Tag Archives: video

Content We Love: The Boot Campaign’s Bold Video

ContentWeLove

“Content We Love” is a weekly feature written by a team of our content specialists. We’re showcasing some of the great content distributed through our channels, and our content specialists are up for the task: they spend a lot of time with the press releases and other content our customers create, proof reading and formatting it, suggesting targeted distribution strategy and offering SEO advice. In Content We Love, we’re going to shine the spotlight on the press releases and other messages that stood out to us, and we’ll tell you why. We hope you find the releases enjoyable and the insights gained from discussing them enlightening.

What Can You Do in 90 Seconds? Through Pushups for Charity, in 90 Seconds you can make a life-changing impact on the lives of veterans healing from a variety of physical and emotional wounds. Pushups for Charity is an annual fitness competition which aims to raise $1 million to support the mission of the Boot Campaign. Your participation will provide Housing, Jobs, Wellness, Urgent Assistance and Family Support to wounded service members, past and present, through the Boot Campaign. http://www.PushupsForCharity.com

A hard workout with sweat dripping from your brow.

In the name of fitness, we push ourselves to new levels and new goals. If you’re anything like me, you feel the best pushing yourself physically to new feats.

When I saw The Boot Campaign’s release challenging all to 90 seconds of push-ups to benefit the military returning from combat, I was instantly drawn in.

The story itself captures the attention with the proper use of bolding.

Why be so bold?

Written word differs from spoken word (obviously) but there are key important details within a story. The solution? Emphasize the important details in text with bolding.

What is bolded in this press release?

  • Pushups for Charity
  • aims to raise $1 million to fulfill the mission of the Boot Campaign
  • May 18, 2013
  • Visit www.PushupsForCharity.com to search for a Pushups for Charity event being held in your community

Showcasing the major points, The Boot Campaign made the details jump off the page using bolding. Highlight the main points of your story in the release and aid the viewer with the key points to remember!

The release also featured multimedia aspects which took the story from pumping iron to pumping gold.

With the knowledge that multimedia not only increases visibility but also leaves a lasting impression, how imperative it is to add these components!

*But why include a video WITH a release?

Not only does video attract viewership, gain visibility, and tell the story,
but it expands your reach.

Different websites house and host different types of content. There will be websites reposting just the text, the images, and some will post solely a video.

  • Reaching different audiences through different platforms is visibility multiplication.

No matter the story, adding key bolding and multimedia components win the gold, 90 seconds or less.

Big thanks to The Boot Campaign for sharing your release with us!

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/what-can-you-accomplish-in-90-seconds-through-pushups-for-charity-you-can-help-military-returning-from-combat-200914371.html

Author Emily Nelson is a Customer Content Specialist for PR Newswire. Follow her adventures on www.bellesandawhistle.wordpress.com or on twitter www.twitter.com/emilyannnelson.

Content We Love: Travelocity’s Photo Adventure

ContentWeLove

There is something special about traveling. New places. New food. Once-in-a-lifetime opportunities that impact you. For me, the beauty is having a camera strapped and ready in my hand. Vacations require photos!

Travelocity’s New Brand Campaign Urges Consumers To ‘Go & Smell the Roses’

When I saw Travelocity’s new campaign, I was instantly wanting to book a vacation.  On the release, Travelocity takes its iconic Roaming Gnome to great heights by having an adventure and capturing it! Laid before my eyes were beautiful images of foreign lands to go hand-in-hand with the message.

#GoSmellTheRoses

cwl gnome

n his latest ad campaign the Travelocity Roaming Gnome is dropped into a scene from the world famous running of the bulls in Pamplona, Spain. (PRNewsFoto/Travelocity)

Within this release, the different adventures, travels, and trips are not only outlined with an enthused tone throughout, but showcase the travel options with unique photos and a video.

  • Would you buy a house without first seeing it?
  • Would you book a vacation without first scoping out the area?

Images are important!

So what does this mean for press releases?

When telling your story (via a press release), it is imperative to show your audience the full story so they can understand. And given the point that “pictures are worth 1,000 words,” adding images and video will instantly attract viewers.  We are visual people in a visual world.

The icing of the touring cake is the hashtag #GoSmellTheRoses which transports the campaign to social media channels. Not only can you view the video on the release, but you can also see the YouTube channel which hosts a video of the Roaming Gnome in each destination mentioned!

