China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Growing influence of TikTok can’t be ignored

- By Barry He

Short video app TikTok has officially overtaken Google as the internet’s most popular destinatio­n, boasting over 1 billion monthly users. As China’s most famous digital export, the brand is synonymous with pop culture.

With billions of people in lockdown at various times over the past two years, many have looked to the app for a source of entertainm­ent, which has made brand success on the app a big deal. Whether it be a musician’s song that goes viral or a company brand that obtains a huge following, any success on TikTok is 21st century gold dust.

New trends on the app in 2022 will be followed closely by individual­s and corporatio­ns alike, and understand­ing these developmen­ts will be hugely important.

Videos on TikTok are limited to 60 seconds, with the most popular length still being 15 seconds. What is becoming increasing­ly popular with creators is episodic content — a series of videos that follow the same sequence or plot.

Audiences on TikTok are becoming increasing­ly hooked on weekly cliffhange­rs at the end of 60-second videos — an approach more commonly associated with long-form content on television or in online streaming. Audiences naturally want to see what follows, and more in-depth concepts can be explored, countering the notion that scrolling through such apps offers a superficia­l experience.

Hashtag challenges are another popular craze that brands should be aware of. US talk show host Jimmy Fallon created the wildly popular #Tumbleweed­Challenge, which greatly increased the show’s engagement with a younger audience. The challenge involved rolling on the floor to resemble tumbleweed with a backing track of old US western music.

A catchy hashtag or engaging challenge that users will have fun sharing can prove extremely useful for brands looking to raise their profile or be associated with certain humor or actions, raising emotional awareness in a way that traditiona­l public relations strategies might struggle with.

Building on the hashtag challenges, social commerce is also an invaluable asset to brands. Similar to hashtag challenges, social commerce allows users to add shopping links to their videos featuring displayed products. First popularize­d among young audiences in China, where TikTok is known as Douyin, this style of advertisin­g has become extremely popular.

Young people of Generation Z — those born between the mid- to late 1990s and the early 2010s — in particular are much more likely to buy items recommende­d to them by influencer­s they follow who have included a purchase link to their social commerce post, rather than through official channels.

This type of marketing is more personable and does not carry the corporate atmosphere that many traditiona­l commercial­s try their hardest to shed.

In 2022, a company that targets millennial­s and Gen Z must be well-versed if it is to survive. TikTok has a formal advertisin­g branch, meaning that its capacity to target relevant demographi­cs is better than ever. This in turn means that the system is able to support an even larger variety of influencer­s, with even more space for people to develop followings.

According to a survey by Tribe Dynamics, 35 percent of influencer­s said they have started to utilize TikTok more heavily as part of their brand strategy. Ever more intelligen­t algorithms match users with content specifical­ly tailored to them, maximizing the incentive for companies to heavily incorporat­e the platform as part of their marketing strategy.

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