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The Sprout Social Index, Edition XIII: Moments & Milestones

Slide 1 of 2
79%
of consumers have shared a life milestone on social
48%
of consumers have made a purchase for a milestone after seeing it on social
1 in 3
consumers would mention a brand when sharing a personal accomplishment on social

Introduction

Birth announcements, vacation photo albums, engagement parties: Humans are wired to want to share their most significant life events with those closest to them. So it’s no surprise that so much of what consumers post about on social involves the full lifecycle of planning, celebrating and sharing our major milestones and most meaningful moments.

And while milestone marketing is a long-standing business strategy, social presents a unique opportunity for brands to become part of these moments in an authentic, consumer-driven way. Because in addition to sharing and celebrating these significant events, many people are also using these posts to acknowledge the people, products and services that helped them along the way, assuming the role of brand ambassador in their recognition and recommendations. It’s why someone might include their Nike shoes when posting about running their first marathon, or tag Le Creuset when posting photos of their first Thanksgiving as host.

Brands long ago started weaving this user-generated content (UGC) into their social strategies, but there’s much to be learned about what drives people to share personal milestones, what inspires someone to name a brand in those posts and how brands can play a role in helping consumers memorialize, celebrate and share more of these major moments. Sprout Social surveyed more than 1,200 consumers to find out.

The Reco Revolution: Using Social to Plan for Major Life Milestones

The Nielsen Global Trust in Advertising report recently found that recommendations from friends and family remain the most credible form of advertising for 83% of today’s consumers. Because milestones are of substantial significance, people want product and service suggestions they can trust. So where do they turn to find out which wedding photographers and baby diaper brands their peers are championing?

More than half of consumers (51%) turn to Facebook, ranking it above any other source, 42% use Pinterest and 34% use YouTube. And while 1 in 4 consumers turn to Instagram, the number increases for Millennials, with 35% of this generation using the visual-focused app to find recommendations and research.

And people aren’t just using social to get the lay of the land—it’s also directly informing their purchasing decisions while planning for a major life event. Nearly half (48%) of consumers have made a purchase for a milestone after seeing that product, service or brand on social. Broken out by generations, that comprises 58% of Millennials, 45% of Gen Xers and 24% of Baby Boomers.

Sprout Stance:

Knowing that life milestones often encourage and even require people to make significant purchases—and that they’re looking to their peers for suggestions—brands need to ensure that their products or services are easy to both discover and recommend on social. The Langham is one of Chicago’s newest Forbes Five-Star Hotels and has become a coveted wedding venue for brides and grooms looking to marry love with luxury. To feature their incredible event space on Instagram, The Langham curates photos being shared by their recent brides, grooms, vendors and guests to their own feeds using the hashtag #LanghamLoveStories.

By incorporating heavily searched hashtags like #WeddingWednesdays, #WeddingInspo and #ChicagoWeddings, they ensure their content reaches new audiences using the platform to plan, gather inspiration and celebrate. They also tap into the brand equity of popular wedding planning publications like The Knot by tagging them in their posts, knowing that The Knot’s community is another source of trusted peer recommendations and inspiration in their industry. To top it all off, they make sure to give credit where credit’s due by tagging featured photographers and designers whenever applicable, knowing those businesses have an interest in building their own reputation and amplifying examples of their work.

Think about your own customer’s journey from start to finish, including the people and networks that have the greatest influence in their decision-making process. Are there relevant conversations or communities you need to be a part of? When people are recommending your brand to others, are you recognizing and rewarding them in any way? Furthermore, how are you amplifying those recommendations? Capitalizing on these opportunities to create connections and inspire advocacy from your satisfied customers will help keep your brand front and center, all while building trust that your products and services can play a role in one of life’s major moments.

With This Brand, I Thee Wed: Acknowledging the Role Our Favorite Products Play in Life Events

So we know that consumers are turning to their social networks for recommendations, especially in preparation for major life events where stakes are high. Trust is a must. But once the milestone or moment finally takes place, are they returning to social to share their experience? According to our data, 79% of consumers say they’ve used social to share a life milestone with their network, compared to 75% who have shared in person, 72% who have texted and 71% who picked up the phone.

Of course “social” means different platforms to different people, so where specifically are people most likely to share? Of people who had previously shared a life milestone on social, 94% said Facebook was their platform of choice, followed by Instagram (39%) and Snapchat (27%). One reason you see more posts about these big life events on Facebook is because Facebook wants you to—the platform’s News Feed Algorithm includes the boosting of posts where the word “congratulations” appears in the comments. The move was part of an ongoing effort to provide users with the most relevant, engaging feed.

When breaking out sharing by generations, it appears that Millennials are slightly less likely than Baby Boomers and Gen Xers to share on Facebook (92% vs. 97%). Instagram and Snapchat make significant gains among Millennials, with 53% of this generation saying they would use Instagram to share a milestone compared to 25% of other generations, and 42% saying they would use Snapchat compared to just 12% of other generations.

So what type of milestones are most prevalently shared on social? While people may assume that most social announcements are celebrations or #humblebrags, people aren’t only sharing the Pinterest-perfect or “Insta-worthy” moments in their lives. The joyful moments are important and topped the list with 66% of people saying they’d post about holiday celebrations, followed by travel or vacation milestones (60%), family milestones (59%) and relationship milestones (58%). But nearly half—47% of people—said they’ve shared a difficult milestone—the death of a loved one—on social. While 55% of Baby Boomers and 47% of Gen Xers would share this milestone on social, only 43% of Millennials said they would. In fact, Millennials were more likely to post about almost every milestone than their Baby Boomer and Gen X counterparts—except this one.