Including your content on multiple channels (and connecting them) presents your message on a wider platform. This introduces your message to an ever bigger audience. It is like learning a greeting in a new language.

Guten Tag, Social Media!

Thank you to Travelocity for taking us places with your multimedia adventures!

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/travelocitys-new-brand-campaign-urges-consumers-to-go–smell-the-roses-196688271.html

Author Emily Nelson is a Customer Content Specialist for PR Newswire. Follow her adventures on www.bellesandawhistle.wordpress.com or on twitter www.twitter.com/emilyannnelson.

Content We Love: Michaels Stores Crafting Multimedia

ContentWeLove

Coloring was my favorite activity as a kid.  In the lines, outside the lines, I loved for my world to POP with a panoply of hues.  When I read Michaels’ Announcement of Top 2013 DIY Wedding Ideas, the color leapt from the page and I could not contain my glee!

Photos! Video! Bullets!
Pure joy to my technicolor world!

Michaels Stores' press release made robust use of multimedia, but the text of the release was formatted to capture reader attention, as well.

Michaels Stores’ press release made robust use of multimedia, but the text of the release was formatted to capture reader attention, as well.

Telling your story can call for the assistance of multimedia. In Michaels Stores’ case, showcasing the 2013 DIY wedding ideas (complete with color schemes) included a visually compelling press release that incorporated images, a movie, and bullets.

Whether it’s a company logo, an individual, an event, an infographic, or photos of great wedding ideas, images increase the visibility of a press release. We are drawn to pictures!

And if pictures are worth 1,000 words…
what does that mean for a video?!

A press release will paint a picture. The words leap from the page, the visuals showcase the news, but a video? A movie is the mini-story, the bonus features, the blooper reel we are instantly drawn to and captivated by. 

*Including a video in your release takes your message to another level. You’re making your content come alive for each reader and allowing your message to cross the threshold to more platforms.

Michaels Stores colored outside the lines with including bullet points within the press release.

Amending the text-block approach, Michaels broke up the message into bite sized pieces. Having bullet points are the pauses in public speaking. They are the breaks in text to allow easier readability of your news.

  • In short, the inclusion of bullet points within your release aids for each reader to fully grasp your message.

When crafting your release, don’t forget to add the multimedia elements to make your story pop! Break up your message using bullet points for readability. Best part? You can join in the DIY fun!

Thank you Michaels Stores for the great release with party favors.

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/michaels-announces-top-2013-diy-wedding-ideas-191751081.html

Author Emily Nelson is a Customer Content Specialist for PR Newswire. Follow her adventures on www.bellesandawhistle.wordpress.com or on twitter www.twitter.com/emilyannnelson.

Content We Love: 5 Broken Cameras’ Multimedia

“Content We Love” is a weekly feature written by a team of our content specialists. We’re showcasing some of the great content distributed through our channels, and our content specialists are up for the task: they spend a lot of time with the press releases and other content our customers create, proof reading and formatting it, suggesting targeted distribution strategy and offering SEO advice. In Content We Love, we’re going to shine the spotlight on the press releases and other messages that stood out to us, and we’ll tell you why. We hope you find the releases enjoyable and the insights gained from discussing them enlightening.

5 broke cameras

And the 2013 Academy Award Nominees are…

Oscar season. To me, it is a reason to celebrate. Every year the scenario is the same, my ballot sheet is printed and come the last Sunday in February, I stand in anticipation to learn who are the winners.

  • The motion picture industry shapes our lives. Dinner and movies shape “date night” and when we peruse the news, video and images seek our attention.

So how fitting: my gaze could not be broken when the multimedia assets on 5 BROKEN CAMERAS Nominated for Oscar® captured my attention.

How fitting it is to have key images
and the movie trailer on the actual release!

The goal of issuing content is to:

  1. have people read it
  2. have people act on it
  3. have people remember it

Chances are, if you’re sending a release, you have a message, a story to share. The hopes are that people will not only see it, but read it, act on it (share, print, comment, etc), and also remember it. And what is memorable? Multimedia!

*Including multimedia components increases the visibility of your message.

Why?

People are drawn to images and videos!

5 BROKEN CAMERAS Nominated for Oscar®, a release about a documentary, scored well in my book for compiling not just an image or two, but including the movie trailer.

