Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video. Show all posts

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Drive Traffic with content from your mobile phone. How to Make a video for your blog from yur mobile phone

The USA group and Stun Mobile media bring you this article about increasing traffic through video content from your mobile phone.


You can use your cell phone to drive traffic to your web site. The key lies in making a video that motivates people to visit your site. Here's the step-by-step plan.

As more cell phone services offer video portals, sign up and check out the video profiles uploaded there. You'll notice a few common mistakes: poor lighting, video is too short, people don't speak clearly.

While this kind of service usually prohibits the posting of your cell phone number in the video, there's nothing that says you can't post your web site's url.

Now on the traffic from video plan:

1. Make sure your video room is well lit, so that you video will look good.

2. Use a plain background. Wear a white shirt so that the video colors don't keep changing. Ready? Now record the video using your cell phone.

3. Smile and state your name. Say that you're looking for friends who enjoy jokes.

4. Deliver a short joke.

5. Now deliver a second joke, but don't give the punch line.

6. Invite your viewers to your web site, where you will give the punch line.

7. Watch your site's traffic increase.

This assumes you have a site that offers jokes. If you don't have one, don't you think it's time to start one? A joke site is a good traffic magnet, which you can use to channel more visitors to your other sites.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

BBC TV player to Compete with YouTube

BBC iPlayer to Launch on Friday (and why 4OD sucks)

The long awaited BBC iPlayer is launching in two days time (on the 27th July) for Windows XP only. The service will allow people to download TV shows to their computers and watch them for a set number of days after.

Channel 4 launched a similar service called 4OD (on demand) a couple of months ago however has been plagued with problems, if the BBC are to succeed with the iPlayer it must not have the following problems that 4OD has:

  • Connection - 4OD only allows people in the UK to download shows, that’s fine as we pay for the shows however the technology they use to only allow UK people sucks. For about the first month my BT connection was unable to use 4OD because I was apparently not living in the UK. I know some people now who are still told they cannot connect.
  • Quality - When making 4OD videos full screen everything is pixelated, I was watching 8 out of 10 cats last night and Sean Locks ear was one giant pixel. The average 45min show is 350mb to download off 4OD yet if I downloaded the same show off a torrent site with the same file size the quality would be so much better.
  • Application slowness - 4OD is basically a web page stuck inside Windows Media Player, this means that every time you click a link it loads another page. The problem with this is that the site and application doesn’t look like a web page so you expect it to act a stand alone application. This makes 4OD seem incredibly slow to use and painful to navigate.
  • Program expiration - This I believe is the biggest problem of 4OD - everything expires so quickly. For most free shows you can watch them for seven days after use. So if you download it on the sixth day and then leave it for two days it will have expired. Also once you have watched a show the expiration date changes. I personally don’t see why shows need to expire, the chances are if I have seen it I’m not going to buy it anyway.
  • Lame Technology - This may just be me but every time I go to stream a show it gets past the adverts (that don’t particularly bother me) then it tells me I don’t have the correct license installed to watch the show. It gives me no way to install the correct license and I just have to accept that I can’t stream anything.
  • Windows XP, Internet Explorer 6, WMP 11 - I don’t like applications that force you down one particular route of technology. I have a Mac as my main machine but I don’t mind using my PC. On my PC I use Firefox but I’m told I must use IE then finally I use VLC for media but I’m told to use WMP.

The reason Youtube is so popular is that it is so convenient and just works - this is a far cry from the buggy inconvenient 4OD. However 4OD is still a Beta so its allowed to suck to a certain extent!

By the sounds of it the iPlayer is going to equally suck come this Friday but I will reserve my judgement for now.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Youtube video slips in a commercial during a teen blog and makes big money

Michael Goldstein of Stun Mobile Media and the USA Group noticed a new form of product placement that will make its way into more forms of content seen on the internet and mobile phones.

Find out more about the Author of this blog about mobile content at his website

The famous YouTube video blog of Lonelygirl15 has added another fictional character to its charade of what looks like user created content but was exposed as the work of a professional and not a 16-year old in her bedroom.

The show’s creators feel they have integrated the commercialism to achieve even more reality for the show. “While the storyline comes first and the fact that the new character works at Neutrogena heightens the reality,” said LG15 creators Miles Beckett and Greg Goodfried, while counting bags of money from its hundreds of thousands of daily viewers.

Marketing the video blog to brands, included the following in the sales pitch: “This long-term relationship with Neutrogena is unprecedented, as the brand comes to life organically with the characters and storyline”.

Product placements in video games, search engines and mobile phone content was the last biggest sources of income for the advertising industry that have been doing lucrative product placements in television and film for years. This type of corporate character placement branding is new.

