marketing

7841T-Mobile superbowl commercial banned from Tom Brandy and Rob Gronkowski
February 6,2021ByDAVID VEGA

T-Mobile superbowl commercial banned from Tom Brandy and Rob Gronkowski

A T-Mobile commercial featuring Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowski was “banned” from the Super Bowl, according to the company’s CEO. The minute-long ad features the former New England Patriots stars and offers a comedic alternative explanation for how they both ended up playing for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers this season. Spoiler alert: As with most cellphone ads, the joke hinges on signal quality. “I mean why would their ‘telco sponsor’ not want you to see this!!?” CEO Mike Sievert Tweeted, in what seems to be a reference to the NFL’s partnership with Verizon....

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7828HOW CAN YOU ADVERTISE SMARTER IN 2021 and Beyond?
January 23,2021ByDAVID VEGA

HOW CAN YOU ADVERTISE SMARTER IN 2021 and Beyond?

IN 2021, WE’LL SAY GOODBYE TO 3RD PARTY COOKIES. With immediate changes to iOS/macOS tracking and upcoming changes across other web browsers (Safari, Chrome, Firefox, etc.), the advertising industry faces a significant change. Existing advertising tactics will stop working. But Here is the Good news, The Spear by Tridence, along with its Data Partner’s proprietary First-Party solution, works regardless of cookies so that you can rest assure your targeting is always accurate. Tridence is a unique combination of strategy and creativity. Left Brains and Right Brains. Technology and Humanity. We listen, learn your business, and outfit you with cutting-edge web technology, targeted social media, and insightful creatives to achieve valuable and measurable results every step of the way. 20+ years helping Businesses & Brands. Review 10 predictions about the future of Advertising in digital marketing below. ⬇️ Many physical businesses have shut down during the pandemic. The first step for any business would be to retain existing customers, stabilize the business, and reach out to new customers. That is where digital marketing steps in. 10 predictions about the future of Advertising in digital marketing: 1. IP-Targeted (GeoFencing) Marketing & Personalization – this market (geofencing) is set to grow to $2.4 billion by 2023 – along with the rise of mobile. Brands and Businesses will start to practice marketing personalization for better results. As permission-based apps and browsers start to block data, successful Businesses and Brands will use IP-Targeting and hyper-local (geofencing) companies (like Tridence), That Help You Reach Your Audience & Target Local Customers That Matters! 100% Cookie-Free IP Targeting & Device Targeting. One of the key measurements is Proximity Targeting. Proximity Targeting is a geomarketing technique that uses mobile location services to reach consumers in real-time when they are around a store location or point of interest. This is done by defining a Target radius around a specific location.  A target area is defined as, say, within a mile of a restaurant. When users enter or leave this area, they receive a push notification, text message, or another form of Ad marketing communication. In today’s world, combining traditional marketing and digital advertising is the best way to get in front of thousands of customers fast and easy. IP targeting takes digital advertising to the next level. Now, you can direct your marketing to exactly the right customer in the right place at the right time, wherever they are. 2. Artificial Intelligence – If you didn’t know already, AI has made its way into the mainstream and has taken over many iterative tasks, and helped realign focus on strategies at a granular level. AI can analyze consumer behavior and search patterns and use data from social media platforms and blog posts to help businesses understand how customers find their products and services. Artificial intelligence will soon be the driving force behind many services, and, currently, we already see it implemented in such areas as 1) Basic communication, 2) Product recommendations, 3) Content creation, 4) Email personalization, 5) E-commerce transactions. 3. Chatbots – Chatbots will continue to be an important part of digital marketing in 2021. This AI-based technology uses instant messaging to chat in real-time, day or night, with your customers or site visitors. Surveys show that: 1) Chatbots will power 85% of customer service by the end of 2021, 2) The top benefits of chatbots are 24-hour service (64%), instant responses to inquiries (55%), and answers to simple questions (55%). Many customers prefer interacting with chatbots as they are responsive 24/7, give answers promptly, accurately recall your entire buying history, and never lose patience. These virtual assistants offer outstanding customer service by meeting customers’ expectations and automating repetitive tasks – which means that you can focus on more important work. 4. Video marketing – Video marketing is one of, if not the, most important marketing trends today and likely for the next 5-10 years. These numbers show the importance of incorporating video into your digital marketing strategy in 2021: 70% of consumers say that they have shared a brand’s video72% of businesses say that video has improved their conversion rate52% of consumers say that watching product videos makes them more confident in online purchase decisions65% of executives visit the marketer’s website and 39% call a vendor after viewing a video Video is by far the most popular way customers want to learn about new products: And don’t just think YouTube. There are plenty of ways to drive higher engagement with your video marketing, as you can make a video post or start a live broadcast on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or LinkedIn. 5. Content Marketing – Content Marketing Continues to Dominate SEO, but must be adopted with SEO schemes to reach the benefit. “Even amid all the innovation, content marketing remains a reliable, powerful way to attract new customers to your site and build relationships with them in real, quantifiable ways that deliver long-term value for your business.” Content marketing is no longer the simple, easy-to-execute tactic it was in the early days of the boom when it was all about blogs and keywords, and “content strategy” was a concept that was yet to be born. In today’s world, Content marketing is a method that drives traffic to your site using multimedia content to generate leads and build relationships with prospects. Note: A successful content strategy is carefully created, documented, and executed without deviation. Yet many marketers still don’t have a content strategy at all — or don’t have a documented strategy, believing that a vague idea of where they’re heading will suffice. In this competitive era, it won’t. Suggestion: Since content marketing is all about drawing your audience in with high-value content, your content must be genuinely engaging, informative, and/or entertaining to your audience. Just because it’s something you want to write or shoot doesn’t mean it’s something they want to read or watch. 6. SEO (Search Engine Optimization) – Successful businesses understand that SEO is still an integral part of your online digital strategy. In the medium to long run, it will save you thousands...