The release combines the information of being Oscar-nominated and the story of Emad Burnat– and gives every single reader the opportunity to share in the experience, by way of the 2 minute trailer!

As you know, we live in an instant-gratification type of world. The likelihood of someone searching for a video versus pressing play on the same page as the release definitely favors the latter. If you have available video, available images, infographics, etc– add them! No more expecting people to search for your information… deliver it directly!

If pictures are worth a thousand words, keep the conversation going on your release with multimedia components!

Big thanks to Kino Lorber for letting us share in the story and the release and congratulations on the Oscar nomination!

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/5-broken-cameras-nominated-for-oscar-189105081.html

Author Emily Nelson is a Customer Content Specialist for PR Newswire. Follow her adventures on www.bellesandawhistle.wordpress.com or on twitter www.twitter.com/emilyannnelson.

Twitter’s New Vine App: Perfect for PR Pitches

Remember when we had to figure out how to condense a 400 word press release into a 140 characters? Daunting as the prospect seemed at first, eventually talented PR professionals became quite deft at the micro press release and we all learned a great lesson about brevity and the modern attention span.

But now we have a new challenge, the six-second video.

vineTwitter has launched its new Vine app, which lets you capture a six second video that loops continuously. The app is very simple to set up if you already have a Twitter account, although it is not a prerequisite, and you can share your micro-film with your Twitter followers, your Facebook friends and the Vine audience.

Brilliantly captivating, the six second video format is both a challenge from a PR perspective and an opportunity.

You couldn’t embed your four minute product demo video in Twitter. The best you could do was to link to it and hope that people would want to leave the platform and go watch elsewhere. At this point you can add page loading time and video loading time to your 4 minute production.

Not something that people are very willing to do for a product demo.

But think how often you’re willing to hit ‘play’ on Facebook and watch videos. All sorts of videos you would otherwise ignore. Why? Because you don’t have to go anywhere and if the video turns out too boring to watch, you click stop and move on. No big deal.

Vine makes videos on Twitter no big deal. And at six second length, people don’t have time to turn off your demo before they’ve seen the whole thing!

Opportunity! It’s the video elevator pitch.

So what kind of content should you be thinking about for your six second PR video? I asked Bev Yehuda, VP of Web Engagement Products for MultiVu and here are her suggestions:

  • Behind the scene clips
  • How-to segments (think time lapse, as Vine allows stitching of 3 segments)
  • Product demo
  • Presentation clips
  • Quick take from speakers at a conference
  • Create a “sneak peak” of a longer video (making-of-a-video clips perhaps)

So go make some videos and share them. As we’ve frequently written about here on Beyond PR, people like visual content. Multimedia press releases blow the socks off traditional text-only releases.

Victoria Harres is PR Newswire’s director of audience development, and the primary voice behind our @PRNewswire presence on Twitter.

Content We Love: 2012 in Press Releases

ContentWeLove

“Content We Love” is a weekly feature written by a team of our content specialists. We’re showcasing some of the great content distributed through our channels, and our content specialists are up for the task: they spend a lot of time with the press releases and other content our customers create, proof reading and formatting it, suggesting targeted distribution strategy and offering SEO advice. In Content We Love, we’re going to shine the spotlight on the press releases and other messages that stood out to us, and we’ll tell you why. We hope you find the releases enjoyable and the insights gained from discussing them enlightening.

2012.
A Year in Press Releases

PR Newswire in 2012 saw great news, great events, and great releases- many of which proved to be interesting, insightful, and dynamic on multiple channels. Reading through these stories touched our hearts and made an impact— and we are proud to present a collection of those impressive releases.

In short: a year review of releases we absolutely love!

Proving to be industry-leading, market-moving, attention-grabbing, award-winning, heart-warming, eye-catching, and thought-provoking, these were stories heard around the world. They stayed on our minds and in our hearts.

01. Kicking off 2012, Chemistry.com had women packing their bags and looking for love! This insightful study revealed where to find a sensitive man in the United States. We can’t help our curiosity on mass migration of people to those cities!

Studies put a pulse on the current population and we “loved” the interesting take on “looking for love.”

02. February was a colorful month with a golden Apple and platinum Adele singing the blues. Official Harris poll of brand reputations announced Apple took the coveted lead of #1 from Google. Congrats to Apple and all Apple-enthusiasts! When ’21′ hit, I trekked to four different stores for the album. Apparently the entire world did the same. We all celebrated when Adele rocked the Grammy Awards with her astonishing six awards for her album ’21.’

