Video Production Editing
Video Production Editing Smart Tips
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May29No Comments
Did you know there are a “Best Practices” Guide for digital video? The IAB Video Council released this handy guide for advertisers. You can check it out here http://www.iabuk.net/en/1/onlinevideomarketing.html
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Mar18
Monetizing Online Video
Filed under: Internet Video, Video Editing;No CommentsTuesday Martin Hayward from Video Insider reported Internet users are watching more videos compared to the same time last year. There has been an increase of 45%. The result of this increase is users and advertisers are looking for more unique ways to monetize their websites and blogs. One of the options is video. You don’t even need a camera these days to add video to your web site.
I have come across a very cool program that will add video to your web site and you don’t even need a camcorder. Check out Animoto There is absolutely no excuses now. This video took about 5 min to create.
So if you’re hedging your bets that your business will be the next YouTube, Metacafe, Blip.tv or even a Hulu, this is the perfect time to upload your videos and try monetizing that content.
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Feb26
Targeted Online Advertising: What’s the Harm & Where Are We Heading?
Filed under: Advertising Video; Tagged as: Advertising Video, Internet Video Marketing, online advertisingNo CommentsThe Internet and mobile communications has made reaching out to other people so much easier. Thanks to the rapid advance of technology, reaching another person is at the tip of everyone’s fingertips. This has proven to be a boon for advertising videos but not everybody is cheering. Some privacy advocates have been asking for some government regulation to protect consumers and users.
Regulators should think twice about imposing more stringent guidelines as this could kill the goose that lays the golden egg. Berin Szoka, in his article ‘Targeted Online Advertising: What’s the Harm & Where Are We Heading?’ declares government regulation poses a danger to the health of the Internet. Government regulation will stifle the advertising video industry which is the economic engine that has ‘supported a flowering of creative expression and innovation of online content and services says Szoka. He however acknowledges that concerns of privacy advocates have to be addressed and he proposes a technology based solution to help keep the balance between privacy, regulation and economic concerns.
Self-regulatory efforts (by websites and ad networks) can be refined, especially through technological innovation. For instance, Szoka says, if websites and ad networks supplemented their current “natural language” privacy policies with equivalent “machine- readable” code, that data could be “read” by browser tools that would implement pre-specified user preferences. However, this system would only work if users realize and make real choices about paying for “free” content by disclosing their personal information.
Privacy sensitive users are free to keep out of whatever tracking they find objectionable, but according to Szoka, this will come with a price. “The less data they agree to share, the less content and services they can fairly expect to receive for free,” Szoka says. This means users might not be able to access certain sites, content and functionality without watching extra untargeted ads or paying for such content. “There is no free lunch,” Szoka adds.
For the moment, authorities are resisting calls for more regulation, and Szoka agrees that this is the right move. Keeping the Internet “free and open” requires preserving the economic engine that makes it so.
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Feb25
Limit Experimentation and Focus on Proven ROI
Filed under: Advertising Video; Tagged as: Advertising Video, social network sites, video content, web contentNo CommentsMembership in social network sites has been growing rapidly in the last few years and advertisers have been quick to exploit this opportunity. Along with this growth, advertising video spending is expected to grow 45% this year to reach $850 million. Part of this increase is attributed to the added presence of professional video content on the Web.
Social networks provide companies with one of the best ways to build brand awareness and increase sales while content providers realize these sites have the potential for efficient distribution channels. This realization has led to much experimentation with various applications and widgets. However, the time for experimentation has passed and marketers are now consolidating their strategies and sticking with fewer proven vendors in order to increase their ROI.
What are the best practices that marketers should keep in mind as they consolidate?
SplashCast CEO Michael Berkley says the first step to maximizing ROI is to ensure content is professional, compelling, and constantly updated. “Basically, for the sought after viral spread that gives presence in this space its value potential, you want to advertise on content that already has legs,” Berkley says.
Also, a content provider should have the ability to update content in real time. A particular widget developer may be preferred because it makes it easier to upload and refresh live in every application that is installed.
A marketer should have the means to measure the success of his advertising video campaign. Metrics such as up-to-the-minute click-throughs or length of time a user spends time interacting with an application should be kept track of in order to help the marketer allot resources to the approach that works best.
