Twitter Collage: A Zillion Volts of Noticeability

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Cleveland Clinic Tweet

 

Cleveland Clinic Tweet

If, as the saying goes, “a picture is worth a thousand words,” what’s the marketing “worth” of four pictures?

Twitter has introduced another new tool that can multiply the impact of your communications. The social media giant unveiled its photo collage feature that delivers even more message-mileage. Now you can share up to four photos within a single tweet.

Although the long-standing 140-character constraint is still the text limit, tweets with one (now up to four) photos jump from the Twitter stream like an Atlantic Salmon leaping upstream.

The science folks tells us that pictures are about a zillion times more attention-getting than plain text. Don’t quote us on the math, but Twitter knows that visual images draw more attention, connect to the brain faster, and are more memorable than words alone.

With the four-photo collage capability, Twitter takes a page from other social media platforms. Photos on Facebook generate over 50 percent more Likes than the average post, according to a HubSpot study, for example.

In healthcare, communications and connectivity add up to engaging an audience, and pictures are a well-known catalyst. The Twitter launch is initially for iPhone, but soon to expand from there. Here’s how Twitter described the multi-image idea on their blog:

“Share up to four photos in a single Tweet: And now you can share a series of photos that automatically create a collage. Just tap on a preview to get the full image and slide through the group. The ability to upload multiple photos is starting to roll out today on iPhone, and is coming soon to Android and twitter.com. Whether you’re on iPhone, Android or twitter.com, you can view Tweets with multiple photos.”

Twitter’s text limitation hasn’t been a handicap. If anything, it has inspired considerable creativity in marketing meaningful (albeit brief) messages. Not long ago, Twitter users broke the 140-character barrier with images, graphs, charts, and the like becoming increasingly common with of the Tweet.

And we expect that Internet advertising in the health care arena will find new and creative ways to “collage” on the social front. The business publication AdvertisingAge put an industry spotlight on early-adopter brand names, including this example by General Electric (with 9 more words).

GE Collage Tweet Twitter Collage: A Zillion Volts of Notice ability

GE Collage Tweet

OK. We can’t guarantee a multiple in the zillions, but it’s clear that the Twitter photo collage is a continuing effort to move away from the Spartan, text-only look, and deliver a much stronger visual splash. (Watch this trend. Twitter owns video-sharing Vine, and Facebook owns picture-sharing Instagram.)

 

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