This week, #ContentChat was joined by Mandy Edwards to talk about the importance of creating compelling visual content and how non-designers can create their own images.
During the chat, participants shared a number of helpful tools for creating visual content. I’ve collected links to the recommended visual content creation tools here, so you can check them out:
- Adobe Express (formerly known as Adobe Spark)
- Aviary
- Boomerang
- Canva and its premium product Canva for Work
- Easelly
- Flickr
- InDesign
- LiveLuvCreate
- Mixoo
- Paint.net
- PicMonkey
- PicPlayPost
- Piktochart
- Pixlr
- Placeit
- Relay
- Shakr
- Snappa
- Snapseed
- Venngage
- VSCO
Q1: What type of visual content do you regularly create?
A1: I create blog images and Instagram posts. I need to work on creating templates for social posts. I also take photos. #ContentChat
— Berrak Sarikaya (@BerrakBiz) July 31, 2017
a1) internally: lots of boring decks! as a company: info’s, some videos, & images supporting proprietary concepts/methodologies #contentchat
— Pawan Deshpande (@TweetsFromPawan) July 31, 2017
I upgraded Canva precisely to be able to save color palettes and create templates. Love it. #ContentChat
— Erika Heald (@SFerika) July 31, 2017
A1: I create lots of graphics for myself and clients with @canva #ContentChat
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
My content creation is mostly words, slideshare, graphics with @canva #contentchat
— Brandie McCallum (@lttlewys) July 31, 2017
A1: I’m actually working on my first @slideshare this week. #ContentChat
— Jeremy Jones 🌤️ (@jerejone) July 31, 2017
Webinar slides, branded photos, social video, infographics #ContentChat https://t.co/CfjlpuwTlL
— LaDonna LaGuerre (@ladonnajonze) July 31, 2017
a1) Examples: #contentchat pic.twitter.com/ITvjbLKnay
— Pawan Deshpande (@TweetsFromPawan) July 31, 2017
A1: Been using @canva a lot this year to create infographics. #contentchat
— Javier Sanabria (@SanabriaJav) July 31, 2017
A1: I create #infographics almost daily. Good times. Presentations is another. Don’t sleep on @Canva. #ContentChat pic.twitter.com/MVdrYTET0p
— Shawn Paul Wood (@ShawnPaulWood) July 31, 2017
A1) I work with small businesses so i tend to be a Do-It-All person. Mostly I take photos or create stylized images. #ContentChat
— Megan McCarthy (@ImMeganMcCarthy) July 31, 2017
A1: We have a designer on our team create all of our blog post graphics. And I create our Twitter chat graphics in Canva. #ContentChat
— Express Writers (@ExpWriters) July 31, 2017
A1 I make a LOT of shareables for social media and blogs! @canva is my favorite tool too! Poor man’s InDesign #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A1: Right now, I am relying on images that tell my brand’s story. I would like to create more #infographics. #contentchat https://t.co/LBE5DZaDJ6
— Heather E. Siefert (@HESiefert) July 31, 2017
A1 I create SlideShares, social media and blog images. About to start creating video content… #ContentChat https://t.co/cjSYxyjUtl
— Erika Heald (@SFerika) July 31, 2017
A1) Using the free Canva I create presentations, infographics, business cards, visuals for my blogs, etc. Thank you @Canva! #contentchat pic.twitter.com/6eAgKTveXt
— Wayne Hendry (@ideakid88) July 31, 2017
Q2: Why is it important to include visual content in your content marketing strategy?
