Social Media

What is Shares?

Shares measure how often users distribute content to others. They help assess content reach and virality.

Full FormShares
CategorySocial Media
UnitCount (number)
Higher IsBetter
FORMULA

How to Track and Measure Shares

Shares track how often users distribute content to others. They indicate content relevance and value. Higher shares increase reach organically, supporting virality analysis. It is important for brand awareness.

Simple Example

If your video was shared 680 times across platforms

total shares = 680
1
Video
680
Shares
Wider
Reach

Marketing Platforms that supports Shares

These platforms provide the data needed to measure or calculate Shares in Two Minute Reports.

Frequently Asked Questions

Shares (retweets, reposts) are most valuable because they exponentially increase reach through network effects—each share exposes content to entirely new audiences who trust the sharer's curation. Shares indicate users found content valuable enough to risk their own reputation by associating with it, a much higher bar than liking. Shared content appears in feeds with implicit endorsement, dramatically increasing click-through and engagement compared to brand-originated posts. Shares are the essence of virality—one post shared by 100 people reaches 10,000+ followers of those people. Unlike likes or comments (visible only to piece's existing audience), shares create compounding distribution. Users sharing your content become brand advocates, doing marketing for you. Share rate (shares per impression) indicates content quality better than any other metric. High-share content reveals what resonates enough to prompt active distribution.
Low shares despite engagement indicate content is interesting but not share-worthy—it lacks the elements prompting users to risk reputation by distributing. Possible issues: too niche (relatable only to small audience, not worth sharing to broader network), too obvious (common knowledge won't make sharers look smart), too promotional (people don't want to advertise for brands), too emotional without practical value (inspiring quotes get likes, actionable advice gets shares), or awkward to share publicly (controversial opinions, personal stories). Sometimes content is perfect for audience but awful for their audience—B2B executives might like tactical tips but won't share them (prefer strategic perspectives). Content requiring too much context doesn't share well. Very time-sensitive content loses shareability quickly. Poorly formatted content (text too small in images, no clear takeaway) won't be shared. Missing clear hooks or quotable elements reduces sharing. If shares lag engagement, add explicit share prompts and make content more objectively valuable to broader audiences.
Most-shared content includes original research and data (people love sharing stats that make them look informed), emotionally resonant stories (inspiring, surprising, or angering), timely commentary on current events, contrarian perspectives challenging conventional wisdom, and highly actionable how-to content (save for later + share with colleagues). Humor and entertainment share well, especially when relevant to specific communities. Lists and roundups ('Top 10 Tools for...') get heavy shares. Visual content (infographics, charts, memes) shares better than text-only. Long-form, in-depth content shares more than shallow takes—people share what makes them look smart. B2B: whitepapers, case studies, industry reports. B2C: coupons, contests, product launches, user-generated content. Content validating existing beliefs shares widely within echo chambers. Controversial statements drive shares from both supporters and detractors. Educational content solving specific problems gets shared within professional networks.
Increase shares by creating undeniably valuable content audiences want to be associated with—original research, comprehensive guides, proprietary frameworks, and data visualizations make sharers look informed and helpful. Include share-prompt CTAs ('Think your network would benefit? Share this.'), create tweetable/quotable snippets with click-to-tweet tools, optimize content for easy sharing (proper image sizes, clear headlines, mobile-friendly), make visual assets shareable (quote graphics, charts), and trigger emotions that prompt sharing (awe, surprise, anger, validation). Leverage influencers and employees to share content, starting distribution momentum. Create content people want to be seen sharing—'I use this strategy' implies competence. Tag relevant people/brands increasing shares from those networks. Use storytelling techniques making content memorable and repeatable. Make sharing simple—add one-click share buttons. Time posts strategically when audiences most likely to share (mid-morning weekdays for B2B). Create recurring valuable content series people anticipate and share habitually. Most effective: solve real problems exceptionally well so sharing is genuinely helpful to networks.