3 Brands That Are Taking Twitter Marketing To An Entirely New Level To Reach Millennials
Amnesty International
Multiple studies have found that Millennials are much more likely to involve themselves in social causes and social protests. So it makes sense that Amnesty International would have this demographic in mind when crafting it campaign to fight homophobia throughout the world.
This campaign was built around the idea of a ‘gay’ turtle that looked different from other turtles, with the tag line of, ‘Love is love. Hate is a choice.’
What makes this effective at reaching Millennials is that the hashtag is instantly memorable, and the image on Twitter is easy to understand, and has an immediate impact.
Millennials are more likely to respond to hashtag campaigns that are clever and easy to remember, with an image that resonates.
L’Oréal Paris
This Twitter campaign by world-famous brand L’Oreal was launched under the hashtag of #WORTHSAYING. The vibe was all about supporting female empowerment, which is a big issue among Millennials, but L’Oreal knew that it couldn’t just trot out dry statistics about the state of women throughout the world.
Champions Against Bullying
An organization named Champions Against Bullying (CAB) wanted to get the word out about the prevalence of cyber bullying on Twitter. But how could it get through to Millennials who may be aware of the issue, but are inundated with so much raw data about it, that they just tune out? What CAB did is to create a Twitter campaign built around the hashtag, #TheNIceBot, which was a bot whose sole purpose was to tweet positive messages and comments. The company made a spambot that tweeted a positive message to every Twitter user throughout the world, which amounted to an estimated 300 million messages with one transmitted every 30 seconds.