>BOOST O2 >> Boost your video marketing impact (Tips)

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Seven ideas that will make your online video marketing stand out




TOP STORIES ON BtoBonline.com
Telephony provider Cbeyond has approximately 70 to 80 video testimonials and product demonstrations on its website and blog. The company’s director of public relations, Shana Keith, who also handles interactive marketing, said video is a perfect way for Cbeyond to improve its overall visibility with its customers, which are mostly small businesses. “It’s a very clean look and feel, and a good way to educate our customers about our services and their features and benefits,” she said. Cbeyond isn’t the only company that’s jumping into video. According to a February 2011 eMarketer report, “7 Trends for Video Advertising Engagement,” video advertising will account for 19.4% of all online display ad spending this year, with that number rising to 35.9% by 2014. The increase can be attributed to video’s unique attributes, said senior analyst David Hallerman in his report. “Video—with its ability to tell stories and therefore influence the audience emotionally—is the most inherently appealing ad form in any medium.”
As Hallerman’s report points out, however, video is still in the experimental phase, changing every year. Last year, marketers were busy creating and building YouTube channels and putting video on their websites. This year, marketers are taking video to the next level, using it in ways they may not have envisioned only a year ago. Here are seven of the top video trends in 2011.
1) Video gets more social. Last year, social was an important yet optional part of any video strategy. This year, it’s a required component as marketers see the value of shared views as opposed to paid views. Something that’s shared virally can have a bigger impact than a paid video placement, which is why so many marketers are tweeting when posting new videos or linking to them from their blogs or Facebook pages, said Kirk Davis, exec VP and co-founder of video technology company Liquidus Marketing.
2) Detailed analytics. Before, marketers focused on views and how long someone was engaged with a video. Today, however, they’re looking at additional metrics to help tweak marketing and promotion. “Marketers need detailed reporting on not just how many videos are watched and for how long, but who is watching those videos, what other behaviors are involved—requesting more information or forwarding to a friend to view,” said Paul Ritter, managing director at the Web Video Marketing Council, an industry group dedicated to online video. Even something as simple as a Facebook “like” can provide details about what makes a video well-received.
3) Hit the road. CBeyond has about 750 salespeople across 14 markets. Many of those people, Keith said, are bringing laptops with them into sales pitches, using website videos to drive home their marketing and sales messages. “It’s great because the salesperson can let the subject matter expert articulate the data points that customers may be asking about,” she said. “We’re hearing it all the time from the salesforce: They love having the videos to help close a deal.”
4) Go beyond the marketing department. Marketers, realizing the power of the Internet, are letting customers and prospects create video elements and new content. For instance, Lumber Liquidators, which sells building materials to contractors, recently produced a number of videos using crowdsourcing (asking people to create videos) on Poptent.net to promote its various offerings. “These videos will run on both TV and reside on their website so customers can see the product benefits, thanks to the power of sight, sound and motion provided by video,” said Neil Perry, president of Poptent.
5) Mobile optimization. As smartphone usage soars (as of October 2010, 29.7% of Americans had smartphones, according to Nielsen Co.), marketers are scrambling to make their videos visible on whatever device a customer or prospect may have, said the Web Video Marketing Council’s Ritter. “One of the challenges that companies face is figuring out how to reach as wide an audience as possible on their mobile devices in an era where the range of devices, speeds and formats has been growing at a dizzying pace,” he said. “Marketers should look for ways to deliver their video content to their desired audiences in a way that can auto-detect the viewer’s type of device and connection, and be able to serve up the right content automatically.”
6) Personalization. WhiteGlove House Call Health, a mobile healthcare provider that sells its services to businesses, sends out personalized videos to customers using a technology from StreamVine, said Michael Cohen, VP-marketing at WhiteGlove. “It’s [our CEO] Bob [Fabbio] speaking: “Hi, John. This is Bob, president and CEO of WhiteGlove,’ ” he said. “It’s personalized, and then we include a call to action.” By making it personal, the company can help boost engagement, he said.
7) Localize. Before this year, video—even for use in international markets—may have been produced in one country but dubbed in English. Today, marketers are creating and posting video in local languages. Apriso Corp., which sells manufacturing operations management software, records its customer testimonial videos in the speakers’ native language and uses subtitles to translate for other markets, said Veerle De Decker, the company’s EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa) marketing director. “You get the true feeling of the person speaking, and it shows our global focus,” De Decker said. “I want people to see that we can provide the same solution and quality standards all over the world.”
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>BOOST O2 >> BUSINESS >> Online Small-Business Strategy (video)