Big news in February. Both stories were of high interest and made lots of noise throughout the world. The world was tuning in and singing along.

03. America is booming! U.S. Census Bureau released hearty information that Asians are now the fastest growing race group in America– as of the last decade!

Remember filling out the 2010 Census Information? This press release showcased the results of a booming population which made waves across different channels.

04. Do you play “I-Spy” with gas prices? Apparently there is a good reason why: U.S. drivers were once again told that our total cost of driving increased in 2012. Keep your fingers crossed for an increase in your wallet instead this year.

Personally-impacting news drives our decisions and opinions– more couldn’t be said of the value of this continually rising story.

05. Starting in the middle of the election year, the Nation hit new lows… of confidence. Harris Poll released tough news that confidence in Congress was the lowest in 50 years.

The world’s eyes turned to the U.S. as the election was looming closer and closer. This poll struck a chord with a nation looking to poll in November.

06. Technology rules our world like never before. Given the option, Gazelle told us consumers wanted iPhones more than sex! What would you give up for technology?

Surveys have the golden opportunity to showcase the feelings of a population. In this instance, Gazelle alerted us we are crazy in love— with our phones (& don’t care if that makes us rude).

07. Location. Location. Location. U.S. News announced the big dog on campus: Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston is now #1, obliterating Johns Hopkins’ 21-year golden record. And if you’re planning on re-locating, Zillow has great news of the first increase of home value in nearly FIVE years!

Nothing can be more important than our health and the information provided by U.S. News & World Report helps people make decisions about who takes care of their health, Home is a close second to health and Zillow gave people the information they needed to find a home.

08. August brought the heat: the political heat. The Republican National Convention announced Chris Christie was the keynote speaker but not the candidate. All eyes turned the politico pages in anticipation for the next few months!

With the election getting closer and the debate heating up, the RNC announced big news for their upcoming convention.

09. No yellow flag on the play: An end to the ‘mash-up’ is complete! The NFL settled with their referees and brought cheers back to the game we love. Merriam-Webster had a ‘mash-up’ of their own with its addition to the official lexicon. Other added words? Aha-moment, sexting, man cave, and gastropub.

Social media was laden with relief from the announcement of the NFL and the referees. The addition to the dictionary solidified the importance of modern vernacular in tandem with current events and entertainment.

10. The award goes to… The Nobel Peace Prize went to the entire European Union. Congratulations EU friends! U.S. Presidential predictions took a hairy turn when the Obama Chia Pet vastly outsold Romney’s caricature. Chanel No5 got a new face for the iconic brand and it was none other than Brad Pitt!

A prize beyond measure was given to European Union while stateside Brad Pitt took the coveted role for the face of Chanel No5. Politics ran rampant and even included Chia pets– now you can water your love of politics!

11. President of the United States of America is Obama! The U.S. re-elected their leader and the European Union offered congratulations on the victory.

November of 2012 became legendary with the re-election of a President and the E.U. were tops on the list to send congratulations.

12. In December, our future was told. The U.S. Census Bureau released projections that our Nation is growing older and more diverse than ever before in half a century from now. OpenTable also released its top 100 Restaurants across the country list— which means– It’s time to eat! All gourmands rejoice!

Results in December showcased the future of our nation, growing up and getting more diverse than ever while a hearty survey of the top 100 Restaurants made us hungry for more.

Huge thank you to all listed the pleasure of reading your phenomenal releases and allowing us to spotlight your stories.

Now who is ready for what 2013 will bring?!

Author Emily Nelson is a Customer Content Specialist for PR Newswire. Follow her adventures on www.bellesandawhistle.wordpress.com or on twitter www.twitter.com/emilyannnelson.

Online Video: Integral to PR & Content Marketing

Earlier this week, we released the results of a study of press releases and rich media. For those that missed the post, press releases that include video and other multimedia assets generate almost ten times more views than plain text message garner.  (See: Press Releases With Multimedia Get More Views)

At the Monaco Media Summit,  David Levin, CEO of PR Newswire’s parent company, UBM, was interviewed by Beet TV (“Online Video is Multi-Million Dollar PR Biz for London’s UBM“) on the subject of content marketing and video.   The video clip of the interview at the top of this post offers some great perspective on the role (and effectiveness) of video in PR and content marketing campaigns.   Specifically, Levin discusses how we’re syndicating customers’ videos via our network of thousands of Web sites and providing tools to “socialize” video campaigns.

