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Creating Value With Streaming Video
Content
Author: John Howarth
Having a corporate or promotional video for your company is
often viewed as something of an expensive luxury – useful, but
rarely considered to be an essential marketing tool. Whilst
many businesses can understand the benefits of having a
corporate video, all too often they are put off by the
perceived cost and subsequently find it hard to justify
commercially. Furthermore, the process of making a video can at
times, appear complex and intimidating, with an array of
technical terms and processes.
Streaming video provides a number of useful opportunities
for maximising the potential of an existing corporate video.
And compared to other distribution media such as DVD or CD-ROMs
it also offers a cost-effective solution for broadcasting a new
corporate presentation to a wider audience.
Although streaming video is certainly not a new concept and
has been around for some time, it’s now easier than ever to add
streaming video content to your website. The technology
required to enable video streaming is widely available, it’s
relatively inexpensive and with the dramatic growth in high
speed, broadband internet connections, a growing number of
internet users can now view high quality, streaming video on
their computers.
In this article, leading corporate video & business
television producer, John Howarth, explains some of the ways in
which streaming video content can be made to work effectively
for your business and produce tangible results.
Provide Compelling Content
Try to provide content that creates a real interest for the
viewer. Instead of simply informing them of your key corporate
values – the typical narrative being ‘how successful we are,
the great products & services we offer, our featured
clients’ - why not turn the message into something that is
actually useful and engaging to watch.
Take for example a company that manufactures kitchen
products. Whilst you could produce a video to establish company
values by highlighting such areas as quality of craftsmanship
and original design of the product, this information is almost
certainly available more easily on the web pages. It could be
far more interesting for the viewer to provide them with a
series of recipes, which feature the products being used in
context.
Another technique is to provide content that is not
centrally focused to your company’s core products &
services. For example, your company sponsors a sports event or
art exhibition. How about showing some clips from the event,
with company branding around it? By using more recognisable and
popular content, you are creating a wider ‘reach’ for the
video, with the added possibility of gaining increased website
traffic.
Re-Package Content
Lets say you already have a corporate video, it’s around ten
minutes long and you currently distribute it on a video tape
format or DVD. The most obvious solution would be to have it
transferred to a streaming format in it’s entirety and loaded
up onto your website. Whilst a ten minute corporate video
sequence may be useful as a backdrop display in a trade
exhibition or screened to a captive audience in a conference,
it’s often far too long to use as a streaming video clip on
your website. Who really has the time to sit and watch a
corporate video clip for this length of time? It’s often far
more useful to break the sequence down into a series of
individual clips or re-edit into a shorter, condensed version
that has greater impact.
Following on from this, you might also want to distribute
streaming video clips around different areas on your website.
This way, the clips featured can be targeted to match – and
complement - the page content. For example, on a page detailing
company clients and case studies, the video clip could feature
customer testimonials; situated on a contact details page, the
video sequence could feature some generic shots of company
locations and building exterior shots.
Brand The Video
Whatever streaming video clips you use, try to ensure they
are branded with your corporate identity. This could be a small
logo in the top corner of the screen or a ‘picture frame’
wrapped around the moving images. Taking it a step further, you
may want to add an introduction sequence with animated
corporate logos at the beginning and end of every sequence.
Another option is to create an HTML or Flash ‘player’
customised with your corporate identity. The video clip would
then play within this frame and could be complemented by some
animated product or service information around it.
When reviewing website statistics, it is frequently pages
featuring streaming video content that are the most ‘sticky’
and have the longest viewing times by site visitors. Use this
factor to your advantage - it’s an ideal opportunity to get
your core brand values, products and services across to the
site visitor.
About The Author
John Howarth is creative director of Blue Tuna Limited, a
leading UK-based corporate communications & multi-media
production agency. Past projects include live streaming for
leading online bookmaker, Blue Square and the launch of the
UK’s of the first club soccer channel, Boro TV for NTL.
www.bluetuna.tv
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