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Thinking Critically About Web Video

Web video is hot. Some say your chance to be a pioneer.

How hot, and how much of an opportunity? Recent reports from comScore, consistently say more than 80% of the total U.S. Internet audience views online video in a given month. YouTube’s fact sheet states every minute, 24 hours of video is uploaded to the network and 2 billion videos are being watched per day.

All this popularity has of course been driving a trend with marketers: the desire to create video as part of their digital marketing mix. Except sadly, it’s almost never approached strategically.

Agency-side marketing/PR/digital pros: how many times have you had a client approach you after creating a web video and said “hey, we made this video, now make it go viral!”

Client-side marketing professionals: how many of you have had a CMO suddenly discover web video, only to enthusiastically push the team to concept something “because our competitors are doing it.”

Due to these mistakes (and many others) most companies get web video dead wrong. Their content is too advertorial, there is a lack of genuine reason anyone would want to watch it, let alone pass it on. It doesn’t pass the all important “so what” test of web content and feels contrived or lacks creativity. And these are actually just surface level problems, it goes deeper than that.

The real question you need to ask yourself is why am I making web video? What marketing problem does it answer, and how does it answer it? How does it feed digital marketing KPI/objective metrics? Am I doing it because I read an article about it in AdAge or because it’s an elegant way to express my brand’s story to the world?

“Let’s make something viral” vs. let’s create an ongoing dialogue

By now, most companies understand blogging. And everyone knows you’d never create just one (even great) blog post and be done with it. No matter how popular that post was, just one blog post is not likely to provide long term value for your brand. You need to continue creating posts over time until you have a large opt-in audience that’s consistently spreading your content organically. Consider the fact that a web video is not too different than a blog post. Successful text and video are both content formats that can be passed on socially, and successful archetypes of each share similar qualities.

Yet, the business world seems to place web video up on a pedestal as if it’s some magic animal that plays by different rules merely because it’s video. The rules are not all that different, and apply for both formats of content for it to spread socially. Creating one video that catches on may be nice, but this does not take advantage of the larger opportunity the web affords: to build up an audience of true fans who genuinely want to follow your every word carefully.

Poorly conceptualized content has no chance

Short of advertising and interrupting users, there’s not much you can do to create awareness for a poorly conceptualized video lacking the proper hooks. On the web, advertising is content – there is no captive audience and viewers can and will ignore your promotions if your videos aren’t worthwhile. It has to be interesting, relevant and sticky if it has any chance of getting passed on. And with a firehose of content being uploaded to to the web, most web video is likely to be lost in perpetual obscurity, perhaps given some life from search engines.

Unless you’re a massive brand with deep pockets that can work with a high-paid creative team to concept some remarkable content, you’re likely better off using video as you would any other social content. In other words: use it to connect with your audiences in a genuine, meaningful way that follows your larger content strategy.

The best part about treating video as you would any other digital content, is just like text: if you produce lots of it and experiment, you can begin to discover video content archetypes that work for you. Then, and only then, can you start to get agile with your video content production and iteratively get better until you can consistently create stuff that catches on.

With that said…you still need a community

Web video by itself is tactical. If you’re serious about influencing the social web you still need a community that’s interested in receiving all types of your content being published in a channel agnostic fashion. Simply put, you need to build up a group who has affinity for your brand, its team members and ideas. Without this you’re not feeding something larger. Even if you have a popular video with hundreds of thousands or millions of views, what’s the point if you’re not continuing the dialogue over time and nurturing those relationships?

Conclusion

Ignoring the “viral video” bug many have been bitten by, web video is an opportunity for your brand and should likely be a part of your content marketing mix. But think critically about how it plays into your larger content strategy, and understand your reason for being with creating digital content in the first place.

Placing web video on a pedestal, as if it’s so different from any other digital content, is the wrong approach. It has to be just as sharp, creative and relevant as your text-based content. Perhaps more so since we can’t just scan a video and get the gist of it. And just like your written content you will need to build an audience before you can have consistent success.

For long term results, experiment and play around with presentation, formatting and ideas. Work to discover what it is your audiences react to and ensure that video is created in a way that benefits your larger social and SEO programs.


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Marketers must start thinking about mobile apps?

Marketers must start thinking about apps

Marketers must start thinking about apps

The mobile phone apps market is booming and is expected to go into overdrive when Apple’s new iPad device launches next month. For most corporate marketers apps are probably nothing more than a curiosity or a convenience if they have app-friendly devices.

But maybe businesses should start thinking about apps a little more strategically as part of their internet marketing strategy.

Research firm Gartner expects that cellphones will be the most common device used for browsing the web by 2013. They predict the number of browser-equipped phones to exceed 1.83 billion, compared to 1.78 billion old fashioned computers in use within 3 years.

Morgan Stanley estimates that the value of the mobile internet market will grow from $US48 billion last year to $US107 billion in 2013.

Smartphone users already appreciate the ease and convenience of apps. They provide a much more satisfactory online experience than the phone browser. For a simple example of the difference take the time to view this site on your phone then access it through our fairly basic iPhone app.

There are now more than 140,000 apps available at Apple’s App Store. The site recently passed 3 billion downloads. Google’s Android, Nokia’s Ovi and Research in Motion’s App World have all launched in order to move into this booming market, while Microsoft has announced plans for a Windows Phone.

Apps are increasingly becoming the online launching point for many people. What would you rather do:

  • access your phone browser to search Google or just open the Google app?
  • access your phone browser to search Wikipedia or just open the Wikipanion app?
  • access your phone browser to access Twitter or just open the Tweetie app?
  • access your phone browser to read your favourite blogs or just open their one-button apps?

The audience for apps is only expected to grow as more smartphones enter the market and devices such as the iPad launch. Many pundits predict the iPad will be a cross-over device that introduces previously non-tech oriented users online via a more user-friendly environment. And how will they access their favourite sites and online resources? Via apps.

In fact, apps are becoming the new web “bookmarks” for quickly accessing favourites and its not hard to argue that we may be seeing a transition from the web-browsing age to the app age.

Which of course means that marketers have another touchpoint to consider. Expecting the rapidly growing brigade of mobile users to access your clunky website on their smartphone is not good enough. If its not a user-friendly experience with proper mobile formatting you’ll lose them.

But if you can provide a useful, simple app then your brand has a strong advantage over competitors. Think about it. If somebody is willing to download your app they’re more likely to revisit it on a regular basis. If the app succeeds in engaging the users they it can become a valuable marketing tool, immersing users in your brand or returning regularly for your information. They are much less likely to do this via a mobile browser.

Whats-more, your app / brand is displayed on the users “desktop” every day.  Most marketers would kill for that sort of brand placement. In-your-face-every-day.

This isn’t the future, its happening now. Smart marketers are offering their visitors multiple touchpoints: Twitter, Facebook groups, RSS… and now apps. If your organisation has something valuable to say then you need to allow people to access that information – anywhere.

The problem is, most marketers are still coming to grips with creating a website that is computer-user-friendly, let alone mobile friendly. Most marketers are still not providing a regular flow of useful and engaging information. Those marketers are going to be left behind in the new mobile apps world.

I’m interested in your thoughts on this: Do you see apps becoming an important part of modern marketing? Lets discuss.

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