Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
9 April 2013
17 September 2012
You Tube Up Close & Personal
You Tube Drives Traffic
You Tube receives 4 billion hits a day. You Tube is the second largest search engine and the third most visited website that there is. Currently 72 hours of video footage are uploaded to You Tube every minute (September 2012). The average visitor spends 23 minutes per day on You Tube while the age demographic ranges from toddler to 54 year old. The best thing about You Tube is that it shows up in Google searches. What this means is that you are fifty times more likely to be found on You Tube than a blog post. Yet a survey of a large audience found that while 82% of the group viewed You Tube in the last 7 days , only 11% had ever put up a video. So you know what to do. Its time to start making your own You Tube videos to drive traffic to your website or blog. Reasons To Make Your First Video
- It draws qualified traffic.
- Excellent for branding and showing professionalism.
- Establishes you as an author with celebrity status.
- Ranks better than articles.
- Its free and can work forever.
Where To Start
Look at videos in your niche. Use the Google Keyword Tool to identify 30 keywords in your niche and build ideas around these keywords. The types of videos that work well are "how to" videos and music videos.
Essential Video Ingredients
I wanted to know what makes a good You Tube video and came up with the following list.
- Provide value. For many this means getting your message across in an entertaining way. Apparently 68% of the audience want entertainment and 28% want information, so the trick is to reach a happy medium.
- Be relevant to your video key words.
- Short and to the point, ideally in 3 to 5 minutes.
- Demonstrate what you are saying. A head and shoulders video of you getting your message out will not work. The trick here is to able to put your words into a graphical context. This needs thought but it will make or break the success of your video. A metaphor here would be to think in terms of visual answers.
- Have a call to action.
- Get viewers to subscribe and share.
- Get viewers to click a link to your website.
- Tell your audience what to do, why to do it and how to do it.
- Above all be consistant.
So in laying out the storyline for your video you need to achieve the following
Grab attention in 2-6 seconds:
Intro bumper in 4-7 seconds. This is your logo with music
The content in 1-5 minutes. Do this, this and this to solve your viewers' problem with call to action
Outro bumper in 4-7seconds. Your branded logo again
Outtakes in 4-7 seconds. Include your mistakes as they humanise you
If your video fails to drive traffic, it will be for the following reasons:
the video is too boring. Remember head and shoulders doesnt work.
your video is not optimised for keywords
or you dont understand You Tube etiquette and need more engagement.
Ideally you should have a camera with an external mic jack. In today's world of HD movie cameras sound if often the limiting factor. A lapel mcrophone is ideal. However the best place to start is with what you have. Many of today's videos are made simply with an iPhone. The most important thing about lighting is make sure you dont have shadow on the eyes. This prevents people from seeing your facial expression. Videos can be edited with iMovies for the Mac or Windows Movie Maker. The other option is to farm out your video editing to the likes of Odesk.
Whats Important
The most import thing is to make a start and take action. Your skills will improve with practice. As your video marketing pays off you can always up scale your camera equipment. The important thing is to get in the game.
23 August 2012
12 August 2012
Powerful Uses For Google Alerts
Google Alerts is a free tool that is easy to overlook. Think of it as a monitoring station, where you can track news, blogs, video, discussion and books on your keyword subject matter. You can set the frequency of the alert and have it delivered by email or RSS feed.
1. Monitor Your Brand
One of the first uses of Google Alerts I came across was to monitor for customer chatter on your own brand, goods or service. Find a conversation relevant to your company, product or service gives you the chance to jump in and engage with potential customers. In the worst case of someone damning your brand or service you can jump in and intervene.
2. Monitor Your Competitors
Google Alerts is an ideal way of keeping abreast of your competitors' latest product launches or news. It makes sense to know what your competition is doing.
3. Monitor For Customers
Keywords covering your product offering that your potential customers would be using can be monitored. Just select "discussions", "as it happens" and select the frequency of update.
If someone is looking for your product you have a chance to get in front of the customer. This is the core of inbound marketing, a social media strategy that drives lead generation.
4. Monitor Industry News
Google Alerts can be used to aggregate the best of the news in your industry sector. You have the option of hand picking bits of news or feeding the highlights to your Facebook page or Twitter. This can be done using the RSS feed selection. The trick here would be to interweave this newsfeed with more personalised posts. Blog aggregation can also be done with Google Alerts rather than Google Reader. Again this is a handy way of compiling all relevant information for a blog of your own or an industry related company newsletter.
Google Alerts

One of the first uses of Google Alerts I came across was to monitor for customer chatter on your own brand, goods or service. Find a conversation relevant to your company, product or service gives you the chance to jump in and engage with potential customers. In the worst case of someone damning your brand or service you can jump in and intervene.
2. Monitor Your Competitors
Google Alerts is an ideal way of keeping abreast of your competitors' latest product launches or news. It makes sense to know what your competition is doing.
3. Monitor For Customers
Keywords covering your product offering that your potential customers would be using can be monitored. Just select "discussions", "as it happens" and select the frequency of update.
If someone is looking for your product you have a chance to get in front of the customer. This is the core of inbound marketing, a social media strategy that drives lead generation.
4. Monitor Industry News
Google Alerts can be used to aggregate the best of the news in your industry sector. You have the option of hand picking bits of news or feeding the highlights to your Facebook page or Twitter. This can be done using the RSS feed selection. The trick here would be to interweave this newsfeed with more personalised posts. Blog aggregation can also be done with Google Alerts rather than Google Reader. Again this is a handy way of compiling all relevant information for a blog of your own or an industry related company newsletter.
Google Alerts
Labels:
aggregate,
aggregation,
blogs,
brand,
competiton,
competitors,
customers,
discussion,
Facebook,
Google Alerts,
Google Reader,
inbound marketing,
keyword,
news,
newsfeed,
RSS,
social media,
Twitter,
video
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