If you’ve thought that video was a one-trick pony named YouTube, it’s time to think again.  Fact is, video content is wildly popular.  Early roadblocks to consumption, such as incompatible formats, bandwidth constraints and high barriers to entry, have largely fallen by the wayside.  We’re streaming video on our phones while we wait for the train these days.  The format is not just one our audiences enjoy – it’s one they expect.

And YouTube? It’s the second largest search engine in the world, behind its parent, Google.  Integration between the two is already tight, and is becoming even more seamless.   Video is becoming ubiquitous.  Is this medium embedded into your content planning and PR campaigns?

Need some help getting started with video for your organization?  We have a free white paper titled “Building Brand Engagement Through Online Video” that will provides some great guidance and tips.

Sarah Skerik is PR Newswire’s vice president of social media.

How to Look and Sound Great on Camera

Brett Simon, a former TV journalist who’s now a member of our audience team, suggests that you put some color around your face when you’re going to be on camera. Our colleague Vicky Harres took her advice for this shoot.

Video content is one of the most powerful drivers of engagement and visibility for press release issuers and content marketers.   Messages that include multimedia get favorable treatment from search engines and social networks; and the human eye naturally gravitates toward visuals.   Producing video is part of many communication strategies.  To develop the best content possible, it’s important that the subjects of your video look (and sound) great on camera.

The American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA) annual Writers Conference featured more than 80 sessions covering a wide variety of topics, including  “How to Look and Sound Great on Camera.”  While the conference was geared toward writers, the tips work well for anyone in the camera’s lens.

Three panelists shared their tips on how you can hone your personal style, develop an appealing speaking voice and craft effective messages.

The panelists were:

  • Rachel Weingarten, style expert, marketing strategist, personal branding consultant, and founder of Interrobang, a marketing and promotions agency. Weingarten is the author of “Career and Corporate Cool” and “Hello, Gorgeous,” and is a regularly featured expert on TV shows, including “Good Morning America” and the “Today” show.
  • Nancy Daniels, founder of Voice Dynamic, offering voice training, voice improvement, and public-speaking solutions through seminars, corporate training and group workshops. Daniels is the creator of the “Voicing it!” DVD training program, which helps clients find their “real” voice and correct problems such as low volume, nasality and childlike tone.
  • Brad Phillips, president of Phillips Media Relations, a media presentation firm with offices in Washington, D.C., and New York City. Phillips is a former broadcast journalist and producer, and is the creator of the popular Mr. Media Training blog, offering media and presentation training.
  • Eileen Kennedy-Moore (moderator), a psychologist, author, and blogger at PsychologyToday.com, moderated the discussion.

Rachel Weingarten

The average American watches 28 hours of video a week, said Weingarten, or roughly nine years of their lives. In October 2011, more than 184 million people watched 42.6 billion videos on YouTube.

“People really are hungry for videos,” said Weingarten, “and especially for good videos.”

The first thing people think about when preparing a video is what they should wear, but there is more to looking good than what you’re wearing. In fact, the No. 1 key to a good video appearance is that you exude confidence, even if you don’t feel it, said Weingarten. How do you do that?

Know your stuff. Do your homework, and prepare as much in advance as you can. Know what the set is like. Do as much research on the host as you can, and make the host the focus of your attention. “If the host loves you, the audience will love you,” said Weingarten.

Be put-together. “People make snap decisions,” said Weingarten. “You want them to focus on your knowledge, not on what you’re wearing. For example, there’s a lawyer that loves to wear head-to-toe green suits. People tend to tune out his message because they’re so focused on what he’s wearing.

Be picky. Research every opportunity, rather than accepting every offer. Weingarten shared the story of how she was offered to be on “The Daily Show,” but turned it down because it would not have provided her the kind of exposure she was looking for.

Be comfortable. When deciding what to wear, pick something you’re comfortable in so you are not self-conscious. Otherwise, you are going to be too distracted to do a good job.

