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Posts filed under 'Video'

6 Rules for Creating Successful Online Video Campaigns

March 1st, 2010

If you are an integrated media producer at an ad agency or a marketing executive at a fortune 500 brand then you have already dealt with creating an online video campaign. And whether your goals where to build brand awareness, drive online sales, capture emails or simply to educate your customers the sheer number of options, collaborators and budget constrains likely made the experience challenging.

In our experience the most common challenges are:

1. Figuring out what to do and how to get consensus amongst your many stakeholders

2. Maintaining expectations during the production of your campaign

3. Follow-up after the launching your campaign

We have talked to integrated media producers, marketing executives and countless others and determined that there is no clear agreement on what makes a good online video campaign. The one thing that remains constant is that with the increased complexity and quantity of moving parts you have to take a more strategic approach to solving these three challenges. In our experience we have found that the same tools developed to create successful user experiences for websites apply to creating video. With that in mind we have created 6 rules that you can apply to your online video campaign website.

Here are the six rules:

Rule #1. Have a shared language:

Have everyone agree on who your viewsers are and what is important to them. It allows the teams to ask the question “does this idea or solution work for our viewser”.

Savings.com

We helped Savings.com rally around their viewsers’ needs and created a common language from which to frame our conversation. This can sometimes be dismissed as “fluff” but if used correctly can be an effective way to communicate and produce better results.

Rule # 2. Have clear measurable goals:

Create simple measurable goals. For example: To increase return visitors by 10% in one month.
Instead of having your team focused on a set number of features, “shots” or functions have them ask “what will it take to meet our goal?”

GlobalBusinessObjective

In The Groop school of thought we use the Agile concept of the “Global Business Objective” as one of our tools to help keep the team focused on “the prize” not fighting over some of the minutia.

Rule # 3. Create approach consensus:

Working to define your goals together allows for both creative and technology partners to feel part of the process. The traditional hand-down from strategy or planning to creative to technology simply does not work.

Consensus

Our experience has been that consensus is best reached when all of the parties involved participate in
the process of defining the goals and the viewsers for the campaign.

Rule # 4. Have flexible execution:

As with most websites it is better to release less features that are awesome versus more features that are mediocre. Quality of experience trumps quantity of options. More importantly even if you plan well things will change and you will have to be comfortable with cutting features to meet your deadlines and budget caps.

Project-Success

We use a project approach that resembles film and animation methods used today by companies such as PIXAR and Dreamworks. Shorter cycles with more with frequent adjustments towards a shared goal.

Rule # 5. Measure often but plan it well:

Measuring often is much easier than knowing what to do with the data. For optimal data analysis make sure that you plan your tests, and conduct A/B or multivariate testing. That is what makes online video campaigns so awesome. It’s like TV but you can fine tune even after “airing” the campaign.

Google-Analyitcs

Google Analytics, Omniture, Webtrends and others provide you with the tools and metrics that you need but only if you use them with A. a cleal goal and B. Well planned analysis will you get optimal results.

Rule # 6. Plan to Adjust:

Launching is only half the battle, the real work begins in the small adjustments that you will continue to make on an ongoing basis. Always plan for several releases in the life cycle of an online video campaign. It’s ok if you don’t get it exactly right the first time, you can adjust it.

savings-test

To the left is the first design of a Savings.com coupon page. To the right you can see the evolution of the design based on the results of multiple rounds of testing.

We would love to hear what you think. What are your experiences? Leave us your comments below.

José Caballer
Chief Visionary, The Groop

For more information about The Groop’s online video capabilities please email us at video@thegroop.net

You can also call us at 213.613.0066

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How to Create Million Dollar Campaigns for a Fraction of the Price

March 1st, 2010

A lot of online video campaigns are overproduced because “that’s the way we always do it” or “if it doesn’t look like a polished campaign, then it won’t work”. And, on the other end of the spectrum, there is a ton of poorly (low quality/low impact) done video out there.

If the endgame is to combine IMPACT + QUALITY and deliver on business objectives such as increasing product awareness, increasing sales or educating customers – how do you achieve both strategic impact and creative quality for a fraction of the price?