Choose a widget provider who understands, hooks, says Berkley. This way, more people will be able to view the message marketers wish to get across. Utilities which make users’ lives easier are hooks in and of themselves, he adds.
Berkley also advices to work with companies that have figured out how to become available on any web page and mobile device.
Finally, always maintain quality in content. Following these tips will lead to a better return for any marketer’s advertising video online campaign.
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Feb23
That Video Screen in the Mall May Be Sizing You Up
Filed under: Advertising Video, marketing videos; Tagged as: Advertising Video, marketing video, sales videoNo CommentsIt may sound like something out of a sci-fi movie but technology is progressing to the point where when one watches an advertising video in the mall it may watch you back.
Small cameras embedded in the screen or hidden around it can now track who looks at the screen and for how long. Makers of the tracking system claim the software can determine the viewer’s gender, approximate age and in some cases ethnicity and can change the advertising video accordingly, according to a report by Dinesh Ramde.That could mean razor ads for men, cosmetic ads for women and video game ads for teens, says Ramde.
The technology is also a goldmine for advertisers as the ability to determine viewers’ demographics will enable them to determine the effectiveness of the reach of their ads.
Technology is still a ways away from identifying individuals and remains in limited use, but manufacturers declare the system can accurately measure gender 85 to 90 percent of the time while other measures continue to be refined.
This means that the system is capable of displaying an ad for a group of men but will switch to a minvan ad when women and children join them.
The idea of smart advertising videos, however, does not please everyone. Some opponents to the use of the technology argue cameras that study people contribute to an erosion of privacy. The use of the technology without the consumer’s knowledge also raises the hackles of privacy-protection advocates. Although manufacturers claim that nothing is ever stored and no identifying information is ever associated with the pictures, skeptics want privacy protection built in to the technology stage while it is still in its infancy.
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Feb23No Comments
Direct response video is a well-established, wildly successful marketing tool that is becoming main stream throughout the Internet. Since its inception on TV 20 years ago, direct response video has sold more than $100 billion of products for entrepreneurs and small business owners and people with great ideas and vision. In 2007 Direct Response TV is had one of its best years on record. However now with the economy in a recession budgets are tighter, and advertisers are more selective in selecting the media they choose to promote their products.
Online video marketing is still growing. There is a reason for that, online video is fast becoming the most effective way to reach and connect with Internet audiences. The direct response video is designed to bring Internet users emotionally closer to the audience. Online video is close enough to television to feel familiar to traditional marketers and advertisers. Large fortune 500 companies are using online video to promote their products. Apple sold a million video downloads within 21 days of launching its service. Right now, online video is still a work in progress with much of the chaos – and dreams – that the early entrepreneurs experienced in TV of the 1950s and early ’60s.
Don’t get lured into a false sense of security, because these products are incredibly successful, direct response TV is without risk. It is easy to put video on your blog or website. Along the lines of rich media content delivery for blogs and websites, the product must match the market. There are even products like Instant Video Generator that easily and instantly turns your emails and websites into full sensory, multimedia marketing communications tools. We are seeing more and more pictures, audio and video being integrating and syndicated within web content.
The delivery of visual and video content is dynamic; advertising models are in flux; and marketers and advertisers have a great many places to place their bets. DRTV is far different from general advertising and therefore offers must be positioned accordingly.
Get creative, time to crank up the volume and craft your own Internet video. Online video is fast becoming the most effective way to reach and connect with your Internet audiences. It all adds up to this: Now is the time for Internet video.
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Feb22No Comments
Government is resisting calls from some sectors to increase regulation in the online advertising industry. The US Federal Trade Commission is urging the advertising industry to more meaningful and rigorous self-regulation even as it expanded the guidelines for online marketers engaged in behavioral advertising, according to a report by Grant Gross of IDG News. FTC Commissioner Jon Leibowitz wrote in a statement that this is the last clear chance for advertisers to show that self-regulation with their advertising video can effectively protect consumers’ privacy online lest government be forced to intervene with a more regulatory approach.