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7704Publishers eye push notifications in aftermath of Facebook news feed changes
February 5,2018ByDAVID VEGA

Publishers eye push notifications in aftermath of Facebook news feed changes

If you’re wondering why you got the same Apple News push alert from CNN a half-dozen times Tuesday afternoon, it wasn’t a coincidence. (CNN said it was an Apple News glitch, something Apple confirmed later.) Now that Facebook is deprioritizing publishers’ posts in the news feed, there is more urgency for publishers to make direct connections with readers. That means they’re taking push notifications more seriously. The Wall Street Journal has tripled, to nine, the number of topics that its mobile app users can follow and made it possible to “follow” its writers so users get a push when those authors publish something. Publishers are making an effort to stand out visually. Gannett’s USA Today grew its referral traffic from pushes by 18 percent by incorporating pictures, video, and GIFs into its messages. The Guardian has played with the font and style of its push notifications. CNN is will begin adding rich media to its push notifications in the second quarter of 2018. And while personalized push notifications didn’t gain much traction among publishers’ app audiences last year, publishers including Gannett are looking to infuse more personalization into the pushes they send. In a survey Gannett conducted with its app users last year, the relevance of the content was named as a top motivation for responding to push notifications. “If they don’t identify with it, they’re less likely to engage with it,” said Larry Aasen, director of mobile development at Gannett. These moves were already in the works when Facebook announced changes to its news feed algorithm earlier in January. But as publishers try to make up for the loss of reach in the news feed, even areas that drive small amounts of referral traffic will become more important. “You’re seeing a lot more sophistication,” said Mike Herrick, svp of product and engineering at Urban Airship, a push notifications technology provider. “The assets that are owned are going to be the most strategic.” Publishers pay close attention to their app audiences because their response to a story often provides a good signal for how a publisher’s broader audience will react to it. At CNN, for example, the click-through rate on its app push notifications determines whether to move breaking stories to the top of its homepage or write more stories on a developing story. “They’re optimal for getting an early indication of how a story is playing with your audience,” said S. Mitra Kalita, CNN’s VP of digital programming. “I used to use Facebook metrics like this over five years ago. You’d look at shares over the course of 20 minutes.” The competition for space on users’ phone lock screens has gotten intense. The volume of push notifications sent by publishers rose more than 50 percent from January to December in 2017, according to data from Urban Airship. While there’s a risk that publishers will overdo it, audiences are getting used to a fire hose of notifications: Opt-in rates for push notifications rose 16 percentage points this year, also according to Urban Airship. Pete Brown, a senior research fellow at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism and the author of “Pushed Beyond Breaking,” a research report on push notifications published last fall, predicts that images, automation, and personalization will gain importance in pushes. Last week, Urban Airship rolled out a tool that will allow publishers to use artificial intelligence to schedule push notifications based on when the audience is most likely to interact with them. Push notifications account for a small percentage of most publishers’ overall traffic. For USA Today, they drive just 10 percent of its mobile app opens and 5 percent of the mobile app’s pageviews. Yet those slivers of the audience are valuable. To receive a push notification, a person must have either downloaded a publisher’s app or followed the publisher inside a platform like Apple News or Google Play Newsstand, a sign of affinity. “A lot of people would consider their push audience their most loyal, their most engaged audience,” Brown said.   Author: Max Willens...