Here are three ways:

1. Recruit members of your community to shoot their own videos:

Every week Savings.com expert users provide the community with a “Deal of the Week” on video. We helped Savings.com package user generated video created by their expert users with an animated intro and end-tag that includes audio branding. In addition we created a customized look for their YouTube channel – This Week in Deals.

Why it Works:

It’s Real! These are real people helping you save. Savings.com could have developed funny clips or cute skits to communicate with their audience, but it would have been inauthentic. Your customers know when something is not authentic, more importantly they like it when you provide them with valuable tips and money savings.
In our increasingly transparent online world, authenticity is powerful.

Conclusion:

User generated video + high quality graphics package = Win, win for the community of users and brand alike.

2. Produce documentary style “testimonials” featuring your customers.

The next level up from user generated is “pro-sumer” quality content. It is well shot and well edited. Though the content is more “produced” the brand spirit/authenticity still comes across and feels human. Having a clear value proposition defined allows for you to direct and edit the video more efficiently and allows for clarity as in this video we produced for Jib Jab’s venture capital firm.

Why it Works:

It is simple, authentic and easy to produce, shoot and edit.

Conclusion:

Pro-sumer quality video documentaries featuring your customers and directed + clear value proposition= Win, win for the customer and brand alike.

3. Shoot a million dollar commercial for less than 250K.

We recently shot a campaign for Suzuki using 2 Canon 7d’s which are DSLR’s. If there is one trend you want to be up on, THIS IS IT. Canon has installed a cinema level image in a $2000 camera. Directors, cinematographers and even George Lucas are putting these cameras up against the biggest and best equipment out there and choosing DSLR’s as a important tool. Last week, while attending Createasphere, we heard reknowned director Tony Kay share his experience shooting his latest feature film on several Canon 7D’s. The bottom line is this, DSLR technology (along with a strong director and creative) is allowing feature film level quality content to be created affordably.

Why it Works:

The technology is at par with more expensive and difficult to operate cameras.

Conclusion:

New lower cost DSLR cameras and lenses + experienced director and crew = million dollar quality for a fraction of the price.

Read recent features written about this shoot:

Photo Cine News: 02/19/2010
Digital Cinema Foundry 02/24/2010

What makes it possible to execute these different options for online video campaigns?

Experience

Having actually shot million dollar commercials and created motion graphic packages for the worlds top brands leads to faster and more efficient production.

Creativity

There is no substitute for having great ideas and making them look amazing. When this is combined with a strong strategic understanding of your business you have a powerful and effective combination to create effective online video campaigns.

Technology

Whether it be a Canon 7D SLR camera that shoots HD or shooting on an iPhone – today’s available tools allow for professionals and semi-pro’s to create compelling content.

Hybrid Work Flow

Flowing smoothly from strategy to creative to technology come from being able to speak all three languages and having a framework for an integrated work flow.

We would love to hear from you. What are your experiences? Leave me your comments below.

Seth Epstein

Chief Catalyst

For more information about The Groop’s online video capabilities please email us at video@thegroop.net

You can also call us at 213.613.0066

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[ Mashable ] 5 Tips for Using Video to Grow Your Business in 2010

December 9th, 2009

By Patrick Moran | From Mashable

It’s no secret that online video is hot. A recent study by comScore revealed that in October 2009, more than 167 million viewers in the U.S. watched an average of 167 videos each, while YouTube (YouTube) reached 1 billion views per day – or 41 million views per hour – in the same month.

At my company, we’ve seen our own surge in video viewing. Video (video) now accounts for the largest number of files uploaded into online meetings on our platform.

1. Punch Up Your Web Site

The easiest way get started is simply to embed your videos on your Web site. You can use YouTube to do this, or alternatives like Vimeo or Sorenson Media. Once you’ve got the videos playing on your site, make sure they are easy to share by adding a “share this” button on each video so that viewers can pass them along via Twitter (Twitter), Facebook (Facebook), and other viral channels. Already on Twitter, 8 percent of all shared URLs are links to videos on YouTube.

2. Use Video to Sell
We’ve found that our sales reps see 20 percent higher close rates when they play a video at the beginning of their virtual sales demo. Other online services report similar results: Jivox, an online video ad platform, used this video demo on their web site to increase registrations by 25 percent – they even embedded a signup form right on the demo page to collect registrations. You can also use services like Wistia to share a video with prospects and track how they interact with the video.

Read Full List on Mashable

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