With TikTok prepared to go dark as soon as this weekend, many marketers seem poised to go all in on Meta.
Creators aren’t quite so sure.
Thoren Bradley, who has amassed more than 10 million TikTok followers for his woodchopping videos, has spent the last week encouraging people to boycott Meta in response to its lobbying efforts ahead of the bill’s passage last year. (Meta has denied supporting the TikTok divest-or-ban bill.)
Bradley isn’t alone. Videos of people turning off (and calling out) Meta’s data-sharing, tracking Meta’s fluctuating stock price, and deleting Facebook altogether have circulated online since the Supreme Court hearing about the TikTon divest-or-ban bill in early January. Even before that, Google searches for how to delete Facebook and Instagram accounts were on the rise following Meta’s announcement that it would end its third-party fact-checking program.
For creators who still plan on using Meta platforms, there’s some apprehension about audience-building and monetization options. TikToker Erica Mags, who has nearly 105,000 followers on the platform, said in one video that one of her videos didn’t get the same reception on Instagram Reels as it did on TikTok—so much so that she ended up deleting it.
“Don’t make us go over there,” she said in the TikTok. “The vibes are not the same.”
Keep reading here on Marketing Brew.—KH
|