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7701Four Ways to Keep Your Brand and Marketing Relevant Amid Fluctuating Cultural Trends
January 5,2018ByDAVID VEGA

Four Ways to Keep Your Brand and Marketing Relevant Amid Fluctuating Cultural Trends

What do your brand, plant-based foods, Barbie dolls, and bottled water have in common? The truth is, quite a lot. There’s a lot of debate right now about whether bottled water is really a better choice than soda. Or whether a plant-based diet is actually healthier than consuming meat. And Some people are up in arms about the wage gap between male and female professionals. Still, others are evaluating whether there are enough variations of the Barbie doll. So… what does any of that have to do with marketing your brand? Cultural trends like those—and so many more—may come and go, but their impact remains significant. For a brand to remain relevant in this day and age, it must align with the dominant cultural trends of its target audience. That means you as a marketer must make it a priority to not only understand the issues that matter to your consumers but also consistently integrate their feelings and opinions into your brand’s message in new and creative ways. Keeping Pace With Culture Successful marketing does more than convey a message to an audience. It inspires, influences, and, ultimately, propels a brand forward. For any marketing campaign to be successful, marketers must find innovative ways to interweave the brand’s core values with the cultural context of the intended audience—its ideologies, tensions, values, and so on. Most consumers, whether consciously or not, look for brands that align with their view of the world. So a marketing campaign that not only acknowledges the cultural trends of its target audience but also aligns with or adds to that message will be rewarded with relevance, acceptance, and loyalty. On the other hand, when marketers ignore cultural context, or skirt around cultural trends, or don’t take the time to understand the issues, they risk landing their brand in hot water. For example: In 2017, Pepsi’s ad featuring Kendall Jenner was instantly condemned for downplaying the seriousness of race-related protests across the country. The company quickly pulled the ad. Some two years ago, Protein World’s Beach Body Ready campaign faced scathing backlash for promoting what many considered to be an unrealistic female body. The ad was eventually banned in the United Kingdom. If you’re not comfortable having your brand take a bold stance on a cultural issue, that’s OK. But researching the trends that matter to your audience can still elevate your marketing. For example, if you discover that the growing popularity of the plant-based food movement stems from consumers’ desire for “cleaner” sources of protein, you could easily change your labeling to highlight the amount or origin of the protein in your product. Even subtle nods toward a pervasive cultural trend can give your brand a leg up on the competition. But whatever you do… it has to be authentic. How to Stay Trend-Relevant It’s clear that to avoid wasting time, money, and resources—and potentially angering or alienating consumers—your marketing team must study, understand, and accommodate cultural trends. Begin that process with the following four steps. 1. Get to know your audience Knowing all you can know about your audience should always be a marketing priority. It’s the only way to precisely target the right consumers, perfect your brand’s message, motivate action, and keep your customers satisfied. Although reliable data should be the foundation of your marketing campaign, don’t rely just on numbers and figures. And move beyond demographics by also investigating the cultural trends that matter to your audience members: What are they interested in? What are they passionate about? How do they spend their time? What are their expectations for the companies they do business with and the products they use? Fleshing out your audience’s cultural attitudes allows you to be more strategic in marketing your brand. 2. Do your cultural research Explore the cultural trends influencing your audience and businesses now and for the foreseeable future. The Culture Vulture 2017 Trends Report is a great place to start. Notable examples include the prevalence of corporate icons and how startups are remaining competitive; the emergence of products, services, and events catered to Baby Boomers; and the way the mindfulness trend has inspired businesses to include offerings that promote serenity and balance. Also important is Millennials’ impact on society—from their redefinition of the American dream to their informal attitudes toward attire, traditions, gender norms, and more. Don’t forget to also look for niche hot topics that directly affect your consumers or brand. For example, if you market for a food or beverage product, understanding the nuances of the soda vs. bottled water battle (consumers seeking lower- or no-sugar options, cost, environmental impact of packaging, etc.) might come in handy. Research both large- and small-scale cultural trends when strategizing for your brand. 3. Craft a message that stands for something Once you know your audience members and the cultural trends influencing them, it’s time to develop a message that aligns with (or better yet, resolves) a larger cultural narrative. Choose words that pack a punch. Make your message simple yet powerful. And be sure your brand’s message is creative, clear, and consistent. For inspiration, you can look at brands that redefined gender-role norms with their own simple, powerful messages. Sport England’s This Girl Can campaign, Under Armour’s I Will What I Want campaign, and P&G’s #LikeAGirl campaign have all been praised for promoting female empowerment, diversity, and opportunity. 4. Strengthen your message with visuals In marketing messaging, visuals are often just as important to the campaign as the written or spoken word. From videos to photographs to well-placed labels, the right visuals can create an emotional connection with consumers, inspire them to take action, and convince them of your cultural relevancy. Thoroughly investigate the ways you could deliver visuals to your audience, paying special attention to newer, nontraditional avenues that currently boast some of the highest user engagement stats. Finally, explore making your visuals powerful enough to carry your message of cultural relevance on their own. Take CoverGirl, for instance. When the company hired its first male ambassador, it didn’t couple the announcement with an explanation of its motives. CoverGirl trusted the new ads properly conveyed its stance...

