Making the most of online video

The growing adoption of broadband combined with a dramatic push by content providers to promote online video has helped pave the way for mainstream audiences to embrace online video viewing.

The majority of internet users report watching or downloading some type of online video content (and 25% do so every day, according to a 2009 report on the online landscape released by The Nielson Company). Once viewers find something they like online more than half share this link with others contributing to a rapid viral spread of online video.

According to statistics released by YouTube, video is now making up a quarter of the internet’s traffic and this number is expected to grow to 90% in just three years time. Video is having a dramatic affect on the way we consume content, with one billion videos viewed per day and 20 hours of video uploaded every minute. Video is helping to drive both demand and sales.

Why should businesses get on the online video bandwagon?

Online video is engaging, entertaining and can help businesses boost their brand and awareness to new levels. It can be used to both capture emotion and help explain complex business processes and services. These two aspects are often difficult to communicate through traditional copy.

Video is the perfect way to engage the viewer and strengthen the brand connection. It helps to create a new level of dialogue with customers and increases the chance that viewers will remember a specific brand or product.

Interestingly, online video and TV help drive sales at similar levels. Statistics released by Google show that YouTube produces a 10% sales uplift while TV drives 9%. These statistics also show that online video sites have a more constant number of viewers over a 24 hour period, compared with TV which has much fewer viewers throughout the day and roughly the same viewers at night.

However, before including online video as part of a business strategy it is important to understand your target audience’s video content needs and preferences to ensure the greatest amount of success. Here a few tips to help get you started.

Simplicity is the key

Keeping videos simple and keeping them real is essential. In keeping it simple you can directly address the viewers in an engaging format that they will positively respond to and find much more convincing than written copy.

For example, digital agency The Dubs created a video-based information portal to be used as a primary channel for AMP Capital Investors to interact. Rather than asking people to download investor information, The Dubs created a two-way dialogue by developing videos of AMP experts discussing investment information.

Without flashy interfaces, the video-based information portal simply offers access to expert information in an easily accessible format.

Is it worth it?

Before you decide to commit yourself to producing online video content it is a good idea to determine whether your customers will actually watch them.

Survey your customers to help you understand if your customers actually engage in online video and what their preferences are. This will help you decide how long to make your videos, what content to include and what style to use in the creation process.

Make it watchable

There is no point in creating video content if the medium doesn’t suit your audience needs.

The AMP Capital Digital INsight’s video portal website uses Flash streaming video (both high and low bandwidth). This was chosen as the most common video format with over 98% of the audience able to view Flash content. By creating high and low bandwidth options it also allows broadband and dial-up users to view the content effectively.

Outside of the online video streaming it is also important that consumers can view the content in their own time. By developing podcasts or Windows Media downloadable versions of the content people can view the videos in their own time either via their smart phone or offline. An RSS subscription feed is also worth considering so people can continue to receive newly added videos automatically.

Mix it up

When creating your videos keep in mind that you don’t need to limit yourself exclusively to video footage. High quality images and text can also be incorporated to support your objectives and messages.

Make sure you conclude your piece with a strong call to action and contact information. It is a good idea to embed a link to your contact information and make it available at any time during the video.

You may also want to use the video to grow a marketing database for ongoing communication. Website visitors can subscribe to a website to receive alerts when any new content is added. In addition, consider building in related recommendations for alternate video and secondary content to complement the viewed video.

Get your videos out there

To boost site traffic and to easily facilitate broader conversation the website also allows users to send site links to friends while viewing the video. This helps to build genuine advocacy to the content disseminated through a peer-to-peer approach.

Share your video by posting to social video sharing sites, sharing with intranets and portals, posting to company and third party blogs, displaying at industry functions, submitting to industry trade publications, incorporating into campaign specific microsites and within email marketing campaigns.

Moments with marketers: Tristan Fawley

Marketingmag.com.au had a chat with Tristan Fawley, @www digitals creative director. If
you would
like to see a certain
marketer profiled, please email your suggestion to Sean Greaney on sean.greaney@niche.com.au.


