Platform hacking
‘Sign up with Twitter’ or ‘Sign up with Facebook’ is a given these days.
‘Platform hacking’, exploits the same philosophy to find a way to work with relevant platforms, businesses, products, or services.
One element that made Quora and Instagram spread like wildfire was their ‘push button’ integration with Facebook. Facebook was (and still is) at the top of the social media totem-poll and these guys capitalized on that.
Please don’t stalk me….
Instagram makes it easy for you to share photos on Facebook, and when a photo is posted, the little ‘via Instagram’ logo increases their brand awareness to a much wider audience.
The same idea with Quora. Users have the option to share questions on major social media platforms and they ensure that the audience is exposed to the Quora logo along the journey.
Good stuff Hillary – branching out your campaign to a social media community.
Quora go even further with the platform hacking. When you answer a question on Quora, the system asks you to add that response to your Facebook timeline. So, if you perform an action on Quora, your Facebook friends will see it (if you opt-in) as it features on your Facebook newsfeed.
Social media channels aren’t the only platforms that you can piggyback. Here are a few ways you might ‘platform hack’ in other ways:
- Run joint webinars with other complimentary businesses who share your audience
- Produce joint case studies or eBooks
- Get exposure on a partner’s website via a guest blog post or feature article