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7699Twitter Launches New ‘Threads’ Feature for Tweetstorms
December 14,2017ByDAVID VEGA

Twitter Launches New ‘Threads’ Feature for Tweetstorms

Twitter is announcing the launch of a new feature that will allow people to more easily post tweetstorms – that is, multiple numbered tweets on a topic or idea “tweetstorm.” Now With Threads, two or more tweets can be linked, simplifying and streamlining the tweetstorm concept.  The company confirmed last month it was testing the feature – which it’s now calling “threads” – across its iOS and Android apps. When you create a tweet on Twitter, you can use the “+” button to add more tweets to the original tweet in the compose window. All of your tweets can be drafted ahead of time and then sent out at once using the new “Tweet All” button. Tweets can also be added to a published thread using the “Add Another Tweet” button, and when browsing Twitter, there’s a new “Show this thread” label that makes it easier to find a series of linked tweets. Twitter says that the new Threads feature is designed for people who want to serialize a longer story or thought or provide ongoing commentary on a particular event or topic. Threads are the second major change that’s been made to Twitter in recent weeks, following a decision to increase the character limit from 140 to 280 characters to give Twitter users more room to express themselves. Twitter says the new Threads feature is rolling out to iOS, Android, and the web “in the coming weeks.”   Author: David Vega, Jacksonville  ...

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7698How to Use Instagram Live With Friends for Business
December 13,2017ByDAVID VEGA