What do you do?

Creative Director of @www Digital Sydney. We provide strategic digital advice and execution to brands and companies through any and all mediums related to the digital space.

What was your first job?

Ironically as a lifelong vegetarian my first job during college was as a grill chef in a motorway service station. Spending 10 hours a day cooking hundreds of fried breakfasts, chicken dinners and steak and chips might seem odd choice but it did however drum into me solid customer skills, dispute management and I never stole a single sausage in over four years!

What did you study?

I studied a degree in Branding and Packaging at Somerset College of Arts and Technology in West England before departing to the bright lights of London and starting work with a branding agency called Tutssels Lambie-Nairn. After working in the offline space for 7 years I moved to digital but I have always felt it is important to have a broad design understanding, its essential to know how what you do fits into the big picture.

Describe a typical day?

A standard day is mix of juggling the needs of my ever needy design team, persistent account directors and, of course, wonderful clients. If a get a free moment I haul myself out of bed at some un-godly hour and try to feel good about going to the gym. The day normally ends around 7pm when I can relax with my wife and dog and try to turn my mind off thinking about doing it all again tomorrow. I am a bit of a closet gamer so I might finish the night killing a few aliens to help me wind down.

What is on the agenda for the next year?

Growing @www Digital to be the best digital partner we can to our clients, expanding our online finance business Iposoft and developing our branded content division Dubz.tv in Australia to help expand our creative business further.

What brand do you love the most? Dislike the most? Why?

Apple (of course), as a designer I have lived and breathed Apple for the best part of twenty years. They have always remained at the forefront of both marketing and technical innovation and have shown that computers will never been seen as small grey boxes again.

What do you believe has been the most significant moment in the history of marketing?

The advent of true broadband capability – the really fast stuff is still yet to come but suddenly we are starting to see what the internet can truly offer for the first time.

Where can people find you?


Perths community news goes online

Background

Seeing the popularity of the online channel as an avenue for communities voicing themselves, Community Newspaper Group (CNG) decided to fill what it saw as a visible gap in Perth. CNG wanted to develop a platform for local issues to be discussed, services reviewed and news to be disseminated. Furthermore, the company wanted to go beyond a cursory social media presence to actively build a discursive online community.

Brand: In My Community
Client: Community Newspaper Group
Creative Agency: @www Digital

Objective

  • Provide a ‘live in’ space for people to express their voice in their own community,
  • Aggregate geographically poignant information via newspaper masthead,
  • Segment information to ensure user-relevance,
  • Encourage high levels of user-generated content,
  • Cross-market In My Community newspapers, and
  • Keep it local!

Strategy

To encourage community participation, interactivity was paramount to the website development. Users had to be able to fully engage with content with the ability to rate and comment on content across the site. To create a viable community, users needed responsibility for developing and managing their own groups and publishing their own content, blogs and videos.

The website can be viewed at: www.inmycommunity.com.au.

Execution

In My Community coupled the traditional sources of community information and content, community newspapers, with an online platform. This aggregation put 21 weekly local newspapers into the hands of the community, with the aim of blurring the line between reader and content producer.

Local information for each area encouraged integration into readers routines. @www Digital provided local information for each area on restaurants, bars, cinemas, clubs, a trade directory, real estate listings and local groups.

Results

The website currently has over 7,000 registered members and just under 400 registered online groups. It is steadily growing as community members realise the benefits the site provides.

Local business advertising has increased revenue for CNG. In addition to site advertising, the project has allowed CNG to offer online/print packages.

Community Newspapers of Australia Awards for Excellence 2009 named In My Community one of the country’s best news portals. The judging panel said it was simple, structured and informative, this site is all about content and the ease with which you can access it.

“People are moving away from a two world’s view which separates the internet from everyday life and realising that the two combined make one picture,” explained Tristan Fawley, creative director at @www Digital.

“People appreciate the opportunity to circulate information and make recommendations. They are using sites to support real world interaction.”