📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Emojis - Brands Cannot Shy Away from The Latest Marketing Tool While emoji is the latest language that young millennial users understand, brands are yet to start talking in this language

By Mohd Wassem

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Jakraphong Photography | Shutterstock

On an average users' spent more than 2 hours a day on social and messaging applications, sending billions and billions of messages per day. Only two platforms Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp process more than 60 billion messages a day. Recent researches show ninety two percent of the users use emojis seventy percent of the time. Three billions of them are shared every day on different platforms. The phenomenon is so strong that even giant like Facebook, which is credited with building social behavior on the Internet, had to change itself when it launched emojis on its platform. It is more convenient for users to communicate, in fact express. Adding emojis to the Facebook post can increase number of likes by fifty seven percent and comment and shares by thirty three percent.

Emoji is the latest language young Millennial Understand

When the biggest digital platform on earth had succumbed to the pressure of rising user expectations, how long could the marketing platforms, medium and marketers stay away? While emoji is the latest language that young millennial users understand, brands are yet to start talking in this language. It is high time marketers and brands speak this language. It is not that all brands are not using this language some have mastered the art and pushing it really hard.

Domino's let customers order pizza by tweeting a pizza slice emoji! Interesting isn't it? Next time do try ordering with emoji ;-). Taco Bell, filed a petition urging Unicode consortium, an organization that controls the coding standards of yellow emojis that you see on your keyboard, to include Taco Emoji. It also ran a campaign "America wants a taco emoji"

If you are a brand, here are five simple yet effective ways you can use emoticons in your marketing campaign

  1. Encourage your users to use emoticon while interacting with you; you can easily use this mode of communication if you happen to be in business of Coffee, Beer, Fruit, Restaurant, and Travel etc. These emojis are already available in all existing keyboards. Gradually you would become part of their personalized conversation. Just like Pizza emoji repeated enough number of times with Domino's would start representative Domino's in conversation.
  2. Work with complementing brands. Brands like Pizza, Soft Drinks, Coffee, Uber etc can work together to design very attractive emoji campaigns. A simple e.g get pizza deliver with Pepsi by Uber. Emoji of pizza, cold drink and car could be used.
  3. Design you campaign around Emoticons. Not all campaign could be designed around emoticon but you could always incorporate them during national events like republic day, independence day etc. National flags are part of standard emoticons in the keyboard.
  4. Work with third party platforms. Twitter allows brands to have sponsored emoticons, Line and Viber allow brands to have sponsored stickers, these can designed in way to represent emoticons and provided to users on their platforms. Brands could also partner with third party Keyboards like Bobble Keyboard to their brands incorporated in the content. Pepsi worked with twitter to include 50 custom branded stickers for #PepsiMoji campaign in 10 countries.
  5. Self promoted emoticon platforms: Starbucks have its own emoji's keyboard with all coffee emojis in it. Celebrity like Kim Kardashian, ad Justin Bieber have their own keyboards. Brands could have their own platforms with pre-populated emojis.

Mohd Wassem

Co-founder, Bobble Keyboard

Mohd. Wassem is the Co-founder & MD of Bobble – a Selfie-based customizable emoji mobile app that enables individuals to engage in highly personalized self-expression on mobile. His principal responsibilities in the company involve developing strategic plans for business growth and employee engagement with specific emphasis on talent management and business development.

A graduate in Economics from Delhi University, Wassem brings over 10 years of corporate and consulting experience to the company. He began his professional career as an officer with NTPC – India's largest energy corporation. He has also been associated with Aricent as Lead Executive – Organizational Development followed by a stint with Deloitte as a Management Consultant. However, driven by ambition, Wassem decided to quit his cushy corporate job, and took the plunge towards entrepreneurship with Bobble.

With a motto that says ‘Just do it!’ he plans to make Bobble an independent enterprise in the next 5 years with aspirations to add value to its investors, employees, product partners, content partners and end users. Furthermore, he hopes to develop and distribute Bobble’s unique technology globally and make it one of the most popular emoji apps in the world.

 

Thought Leaders

It's the End of the Entrepreneurial Era As We Know It

With the rise of advanced technologies and AI, are we losing all sense of the independent business person and entrepreneur?

Living

10 Surprising 'Organic' and 'Gluten-Free' Products and Services

From organic water to gluten-free haircuts, companies go above and beyond to get you to buy.

Data & Recovery

Transfer Data Affordably for Life with This $30 License

EaseUS Disk Copy enables easy and affordable data transfers and Windows OS migrations without needing to reinstall.

Side Hustle

He Started a Luxury Side Hustle at Age 13 — Now the Business Earns More Than $10 Million a Year: 'People Want to Help You When You're Young'

Michael Morgan, now the owner of Iconic Watch Company, always had a passion for "old things" — and he turned it into a lucrative venture.

Business News

James Clear's Atoms App Promises to Help Break Bad Habits and Create Better Ones — Here's How It Works

The app turns Clear's best-selling book, "Atomic Habits," into something actionable.

Business Plans

From Camera-Shy to Camera-Ready — Here's What to Consider Before You Go on Camera

Are you ready to be on camera? Here are a few things to consider.