The FTC released its revised behavioral marketing principles recently and critics are not satisfied with the stance the government agency has taken saying it does not do enough to protect consumer privacy. “Unknown to most members of the public, a vast commercial surveillance system is at the core of most search engines, online video channels, video games, mobile services and social networks,” said privacy advocate Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy.
The FTC report makes some changes to four privacy principles first laid out in 2007: transparency and consumer control; reasonable security and limited data retention; consumer consent for major changes to existing privacy policies; and affirmative consumer consent for using sensitive data for behavioral advertising video.
The FTC also clarified its stance on retroactive changes to privacy policies saying a company must keep any promises it makes with respect to how it will handle and protect consumer data. Companies, therefore must, before using previously collected data in a manner materially different from promises the company made when it collected the data, obtain the express affirmative consent from affected consumers.
Four online marketing and advertising groups have already said they are committed to working together to develop a set of privacy principles for online advertising. The American Association of Advertising Agencies, the Association of National Advertisers, the Direct Marketing Association and the Interactive Advertising Bureau have created a task force to support the FTC’s goal of a self-regulatory program, according to Gross’s report.
Despite its critics, many people want to see self-regulation work. Time will tell whether advertising videos alone will effectively balance companies’ marketing and data collection practices with consumers’ privacy interests.
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Feb22Filed under: Internet Video Marketing;No Comments
Government is resisting calls from some sectors to increase regulation in the online advertising industry. The US Federal Trade Commission is urging the advertising industry to more meaningful and rigorous self-regulation even as it expanded the guidelines for online marketers engaged in behavioral advertising, according to a report by Grant Gross of IDG News. FTC Commissioner Jon Leibowitz wrote in a statement that this is the last clear chance for advertisers to show that self-regulation with their advertising video can effectively protect consumers’ privacy online lest government be forced to intervene with a more regulatory approach.
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Feb22Filed under: Internet Video Marketing;No Comments
Government is resisting calls from some sectors to increase regulation in the online advertising industry. The US Federal Trade Commission is urging the advertising industry to more meaningful and rigorous self-regulation even as it expanded the guidelines for online marketers engaged in behavioral advertising, according to a report by Grant Gross of IDG News. FTC Commissioner Jon Leibowitz wrote in a statement that this is the last clear chance for advertisers to show that self-regulation with their advertising video can effectively protect consumers’ privacy online lest government be forced to intervene with a more regulatory approach.
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Feb22No Comments
Government is resisting calls from some sectors to increase regulation in the online advertising industry. The US Federal Trade Commission is urging the advertising industry to more meaningful and rigorous self-regulation even as it expanded the guidelines for online marketers engaged in behavioral advertising, according to a report by Grant Gross of IDG News. FTC Commissioner Jon Leibowitz wrote in a statement that this is the last clear chance for advertisers to show that self-regulation with their advertising video can effectively protect consumers’ privacy online lest government be forced to intervene with a more regulatory approach.
The FTC released its revised behavioral marketing principles recently and critics are not satisfied with the stance the government agency has taken saying it does not do enough to protect consumer privacy. “Unknown to most members of the public, a vast commercial surveillance system is at the core of most search engines, online video channels, video games, mobile services and social networks,” said privacy advocate Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy.
The FTC report makes some changes to four privacy principles first laid out in 2007: transparency and consumer control; reasonable security and limited data retention; consumer consent for major changes to existing privacy policies; and affirmative consumer consent for using sensitive data for behavioral advertising video.
The FTC also clarified its stance on retroactive changes to privacy policies saying a company must keep any promises it makes with respect to how it will handle and protect consumer data. Companies, therefore must, before using previously collected data in a manner materially different from promises the company made when it collected the data, obtain the express affirmative consent from affected consumers.
Four online marketing and advertising groups have already said they are committed to working together to develop a set of privacy principles for online advertising. The American Association of Advertising Agencies, the Association of National Advertisers, the Direct Marketing Association and the Interactive Advertising Bureau have created a task force to support the FTC’s goal of a self-regulatory program, according to Gross’s report.
Despite its critics, many people want to see self-regulation work. Time will tell whether advertising videos alone will effectively balance companies’ marketing and data collection practices with consumers’ privacy interests.
