Strategies, research, industry trends — your pulse on the marketplace
The   Bazaar   Voice
Strategies, research, industry trends — your pulse on the marketplace
 

How to incorporate visual UGC into your go-to-market strategy

go-to-market strategy

60% of marketers believe visual content is essential to their go-to-market strategy. However, only half of marketing departments allocate even 20% (or less) of their budget towards producing pictures and videos.

That isn’t surprising. It’s costly to create compelling visual content across your product catalog. But it doesn’t have to be! Today, social media platforms offer plenty of authentic product and brand focused social content created by your customers — aka visual user-generated content (UGC).

The average consumer devotes over two hours per day to social media. With over 250 billion photos on Facebook and 95 million new photos and videos posted on Instagram each day, user-generated visuals flood our digital devices. You and your marketing team should be taking advantage of this content and also populating your website, product pages, and own social channels with it. 

5 step go-to-market strategy

When you leverage this visual UGC that consumers are creating, you’ll be able to set the perfect foundation for a go-to-market strategy for any product you offer. 

“Customers will be your best advocates. If you want to launch with the maximum impact, it’s they, the people, who matter. Not your company. Let them do the talking,” Vishal Patel, Digital Interactions Specialist at Canon Europe.

1. Plan your go-to-market strategy early

This may sound like an obvious first step, but one reason brands often get their go-to-market strategy wrong is because they don’t leave enough time for planning.

You’ll need to make sure you leave enough time to collect visual UGC, tweak product messaging, and allow for the inevitable delays that crop up.

2. Create buzz on social media 

Social media helps consumers discover new products and brands. After seeing a product or service on Instagram, 92% of users said they have taken some kind of action, like buying the product online, visiting the brand’s website, or following the brand on social media, according to research commissioned by Facebook.   

Social media influencers can also help spread the word about new products to their followers. According to a Morning Consult report, influencers especially resonate with younger demographics. Over 50% of Gen Z and millennials say they trust influencers’ advice about brands and products.

To create buzz on social media with visual content, start with relevant influencers and your most loyal customers. Consider sending them samples of your new product and asking them to use a specific hashtag when posting about the product on their social channels.

This will build awareness about your product, make it more discoverable by new customers, and provide you with some good visual content from influencers and followers to use in the rest of your go-to-market strategy. 

You should also perform regular searches to find where else your customers are posting about you. Search your name on social platforms, find YouTube mentions, audit event photos, look at tagged locations for your physical stores, and use Google Analytics to see where on-site traffic is coming from.

3. Add customer photos to product pages

Once you start finding the visual content that customers are creating about your brand, you can use that content to enhance product pages on your website pre-launch. 

Shoppers are 6x more likely to buy make a purchase if the product page contains social content. User-generated photos are especially important for categories like apparel, food and beverage, home furnishings, health and beauty, and pets.

Use the visual content your customers post on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and TikTok to add photos and videos to your product pages. Visual content gives customers the information they need to make a confident purchase decision. We’ve seen conversion rates increase by up to 150% when visitors interact with images displayed with Bazaarvoice Galleries. And, Salesforce reports that visitors spend 90% more time on websites that include UGC galleries.

4. Learn customer use cases to influence your go-to-market strategy

Product descriptions can only say so much. But when paired with content that actually shows how the product can be used, they help customers make the most informed purchasing decisions. 

Find visual content from customers that displays how they’re using your products in their real lives. Plus, by incorporating common customer use cases and customer phrasing from social posts and reviews into your product pages, you’ll also improve search and marketing copy. 

When lifestyle brand Oliver Bonas started using UGC galleries to show how customers were actually styling jewelry, they saw a 188% conversion lift among those who engage with social and visual content.

5. Explain your products with how-to videos

With TikTok and Instagram Reels making videos as common as photo content, shoppers are taking notice. 

Bazaarvoice’s research on visual UGC found that 24% of consumers say videos may highlight something that wasn’t obvious just from the still images or product description, and 21% would like to see a product in action before they buy. 

Work with influencers to create short, engaging how-to videos that you can post on social media and product pages pre-launch. When customers immediately understand how to use your products, they’ll be more confident in making a purchase.

Get go-to-market right with a full UGC strategy

It’s time for brands and retailers to put visual UGC to work in their go-to-market strategy. Embracing this provides a tremendous opportunity to increase shoppers’ awareness of new products, inspire purchasing decisions, and build loyalty to your brand.

But a great go-to-market strategy encompasses more than just collecting visual UGC. You need to collect a wealth of different UGC and then make sure it reaches multiple digital and physical touchpoints across the customer journey. Learn more ways to successfully launch your product here.

Jacqui Simses

Jacqui Simses

Business Development Manager

Read more from Jacqui
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