LG15’s video blogs are being viewed hundreds of thousands of times and other Web dramas such as Prom Queen are enjoying success.

The Neutrogena character will be an experiment worth watching as show creators and the whole industry, look for ways to monetize.

Find out more about the Author of this blog about mobile content at his website

Monday, June 18, 2007

Premium content is free on YouTube. Are the studios coming after your kids?



Kids have grown up stealing music, and now they're uploading premium content they don't have permission to use. So now what's going to happen? Are the studio's going to come after your kids and arrest them, or are they going to find ways to use this as a promotion tool.

If You Can't Beat 'Em…

Content owners need to rethink how they deal with online video sites



One of the biggest problems that content owners face today is that kids have grown up stealing music. The music industry fought this fight too long and as a result has lost this generation, which now expects to receive its video content in a similar way. Today's kids don't distinguish between web video and television—to them it's just content. Perhaps the lesson that traditional media companies should take from this example is to find ways to join consumers, not beat them.





What irks the studios is that disruptive companies like YouTube have built strong businesses based on users uploading premium content they don't have permission to use. It's not so much the fact that the content is on the platform. It's more that YouTube is not rewarding the studios as content owners with the advertising dollars it has been able to monetize from their content.







Alan Bell, Paramount Studios' executive vp and first chief technology officer, doesn't dispute that "YouTube is an efficient sharing platform," but he adds, "It's just not being used properly. Logically, it seems that a good idea is to have companies like YouTube simply develop software that serves the needs of the entertainment industry."

That would seem like an easy enough task, but before this happens, the parties need to resolve who owns the content copyright. Who is going to exploit the copyright? Who sells the advertising? And what assets go to what platform at what time?

"You write YouTube a letter and the content gets removed within eight hours," explains Bell. "But the site is so vast that the next day it's up on the platform again, posted by another user. One solution is to write software based on keywords that recognizes what content is up there. If it can recognize it, then it can be monetized.

"The technology of rights management today is not yet perfect," Bell continues. "So what we need to do in the meantime is to distinguish between 'fair use,' 'popular use' and 'reasonable use.' Identify what people want to do with those rights, and then package and market those rights accordingly."

This all makes sense, but I can't help but wonder if the studios are overthinking this a little. They are obsessed with their intellectual properties, and justifiably so. But we're not just dealing with IP piracy, we're dealing with a social lifestyle phenomenon.

"Everyone wants to consume their media the way they want to consume it. You can't control that," acknowledges Stefanie Henning, senior vp, global marketing and new media for Fox Television Studios. "But we do want an environment where consumers can get to our content in the best format possible on a platform that we're able to monetize."

Instead of waiting for YouTube to come up with a viable solution or worse yet, fighting the way consumers have grown accustomed to doing things, perhaps the studios should embrace it.

I'm not saying that the studios stop monitoring content posted on YouTube. Rather, I'm suggesting that content owners like the studios give consumers the same tools they've grown to expect from sites like YouTube.

"Users want to be passionate about what their interests are. The habit of sharing them has become a cultural phenomenon," says Richard Rosenblatt, founder and former chairman of MySpace. "Online Communities like YouTube, MySpace and me.TV are all about embracing self-expression."

Whether studios like it or not, users are going to find ways to rip off clips from favorite television shows like NBC's The Office. So let's give it to them. The TV studios already have the eyeballs and the advertising inventory. They also have branded content that keeps users coming back. Logically, they should be able to sell advertising, no matter where the audience is. The studios need make video clips available on their Web sites—not just what they want people to see, which they are already doing, but what people want to see.

Equally important, they need to provide the video-embed codes so users can share the content on any community pages they want. If users go to the studio's host site only once to get the codes to share on their community pages, it doesn't matter. Because with the right technology, the studio's host site can stream advertising to those feeds as part of the user experience.

Once users discover that some of the coolest clips from their favorite TV shows are posted online via the studio's site immediately after a show airs, the amount of unauthorized uploading of video content on sites like YouTube should diminish.

Better yet, the networks will have engaged thousands of users legitimately to virally market their content all over the Internet—just as they're already doing thanks to sites like YouTube.

To take it one step further, it wouldn't surprise me if the studios find ways to sign users up and reward "power users" for influencing the communities they reach—just like marketing practices in the early days of the Internet.


Stolen from a recent article by Michael Goldstein:
Michael Goldstein is COO and chief creative for Los Angeles-based Stun Mobile Media, specializing in the acquisition, creation and distribution of mobile content. He can be reached at mg@stunmobile.com.


Find the original article at:

Find out more about the Author of this blog and see the original article at Mediaweek mediaweek.com