![]() Then going absolutely apeshit viral, but Instagram updated to scorn the watermarks, which honestly makes a lot of sense. It was insane in the early days, as people were LITERALLY just reposting their tiktoks, with the watermark and all. With a bit of a boost to SEO as well, and so I think it is a viable place to grow. There is already an audience there more than likely who will see your reels, and the hashtag system is more refined. There are a plethora of things you can create for the platform, and I didn't even mention stories or carousels. ![]() I for one am loving the multi-content type approach that Instagram is going for, from short to long form videos, square to vertical pictures, and even reels and guides. That is just saying something in of itself. The organic reach is immense, and the algorithm I'd argue is 2-3 times as strong as YouTube's. I watched KallmeKris from pre-10K days, and now she has upwards of TWENTY-FIVE MILLION!!! However considering that is more followers than all of my other platforms COMBINED, that is still amazing. ![]() Now I sit over 3000, and I'm bit salty that it is that low. Even surpassing it's predecessor Vine before it.ĭuring one of my experiments in the early years I made a series of 12 posts interrelated, and went from 200 followers to 900 in a week. It is the oldest platform in this regard, yes I know YouTube and Instagram are archaic at this point, but Tiktok has dominated this content medium. Although I truly think if you share the same video, without any watermarks of course, to all three then you are primed for success. Meaning some platforms may have some creators, and not vice versa. Depending on the creators, and how open minded they are There are a lot of experiments going on. They all have different approaches in a slight way, but for the most part are exactly the same content. Reels failed to work for me at first, at all, and now it is just fine. I honestly thought it was great, and was super excited to get my hands on those features. Just like with Stories before, the feature of these short form video in vertical format, got copied by the major platforms. Medium became kind of detrimental to search engine optimization however, but I don't think that same outcome applies to these social video platforms. While I didn't agree with it at the time, for example people cross posted their blog posts to medium back in the day. Now let me be clear I think you should do this, AS OF RIGHT NOW, but over time things WILL diverge. Why you should be sharing across all THREE They usually do what I mention in this post too, and that is syndicate across the platforms. On shorts it is mainly channels that are specifically making/experimenting with shorter versions of their long form works. Most of the Reels I see are simply ones that were on Tiktok three months prior, OR perhaps the artistic photographers/videographers. While the feature set is similar, the usage I would argue is different. Meanwhile YouTube and Instagram copied the platform in their own ways with Shorts and Reels respectively. Tiktok is on it's probably fourth or fifth wave at this point, and while it is certainly not too late It is still getting to be more difficult to grow organically compared to before (mind you, you can still go viral). I watch the people grow, and how they do it. I see the trends of what creators are doing in the sense of how many times they post or what kind of experiments they do. Not in the sense of these are what are popular, as that is more common. ![]() I was on Vine, Snapchat, Tinder, Facebook, Instagram, and even Musically/Tiktok super early on.īeing on these platforms has taught me a lot, and I notice the trends happening. In 2016, his LifeOfTom YouTube channel, with everyday vlog adventures, passed the 2M subscriber mark, and he voiced “Loki” for the mobile app game Marvel Avengers Academy.I've been on all of the social media platforms for a very long time, and I've joined most of them within the first couple years of their launch. Popularized by his gameplays of CoD: MW2 and Black Ops zombies and Minecraft, with subsequent series “Nuking The Fridge” and “Minecraft Project,” Tom also collaborates with fellow gamers like YouTube’s GamerShore and on the “Mianite" live streamed Twitch series. Expanding to YouTube in 2014, Tom’s TheSyndicateProject channel is one of YouTube’s top 100, nearing 10M subscribers. The first streamer to hit the 1M follower mark on Twitch, Tom Cassell’s Syndicate is currently the most followed Twitch channel with 2.4M+ people tuning in. ![]()
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