The riskiest marketing strategy these days is to play it safe. Safe is bland, safe blends in with everything else, and safe doesn’t stand out. Do something different to the rest of your industry, do something unexpected and do something first. Start planning your 2023 marketing strategy if you haven’t already, and get ahead of the curve by incorporating some of the latest marketing trends and tools.
You might not be ready for some or most of these, but it’s good to get a sense of the direction the business world is going and try to pick out one or two to focus on. Marketing trends continue to be influenced more by Gen Z than the millennials, but this doesn’t mean these won’t work if your target market isn’t Gen Z - whoever you want to reach these days, the priority should be to be social and be real.
1. TikTok
TikTok was the most downloaded app of 2022, with 70% of TikTokers saying they’ve discovered new products and brands on the platform. And it’s not just B2C brands that can do well there; B2B brands can take a leaf out of the book of companies like Adobe, Shopify and Grammarly and breathe new life into their social media strategy with light-hearted videos.
2. LinkedIn
Being ‘less mature’ than the likes of Facebook and Instagram, content on LinkedIn and TikTok currently tends to perform much better organically (without having to pay for views), so these platforms are where the opportunity lies in 2023. Choose who to connect with carefully and focus on building relationships with supportive commenting and DMs where appropriate. Don’t be too salesy; if you doubt what to post, always ask how you could be helpful. Carousels, images, and concise text-based posts work the best.
3. Email journeys
Email marketing continues to be one of the most impactful and cost-effective ways to reach your audience, but simply asking people to sign up and sending them emails willy-nilly is no good anymore. Create a free resource for your prospects to incentivise them to subscribe to your mailing list and then have a great welcome email. After this, take them on a journey to get to know you and how you can help them.
4. BeReal
Every day at a different time, everyone is notified simultaneously by the BeReal app to capture and share a photo in two minutes. The app wasn’t designed for brands, but Chipolte has already jumped on board to demonstrate the brand’s transparency, capture behind-the-scenes content, and share discount codes.
5. Twitch
Twitch is most famous as a gaming platform, but it’s a fantastic place to live stream content like masterclasses, launch parties, and unboxings to grow a really engaged community.
6. Discord
Community-led marketing will continue to grow in 2023 but growing a community shouldn’t be taken lightly. Remember that you having one-way communication with your audience is not a community, you having two-way communication with your audience is not a community - the power of community comes when you connect the people in it to each other, and you really understand what they want. If you really are committed to creating or growing a community and there is a business reason for you to do it too, then setting up a Discord channel could be a good option for your members to connect with each other via instant messaging, voice and video calls, and private chats.
7. Supernova
Supernova went live on the app store at the end of 2021 and bills itself as the social network for a positive world with 60% of its advertising revenue going to global charities and 24/7 human moderation for a kinder, more inclusive community. If the other social networks' values make you uncomfortable, maybe Supernova could be your social home.
8. Slack
Some companies are now using the Slack platform to completely replace email and encourage team collaboration. It’s another good platform for bringing communities together online with instant chat, specific topic channels, threads, private messaging, and file sharing.
9. Butter
Zoom is so Covid-19. Don’t assume that because tools are the best known, they will definitely have the best functionality for your purpose. If you’re running training or workshops, consider Butter - a great-looking platform for presentations and group sessions with a planner, recaps, flashcards, emojis, sound effects, gifs, breakout rooms, and polls.
10. Podcasting
Not so much a marketing trend but a fully-fledged It seems that everyone has a podcast these days, but for a good reason. 19% of UK adults listen every week for a total of 69m hours (RAJAR). Podcasts don’t have to book big guests; they can be long, short, or narrative style. Bear in mind your listeners are probably multi-tasking, so make them light and easy to digest.