TEMPO

Climbing On Board with Vine

Twitter recently acquired Vine, a new app which allows users to share looping video clips of up to six seconds. Because it uses stop-start recording, the app itself is easy to jump into:  lifting a finger from the screen stops recording, and you can pick up again wherever you would like, allowing for a stop motion effect. The six second limit on Vine is the equivalent of twitter’s 140 character maximum–keep it witty, keep it brief.

Almost immediately after twitter made the announcement, brands began adding Vine videos to their regular and promoted tweets. Rolling Stone, Lucky and People have shared entertainment news alongside videos from their offices, while Armani went behind-the-scenes at fashion week. Ritz, Red Vines, and Cadbury UK put out silly videos using their snacks, which were sometimes entertaining, sometimes redundant.

Should you jump on board too?  Here are some of the pros and cons:

Pros:

Cons:

Takeaways for Marketers

We love the range of new possibilities for engagement that Vine brings, and since it’s owned by Twitter, we’ll probably be seeing it for a while. Yet just because anyone with a smart phone can make a vine, it doesn’t mean that “anyone with a smartphone” can make one to represent your brand. If you want to maintain your image, engage your followers, and earn that retweet, you have to put in more effort.

And there’s the rub – the app is free, but the Vine is not. By the time someone (preferably in creative) has thought of a good concept, found the props, set the lighting, and reshot the Vine to perfection, it will have cost you time if not money. It is a frequent misconception that social media is low or no cost (for a great example of just how much goes into managing the workflow, check out Jeremiah Owyang’s post.) Once you’re finished, the video will work its way through the feed quickly, so you’ll have to create more if you want to keep the momentum going.

If you have a large marketing budget and a strong presence on Twitter, then take the first mover advantage and try Vine to jazz up your social media and create buzz. But if your budget is smaller, Vine is not yet important enough to demand a chunk of your digital attention. Wait for it to creep up the social media ladder before you take the plunge.