
Heritage Month is just a flash in the pan if brands are to win with the youth
HDI Youth Consultancy 2 Oct 2018
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Tastefully celebrating holidays and events: how brands can get it rightWith Heritage Day on the horizon, consumers can expect to see two things in brands' social media and content around 24 September. The first is a back-patting post on company diversity. The other is a fluffy "Happy Braai Day" message. ![]() Image credit: Mpumelelo Macu on Unsplash. There is nothing fundamentally wrong with posting a picture of your staff enjoying a freshly braaied boerewors roll, especially on a more light-hearted platform like Instagram. This is particularly true if you’re using social content to entice prospective employees by highlighting your company culture. However, if you’re trying to incite discussion or engagement, this is the wrong way to go about it. Too often, these posts feel insincere or artificial and can do more bad to brand reputation than good. Don’t post for the sake of postingThe problem is that too often, regardless of relevance, brands try to force an association with a topical holiday or calendar event just to have something to talk about on social media. Instead, companies and their agencies should be asking themselves three questions:
With its focus on cultural diversity and pride, Heritage Day is a particularly sensitive occasion, and social posts risk provoking prickly keyboard warriors on Twitter and Facebook. Alternatively, pair your post with information pertinent to your customers. For example, your Happy Holidays message at the end of the year can be more than well-wishing attached to a festive stock image. Include notification of changed office hours for the period. Walk the talk; prove that you’re a conscious companyWhere posting on notable days works is when a company’s real-world actions align with the occasion and do so consistently throughout the year. For example, Exxaro Resources’ Women in Mining initiative is an “always-on” project, uplifting women in a traditionally male-dominated industry. Efforts are communicated year-round across social and media channels, creating consistency on a conversation that makes messaging on Women’s Day a natural fit for the brand.
It can’t be stressed enough: authenticity is key. People will look into what you say you do. A company can’t hop on a holiday bandwagon, talk about a topic for only one day and expect to be taken seriously. Ultimately, brands shouldn’t feel compelled to tap into every single notable occasion. Such communications typically blend into the noise of the day, with everyone doing the same thing. Simply focus on what aligns with your company. And make sure what you have to say feels genuine as opposed to forced. About Marc de la QuerraMarc de la Querra is a multi-award winning Creative and Business Unit Director at communications agency Clockwork in Johannesburg South Africa.
He has lead various teams to create outstanding content for Netflix, Microsoft, E! Entertainment, LG, Microsoft, Comedy Central, Standard Bank and Jagermeister among others. View my profile and articles... |