Myself and Lacey (@benthamite) and Emma Williamson (@dailydosenews) piloted giving away copies of Doing Good Better on TikTok. This is a short write up of intermediate results.
Executive summary
We gave away 359 books across 5 videos
320 of those came from the most successful video
Each video took a couple of hours of work
I want to do a follow-up survey to see how many of these people actually read the book and got involved in EA. My guess is that a few of them did, which would make this a fairly cost-effective outreach strategy. I plan to publish a longer write up once those survey results are in.
Process
We created videos advertising various EA things, with a call to action for them to get a free book by accessing a link in our bio
People filled out a form with their contact information to receive the book. We did not require a credit card etc.
The form let them opt out of receiving a follow-up survey
Advertising
I tried purchasing promotion for one video. In TikTok, this means that the video was shown to more people than usual with small text indicating that it’s being shown to the user via paid promotion.
As expected, this dramatically increased the number of people viewing the video, but very few of them signed up to get a book.
Probably someone should try this with a larger sample size though, and also with video which is inherently more compelling.
(I am unable to promote the most popular video as the sound is copyrighted.)
Thoughts on the most popular video
I filmed Sam doing a dance (as opposed to e.g. talking into the camera) because this let me decide later what text to put on top of it instead of having to decide that before filming.
I think this was the right call – my first attempt was not very successful, but the second one was.
Sam obviously has starpower but the fact that the first video was unsuccessful indicates that people aren’t just watching because of his celebrity. This makes me hopeful that at least some of the people who got books did so because they were intrigued by the message.
The success of the video seems to have mostly been driven by having a higher watch percentage (as opposed to engagement through likes/comments etc.)
Thanks to the EABD team and the Open Philanthropy Project for making this project possible
TikTok EA Book Giveaway Intermediate Results
Myself and Lacey (@benthamite) and Emma Williamson (@dailydosenews) piloted giving away copies of Doing Good Better on TikTok. This is a short write up of intermediate results.
Executive summary
We gave away 359 books across 5 videos
320 of those came from the most successful video
Each video took a couple of hours of work
I want to do a follow-up survey to see how many of these people actually read the book and got involved in EA. My guess is that a few of them did, which would make this a fairly cost-effective outreach strategy. I plan to publish a longer write up once those survey results are in.
Process
We created videos advertising various EA things, with a call to action for them to get a free book by accessing a link in our bio
People filled out a form with their contact information to receive the book. We did not require a credit card etc.
The form let them opt out of receiving a follow-up survey
Advertising
I tried purchasing promotion for one video. In TikTok, this means that the video was shown to more people than usual with small text indicating that it’s being shown to the user via paid promotion.
As expected, this dramatically increased the number of people viewing the video, but very few of them signed up to get a book.
Probably someone should try this with a larger sample size though, and also with video which is inherently more compelling.
(I am unable to promote the most popular video as the sound is copyrighted.)
Thoughts on the most popular video
I filmed Sam doing a dance (as opposed to e.g. talking into the camera) because this let me decide later what text to put on top of it instead of having to decide that before filming.
I think this was the right call – my first attempt was not very successful, but the second one was.
Sam obviously has starpower but the fact that the first video was unsuccessful indicates that people aren’t just watching because of his celebrity. This makes me hopeful that at least some of the people who got books did so because they were intrigued by the message.
The success of the video seems to have mostly been driven by having a higher watch percentage (as opposed to engagement through likes/comments etc.)
Thanks to the EABD team and the Open Philanthropy Project for making this project possible
16
1,543
136
5
5
21.0%
3-10
1,090
69
9
1
17.0%
4-7
14,200
247
2
0
23
2,580
84
18
7
31.7%
9
125,800
1,652
182
390
43.9%
320