A2: Visual content is more than 40X more likely to get shared on social media than other types of content. ~ @buffer #contentchat
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
A2. Some concepts and data sets can be communicated much quicker through visuals. Plus, some people are visual learners! #contentchat https://t.co/dpwOyPO3GH
— Amanda Milligan (@millanda) July 31, 2017
A2: Visual content is easily consumed and more likely to be shared. Some people are also visual learners! #ContentChat
— Berrak Sarikaya (@BerrakBiz) July 31, 2017
A2: Use visuals in your content marketing to prevent the dreaded WallOfText. #ContentChat
— Jeremy Jones 🌤️ (@jerejone) July 31, 2017
A2: Visuals get more response & engagement! So why not? #ContentChat
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
A2: We see thousands of messages trying to grab our attention each day. A compelling image breaks through the noise. #ContentChat https://t.co/RFRGvrMoyD
— Erika Heald (@SFerika) July 31, 2017
A2: We are a visual culture. Pictures, videos grab attention. You just can’t slap any old pic, it needs to tell the story #contentchat pic.twitter.com/v9oBSAHsVq
— Brandie McCallum (@lttlewys) July 31, 2017
a2) for content, visuals are critical for supporting topics that are complicated. for promotion, they help engage and catch the audience 👀
— Pawan Deshpande (@TweetsFromPawan) July 31, 2017
A2 In the “make them stop scrolling” saga, visuals, strong visuals, are essential to your success! #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A2: Studies show visual content generates more engagement & is processed faster. #contentchat
— Javier Sanabria (@SanabriaJav) July 31, 2017
A2: Audiences have outgrown just #text. Visual content helps an idea lift off the page or screen. It makes feel #alive. #contentchat pic.twitter.com/kNnJNYmNSu
— Heather E. Siefert (@HESiefert) July 31, 2017
A2.
– Attention grabber
– It is definitely more engaging to the reader – delivers a kind of interaction that pure text doesn’t.#ContentChat— Natasha G. (@nplusg) July 31, 2017
A2: Stats prove it: At least 700% more visibility on any channel or platform; 300% more chance at conversion. #GetVisual #ContentChat pic.twitter.com/RSqwvFPaZP
— Shawn Paul Wood (@ShawnPaulWood) July 31, 2017
A2 visual content is much more effective with users. It’s easier, quicker and simpler to consume. Plus it’s kinda universal #ContentChat https://t.co/2qaVjvyiBM
— Simone Gobbo (@sim_gobb) July 31, 2017
A2: Visual content improves recall. Add a picture to a piece of info, & people will remember 65% of it 3 days later (vs. 10%). #contentchat
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
At a minimum, helps guide the reader to/through the written content, i.e., I struggled to find this question w/o a graphic #ContentChat https://t.co/LPNy3joJ21
— LaDonna LaGuerre (@ladonnajonze) July 31, 2017
Easy recall value…also with mobile replacing desktops/laptops as the most widely used device it becomes much more easy to consume
— Sachin Kolte (@sachin_kolte) July 31, 2017
A2: Stats show visual content is effective, but don’t just slap up a image or animated gif – make sure your visual makes sense. #contentchat
— Derek Pillie (@dpillie) July 31, 2017
Can I add uniquely compelling? There’s a lot of the same “Instagram aesthetic” and color palettes out there #ContentChat https://t.co/SHJYEchnAf
— LaDonna LaGuerre (@ladonnajonze) July 31, 2017
A2: Visuals improve people’s ability to follow directions. They do 323% better with illustrations. @neomammalian #contentchat
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
A2: We’re skimmers when it comes right down to it, if the content doesn’t ‘pop’ – we’ll scroll right passed it in the newsfeed! #ContentChat
— 🎙JMatt (@JMattMke) July 31, 2017
Yep. All our children’s books are image-oriented for a reason. We forget that when we get older, for some reason. #ContentChat
— Jeremy Jones 🌤️ (@jerejone) July 31, 2017
Demand is key…visuals are not novelty or there to “pretty something up” #ContentChat https://t.co/TW9Tq4iLeL
— LaDonna LaGuerre (@ladonnajonze) July 31, 2017
A2) People are visual, Millennials even more so:. It’s as simple as that: https://t.co/Y9nvd3UWC7 #contentchat
— Wayne Hendry (@ideakid88) July 31, 2017
A2.b also, good imagery can increase trust in a brand. Especially with my generation and younger (millennial) #contentchat
— Megan McCarthy (@ImMeganMcCarthy) July 31, 2017
Sure. @chrisbrogan mentioned it on my podcast & he’s written about it –https://t.co/NG5nuAjlEp #ContentChat
— Scott Murray (@MrScottMurray) July 31, 2017
Q3: What are some common misconceptions around creating visual content?