How to Use Instagram Live With Friends for Business

Are you looking for a creative way to improve your Instagram stories? Wondering how to use Instagram Live with a guest? In this article, you’ll discover how to use Instagram Live With Friends. What Instagram Live With Friends Looks Like Not every business gets the chance to include interviews with mainstream actors and musicians as part of their content strategy, like Gucci. But if you could, it would start with a promotion of your live broadcast with a guest. Your followers are alerted to your live broadcast at the top of their Instagram news feed. When you use Instagram Live with a guest, your followers see two circles representing your Instagram account and your guest’s. Both your profile and your guest’s profile show two circles, as well as the Instagram Live indicator. Your broadcast will look like this. When viewers click the profile links at the top left, they get the option to view your profile or your guest’s profile. Depending on the popularity of your Instagram Live broadcast, it may show up in the top Instagram Live stories on the Search and Explore tab. Verified Instagram accounts and the Instagram Live broadcasts with the most viewers that best relate to your interests (based on Instagram usage habits) are listed first. The more live viewers you and your guest can attract, the higher you can move on the Top Live Instagram Stories screen and the more likely you are to attract new audiences on the Search and Explore tab. Now that you know what Instagram Live With Friends looks like to your followers and other Instagram users, let’s look at how to set up an Instagram Live With Friends broadcast for your business. #1: Plan and Promote Your Instagram Live in Advance To get the best visibility possible, plan and promote your Instagram Live With Friends broadcast. If you have an Instagram business account, you can use your Followers Insights to determine when your followers are online. Your guest can do the same if they also have a business account. Once you determine the best time to reach the majority of your followers and your guest’s, promote the live broadcast using a standard image or video post to your Instagram profile. Use this post to let your followers know when the live broadcast will happen, whom you intend to invite as your guest(s), and what viewers can expect. Add hashtags to the post to help it reach more people who may be interested in following your Instagram account and viewing your live broadcast. #2: Start Your Instagram Live Broadcast When you’re ready to start your Instagram Live broadcast, tap on the camera icon or profile photo in the Instagram Stories section at the top left of your Instagram news feed. At the bottom of the screen, move the slider to Live. Then tap on Start Live Video when you’re ready to go live. #3: Add a Guest to Your Instagram Live Once your guest begins viewing the broadcast, tap on the friends icon to the right of the comment box to add the guest to your live stream. Tap on the guest’s name in the Go Live With pop-up and tap Add to invite them to the broadcast. At the bottom of the screen, you’ll see a notification that the guest is waiting to accept your invitation to go live. #4: Remove a Guest and Add Another Guest After your guest joins the broadcast, you’ll see your live video and theirs. You’ll also see the option to end the broadcast at the top right of your live video. If you want to remove the guest from the broadcast, tap the X at the top right of your guest’s live video. Then confirm that you want to remove the guest from your live broadcast. Now you can add and broadcast live with another guest. When you tap End to end your live video, you have the option to share it in Instagram Stories for the next 24 hours. If you don’t want to share your video after the original broadcast has ended, tap the slider and confirm you want to discard the video. #5: Promote the Live Replay on Instagram Stories If you choose to save your video to your Instagram stories, you can archive your original promotion of the broadcast and post a new update to let followers know they can catch your live video for the next 24 hours. After the 24-hour period is up, you can archive that post if you want. #6: Review Your Instagram Stories Analytics If you share your Instagram Live broadcast to Instagram Stories, you can view Stories Insights in your Instagram business account analytics. If you don’t see your story preview, tap on the See Older link to find it. You’ll find the best analytics during the 24-hour period that the Instagram story is displayed. These insights show the people who are viewing your Instagram story (everyone), as well as the impressions, reach, and other engagement metrics (Instagram business account holders only). To access this data, tap on the number of viewers for your Instagram story during the 24 hours it’s available, shown at the bottom left of your story. Everyone will see the number of viewers and a list of those viewers. Business account users can tap the Insights tab to get impressions, viewers, replies, and swipe-aways, as applicable. Conclusion Instagram Live With Friends lets everyone broadcast live with guests. Businesses can use this feature to host live interviews, AMA sessions, product launches, service demos, and more.   Author: Kristi Hines...

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7696How to Bulk Invite your Facebook Friends to LIKE your Business Page.
December 7,2017ByDAVID VEGA

How to Bulk Invite your Facebook Friends to LIKE your Business Page.

Quick Tip:  The other day a Facebook friend posted, Anyone knows if there’s a way to invite a lot of my Facebook friends to like my new business page at once? Going one by one takes forever.” Then I started reading all the comments and I was thinking, “These people need help” LOL. So, I made this quick tutorial video about how to invite friends to like your page, in bulk. Enjoy. Like and Share. [facebook url=”https://www.facebook.com/tridence/videos/1457408637660891/” /]   Author: David Vega, Influencer and Social Media Guru Chicago, IL. & Jacksonville, FL....

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7694Snapchat Unveils Redesigned App Aimed at Separating Your Best Friends From Brand Content
November 29,2017ByDAVID VEGA

Snapchat Unveils Redesigned App Aimed at Separating Your Best Friends From Brand Content

