View counts can be misleading. Prioritize analyzing competitors' content with high shares and comments. These metrics reveal what truly provides value and sparks community conversation, offering a more reliable blueprint for your own content strategy.

Related Insights

When leadership resists a modern, low-budget content approach, use social proof as leverage. Find examples of competitors succeeding with this exact strategy (e.g., TikToks, lo-fi videos). Presenting this evidence creates social pressure and a sense of urgency that is often more persuasive than a theoretical pitch.

The most valuable consumer insights are not in analytics dashboards, but in the raw, qualitative feedback within social media comments. Winning brands invest in teams whose sole job is to read and interpret this chatter, providing a competitive advantage that quantitative data alone cannot deliver.

A month with 25% fewer views can generate a record number of leads if the content is highly targeted to the right audience. This proves that viewer quality and intent are far more valuable for lead generation than raw view count, a common vanity metric.

The true measure of success for short-form video isn't just views, but private shares. To get your content shared in DMs or Slack channels, focus on creating highly shareable content with a strong 3-second hook, compelling storytelling, and a clear loop or CTA.

Conventional engagement metrics like likes and shares are often misleading. A more valuable indicator of content quality is dwell time. In an environment where users can easily skip content, their choice to spend more time with an ad is a powerful behavioral signal that the message is resonating.

The new Reels watch history is more than a memory aid. The ability to filter by a specific account transforms it into a research tool, allowing marketers to easily review all recently-viewed Reels from a single competitor to analyze their content strategy.

Stop thinking of content as a one-way broadcast. A sophisticated approach involves creating posts designed to provoke responses. Then, systematically mine the comments for raw, unfiltered consumer insights, effectively turning your social channels into a free, real-time market research platform.

While charts rank podcasts by overall downloads, the "most shared" list highlights content that inspires active listener evangelism. This suggests a different, potentially more valuable, form of audience connection that top-level rankings may obscure, offering a key insight for content creators.

LinkedIn shows impressions on comments, allowing marketers to prove ROI. A strategic commenting plan can now be a core part of a content strategy, sometimes yielding more reach than original posts. This shifts focus from just publishing to engaging with others.

LinkedIn reported double-digit growth in video uploads but notably omitted data on video engagement or watch time. This suggests that while marketers are following the platform's advice to post video, it may not be yielding results. Marketers must analyze what platforms *don't* report.

Analyze Competitor Video Shares and Comments, Not Just Views, for True Insights | RiffOn