Website Video Marketing
The following article by David Collier explores the exciting future of website video
marketing. With his wide experience in video for the
web and video production marketing. He delivers a concise snapshot of the present
ever expanding web video market concept. David outlines the exciting future of this marketing
concept as he sees it.
The future has challenges and his predictions of evolving videos for the website video
marketing developments are exciting. With his experienced hands on involvement in the sophisticated
media marketing initiatives, predictions include interactive engagement such as clickable hot spots, 3d
manipulation of images, synchronized web page events, and sidebar video segment features we can look forward
to.
The Future Of Web Video Marketing
By: David Collier
With more consumers turning to the web for news and entertainment (think Netflix Watch Instantly, ABC.com, VEVO,
etc) online real estate for video marketing is garnering greater value. Embedding video onto your facebook, blogor
website has become par for the course and where social media trends go, larger companies and their marketing
strategies must follow. In the last year Berkeley-based Studio B Films has produced more marketing videos for
online distribution than any other platform. What does this mean for the future of marketing videos? We sat down
with David Collier, director and founder of Studio B Films to find out what we can expect in the years to come.
Give us a sense of the landscape out there right now. What percentage of your clients are producing videos for
marketing on the web?
It seems that every marketing department of almost every company is clamoring to produce video for the web. At
least 70% of the marketing videos we produce are created to live online. Sometimes these videos are also intended
for trade shows and company events, but we always recommend that our clients leverage their video for their
website. Not all videos are web-friendly so sometime we re-edit them and produce new graphical elements that will
play better for web distribution.
There are many advantages to web-based marketing. For one thing, distribution on the web is
free, which is perhaps its biggest selling-point. Secondly, well produced web videos drive a lot of traffic which
in turn build customers, brand loyalty and ultimately delivers sales. The fact that anyone and everyone can access
a company's website at any time from anywhere makes it a powerful way to distribute videos, not only for marketing,
but also for training and education.
Video on the web is huge right now and it's only going to get better and more popular in the coming years.
What is the ideal length of a web-based marketing video?
As web compression gets improves and the down-load times get faster, the ideal length of web videos is
expanding. However, people still have a short attention span when it comes to viewing videos online. Viewers are
now accustomed to watching short clips on YouTube which usually run under two-minutes. Also, when people are
watching video on the web they are in a "surfing mode" and are looking for quick hits of entertainment and
information. For that reason we advise our clients not to exceed three and a half minutes in length, ideally closer
to two minutes.
Length also, depends on content. People have more patience for entertainment or educational material than for
straight-forward marketing. With this in mind, it's necessary to keep web videos concise and highly engaging or
you'll loose your audience. In short, the true limiting factor isn't the technology but attention spans.
Are there specific challenges that exist when producing and serving web video?
Up until recently, one of the biggest challenges in producing video for the web was all of the many steps
required to prepare it, transcode it, upload it, and test it. The compression software was difficult to comprehend
and it was often difficult to know all of the variables in order to optimize the quality. That has all changed in
the last year or so. The latest versions of Final Cut Pro and other NLE systems have easy-to-use presets and
YouTube employs server-side encoding software that will take just about anything you can upload and make it look
decent. As a professional video company we of course are striving for better than that, As a professional video
company we of course are striving for better than that, so we typically encode web videos to the industry-standard
H.264 format with either Compressor or Adobe Media Encoder. Both produce great looking video with a relatively
small file size.
What format do you shoot in for the web?
We produce everything we do in either 4K, 2K or 1920x1080p even if it's ultimately intended
for the web. Depending on the job we shoot with either the Red One, our Panasonic 2P card-based Varicam, or if our
client is on a tighter budget Sony EX1.
Why shoot in HD if it's just intended for the web which is going to be compressed?
There are several advantages to shooting in a higher resolution format even if it's overkill for the web. One
reason is that it gives the editor the possibility to re-size the footage (crop in) without loosing a lot of image
quality. Another value in shooting in a 4K, 2K or HD 1920x1080p is that you are future proofing your videos so that
when web quality does catch up your videos are already in high quality HD. The other advantage is that you never
know when you might need to repurpose that footage for a sale presentation on a larger screen.
What do you think is the future of video on the web?
I think we will see more interactive engagement such as clickable hot spots, 3d manipulation of images,
synchronized web page events, sidebar video segments, which will extend the experience of web video viewing beyond
the 16:9 frame and onto the web page that surrounds it.
We just produced a video for Adobe about a partnership between Adobe and Wired magazine and the future of
electronic publishing. We were blown away by the experience of reading a magazine on the web. You can now have a
magazine with embedded videos, web links, sound, and motion graphics all within an magazine article. The fact that
you can access all of this from a ipad or other mobile devices makes this a technological development with real
staying power.
Another great advantage of video on the Internet is the access to your market with more interesting and valuable
analytics now available. As they become more and more sophisticated, we'll be able to tell even more about how
groups of viewers react to a video segment, second by second, and relate those reactions to commercial calls to
action, such as buying a product, signing up for a cause or casting a vote. Author
Resource:-> Studio B Films, Inc. is a San Francisco Bay Area video production company specializing in corporate, marketing,
sizzle and web viral videos in the San Francisco Bay Area. Studio B Films also provides video production
crews or crewing services in SF.
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