Prioritizing the formats audiences can’t stop watching
Organic reach is no longer evenly distributed across content formats. In 2022, video stands at the top of the algorithmic food chain, with platforms like TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and even LinkedIn rewarding it with greater visibility and engagement. A video-first strategy isn’t simply about producing more video — it’s about designing content for the behaviors, algorithms, and contexts that favor it.

With TikTok continuing its meteoric rise, Instagram doubling down on Reels, and YouTube expanding Shorts monetization, search trends in May 2022 revealed exactly where audiences — and algorithms — were headed. Brands adopting a video-first mindset aren’t abandoning other formats; they’re anchoring campaigns in video and letting supporting formats flow from there.
B2B vs. B2C Perspectives
For B2B, a video-first approach often begins with thought leadership: interviews, webinars, behind-the-scenes tours, or explainer videos that demystify complex topics. On LinkedIn, video can humanize an organization, giving decision-makers a reason to engage beyond reading a white paper. Posting native video content improves dwell time and triggers the platform’s feed-boosting signals.
B2C brands, on the other hand, thrive by mixing entertainment with utility. Short-form tutorials, product demos, influencer collaborations, and reactive content tied to trending audio on TikTok or Reels can generate massive exposure. In 2022, searches for “TikTok algorithm” and “Instagram Reels growth” reflected a marketer’s race to understand and ride these discovery waves.
Factics
What the data says:
• Social video generates 1,200% more shares than text and images combined (Brightcove).
• TikTok’s average engagement rate is 5.96%, outpacing Instagram’s 0.83% (Influencer Marketing Hub).
• LinkedIn users are 20x more likely to share a video post than a text post (LinkedIn).
• YouTube Shorts surpassed 30 billion daily views by early 2022 (Google).
• Adding video to landing pages can increase conversions by 80% (Eyeview).
How to apply it: Build campaign calendars around key video assets, then adapt into blogs, carousels, and podcasts. Create platform-specific edits rather than recycling the same cut across channels. Use native features like TikTok trending audio or Instagram’s Remix to align with algorithmic boosts. Optimize titles, captions, and thumbnails for searchability on both social and YouTube. Treat video descriptions as SEO assets, weaving in keywords relevant to your audience’s searches.
Platform Playbook
• TikTok: Short, trend-aligned clips with strong hooks in the first 3 seconds.
• Instagram Reels: Educational or entertaining content optimized for vertical viewing.
• YouTube Shorts: Quick, high-value bursts that complement longer-form videos on the same channel.
• LinkedIn Native Video: Professional storytelling with captions for sound-off viewers.
• Facebook Watch: Episodic series or themed playlists to keep viewers returning.
Best Practice Spotlight
Gymshark has mastered platform-native video creation, tailoring the same campaign concept into unique edits for TikTok, Reels, and YouTube Shorts. By leaning into each platform’s culture — humorous trends on TikTok, polished storytelling on Instagram, and training tips on YouTube Shorts — they expand reach while keeping the brand voice consistent.
Hypotheticals Imagined
Scenario 1 – B2B Product Launch via LinkedIn and YouTube
Background: A software company releases a new analytics platform.
Execution: Launch with a 2-minute LinkedIn explainer video, follow up with a deep-dive YouTube tutorial, and distribute 15-second Shorts showing quick wins.
Expected Outcome: Higher demo sign-ups and stronger thought leadership positioning.
Potential Pitfalls: Overlooking captions or accessibility features, limiting engagement.
Scenario 2 – B2C Seasonal Campaign on TikTok and Reels
Background: A beverage brand wants to promote a summer product line.
Execution: Partner with micro-influencers to create TikTok trends featuring the drink, post how-to-make recipes in Reels, and link back to product pages.
Expected Outcome: Increased social mentions, traffic spikes during campaign period.
Potential Pitfalls: Trend fatigue — content feels stale if posted too late.
Scenario 3 – Omni-Channel Nonprofit Awareness Drive
Background: A nonprofit launches a cause awareness month.
Execution: Produce a hero video for YouTube, cut into Shorts and TikToks, with behind-the-scenes clips on Instagram Stories.
Expected Outcome: Boosted donations and volunteer sign-ups.
Potential Pitfalls: Failing to tailor tone and messaging for different audience segments.
References
Brightcove. (n.d.). The Power of Social Video.
Influencer Marketing Hub. (n.d.). TikTok Engagement Rate Data.
LinkedIn. (n.d.). Video Sharing Statistics.
Google. (2022). YouTube Shorts Viewership Data.
Eyeview. (n.d.). Video and Conversion Rate Impact.
YouTube Shorts Hits 30 Billion Views Per Day. Search Engine Journal
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