter at @natebirt.

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