A couple of years back, I wrote a blog where I predicted a few things that will shape the future of marketing.
But by attempting to take a shot at the broader, longer-term forecastsâI missed the opportunity to talk about another futuristic marketing trend thatâs already drawing many peopleâs attention.
Iâm talking about the explosive growth of meme marketing in recent years.
Right now, memes are the hottest content currency online. Everything worth publishing on the Internet is worthy of turning into a meme.
Feeling down about your next virtual meeting? Channel your frustration through a meme.
Donât like Donald Trumpâs bluffs? Throw a meme @ him on Twitter.
Too eager to critique a movie but too lazy to write a review? Just meme it!Â
Today, memes travel faster than news or tweets. Memes are what you will see when you are casually surfing your social media feeds on Twitter, Facebook, or Reddit.
And memes are rising in popularity worldwide.
What is a meme, though?
You must have come across one of the many versions of the jealous girlfriend meme on your social media feedâlike this one:
A meme is visual content that communicates an issue alongside a humorous caption.
A meme is primarily an image-based off on some cultural reference. But other visual formats like GIFs and videos are also pretty popular in the world of meme-lords.
A meme has three major ingredients:
- Pop culture reference
- A humorous slant
- Relevancy
(More on the what and how of memes later.)
People relate to memes better than other forms of content because they are straightforward.
Most memes offer a fresh perspective on a given issue. They pattern-interrupt the beholderâs online attention.
Our brains are hardwired to process visual information 60,000 times faster than texts. And if the visual includes something that has a recall valueâlike a scene out of the movie The Matrixâwe process it even faster and relate to it better.
Many memes go beyond just humor. I see memes as tools that offer a reality check of our experiences in a satirical way.
As the saying goesâthereâs always a grain of truth in every joke. Some memes are straight-up reflections of our realities presented hilariously.
Meme culture has given birth to many social media trends and phrases like âNetflix and chillâ or âHey girlâ or that Doge meme phrase âmuch wow. so amaze.â
People, especially from the Gen Z cohort, love memes because they offer an entertaining analysis of everythingâfrom your childhood trauma to the latest current affairs around the globe.
And because pop culture is the cousin that marketing hangs out with, the former always influences the latter.
In the marketing world, brands are adopting the meme frenzy (often called meme marketing) because memes are fun, easy, and entertaining to create.
Forward-thinking brands know that meme is the language that todayâs customers speak and understand. And they are leveraging meme marketing to make their brands look cool, bold, or even goofy.
These days, customers are resistant to the bygone ways of advertising and marketing. They donât like being marketed toâit makes them feel manipulated and dumb.
Instead, customers these days expect brands to court them, make them laugh, or give them gifts. Todayâs customers flock to brands that are relatable, entertaining, and bold.
We trust and buy from brands that interact with them on a personal levelâas friends do. We want to have a little fun along the way in our social interactions with our favorite brands.
Thatâs why memes are so greatâthey make brands look cool and young. And we all want to hang out and party with the cool and young peeps.
Jimmy Johnâs is one of the brands that makes extensive use of memes across their social media handles.
Where does meme fit into your marketing funnel?
Memes are lighthearted jibes at things around you. Itâs primarily a top-of-mind marketing asset that helps you build trust and relationships with customers.
Therefore, memes only work for the top of the funnel marketing. There isnât much debate around it.
Anybody who says anything else doesnât get memes or is lying.
Meme marketing makes for good social media fodder because they are great at improving brand engagement. In that sense, memes are your social media managerâs best friends.
It helps them drive page engagement, build a community of fun-loving audiences, and improve branding.
You can also use memes as visual breaks in content marketing assets like blogs and videos.
Twitter and Facebook audiences love memesâbut thatâs a given.
I personally believe brands should make extensive use of memes to cut through the dry noise of boringâand sometimes tensedâsocial media platforms like LinkedIn.
A lot of LinkedIn purists say that sharing memes or GIFs takes away the essence of LinkedIn as a social media platform for business networking. I donât buy that charade because I think even the stuffiest business circles can use a dash of humor in their daily lives.
LinkedIn is turning into this conformist echo chamber where users showcase the polished side of their profession and exchange a deluge of motivation-porn.
While thereâs nothing wrong with that, thereâs definitely more room in LinkedIn for us to share other variety of content like memesâbecause nothing bursts an echo bubble like a candid meme.
Meme marketing works on LinkedIn because they are counterintuitiveânobody expects them.
What does it take to make memes?
Until a few months back, I used to think it takes a professional memer to make memes.
After all, creating a meme is like coming up with a jokeâwhich is not something everyone can do.
But I changed my mind last May when I and my co-host Yaag decided to create memes as part of our strategy to promote our The ABM Conversations Podcastâs page on LinkedIn.
Since then, I have realized that anyone with a sense of humor can be a memerâwhich includes most of us. Thatâs why the barrier to entry in the meme world is low.
We began the #ABMemes campaign in mid-May with the clear intention of breaking through the clutter of LinkedInâs fuzzy content stream.
An example of the memes we used to promote The ABM Conversations Podcast page on Linkedin.
As of this writing, we have posted about 20 memes as part of the campaign. Honestly, the campaign has seen its peaks and valleys.
Most of our memes have gotten an average of 500 impressions, while a couple of them have gotten over 36 likes and more than 3K impressions!
