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☕ IG just pushed your brand to TikTok
To:Brew Readers
Money Scoop
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Howdy Pard’ner! I’m knee-deep in an Arrested Development rewatch, but pulled myself away to write about everyone’s least-favorite platform of the summer: Instagram. At least I’ve got some good news on that front for social media professionals. Today, we’ll talk about:

  • How Instagram just forced your brand to TikTok
  • How content efficiency is the name of the game
  • Three social essays with great strategy thinking

Jack Appleby


INSTAGRAM

Any brand on Instagram should TikTok, too

instagram reels TikTok
Francis Scialabba

I feel bad for Adam Mosseri. The head of Instagram has been public enemy No. 1 the last few weeks as the internet (and a couple of Kardashians) angrily yells to “make Instagram Instagram again.” There’s a cultural feeling that IG is just doing a TikTok impersonation lately, cutting back your friends’ photos in favor of recommended video content. We’re living in the Reels world now, where vertical short-form vids feel like the primary content type for two of the largest social networks.

Here’s the funny thing.

Instagram’s attempts to follow TikTok now give all brands a catalyst to start TikToking.

Seriously. Let me walk you through the thinking.

Instagram Reels, from 2020 to today

We’re only two years into Reels, but let’s go back to that first blog where Instagram announced the format and how it works:

“Reels invites you to create fun videos to share with your friends or anyone on Instagram. Record and edit 15-second multi-clip videos with audio, effects, and new creative tools. You can share reels with your followers on Feed, and, if you have a public account, make them available to the wider Instagram community through a new space in Explore. Reels in Explore offers anyone the chance to become a creator on Instagram and reach new audiences on a global stage.”

Yep, those seem like TikToks, as they always have. Back then, Reels were just an additional content format—something new for social media managers to play with, alongside images, carousels, videos, live, and everything else IG offers. Because Instagram’s feed was then primarily content from accounts a user followed, Reels were largely avoidable for a long time.

What’s changed: Reels went from just another Instagram content format to the primary content format. As of July, any new video posted to Instagram shorter than 15 minutes is automatically categorized as a Reel. The feed is riddled with Reels, escaping their Explore page home to infest every scroll on your primary feed. This is why the Kardashians are pissed.

Here’s the social media math of it all

Let’s be honest, brands: You’re pot-committed to Instagram. Over 200 million businesses are on the platform. You can’t jump off IG just because the format changed—you’ve spent too much time and money building a community there.

If you plan on having business success on Instagram, you better commit to Reels.

If we agree Reels and TikToks are basically the same, you better commit to TikTok.

Two platforms, one strategy

Instagram just gave social media managers a gift: content efficiency. Two of the largest platforms are encouraging the exact same type of content. Reels is just TikTok’s fellow—not, like, an evil version. Any Instagram Reel can succeed on TikTok. Any TikTok can succeed as an Instagram Reel.

Brands, you have my permission to copy/paste. Literally just toss your 9:16 short-form video content on both platforms and see what happens. Sure, there are plenty of tricky optimizations we can make, but as long as there’s a strong hook in the first three seconds, the content’s got a shot.

Those TikTok benefits

Dropping the same content on multiple platforms isn’t anything new; all social pros are familiar with recropping and recutting to make that image or video just right for another social network. The difference this time: TikTok is a content-recommendation engine.

Usually when brands toss content on a new social network they’ve gotta build up a follower base. Facebook, Twitter, the old Instagram: All are follow-based networks, where users primarily see content they’ve asked for by smashing the follow button. Historically, that makes adding a new platform to your social media mix an expensive endeavor—you’ve gotta get followers! If content falls on a network and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?

TikTok isn’t like that, though. Users primarily scroll the For You page, mostly comprising content the algorithm thinks you’d enjoy. You don’t need followers—TikTok’s gonna push your content to the right audiences automatically. Brands can dip their toes into TikTok through literally copy/pasting the content.

To recap: Instagram and TikTok feel like carbon copies of each other. For brands, this is a good thing—make your content work smarter by going from platform to platform. Go forth and make things, then get them everywhere.

     
SOCIAL CUES

Social cues

Woman reading on an airplane The Simpsons/Fox via Giphy

There are so many social big thinkers out there, writing all kinds of amazing strategies, analysis, and breakdowns. All ships rise with the tide, so here are a few reads from other places I think you could learn from.

TikTok chops are ‘huge’ for creative agencies right now” (Marketing Brew)

Advertising agencies spent most of the last decade teaching old dogs new tricks, encouraging their creative teams to learn the new world of social media. As the platforms’ content styles keep evolving, now agencies are looking at content creators to join the team—a smart move.

BeReal and the doomed quest for online authenticity” (Wired)

Social media is, by definition, performative. We, the users, elect what moments we want to share with the world. While there’s been a call for more authentic representations of self on social, it’s a fool’s errand, and no emerging platform’s gonna solve that. Here’s a great read on why BeReal’s entire value proposition may ultimately fail.

Can creators ever take a vacation?” (The Publish Press)

When your entire career hinges on keeping your audience, the idea of stepping away from content creation can be terrifying. It’s also vitally important if influencers want to avoid burnout and find that freshness that got them started. Read about how YouTubers Colin and Samir handled their time off and still made sure their audience was up to date.

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