Posts Tagged: video


15
Mar 10

Live from SXSW: Viral video how-tos from the pros

The most fun — and still useful — panel I’ve attended at SXSW Interactive so far was Saturday’s How to Create a Viral Video . It doesn’t get much better than the three viral experts that Flux creative director Jonathan Wells brought together: Damian Kulash , frontman of rock band OK Go Margaret Gould Stewart , head of user experience at YouTube Jason Wishnow , director of film and video, TED The tone for the session was set when Damian Kulash teed up “the definition of viral video”: Boobies and Kitties , which presents the view with 30 seconds of plunging necklines, 30 seconds of saccharine-sweet kittens and 30 seconds of kittens stuffed into bodacious cleavage. With such quality artistic contributions to our cultural good, who needs Quentin Tarantino ? Once we were all laughing, the panelists proceeded to illustrate answers to the 30 million-page-view question: How do you create videos so compelling that your viewers become part of the distribution process? Hit people on an emotional level .  TEDTalks are 18-minute taped academic lectures, which could easily be “online suicide” but instead have been viewed by 230 million people to date. According to Wishnow, the production quality — shooting in HD, using multiple cameras, actually being able to see details on the supporting visuals — enhances the “talk of their lives” feeling that TED is going for. The real key to viral success, though, is the ideas that genuinely inspire the speakers and their work, he says. Content that taps into viewers’ emotions travels farthest. Go for a sense of wonder, optimism and surprise . OK Go’s approach to viral video is to “think of the craziest ideas they can come up with and figure out if we can pull them off,”  said Kulash. This has led to masterpieces like “Here It Goes Again ” (the treadmill video that inspired a whole host of fantastic spinoffs ), “ A Million Ways ” and the Rube-Goldberg-inspired “This Too Shall Pass ,” which recently led to the dissolution of the band’s contract with EMI . Damian’s advice — to embrace cleverness and the element of surprise — jives with recent research out of the University of Pennsylvania about what compels people to share. “The fact is, humans like to share good news. So Debbie Downer won’t work,” said Margaret Gould Stewart. “We are trained to put things in buckets. So when you mix cookie monster with German metal , it’s really funny!”  Oh man, is it ever. Think about production value . While high production-values work for TED, less high-tech videos can also be an effective content strategy. Your video doesn’t have to be pixel-perfect. It should have appropriate production values, depending on the content and context. Have people participate in the things you make — if not in the actual shooting of the videos, then after they go public. Solidify your community by getting into the comments and engaging directly in what’s happening with your content. Create conversation between the creator and the audience, and encourage satire and offshoots. Make it easy to embed your videos . More than half of YouTube traffic comes from those who grab a video’s code and tweet about it or integrate it into their Web sites and blogs. “If you don’t make it easy to embed, you are hamstringing your video,” Stewart said. Mind your metadata .  Embed key search terms into the titles of your videos. If you’re creating parodies, include the same key words in your video’s title as in the original. Surround your video with supplemental material such as additional video material and still images. Paying attention to metadata details will aid with search engine optimization. To conclude this hilarious session, our esteemed panelists grabbed a video camera and climbed up on top of the panel table to recreate the infamous surprised kitty video with us, the audience, playing the role of kitty.  What the result (below) lacks in production quality, it makes up in on-the-spot charm. Viral-to-be, for sure. Click here to view the embedded video. Image credit, Merritt Colaizzi