Nancy Daniels

“The way you sound on your answering machine is the way everyone else hears you,” said Daniels. If you don’t like what you hear, there are ways you can improve and find your “real” voice:

Record yourself. Practice by recording yourself in a mock interview session with a friend or colleague. This will help you gauge:

  • The volume of your voice: “You don’t want to speak too softly,” said Daniels.
  • Your accent: You don’t have to get rid of it, but you do have to be understood.
  • Whether you speak with “Valley Girl-ese,” as Daniels calls it. “If every sentence sounds like it ends in a question, you will not sound confident or professional.”

Find the friendly faces. The secret to public speaking, said Daniels, is to treat the audience or interviewer as if you were having a conversation in your living room. Zero in on your “smilers” – they will make you feel more confident.

Learn diaphragmatic breathing. It’s OK to be nervous. Learn to breathe with the support of your diaphragm; it will help you take control of your nervousness. Daniels recently wrote about how to control what comes out of your mouth when you’re nervous.

Brad Phillips

When speaking to the media, remember that your job is not to be comprehensive – your job is to give the public only enough information to take the action you want them to take. Reduce your points to your three most important messages, and support them with compelling stories and statistics.

People will remember almost nothing you say during media interviews, and one of the ways you can combat that is through repetition. “It takes 7-15 repetitions for people to remember your message,” said Phillips.

So what makes a message effective? According to Phillips, an effective message is composed of stories, statistics and sound bites.

Stories: These can be a personal story, an anecdote, a case study or a historical example. It just has to reinforce the theme of your message and make it less abstract and more tangible. You should be able to tell a compelling story in 20 seconds or less.

Statistics: Don’t use raw data; use statistics in a way the audience can relate.

Philips gave this example: “Five million Americans have Alzheimer’s.” That doesn’t immediately make you think, “Wow.”

Try this instead: “Fenway Park seats 37,000 people. It would take 135 Fenway Parks packed with people to hold every American with Alzheimer’s. That’s 5 million people in total. Now, think about the family members caring for that patient. It would take almost 600 Fenway Parks, packed with people, to hold all the patients and family members affected by Alzheimer’s.”

“For most people,” said Phillips, “that statistic is more powerful, evoking a specific image and producing that desired ‘Wow’ response.”

Sound bites: Sound bites are short, wonderful quips that are repeatable – e.g., “If it doesn’t fit, you must acquit.”

Other types of sound bites:

  • Simile, metaphor, analogy
  • Witty
  • Rhetorical  questions
  • References to pop culture

Once you have your messages, prepare for the interview. Create a worksheet detailing each message, and the story, statistic and sound bite for that message. Repeat for each message.

On his blog, Phillips shares more tips on how to create a message: Creating Your Message: A Seven-Part Series.

Q&A

Q: When offering statistics, do you need to provide the source?

Phillips: Your goal is to intrigue. In a public presentation, I would stay away from it. Unless it’s core to their understanding, I wouldn’t focus on it.

Q: Which television personalities should we watch that have a good presence?

Daniels: Diane Sawyer – her voice is like a blanket around your shoulders. Listen for the voice that has warmth, speaks comfortably.

Phillips: Newt Gingrich and Al Sharpton are both very effective in their own way. Also, Tom Friedman – what I like is that he comes in very prepared, with three or four tight bullet points he can deliver in 20 seconds. One thing I don’t agree with that he does is saying the name of the host – “Well, Diane…” – because you want the audience to think you’re talking to them, and that breaks the connection.

Q: If you make a mistake, should you correct it or let it go?

Phillips: It depends on the nature of the mistake. If it’s a mispronunciation, let it go. If it’s a significant mistake, correct it.

Author Maria Perez is director of news operations for ProfNet, a service that helps journalists connect with expert sources. To read more from Maria, visit her blog on ProfNet Connect at http://www.profnetconnect.com/profnetmaria/blog/

What Types of Video go Viral on YouTube?

Just like the varying types of media that communications companies work with today, there are also several ways in which this information can be sliced, diced and analyzed.  Thus, multimedia engagement can be discussed with infinite approaches.

