How Buffer Generated 2 Million+ Social Media Video Views in One Year

Brian G. Peters
10 min readAug 14, 2018

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Generating social media video views is hard.

Getting people to interact with and share your videos on social media is even harder.

Today brands and marketers are competing with the BuzzFeeds, Business Insiders, and Viral Threads of the world — all with big budgets, professional videographers, and talented editors.

But the effectiveness of social video is hard to ignore and the stats are mind-blowing (here are a few daily numbers):

  • People watch more than 100 million hours of video on Facebook
  • YouTube brings in nearly 5 billion video views
  • Time spent watching video on Instagram is up more than 80% year over year

As social media and digital marketing strategist at Buffer, I had the opportunity to help generate more than 2,000,000 video views on social media in one year. Here’s how we did it and everything I learned in the process.

Successful Social Media Video is Emotional

There’s a good (and scientific) reason that animal, DIY, fashion, beauty, news and political videos fill our social media feeds. They make us feel something, which in turn, compels us to share the content with our friends and family.

The best social media videos cut to our core emotions (happiness, sadness, fear)

In 2011, the New York Times published an intriguing article on the science behind why people share online. More than seven years later, the lessons learned in that research are still as relevant as ever.

They found that the top 5 reasons why people share online is to:

  1. Delight others with valuable & entertaining content
  2. Identify and present ourselves to others
  3. Foster relationships
  4. Self-fulfillment
  5. Spreading the word about issues, products, and brands

Perhaps the most important takeaway is that people share because they believe that the content reflects their identity (whether it’s true or not).

Keep emotions in mind as we explore the ever-changing world of video marketing below.

Why Create Social Media Video

There are almost too many stats to count when it comes to why you should be creating video for social media. Including the video stats above, here are a few more of my favorites:

Before we got serious about video marketing at Buffer, we would post videos to social media ad-hoc, with no real strategy or understanding of what works.

Once we began to put some thought and effort into studying the video landscape and creating quality videos, that’s when we began to see the powerful effect that they could have on our social media marketing:

Comparing Buffer Facebook Video Stats: 2016 v. 2017

Looking back, it’s interesting to see there was a visible turning point in our results:

Before February 2017 we had no social media video strategy

Our biggest takeaway since the change:

Video is one of the most compelling ways to reach your audience because video is the preferred way people consume information in 2018 and will be for the foreseeable future.

How We Created Successful Social Media Videos

Above all, we realized that in order to be successful with social media video, we had to experiment and iterate — a lot.

It’s nearly impossible to determine which topics and videos will perform better than others with 100% accuracy (even 50% accuracy). Many times, we thought the topics that would perform well, tanked, and the topics we thought would perform so-so, ended up being some of our best.

Since we couldn’t predict video success with 100% accuracy, we created a formula for producing quality videos, without overthinking it.

Here’s our formula.

1. Start With What Works

Remember, video is not a whole new type of marketing video is a way to amplify your existing marketing strategy.

In order to get a few quick wins, we turned to the content we knew was already performing well. For us at Buffer, that was our social media blog.

Start with what works

We started by sorting our most visited blog posts from the previous 90 days in Google Analytics. Then, we created an Excel spreadsheet to add our favorite topic ideas to the list based on our most popular posts.

From there, we dwindled down the list to topics that would “make sense” in video format and got to creating (more on our favorite tools later).

2. Consider Video Context

The wonderful thing about social media video is that if you do it right, the videos can produce results for your business long after they’ve been posted.

In looking at the many different paths we could take, we decided to focus on video topics that would (hopefully) be evergreen — as opposed to short-lived topics such as news.

Focus on perpetual and important video topics

Focusing on perpetual and important allowed us to embed these videos in our blog posts, send them in emails to customers, and even embed them on our website because we knew they wouldn’t “go out of style” anytime soon.

Plus, you can’t plan on a social media video going viral. It just happens.

But that doesn’t mean we didn’t try!

In addition to creating evergreen videos for our various digital assets, we did try to produce something we thought might go viral every once in a while.

Meaning our social media video strategy consisted of perpetual and important topics 80% of the time, and swing-for-the-fences type video topics 20% of the time.

Who knew that our audience loved kinetics so much!

Curated content is a great way to supplement your current video strategy

3. Choose Your Video Topics Wisely

As I alluded to earlier, social media is supposed to be social.

As much as much as we’d love for audiences to want to hear about our product or our latest free ebook or our sales pitch as businesses, the fact is they don’t.

There is, however, a way to capture your audience’s attention by educating and/or entertaining them and then moving them (gently) through the customer lifecycle.

In a recent presentation I did with Animoto President and Co-founder, Jason Hsiao, we talked about this idea of creating awareness vs. converting customers.

Customers aren’t always ready to buy.

A big mistake I see brands making on social media is skipping right to the convert stage without telling their brand story — i.e., the glue that makes people care. Typically (unless you have a product that is flying off the shelf) you can’t gloss over the interactions, tiny moments, and trust building in-between awareness and conversion.