3c3b757d57button.gif Live from SXSW: Viral video how tos from the pros

Original post:
Live from SXSW: Viral video how-tos from the pros


13
Mar 10

10 Tips on Live Blogging & Content Marketing at SXSWi

So here I sit in the DFW airport hanging out with David Berkowitz waiting for my connection to Austin. What better way to spend that 45 min than to write a helpful blog post? A big part of my “mission” for SXSXi is to create content after all. I have several other goals like networking (reconnecting and especially new contacts), competitive research, recruiting and potential client prospecting. But content marketing is our bread and butter. It can be an effective tactic for you too, especially if you can learn to be highly efficient at liveblogging conferences. Here are a few tips that will not only give you a tested and proven guideline but should improve your efficiency and quality of output. Create a schedule . Whether you’re blogging on your own or with a team, pick which sessions and related topics you plan on covering before the event. SXSWi has almost too many concurrent sessions and with such a large event, not planning will lead to getting to sessions late. That means a crappy seat in back and likely not anywhere near an outlet.It’s very easy to get distracted while at the conference and with live blogging, there’s no time to waste. If you know which sessions you’ll be covering, it can help to create draft blog posts ahead of time and include as much information in the draft as you can. This will make it easier to finish off the post as close to the session time as possible. Plan ahead . When planning out which sessions, interviews or events you’ll cover, put together a grid showing session names, times and who should be covering (if you’re part of a blogging team). Coordinate sessions coverage avoids duplication and ensures the topical mix of content you plan on covering is properly represented. Write the posts offline in an application like notepad. Then transfer the post to the blog. Many session rooms have poor if any internet connection at all. Make posts in an offline document and transfer them over to your blog software when you’re ready to publish. Take photos . Photos of the panel or an individual speaker are great and can add a lot to what otherwise would be a text heavy post. Photos of the PowerPoint slides can be particularly useful if the presented goes fast or doesn’t follow a logical order. You can reference them later when finishing the blog post after the session ends. With photos, we’ve set up a TopRank Blog account at Flickr just for conferences. There, we create a “set” for each conference event and are sure to link to those collections of photos from within the blog posts. Promotion tips for conference photos on Flickr: Be sure to add titles and descriptions to each photo. Include an anchor text link from the description back to the blog post it’s used with. With your Flickr account, be sure to network with other Flickr members that would be interested in conference photos. When we set up an account just for SES San Jose, we exported our 400+ network contacts from LinkedIn and used the feature in Flickr that allows you to invite 100 people at a time to our Flickr network. The more relevant people in your Flickr network, the more people that “see” what photos you’re posting. Images taken through out the day and eve should be uploaded, titled, tagged and commented/linked before the next morning. Take videos . Just about ever digital camera can take web quality video. We added 4gb memory cards over an hour of video for each camera can be taken. Interviews with attendees, speakers and exhibitors are particularly popular. You must keep in mind that with large companies, employees can rarely do a video interview without approval from their Legal and/or PR departments, so you need to schedule those ahead of time. You also need to be aware of the video taping policy of the conference. Most events do not want you to take videos of the sessions themselves. Add some flavor to your videos . You don’t necessarily need a pro level of post-video production to get good promotion value out of conference videos. You should however, be sure to use software like Windows Movie Maker (free) to add text to the video indicating the topic and your blog URL. Also, set up a channel on YouTube as a way to organize and promote your posts along with accounts at other video sharing sites. Sit close to the panel AND the screen . Also, if there is just one large screen in the room, sit between that and the panel. That way you can get clear photos of both the panel and PPT slides. If you have one of the most common digital cameras, don’t bother with a flash if you’re not close to your subject. Network with other bloggers . When in the sessions or in the press room (if your blogging on a press pass) be sure to connect with other bloggers. You have something in common – the formidable task of taking a mix of presentations, some great and some psychotically unorganized, and turning them into a story that makes sense to a savvy search marketing audience – all in real time. Connecting with other bloggers both offline and online can facilitate information sharing as well as links. Promote your posts . Once your posts go live, then be sure to make an effort to promote the posts to your network and to interested social communities. For example, promote screen shots of your videos to Flickr with a link to the video post. Let interview subjects and other bloggers know when you’ve posted. Leverage your social community networks (StumbleUpon, del.icio.us, Facebook and niche/vertical specific sites) to draw attention to particularly “promotable” content. Tag your posts and media . For some conferences, the organizer will advise the attendees to use a specific tag to make it easy for readers to find posts specific to that event. For example, the recent MediaPost event in Park City Utah used an image tag of: sisutah07 . Generic tags are also useful. Use these tags not only with your blog posts and Technorati, but also with photos, video and social bookmark/news submissions. Establish a few basic blogging guidelines or simple processes. Here are a few that we start with: Create drafts of posts BEFORE the conference with notes. After sessions posts are saved in draft form. All posts must have images, ideally of the session panel. All posts are associated with relevant categories and tags. Alternate title tags with keywords are written. Post titles start with a consistent naming convention along with a short description. Once posts are edited, editor makes them live. Better quality posts are vetted for promotion within blogger networks. Round up posts are published at the end of each day or at the end of the conference. The biggest takeaway for better liveblogging is to plan ahead and follow through with promoting your content once it’s live. What liveblogging tips have you found to be effective? Any tips or tricks on being more efficient?


10
Mar 10

Can MySpace make a comeback?

I love it when companies decide to buckle down and focus on what makes them great. Innovation is essential, but it has an evil twin: mission creep. If you’re trying to keep up with your competitors’ innovations — instead of concocting your own — you might end up with a diffuse, muddled brand that isn’t known for doing anything particularly well. You need to innovate on your own terms and in a way that allows new ideas to arise organically out of what your company already does well. MySpace is a textbook example of this. It saw what Facebook was doing and tried to bandwagon. That didn’t end well . Now the company is trumpeting a return to its roots, as we note in today’s SmartBrief on Social Media . That’s great, but it’s not enough to simply back away from they’re doing wrong.  If MySpace is going to survive, it needs to become a real alternative to Facebook’s way of doing things, not just an interchangeable alternate. It needs to embrace a new direction that makes sense for the brand. Some things I’d like to see: Better privacy controls . Facebook and Google are freaking everyone out with shifting privacy terms and unintended disclosures. Better multimedia . MySpace is still synonymous with music and social media. Build on that. One of Facebook’s weaknesses is the clunky way it handles photos, videos and the like. MySpace should also look into capitalizing on a resurgent interest in video chat. Better groups . I’m a fan of niche networks. I wish it were easier to create, manage and maintain those networks in the context of a larger site — that way I could have my video game community and my political news community in the same space. Facebook groups always seemed anemic to me. I think this is one area where MySpace could leapfrog. Better incentives . What MySpace needs is to give old users a reason to check back in. The site should be aggressively pursuing social-shopping features, special offers and content giveaways. To overcome its weak network and lackluster reputation, the site needs to give users a reason to reintegrate the site into their daily lives. That’s what I got. How about you? What does MySpace need to do to make a comeback? Image credit, Carsten Reisinger , via shutterstock

3c3b757d57button.gif Can MySpace make a comeback?

More here:
Can MySpace make a comeback?


3
Mar 10

ExactTarget acquires CoTweet – The Daily Deal (subscription)

ExactTarget acquires CoTweet The Daily Deal (subscription) Engle added that social media product development for LinkedIn and Facebook was in the works. Watch the video above or download it at iTunes. - Maria Woehr. and more


25
Feb 10

5 Tips for Using Online Video to Market Your Small Business – ReelSEO Online Video News

5 Tips for Using Online Video to Market Your Small Business ReelSEO Online Video News For small businesses, getting noticed online is a challenge, particularly when competing with big brands with large marketing departments and seemingly ... and more