A3: You don’t need to be a graphic designer. Just have a creative mind! #ContentChat pic.twitter.com/RD4w8yjeoe
— Shawn Paul Wood (@ShawnPaulWood) July 31, 2017
A3: A common misconception is that visuals can only be done by professionals. With all the programs now, anyone can do it. #ContentChat
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
A3 That it’s expensive and difficult to do. While that *can* be the case, it doesn’t have to be… #ContentChat https://t.co/iujoV9x0O7
— Erika Heald (@SFerika) July 31, 2017
A3b: Well, maybe I can think some. Creating visual content is too expensive. Takes too long. Is beyond our capabilities. #ContentChat
— Jeremy Jones 🌤️ (@jerejone) July 31, 2017
A3 that perfection trumps conveying the message. Quality can be subjective. Producing something is better than nothing #ContentChat https://t.co/VPm3wVwQIz
— Simone Gobbo (@sim_gobb) July 31, 2017
A3) That any and all visuals work the same. #contentchat https://t.co/35G2k45kPH
— David W. White (@DavidWDC) July 31, 2017
A3: That the video has to look like it was produced by Industrial Light & Magic. #ContentChat
— Scott Murray (@MrScottMurray) July 31, 2017
A3. That *everything* should be made into a graphic. (Graphics are only good when they tell a story better than text.) #contentchat pic.twitter.com/jZcTctjy0a
— Amanda Milligan (@millanda) July 31, 2017
A3 that your visuals can magically sell your point or do the work of the corresponding copy… #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A3: That it needs to be perfect, that it needs to be video (not everything needs to be video) That it all needs to be the same #ContentChat
— Brandie McCallum (@lttlewys) July 31, 2017
a3) its ok to bend ur brand guide. even if your execs don’t want to be know for memes, if they give your content traction= its👍 #contentchat
— Pawan Deshpande (@TweetsFromPawan) July 31, 2017
A3b Or that smaller brands can’t put time into it if they don’t have a hired designer… You can, I promise! #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A3: One fatal flaw that some do is using visuals they found on Google image search results… stealing other people’s work. #ContentChat
— 🎙JMatt (@JMattMke) July 31, 2017
A3: A lot of people think they have to be designers or Photoshop experts to create amazing graphics, but that’s not true! #ContentChat
— Express Writers (@ExpWriters) July 31, 2017
A3: Visuals don’t necessarily improve storytelling. If the story framework isn’t there, visuals are just clutter. #contentchat
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
A3: You don’t have to be a designer or videographer to create high quality visual content. You just need some #creativity. #contentchat pic.twitter.com/BsUyTIgl8x
— Heather E. Siefert (@HESiefert) July 31, 2017
A3: That visuals tell a 1k words so can set it and forget it. Still need strategic context. Story matters. #ContentChat
— Alan Fleming (@alan_fleming) July 31, 2017
Agreed – on your website, maybe so. But on social media, images just need to get attention and be relevant #contentchat https://t.co/TITE1xdZrL
— Dan Goldberg (@Jonas419) July 31, 2017
A3: People often put process in front of purpose. Don’t ask “what visual should we use,” but “what should we DO” to stand out. #contentchat
— Derek Pillie (@dpillie) July 31, 2017
Instagram filters are some of my favs! I think they are better than a lot of others! #ContentChat
— Brandie McCallum (@lttlewys) July 31, 2017
Q4: I’m a writer, not a graphic designer. Help! How can I easily create visual content?
A4 Use @canva @InDesign even publisher if you must, know the sizes for each channel, know the brand standards for creative, then create!
