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Industry Contributor 13 May 2020 - 2 min read

You don’t need 'low-fi' UGC to be authentic, just real stories with something to offer

By Lauren Quaintance, Head of Content - Storyation

How quickly things change. All of a sudden we’re all Zooming from our kitchens in our pyjamas while scanning the latest pandemic news on Facebook and that’s a new kind of normal.

Some commentators argue that means that brands need to drop the corporate façade, loosen their grip on perfection and embrace user-generated content like they never have before.

Key points:

  • Daily usage of Facebook is up 27%, YouTube is up 15% and TikTok is up 15% while eCommerce orders are up 108%.
  • The shift to online connection, boosting online engagement, and conversion, is now essential to business success.
  • User-generated content can be a sustainable, cost-effective and influential source of content that brands will need to help build trust, grow sales and deepen relationships with customers.
Authentic content helps to facilitate real, human connection, and dramatically increase performance on social channels.

It’s true that in just a few weeks the slick production values, made-up faces and staged sets of old seem jarring and we’ve come to expect a more stripped back, lo-fi approach. 

Just look at New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern recording a homespun video message about the country’s imminent lockdown from her couch wearing an almost threadbare sweatshirt after putting her toddler daughter to bed.

Closer to home Coles has embraced the lo-fi aesthetic in its What’s for Dinner segment during the 6pm news with chefs like Luke Mangan, Colin Fassnidge, Matt Stone and Kylie Millar sharing favourite recipes they have filmed themselves preparing in their own kitchens and backyards complete with messy fridge magnets, kids and pets.

Necessity is the mother of invention but arguably this is just accelerating a trend that was already underway. If Instagram was, initially at least, a place for more highly polished content, the newer social darling TikTok has always traded in more quirky, accessible lo-fi content. The platform’s biggest star, 15-year-old Charli D’Amelio, mostly does choreographed dances from her bedroom wearing sweatpants and drinking a mug of tea.

The question is will it last? I’ve got no doubt that there’s a shift that will resonate for months if not years to come. But I’m picking that the pendulum will shift back somewhat because there are limits to what audiences will put up with (think shaky cameras, poor sound) and even the most forward-thinking brands aren’t quite ready to hand everything over to average Aussies armed with an iPhone. And nor should they.

The good news is you don’t need UGC to be “authentic” and of the moment. You just need real people stories honestly told that offer something of value to your audience.

What do you think?

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