Video marketers know we lack patience. So they're starting to tailor content for our dwindling attention spans. In fact, 56% of all videos published in the last year are less than 2 minutes long.
But marketers must innovate further because users expect different video lengths on different platforms. Odds are, they're more willing to watch a 2 minute long video on YouTube than on Twitter.
If you don't customize video length for each platform, then you're not fully catering to your audience. Sooner or later, the attention they give to your brand will wither away.
That's why we decided to create this handy, bookmarkable infographic about the optimal video length for the most popular video channels. To help you better engage your audience on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube, we extracted insights from HubSpot's own social and YouTube data, and combined it with existing research in the area. ...
Via
Jeff Domansky
As of this month, the number of Twitter users that refer to themselves as social media "gurus," "ninjas," "mavens," "experts," or even "freaks," has increased to 181,000.
According to B.L. Ochman, "a guru is something someone else calls you, not something you call yourself." I could not agree more with her. It's hard to believe someone when they refer to themselves as people who are often worshipped in religious or intellectual contexts.
Check out the video at the end of the post; it's a hilarious parody of the "social media guru."
I thank the good Lord that I never claimed to be a ninja, a maven, nor a master. Goddess? That would be me.