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A4: Use tools like @canva or purchase simple templates to use with your design tool of choice. Experiment! #ContentChat https://t.co/liHytq9K1l
— Erika Heald (@SFerika) July 31, 2017
A4: @canva can be a saving grace! Their templates are great for beginners! #ContentChat
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
A4. Everyone’s mentioned Canva, but for IGs there’s also @Venngage. And don’t forget the power of your phone camera! #contentchat
— Amanda Milligan (@millanda) July 31, 2017
A4: Start paying attention to imagery–& how it interplays with the copy/script. What makes it work (or not)? #contentchat
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
I find Canva really useful, and mixoo, aviary and Instagram too
— Janine (@jaycitygirl) July 31, 2017
A4: Everyone else is saying Canva, I’ll say knowing best practices for image sizes, asking designer if my idea is even feasible #ContentChat
— Alan Fleming (@alan_fleming) July 31, 2017
A4: @Canva, @piktochart, @placeitapp, @PicMonkey, @LiveLuvCreate for starters. Oh, and don’t suck. Surprise yourself. #ContentChat pic.twitter.com/qRF5JeIveT
— Shawn Paul Wood (@ShawnPaulWood) July 31, 2017
A4: Vector-art can be customized w/o advanced Adobe Illustrator skills. You can move/ delete/ tweak colors for a custom look. #contentchat
— Beth Farris (@bethbabble) July 31, 2017
A4: I like playing around in Pinterest & Flickr–categorizing favorites & making notes. Great ideas. #contentchat
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
A4: Pick up a children book, they do a great job of marrying the written word and the story. Next step – #practice. #contentchat pic.twitter.com/xrOoMff0jJ
— Heather E. Siefert (@HESiefert) July 31, 2017
Q4: I’m not a designer either, but I’ve made great use of Canva & PicMonkey to make logos, blog graphics, social covers, etc. #ContentChat
— Scott Murray (@MrScottMurray) July 31, 2017
A4: Use Canva, they have some great tutorials. To help you! I use PicPostPlay on my phone to combine videos/pics #ContentChat
— Brandie McCallum (@lttlewys) July 31, 2017
as i mentioned, we are using @SnappaIO for the same. tinker with both! #contentchat
— Pawan Deshpande (@TweetsFromPawan) July 31, 2017
A4: If you’re not skilled with a tool like Photoshop or Illustrator, give @canva a go! They’ve made it easy to design graphics. #ContentChat
— Express Writers (@ExpWriters) July 31, 2017
a4) @pixlr is another free and easy to use tool. #contentchat
— Pawan Deshpande (@TweetsFromPawan) July 31, 2017
A4) We started taking pics all around #Chicago & then use @canva to brand them with our logo – super easy and engaging #contentchat
— LaSalle Network (@LaSalleNetwork) July 31, 2017
A4: Adobe Spark Post. Easel.ly. Canva. RelayThat. The list goes on & all are very easy to get a handle on to create graphics #ContentChat https://t.co/AtpbRfPuEC
— Eddie Garrison (@EddieGarrison) July 31, 2017
A4. Was shy about sharing rough sketches but found imperfect stands out ( hopefully in a good way) #ContentChat pic.twitter.com/tnIzlt4P1d
— Su Doyle (@sudoyle) July 31, 2017
A4: If you’re writing copy for an animated ad, think about how the copy in each frame can be visualized + tied together. #contentchat
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
A4: As a writer, @SFerika you’ll love Shakr. It’s a video clip content creator and works perfectly for copywriters like us 🙂 #contentchat
— Augmentify (@augmentifysays) July 31, 2017
Q5: Are infographics still a relevant type of visual content?
A5: @Meltwater uses infographics 4 #data stories gleaned fr. our platform. So, yes! https://t.co/ABEwyUZ0ha #contentchat cc: @Nick_Acosta
— m (@mai) July 31, 2017
A5. Short answer? YES. Recently did a podcast episode on this topic for any interested: https://t.co/7CAlNcFDBj #contentchat https://t.co/kiE1I7XiXm
— Amanda Milligan (@millanda) July 31, 2017
A5: Yes. Remember, we market to various regions. Some regions are still getting into infographics. Don’t stop creating them! #contentchat https://t.co/HcaX2RvjyI
— Augmentify (@augmentifysays) July 31, 2017
A5) Like with all visual representation, #inforgraphics have to be used in conjuction with the right #content #contentchat
— LaSalle Network (@LaSalleNetwork) July 31, 2017
A5 Absolutely!! When appropriate though, not everything needs to be or ought to be put into an infographic. #contentchat pic.twitter.com/4HUaaZQ3dS
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A5 if well done and giving value, yes. I do feel they’ve been a bit abused and overused in the past couple of years. #ContentChat https://t.co/HDo4LaQd9n
— Simone Gobbo (@sim_gobb) July 31, 2017
A5: Yes – when used with purpose and it has valuable info. #ContentChat
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
A5: Absolutely! They command attention, conveying information to your audience. Even with text users don’t see it as “reading” #ContentChat https://t.co/fyGp1N4Eq7
— Eddie Garrison (@EddieGarrison) July 31, 2017
I totally agree! I have seen so many useless (and incorrect) infographics. https://t.co/NXotuH3Ggb
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
A5: Yes, but unfortunately there are a lot of crap infographics out there today. #contentchat pic.twitter.com/a8ISlqjSpN
— Beth Farris (@bethbabble) July 31, 2017
A5: I love interactive infographics–responsive, clickable, & “personalized.” #contentchat
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
A5. The best infographics I’ve seen are not quick & easy, slap-dash kind of projects, they took time, energy and were promoted. #contentchat
— Derek Pillie (@dpillie) July 31, 2017
A5 P.S. We shouldn’t cite an infographic as a stat source—need to go to the source they drew from! Sometimes they’re not real. #ContentChat
— Erika Heald (@SFerika) July 31, 2017
A5 It seems they’re too saturated now, and lots of bad ones. Shorter graphics broken up throughout content seem more effective #contentchat
— Jessie Lewis (@ItsJessieLewis) July 31, 2017
A5b: Good infographics aren’t just here’s some pretty info. There is a point, a story or a solution, that reader/viewer gets. #ContentChat
— Alan Fleming (@alan_fleming) July 31, 2017
Q6: To meme, or not to meme, that is the question! Should brands participate in popular memes?