In one of the latest efforts to get a handle on the topic, The Pew Research Center has just released a study on the most popular news footage uploaded and viewed on YouTube.  The goal was to examine some concrete features of the videos within the YouTube News and Politics Channel that went most “viral” each week over the course of a 15 month period (January 2011 through March 2012).  Some of the key takeaways include:

-          Regular people (not news outlets or journalists) posted close to 40% of the content

  • While much of this 40% was originally produced by a news outlet, a large portion of it was not sourced correctly, if at all
  • The most popular (“viral”) news videos focused on controversies, striking disasters or humorous occurrences
  • The lengths of the popular news videos range from less than one minute to over 15 minutes!
  • A large amount of the most popular news content was raw, unedited video

This really shows the differences between TV and online viewing habits.  Can you imagine watching a story that is longer than 2-3 minutes on TV news?  What about unedited, raw video?  Citizen journalism seems to be successful when it comes to unique and / or shocking news stories, but the consensus seems to be that more requirements are needed for proper news sourcing, beyond YouTube’s current attribution guidelines.

Another notable point is that while YouTube contains a large portion of popular online video and international viewership, it is not the only destination for news video, especially for U.S. audiences (only 30% of YouTube traffic is U.S. based).

It would be interesting to see what some of the viewing trends are on other YouTube channels, and perhaps on other online video hubs like Vimeo or Treemo.  The definition of “news” has undoubtedly evolved during the past several years, and with that, so has “journalist,” “branding,” “marketing,” and “PR.”

 Author Gena Sabin is the director of multimedia business at MultiVu.

Brand TV: Using Video to Engage Audiences

Read our free white paper on utilizing video in communications campaigns.

Today’s communication professionals are well aware that social media and video both have a major impact in marketing strategy.  The question that many of us ask is how these tools should be harnessed and when are they most appropriate?

In 2011, we hit an important tipping point: fully half of all web traffic was accessing online video. Clearly, audiences of all kinds are watching video and on any one of a plethora of devices that are available.  Did you know that as of the beginning of 2012, there are more mobile devices in existence than people on the planet?  That fact alone is mind-blowing. There are now an infinite number of combinations of platforms and devices where content can be viewed and experienced, along with the different browsers used along with them.  Ignoring the fact that this combination exists is, the biggest mistake that marketing professionals can make.

The Content Marketing Institute recently held a webcast that focuses on this hot topic entitled “Jumpstart Your 2012 Content Marketing Strategy with Video + Social Media,”  with a presentation from Steve Rotter, VP of Marketing for Brightcove, who declared that the best way for marketers to learn is through customer examples, starting with our own viewing behavior.  Audiences in 2012 “want options,” he said, along with “living room content everywhere.” As usual, I thought of my own short attention span, and translated that to mean that companies should keep their content short (2 minutes tops), entertaining and of good quality.

For more examples of how brands are using video, click the the image.

Branded video applications:

One tactic that was discussed was “brand TV” – the development and display of branded videos.  Considered a video engagement best practice, brand TV is a proactive format that is great for branding, education and it can also cut down customer service costs.

  • Kohler, a company known for making bathroom fixtures, has developed “The Kohler Network” their own TV channel on their web site.
  • Hoover uses video to address popular customer issues and provide instruction guides presented in short videos.
  • Citrix TV utilizes videos between 30 seconds and 2 minutes utilized in a “bite-sized” fashion.  This type of visual experience with a brand, according to Rotter, strengthens customer loyalty, which is a goal for all marketers.
  • Phillips, Oracle, McKesson and even the US Department of State utilize live video in some way, causing what Rotter labels the “halo effect,” making sure that people will come back to the site due to past live content.

It’s interesting to note that the most popular question from marketers typically has to do with YouTube, and how important it is in social media strategy.  While having a presence on YouTube is pretty much necessary these days, Rotter says to be careful when looking at the search stats on the site.  While it does garner a large amount of web traffic, the searches performed on YouTube are a lot more topically specific than Google.  A company’s own website is still very important. Thus, a “blended distribution strategy” is the ideal set-up, where a company has some video on YouTube, as well as their own site.  This offers more control over the entire user experience.

There are plenty of options for a marketer to consider when putting together their strategy, and it is quite evident that social media and video are requirements for that strategy.  It was astounding to me when 67% of the webinar audience claimed that their company “doesn’t have a mobile strategy.”  This is where the eyeballs are, and where even more of them are going.  Harnessing this fact by creating and distributing your content to work on these devices should be a priority.  As Rotter explained, “With video compared to standard web stats, you get more statistics and information about your user.”  That information is a fundamental requirement for all marketers.  As technology continues to fragment, conversion will become more complex.  It is our responsibility to build marketing strategies that keep up with these changes.

Author Gena Sabin is director of multimedia business for PR Newswire/MultiVu.