Source: iStock
The brains behind brands are getting more personal with their fans and customers on TikTok.
Founders and CEOs of brands have taken to posting “day in the life” videos, sharing first-person accounts of their personal histories and even responding directly to customers on the popular short-form video platform, according to an article on Inc. by Lauren Huttner. The article suggests that brand founders communicating with customers from personal accounts rather than brand-specific accounts is a more effective use of TikTok.
Jade Beguelin, founder of e-commerce skincare brand 4AM Skin, told Inc. that 88 percent of her purchasing customers discovered her through TikTok and speculated that most were followers of her personal account, not her business account. Ms. Beguelin’s personal account has more than 65,000 followers and 3.4 million likes, well outperforming the 13,500 and 428,000 likes of her business account. This gap between personal page reach and business page reach is a phenomenon often seen on the app.
Since social media went mainstream more than a decade ago, brands and retailers have been using popular social media platforms to message and interact directly with their customers. Having such a close relationship with the customer has sometimes proven beneficial and other times proven dangerous. The immediate nature of social platforms allows brands to make damaging public missteps and there is a danger that individuals managing accounts can get drawn into arguments in ways that can reflect poorly on the brand.
Social media-reliant brands can also suffer due to sudden, unexpected algorithm changes and platform revamps that negatively affect their marketing strategies.
For U.S. brands with a big TikTok presence, one concern may be the uncertain future of the app stateside even though it remains popular despite government concerns about privacy and state security, as CNBC recently reported.
The recent ban of the app on the state level in Montana has drawn criticism for potentially violating the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Others have pointed out that a nationwide ban on the app would reduce competition and yield market share to already powerful tech corporations like Meta and Twitter.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.