It might not sound like much, but itâs pretty good for a brand page that we started in May. FYIâitâs tough for a brand page to get good traction on its content compared to individual LinkedIn profiles.
The best thing about using memes in your marketing is that itâs absolutely free and fun to do. Making people laugh is perhaps one of the most difficult yet most rewarding experiences. So you will enjoy thinking and making memes as much as people would after seeing it.
Itâs a skill that, once acquired, never goes away. Once youâre a memer, you start looking at every visual content around you as a blank template for your next meme idea.
Your brain reprograms itself into a meme-generating machine. Itâs fun.
Here is what we have learned about memes based on that campaign exercise.
Like I mentioned earlier in the post, you need three ingredients to create a good meme:
- Pop culture reference
- A humorous slant
- Relevancy
Let me explain the process we took to create new memes by combining these three ingredients.
1. Use a pop culture reference
For people to like your meme, you have to make sure itâs relatable to the masses. Use references from popular culture that your audience will get right away.
These cultural artifacts can be from the movies, political photo-ops, viral video screenshots, vintage ads, and almost anything that has the potential to fit into multiple meme contexts.
The more popular your reference, the better people will relate to it.
Thankfully, the Internet is a very small place which helps you in this cause. Content usually becomes a pop culture symbol and earns a recall value when it passes across the various circles of the global village again and again.
This is also the reason why most memes recycle the same set of content templates. Memes are based on the same core premise applied to different contextsâlike a famous still from the Harry Potter movies or an amusing quote from a celebrity that made global headlines.
Hereâs an example. I havenât watched Pulp Fiction or The Lord of The Rings, but Iâve seen so many memes based on these movies that now, if I come across a meme based on them, I get the joke!
However, this also cuts memesâ lifespan short due to the law of diminishing returns. Just like how a joke doesnât hold the same value after you hear it once, memes have just one opportunity to make an impact on your audience.
Sometimes a meme becomes so viral it exhausts its shelf life sooner than the average memes. Hence, they end up becoming #dankmemesâoverused memes that circumnavigate the globe to the point of being stale.
My suggestion to you isâdonât repost the same meme multiple times to the same set of audience. It puts them off and makes your brandâs engagement style look lazy and unoriginal.
Donât be afraid to create your own meme templates from scratch. You donât have to go crazy with the graphics or the photo quality. If you have noticed, most memes have questionable taste in image quality and font styles.
Thatâs intentional. The more authentic the memeâs photo quality is, the better it is because it keeps the message raw.
2. Take a humorous slant
A meme without humor is like a joke that doesnât make anyone laugh (except the person saying it, perhaps).
You get an A for effort, but if your meme doesnât make people grin, scoff, or guffawâyou fail.
And this happens more often than you realize. Many brands assume that meme marketing is taking an empty meme template, slapping a quote or a phrase on it, and voilaâthey achieve comedy.
Thatâs not how you meme. A meme is not like creating an illustration for your blog. A joke, a good-humored satire, or a self-deprecating jab is at the heart of a good meme.
This means having an appetite to make jokes about your own brand, your fraternity, or something mainstream.
But hereâs the deal. Donât force a joke if it doesnât come naturally to you. Meme-making is an acquired tasteâit will come to you by practice.
A lot of memes out there are not ROFL-level, hilarious content anyway. They are simple jokes turned into visuals that make people chuckle, like, and share.
You donât have to be the biggest clown or hire a full-time person to create funny memes. If you donât have in-house talent for making memes, thatâs okay. Find memes that might not promote your brand directly but that resonate with your niche audience.
Memes donât have copyright restrictions. You can find plenty of ready memes or templates on websites such as Pixmeme, Imgflip, etc.
3. Keep it relevant
When you are a brand, everything you do as a company adds up to your marketing and promotion.
But the more relevant your engagement content is, the better your chances of improving your business.
So make memes that are relevant to your audience. If you post memes that are funny but not related to your niche, you might get the wrong kind of engagement.
Imagine the horror of unwittingly positioning your brand as a parody account on Twitter when your memes attract the wrong kind of audience to your page. This wonât bode well for your long-term marketing.
Hereâs another way to think about making your memes relevant to your audience. Nothing is better than you somehow weaving your brand in the memes.
Take a look at this meme from Chex Mex:
Check out the other funny brand memes that followed soon after Chex Mex published the above meme.
Hereâs another example from the Indian food delivery app Zomato:
When you create branded memes, just make sure you keep it funny without trying to overly promote your products to customers.
Brand promotion shouldnât take away the humor from a meme.
Your memes should make people stop scrolling their social media feed, make them type đđđđđ, or make them share it with the world.
Memes are not for everyone
A word of caution: memes can be divisive and offensive. If you are not sure about memes, test the waters gently with your audience.
If they like your memes, they will reflect in your engagement analytics. If they donât like them, they will most likely say so directly.
Another way to avoid making your memes offensive is to use websites like Know Your Meme to understand a memeâs original context before you publish a meme on your social media handle.
Some oldfags say that memes work best for B2C audiences and not so much for B2B customers. Again, I think itâs one of those pretentious pomps of the business world that likes to ramble on topics like productivity, ROI, and bottom lineâall the time!
Use memes to exchange good-humored interactions with your customers and delight them. Who knowsâyour meme might brighten someoneâs day!
Also published on https://www.yaagneshwaran.com/blog/meme-marketing/.