A6: When it’s relevant and on brand, yes! But make sure the origin of the meme aligns with your values. #ContentChat
— Berrak Sarikaya (@BerrakBiz) July 31, 2017
A6: Memes are a slippery slope, and only appropriate at certain times, with certain audiences, and on certain platforms. #ContentChat
— Jeremy Jones 🌤️ (@jerejone) July 31, 2017
A6: Only if it provides business value in some capacity. #contentchat
— Javier Sanabria (@SanabriaJav) July 31, 2017
A6 not abuse it, but often it’s a great way to connect with people. Had amazing results for brands with memes+Fb Ads #ContentChat https://t.co/0zSfH22XXs
— Simone Gobbo (@sim_gobb) July 31, 2017
Q6: In many cases, I would say yes…but there are probably some brands whose tone/personality doesn’t match well with it. #ContentChat
— Scott Murray (@MrScottMurray) July 31, 2017
A6: Yes, if it exists in the same visual ambiance as their brand identity and social media voice tone. #contentchat https://t.co/Olpy0yg9Dm
— The MD (@marketingdude) July 31, 2017
A6: As long as it’s appropriate and in-line with your brand, absolutely! #ContentChat
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
A6 If the meme goes with the story the brand is telling and/or it wouldn’t look super weird for the brand to participate in… #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A5) I think it depends on the “brand” – #contentchat – The tweets I work on tend to be mostly newsy – not prone to be “popular” https://t.co/q8iFQ5odVx
— David W. White (@DavidWDC) July 31, 2017
there’s a big risk reward to proper memeing
— Joshua Klinger (@jklinger410) July 31, 2017
A6. Sure, IF it matches their brand voice and IF they actually understand the meme…nothing cringier than missing the mark #contentchat pic.twitter.com/9fi7ah7FIi
— Amanda Milligan (@millanda) July 31, 2017
A6: ONLY when you have shown the creativity and proclivity to do so in the past. If you are new to the meme game, it shows! #ContentChat pic.twitter.com/t0J4b9CnZa
— Shawn Paul Wood (@ShawnPaulWood) July 31, 2017
A6b It would be really off-brand to just jump on the meme wagon without strategic thought or purpose. #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A6 Only when the company has incorporated memes into its brand (ex: @dennysdiner) OR gives strong personal voice to SM managers #contentchat
— Jessie Lewis (@ItsJessieLewis) July 31, 2017
A6: Memes work if the brand is perceived as fun and participants in their general use. Otherwise appear forced. #ContentChat
— Alan Fleming (@alan_fleming) July 31, 2017
Or audience. I find certain audience segments don’t like or understand memes #contentchat
— Megan McCarthy (@ImMeganMcCarthy) July 31, 2017
A6. Thoughtfully. As long as memes align w/ brand values & it’s an oppty to show a bit of quirky personality, go for it! #ContentChat https://t.co/vy3ohbP89M
— Su Doyle (@sudoyle) July 31, 2017
I’ve seen a number of brands aggressively chase after memes without a strategic reason. It just adds to the noise. #ContentChat
— Erika Heald (@SFerika) July 31, 2017
A6: Question 6 is like an iceberg! Should be a simple response whether to meme or not but a lot is going on below the surface #ContentChat
— Derek Pillie (@dpillie) July 31, 2017
A6: (jumping in late) all about the context but yes brands CAN play into meme culture … @Reebok w/ the Trump infographic #ContentChat
— Jacob Benedict (@osubenedict) July 31, 2017
A6: Memes are often stolen graphics, right? So unless you have a personality recreate it, I’d avoid it. #ContentChat
— 🎙JMatt (@JMattMke) July 31, 2017
a6) when done right: yes. they humanize your messaging. People are often allergic to heavy branded stuff. see @larrykim #contentchat
— Pawan Deshpande (@TweetsFromPawan) July 31, 2017
Like all the covfefe memes. Most were hilarious, but a few brands demonstrated they have no idea what they’re doing or why #contentchat
— Megan McCarthy (@ImMeganMcCarthy) July 31, 2017
— Erika Heald (@SFerika) July 31, 2017
Q7: How successful has visual content been for you/your clients?
