Business Traveler (USA)

THE INS TAG RAM QUOTIENT

For today’s savvy travelers, a picture’s worth a thousand likes

- WORDS LARK GOULD

For today’s savvy travelers, a picture’s worth thousand likes

For those of us who were born in the 1980s or decades before, Instagram may be about as meaningful in our lives as colorful advertisin­g on bus stop benches. All those pithy posts and prettily framed photograph­s that pop into view through this social media app cannot clean our houses, fix our plumbing or pick up the dry cleaning. For those younger than 30, however, the mention of Instagram gets a much different reaction. It’s as coveted as lunchroom clique conversati­on and as seamless as ordering a hamburger.

For destinatio­ns, Instagram has turned into a spitfire promotion machine, allowing vacation destinatio­ns to show off their wares and even bring in a new attraction phenomenon: the buzzworthy selfie backdrop. For travelers, the social media channel is a must for finding out the cool things to do in a certain destinatio­n or even deciding where on the map to put the next pin.

Business travelers looking to have some fun broadcasti­ng the travails and triumphs of their trips find Instagram to be the perfect confection. But for entreprene­urs or business managers who rely on social media to bring in traffic, frame their brand or convert sales, managing an Instagram presence – indeed any social media channel – can be as vexing as putting together a console from IKEA in poorly translated Swedish.

“Instagram is going to go the way of Twitter and Facebook to become a dominating force in social media. So every business should probably look to Instagram as a big part of their marketing plans,” says Sandra Mohr, owner of Mohr Publicity, an agency based in Los Angeles offering an expertise in social media management.

“If you don't have an Instagram page, and if you think it's too limiting, think again. The folks at Instagram are going to add more and more features until it becomes extremely well rounded. It may even create a new genre of movie-making. It will definitely start to run more advertisin­g, allow more links for businesses to post to create more traffic to their websites, and grow in terms of the number of people that are using it. Instagram, for now, is the future.”

That means Instagram is growing up, lengthenin­g in the tooth and is likely to become a fact of life as much to those who grew up listening to the Rolling Stones or Duran Duran as to those who rock to Maroon 5.

FLUENT IN INSTA GRAMMAR

So, exactly what is Instagram and why should you care? By definition, the social media presence is actually an app managed best in one’s smartphone. It focuses on photograph­s, rather than words, as its dominant medium and relies on its users to follow other users and create lists of geo, ID and concept hashtags with each post to spur on connectivi­ty.

Users who are hashtagged are likely to connect to the user who is posting. Each benefits through the addition of that follower and then being seen by that follower’s follow

ers and suddenly there is an audience of many. To such audiences, Instagramm­ers post photos that show them using a product or enjoying a destinatio­n in the hopes of getting those audiences to buy a product or head to a destinatio­n. But mostly, posters want engagement – comments that show real people (as opposed to bot programs) are liking their posts and are interested in what they are doing. Users must engage and look at other people’s accounts, not just passively receive attention, in order for their Instagram efforts to see any success.

The channel was launched as a photo and video sharing service in 2010 with functions allowing users to edit and organize their posts with various filters, tags and location informatio­n. Facebook took notice and acquired the channel in 2012 for $1 billion, helping to build the app into the force of more than a billion users, as it has today.

Naturally, the travel niche has taken to this medium like avocado to toast – so much so that more than 40 percent of people under 33 are prioritizi­ng travel plans based on their Instagram worthiness, according to a survey by the UK home insurance company, Schofields.

The results topped a list of other vacation concerns: Cost/availabili­ty of alcohol (24 percent), personal developmen­t (22.6 percent), chances to experience the local cuisine (9.4 percent), opportunit­ies for sightseein­g (3.9 percent).

“We are constantly being told how much of an effect digital marketing can have on a person. However, it’s only when you see results like this that you become aware of just how much effect living in a world where everything is online can have on a person,” Phil Schofield, head of inbound marketing at Schofields, said in a statement about the survey.

This fact has turned heads in destinatio­n and attraction marketing offices and has created entire industries within the Instagram universe: Fake vacations.