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Online Small-Business Strategy
6 min
Andre Taylor shares tips on how entrepreneurs can gain an online presence.
abcnews.go.com

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>O2 > YouTube Video Editor Makes Online Editing Simple

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Post-interview video editing with Final Cut Pr...Image by mobilechina2007 via Flickr


 , About.com Guide

The Bottom Line
There’s a certain beauty in the simplicity of the YouTube video editor. It’s just a single track timeline with basic transitions and effects, and a simple soundtrack feature. But it’s easy to learn, quick to use, and pretty awesome.
It may be simple, but just for being on YouTube it’s a success and has the potential to change the way millions of producers interact with the site.

Pros
  • The YouTube video editor is easy to learn
  • The YouTube video editor processes video quickly
  • The YouTube video editor is free
Cons
  • The YouTube video editor only has the most basic features.
Description
  • The YouTube video editor makes it easy to edit and remix your YouTube videos.
  • Video editing on YouTube is very basic, lacking any complex editing features.
  • As part of the Test Tube program, the YouTube video editor is still under development.
  • You can only edit YouTube videos that you’ve uploaded to your YouTube account.
  • Effects include black & white, image stabilization, brightness and contrast.
  • Transitions include basics like crossfade and wipe, as well as cheesy ones like heart, star and jack-o-lantern.
Guide Review – YouTube Video Editor Makes Online Editing Simple
The YouTube video editor is getting better and better. When it was originally introduced, all you could do was trim your clips, arrange them in a timeline, insert basic transitions and add a soundtrack.
Now, you can also create multiple projects and add effects to change the look of your video. These improvements make the YouTube editor – already a great tool – even better.
Even with its recent additions, the YouTube editor remains a simple tool. And simplicity has its benefits. In the case of the YouTube video editor it translates into speed. We all know how slow video editing can be on a desktop computer, and you’d expect editing online to be even slower.
That’s not the case with the YouTube video editor, which processes your videos much more quickly than you’d expect from an online video application. And it’s much easier to learn, so you can start editing your YouTube videos in no time.
Obviously, such limited video editing software is not suitable for many projects. But I can imagine many instances where the YouTube video editor will come in incredibly handy.
For instance, it’s great for making mashups of your recent videos. And web series producers could use the YouTube video editor to add opening and closing credits onto their videos.
The YouTube video editor is nothing complex. It’s just a simple tool that has the power to deeply impact the way we publish and interact with online video – much like YouTube itself.

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>O2 > New Ways to Safeguard your ID

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WASHINGTON - MARCH 26:  U.S. President Barack ...

White House unveils cyber ID proposal

(PhysOrg.com) — The White House unveiled a plan Friday to boost consumer confidence and business online through the creation of a single, secure credential for Internet users.

“By making online transactions more trustworthy and better protecting privacy, we will prevent costly crime, we will give businesses and consumers new confidence, and we will foster growth and untold innovation,” President said in a statement.
“That’s why this initiative is so important for our economy.”
The National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC) proposes to create secure and reliable online credentials that would be available to consumers who want to use them.
It would be private-sector driven and participation would be voluntary.
The system would involve using a single credential — unique software on a , a smart card or a token that generates a one-time digital password — and would eliminate the need to remember multiple passwords.
“The consumer can use their single credential to log into any website, with more security than passwords alone provide,” the said.
“Consumers can use their credential to prove their identity when they’re carrying out sensitive transactions, like banking, and can stay anonymous when they are not.”
In making online transactions more secure, the White House said the goal was to give businesses and consumers “more confidence in conducting business online.”
“The Internet has transformed how we communicate and do business, opening up markets, and connecting our society as never before,” Obama said. “But it has also led to new challenges, like online fraud and , that harm consumers and cost billions of dollars each year.”
The proposed “identity ecosystem” would also provide better privacy protections.
“Today, a vast amount of information about consumers is collected as they surf the Internet and conduct transactions,” the White House said. “How organizations handle that information can vary greatly, and more often than not, it is difficult for consumers to understand how their privacy will (or will not) be protected.
“The NSTIC seeks to drive the development of privacy-enhancing policies as well as innovative privacy-enhancing technologies to ensure that the ecosystem provides strong privacy protections for consumers,” it added.

(c) 2011 AFP

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