A7: Just recently started adding more creative visual into my internal content, and the company responded big-time positively. #ContentChat
— Jeremy Jones 🌤️ (@jerejone) July 31, 2017
A7 The majority of my clients need Instagram and/or Fb Ads. Doesn’t get much more visual than that! 😊 https://t.co/IiN6wSpHez
— Simone Gobbo (@sim_gobb) July 31, 2017
A7: Very. I helped launch Instagram for a ‘boring’ energy co and ppl thought they were nuts. Wrong. It rocks if you ‘get it’. #contentchat https://t.co/pOEhhXoH7x
— The MD (@marketingdude) July 31, 2017
A7: Amazing! It really helps the message and gets the engagement. #ContentChat
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
A7: Visuals drive results… not using visuals with content you’re trying to promote will miss the mark every time. #ContentChat
— 🎙JMatt (@JMattMke) July 31, 2017
A7) difficult to know precisely-but my personal twitter is 95% visual — the work twitter is primarily #facts #laws, #rights #contentchat https://t.co/K4rTwyc7e2
— David W. White (@DavidWDC) July 31, 2017
A7. Extremely. Visuals are necessary. Everything we’ve done has had a visual component — all that varies is complexity/style. #contentchat https://t.co/PxxGFAv5Bi
— Amanda Milligan (@millanda) July 31, 2017
A7 Visuals are show stoppers. My clients LOVE having a little extra flare in their competitive markets when we use visuals. #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A7b I’ve seen drastic differences in engagement when a post goes out w/ visuals over just copy. Do the thing, use visuals! #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
Q8: What are some brands that are killing it with their visual content?
a8) my favorite: @BuzzSumo #contentchat
— Pawan Deshpande (@TweetsFromPawan) July 31, 2017
A8: Gonna give some props to @CMIContent for their visuals on #cmworld speakers. They always make me click them. #ContentChat
— Jeremy Jones 🌤️ (@jerejone) July 31, 2017
A8: @thesouthernc does a fabulous job on Instagram! Their visuals are gorgeous! #ContentChat
— Mandy Edwards (@memktgservices) July 31, 2017
A8: @Arbys. Seriously. #ContentChat
— Berrak Sarikaya (@BerrakBiz) July 31, 2017
— Simone Gobbo (@sim_gobb) July 31, 2017
A8: @CareemUAE and @BurjKhalifa #contentchat https://t.co/DB0PbXQihH
— The MD (@marketingdude) July 31, 2017
A8: I love the @MailChimp “Did You Mean…?” campaign by @droga5. #ContentChat pic.twitter.com/eUWy6nL9ec
— Shelly Lucas (@pisarose) July 31, 2017
A8 Not necessarily on Social but @VenetianVegas‘ email imagery makes me long greatly to go to Vegas just to stay there… #ContentChat
— Derek Pillie (@dpillie) July 31, 2017
A8 Taking a risk here, but the news/media do a REALLY great job with captivating images. I love @Reuters personally. #contentchat
— Hanna Steinker (@Hann_bananz) July 31, 2017
A8) @ClarinsFR @LouisVuitton_US – looks great, moves, at times sparkling content #ContentChat
— David W. White (@DavidWDC) July 31, 2017
a8: @dodo has amazing videos all the time, captivating hitting everyone’s sensitive cord while also being informative #contentchat
— Zocle (@Zocle) July 31, 2017
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