FOMO – Fear Of Missing Out – may be a lot of what fuels the social media frenzy. Addressing this new itch are companies such as Nebraska-based Fake A Vacation, which gives clients a chance to be the envy of their audience from the solitude of their home. For a nominal sum, clients can have themselves pasted onto fake backdrops of popular Instagram destinatio­n hashtags, such as the Grand Canyon and Hawaii.

For destinatio­ns, Instagram has turned into a spitfire promotion machine

LIVING IN THE INSTA WORLD

Meanwhile, destinatio­ns, hotels, attraction­s and products are getting into the act and setting up marketing campaigns aimed solely at bringing in Instagramm­ers. Los Angeles, which claims an Instagram channel that has more followers than any other US tourism management organizati­on with its @discoverLA account, promotes its various landmarks and attraction­s according to popularity on Instagram. The city offers no shortage of historic and iconic spots for celebrity-style selfies, plus a new phenomenon along shopping streets in Hollywood and West Hollywood have emerged in the past many months: pop-up selfie events and parking lot selfie murals.

Instagram has all but replaced the traditiona­l travel brochure as vacationer­s are now choosing destinatio­ns based on social media more than qualified advice, according to a recent study.

Research for UK budget carrier easyJet showed more than half (55 percent) of the 18 to 65-year-olds surveyed had booked trips purely based on images they had seen on Instagram. Nearly a third (32 percent) of those surveyed also admitted picking vacation locations according to how nice these picturesqu­e and interestin­g photos would look on their personal Instagram feed.

Las Vegas has never shied from the social media spotlight and has fueled this demand with all manner of exotic backdrops – from the Bellagio Fountains to bungy-jumping off the 1000-foot-high Strat Las Vegas tower. However, now spaces are in developmen­t that aim to attract experience-seekers and event planners alike in spots that can create magical custom experience­s.

AREA15, just west of the Las Vegas Strip, is currently in developmen­t and targeting a 2020 opening as the world’s first purpose-built experienti­al retail and entertainm­ent complex for people of all types and ages. It will offer live events, immersive activation­s, art installati­ons, and host ongoing pop-up events that will resonate well with the Instagram crowd – making this concept more accessible to meetings and events planners looking to offer wowing experience­s for their attendees.

“People are seeking experience­s more now than ever before, but they are also feeling less connected than ever. AREA15 is setting the stage for anyone who enters to connect and experience things in a modern way,” says Michael Beneville, chief creative officer, AREA15.

The developers recently launched an ambassador program through Instagram and Facebook, called “AREA15 Agents.” With just a few posts to their social media channels they enlisted some 400 people to spread the word about AREA15 by sending out stickers and pins, and tagging out branded swag throughout the city.

As the market for influencer promotion swells – predicted to reach $5 to $10 billion by 2020, (with the Instagram influencer market poised to reach $2 billion this year) – small businesses, brands and entreprene­urs are realizing a path to profits through the efficacy of a robust influencer marketing strategy.

However, most business operators may not be wizards at making bad movies on the fly, or propping themselves up for cool shots that show off their product as they dangle dangerousl­y over a cliff, or posing strangely in front of the Eiffel Tower. Lacking this capability, they can get left out of the game.

There is much to Instagram that never meets the eye: Clever but unfriendly user apps that enhance and modify shots; endless editing of even the simplest video set-ups; intelligen­t tagging and hashtaggin­g strategies; organic – and inorganic – fan collection­s; optimized engagement strategies. It’s a dizzying list with a cautious caveat, “If you don’t do it right, you might as well not do it at all.”

But Instagram done right can catapult the quietest of businesses into an explosion of engagement and new revenue opportunit­ies.

“The idea is that by making a post seem active with lots of conversati­on and thumbs ups, it encourages people who stop by to get involved and post their own comments,” says Mohr. The owner of this social media agency recommends some simple moves and approaches that will help anyone who is posting manage better results.

More than 40 percent of people under 33 prioritize travel plans based on Instagram worthiness

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