If you’re looking to build trust, increase engagement, and generate views, here are the 4 social video topics we found work best:

1. Blog Posts

Start with what works (as we talked about before). Sort your most visited blog posts and/or website pages and create short video recaps that people can watch in 30 seconds — 2 minutes.

Free education is an incredible way to increase video views on social media.

2. Industry News

If you’re fresh our of ideas or don’t have a ton of current content to work with, creating videos around trending industry news topics will help to drive results on social media.

One of my favorite tools for finding the most popular topics right now is BuzzSumo. I simply enter the URL of my favorite industry-related websites and it shows me the most popular posts from the last 24 hours, week, month, and even year.

Note: It’s also how we generate episode ideas for the Buffer Podcast (now with more than 100 episodes and 1.1M downloads).

3. Inspiration

Remember when I mentioned that we do try to swing-for-the-fence once in a while with social media video?

Well, inspirational videos are the perfect way to, 1) blow your audience’s mind, and 2) experiment to see what type of content your audience might like.

These don’t have to be overly complicated or time-consuming either.

To find inspirational topics, all you have to do is look around you.

What’s trending on Twitter? What are the most successful videos on Facebook Pages to Watch? What keywords are people searching for on YouTube?

4. Hacks, Tips, & Tricks

My absolute favorite social media video topics (and the ones I enjoy watching myself) are in the hacks, tips, and tricks realm.

These types of videos allow you to both educate and entertain your audience at the same time, which is the perfect recipe for success.

For example, we were getting constant questions from our customers asking how we make customs GIFs for our website. Well, instead of writing the same answer 100 times or writing a blog post, we simply made a video.

What does your audience want to know? It’s up to you to teach them, otherwise someone else will.

Facebook recently released a really interesting guide on how to create videos for social media that generate views and drive sales. My biggest takeaway from the guide was this:

Which leads perfectly into best practices you can use to start creating video content that performs starting today.

Social Media Video Best Practices

Believe it or not, there are some scientific, data-backed ways to create better videos.

1. Create video for mobile consumption

Fun fact: More than 90% of Facebook and Instagram users access the social network from their mobile device, meaning that it’s time for us to start consider the implications of mobile and how we might evolve our social media video strategies moving forward.

Square and vertical video take up 78% more space in the News Feed

In a recent study we conducted with Animoto, one stat really stood out to us: Square video (1:1) takes up 78% more real estate in a person’s mobile newsfeed than does landscape video (16:9).

We we looked at performance of square video vs. landscape video we found that square dramatically outperformed the latter. Check out the stats from 10 tests, 60 variations, and more than $1,500 spent on advertising — square video garnered:

  • +70% engagement
  • 40% more views
  • 33% lower CPC
  • 41% higher CTR

A simple change such as video format can increase the performance of your videos in a big way.

2. Consider video length and captions

The other major factors to consider when optimizing your content for mobile are video length and caption length.

BuzzSumo found that the optimal video length on Facebook is anywhere between 30–120 seconds. In other words, your videos should be no longer than 2 minutes and should aim to capture the user’s attention within the first 1–3 seconds.

Why?

Think about your own social media habits. Are you taking your time and scrolling slowly through the feed, or are you quickly passing by each piece of content until you find something that catches your attention?

If you want to perform a fun experiment, go out in public and watch people use Facebook and Instagram on their phones… it’s, well, awesome.

The quicker you can get someone to click on or engage with your content on mobile, the better. That often means keeping your captions short and sweet as to not distract users from your ultimate goal.

3. Create videos around popular topics

This one may seem irrelevant for your business, but I promise you that you can find something from this best practice. Here are the most popular video topics on Facebook by category:

Buffer, as you may know, is a social media management platform in the SaaS space. At first glance, you may think we’d only post content around social media marketing.

That was true until we started to experiment with other topics and themes — a move that helped to skyrocket our social media video results.

By creating videos focused on things like tech, education, travel, and science, we were able to tap into the topics that people truly enjoy to interact with on social media.

Our biggest learnings from 2,000,000 video views

Before you go, I’d love to leave you with some final thoughts on creating great videos. Here they are completely unedited:

  • Tap into the wealth of Facebook data to understand your audience on a deep lever (Facebook Audience Insights and Pages to Watch are gold mines)
  • Don’t use the “Boost” button (target your content to customized audiences in Facebook Ads Manager —stick to general, broad targeting buckets as opposed to niche, granular interests)
  • Test a LOT. Iterate and improve constantly
  • Use concise messaging — assume the viewer is unaware of the video’s content (also assume they’re watching with the sound off)
  • Consumers have high expectations for right-here, right-now experiences on social media
  • Emotions are the most powerful video tool you have

Before you go…

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Brian G. Peters

Ecosystem Partnerships Lead at Shopify | Outdoorist | Husband to Superwoman | Dad to Dierks | briangreggpeters.com | https://twitter.com/brian_g_peters