Following an op-ed shared on Axios earlier this morning by CEO Evan Spiegel, Snapchat has now unveiled its radical redesign with the goal of creating a personalized user experience that’s easier to navigate, particularly for new users (via TechCrunch). The app’s update will start to roll out to iOS and Android users on Friday, and will be introduced to everyone “within a few weeks.” The update aggregates both Stories and direct messages into one place, to the left of the main camera section of the app, and an algorithm sorts and prioritizes this section by “who you talk to and view most.” This personalized content is now separate from premium publishers, celebrity Snapchatters, and aggregated Story events in “Discover” to the right of the camera, where Stories were located previously. Images via TechCrunch According to Spiegel, this is an attempt to “separate the social from the media” and ensure that it’s simpler to keep up with your real friends and not be inundated with things you might not care about created by brands and influencers. With the upcoming redesign of Snapchat, we are separating the social from the media, and taking an important step forward towards strengthening our relationships with our friends and our relationships with the media. This will provide a better way for publishers to distribute and monetize their Stories, and a more personal way for friends to communicate and find the content they want to watch. The Discover area is curated by Snapchat employees but is also affected by an algorithm that will sort content based on your past viewing behavior, which Spiegel stated is inspired by Netflix’s recommendation algorithms. Spiegel said that research has shown “your past behavior is a far better predictor of what you’re interested in than anything your friends are doing,” referencing rival companies like Facebook and Twitter. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nx1R-eHSkfM?rel=0] All of this borders the camera section of the app, which you’ll still see first when you open Snapchat. Navigation is made simpler thanks to icons that push you to specific sections of the app from this launch menu, including more obvious buttons for My Story, adding friends, Snap Map, and more. The biggest change comes on the Friends page and its combination of Stories and direct messages. When you come to this area of Snapchat, you’ll first see new Snaps and messages at the top, then Stories from close friends (who you watch and chat with the most), and then last will be other Stories from friends you don’t interact with as much. Auto-advancing is back but with a new quality of life fix that provides a brief title screen that pops up with the name of the next friend in the queue, which you can easily swipe to skip. Snapchat has been facing intense competition from Instagram and its own Stories feature, which it launched in August 2016. The Facebook-owned company’s version of Stories quickly caught on with users and eventually managed to capture more daily active users than Snapchat in less than a year.   Author: Mitchel Broussard...

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7692You can now request to join someone’s Instagram live stream
November 27,2017ByDAVID VEGA

You can now request to join someone’s Instagram live stream

Instagram just rolled out a neat feature for its live product. Users can now request to join a live stream that they’re watching and, if accepted, can start broadcasting live as the host’s guest. To request to join a live video a viewer can tap a request button in the comments section. Hosts see the request pop up in real time and can accept or deny, and also have access to a list of pending requests in case a bunch of different people are trying to join in. Instagram had already let anyone streaming live invite a friend to join them, but by adding a request feature the possibilities for collaboration are greatly expanded. Imagine a celebrity “taking calls” from fans. With the ability to see all pending requests, a host could pick a fan to join them live at random, or even selectively pick someone who just made an insightful comment in the chat. Of course, there’s the worry that someone says something inappropriate when they join, but that’s not necessarily any riskier than allowing random people to comment on your posts. In an ideal world, Instagram would build in a feature like a 2- or 3-second delay that would let the host boot the guest if they said anything inappropriate, but for now it seems like hosts will just have to selectively screen their guests. The feature also should be helpful among friends. It shifts the burden for collaboration from host to guest, meaning a lot more people should try to participate, which results in a happier host and better overall content.   Author:  Fitz Tepper...

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7691Instagram Stories adds no-frills photo-only posting from mobile web
November 17,2017ByDAVID VEGA

Instagram Stories adds no-frills photo-only posting from mobile web

Snap Chat Dead? Instagram Stories adds no-frills photo-only posting from the mobile web, as Instagram really wants the developing world to start using Storytelling with Brand Development. IG Users won’t be able to use Instagram’s augmented reality masks or share videos, but starting today (Nov. 16th, 2017) mobile web users can post to Instagram Stories. Previously, mobile web users could only view Stories, which have to be created in Instagram’s native apps. But now users can snap photos, overlay text captions, and share them with friends from mobile web, as well as Save posts they find in the feed and want to revisit later. Releasing soon in stages, everyone in the next few weeks will see a camera icon in the top left corner they can tap to shoot or upload a photo of their Story. Captions in different colors can then be laid on top. But videos and the rest of Instagram’s creative tools like doodling, stickers, location tags, polls, and more are still just in the native apps. Instagram says it plans to keep improving the creative tool offering on mobile web but it has nothing more to share right now. If Instagram can get its Stories institutionalized worldwide before Snapchat gets there, it could lock in a long-standing audience and be the end of the Ghost. Featured Image: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch...

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