When we examine which life milestones people are most likely to mention a brand while sharing, celebratory milestones come out on top: 47% say they’d include a brand in posts about holiday celebrations, 43% in a travel/vacation milestone and 35% when sharing a personal accomplishment. However, nearly 1 in 3 (29%) people say they’d incorporate a brand in even more intimate moments like engagements or weddings, family milestones like having a baby (30%) and posts about buying a home or relocating (30%).

Millennials were more likely than older generations to recognize brands across the board. In particular, they were 48% more likely than older generations to include a brand in a post about a personal accomplishment.

Sprout Stance:

These special moments all share one important thing in common: they’re all highly emotional. While some brands may not feel their product or service naturally lends itself to this narrative, understanding those emotions, their role and the impact they have on the full lifecycle of significant life events gives brands the necessary insight they need to find—and even create—a relevant space for themselves in that conversation. It’s the sentiment around these life events that becomes the opportunity. One of the best ways to understand consumers’ natural behaviors and how they’re already talking about your brand is through social listening. The insights derived from the world’s largest, most open and accessible focus group—social media—can inform brand content that has a much greater potential to resonate with your audience by leveraging the ways they’re already acting and engaging on social.

Mint, the personal budgeting software, used the inherent emotion in making your dreams come true for its recent Instagram contest, #MyMintMoment. Mint asked users to share photos of the milestones they were finally able to achieve (like buying a car, a new home, or getting married) as a result of good financial planning using the hashtag #MyMintMoment for a chance to win $1,000. By looking to the big picture results of day-to-day product use, Mint connected a somewhat dispassionate product with a deeply emotional touchpoint. This contest tapped an existing consumer behavior—celebrating major milestones on social—to authentically demonstrate what Mint’s product could enable consumers to achieve, without the brand doing any of the talking.

For the People, By the People: How UGC Transforms Consumers into Creators

The lifecycle of consumer to creator begins with asking for recommendations and ends with making them. Those same people who once tapped their peers for product and service suggestions will eventually develop their own brand affinity. And when that affinity deepens to loyalty, that’s when we see the milestone sharing and brand recommendations—even in the absence of a specific request.

After digging a bit deeper into the overall motivations behind sharing a life milestone on social, we found that more than half (54%) of consumers want their network to celebrate with them, while 43% post purely to inform and 42% want to share because they want to provide helpful information to others.

But as might be expected, Millennials demonstrate a few key differences in what fuels their desire to share. Millennials were much more likely to want to tell their story and be acknowledged (41%) than members of older generations (27%). Additionally, Millennials wanted a specific social response from their network: recognition and congratulations (likes, comments) than older generations (36% vs. 23%).

Seeing as though most of the milestones people share on social are highly personal, what would motivate them to include a brand in their posts? Half of consumers (50%) do so to recommend that brand to others. One in three (34%) want to thank or recognize that brand for being part of their life event—and for Millennials, the desire to share that gratitude increases to 41%.

And while some of the motivation might stem from incentives—34% of consumers said that a discount, free product or contest entry would motivate them to include a brand—some want to show brand affinity for other reasons. These include wanting friends and family to see them using a specific brand (30%) and because the brand’s values match their personal beliefs (29%). This shows an opportunity for brands to take a more public stance on their values and issues to encourage this deeper level of social engagement.

When consumers mention brands in their social posts about life milestones, 45% want the brand to engage in return by liking or commenting on that content—and yes, 45% are hoping for a discount or deal. But one statistic that jumped out was the 30% of all consumers who want the brand to share their post from the brand’s profile.

This desire to have their content shared by brands is highest among Millennials: 41% would want the brand to share their post from its profile, compared to only 23% of Baby Boomers and Gen Xers who’d want the same. Consumers know that brands often encourage and share content from their fans, and it appears that having your post chosen is an exciting motivation to mention or tag a brand when experiencing a significant event.

Sprout Stance:

With everything we’ve learned about purchase and recommendation behaviors on social, it’s not a question of whether UGC is right for your brand, it’s how to do it right. UGC fails when it feels forced, and it’s not as simple as just asking your fans to share photos with a branded hashtag. Brands must take great care in ensuring that their UGC campaigns are customer-centric—celebrating people and their content, not just products. Ask consumers for behaviors or actions your audience is already committing on social, and make sure the product or service tie-in so tight it doesn’t need an explanation.

When Walgreens was looking for a way to connect with consumers during graduation season, they created a campaign that checked off virtually every one of the aforementioned boxes. The company asked consumers to share Throwback Thursday (#TBT) photos, an already well-established behavior, of their favorite grad with the hashtag #tbtWalgreens for a chance to win a $100 Walgreens Photo gift card. The call to action was not unreasonable as consumers were already regularly sharing their “tbt” photos—or even just baby photos in general—and tied perfectly into the sentimental reflections associated with a loved one’s transition into the next stage of their life. The contest prize was also a subtle, natural product tie-in for Walgreens’ photo services. Walgreens didn’t ask anything more of their consumers than what they’d already been doing, and made sure that their brand took a backseat to the content—which took the form of nostalgic photos, family storytelling and sharing poignant memories from their audience.

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