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Four How-To Video Requirements
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| Guest post by: Jerry Bader |
Article Overview: In today’s fast paced environment tapping into the knowledge deficit is one of the best ways to grow your business. One common business tactic used to exploit how-to opportunities is to provide teaser videos so that people get a taste of what to expect. Anyone interested in learning anything has watched his or her share of teaser videos, but all too often these videos only lead to frustration and a quick click of the mouse onto the next website offering instructions.
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Free Download - Essential Web Video Concepts: Make’em Feel By Jerry Bader |
Four How-To Video Requirements
Consultants are always talking about “deliverables,” a term
used to describe the final product provided to their clients. Consultants
understand that business people are loath to paying for mere advice even if
that advice is critical to their business, but they are open to paying for
something tangible like a deliverable. The so called “deliverable” is usually a
nice thick report bound in one of those fancy expensive folios that may contain
some useful strategies and tactics but quite often is filled with platitudes
and generalities accompanied by colorful graphs and charts of equally dubious
value. As a consequence, business consultants, have a generalized reputation
that lies somewhere between politicians and used car salesman.
Somewhere along the evolutionary development of the Web
entrepreneur a lesson was learned, unfortunately it was the wrong one.
Deliverables are good; useless unusable stock solutions, even if it’s wrapped
in a nice shiny package, are bad.
The How-To
Video Strategy
How-to videos have become an essential marketing strategy
for featuring product knowledge and market expertise with the goal of creating
confidence in a company’s ability to deliver what they promise.
Let’s say you are an expert in something. It really doesn’t
matter what it is because there is a market for educational and instructional
material for just about anything from guitar playing to poker, from makeup
application to origami, from drawing lessons to app development.
Tapping Into
The Knowledge Deficit
In today’s fast paced environment tapping into the knowledge
deficit is one of the best ways to grow your business. One common business
tactic used to exploit how-to opportunities is to provide teaser videos so that
people get a taste of what to expect. Anyone interested in learning anything
has watched his or her share of teaser videos, but all too often these videos
only lead to frustration and a quick click of the mouse onto the next website
offering instructions.
I’ve heard many experts fret about giving away too much
information without getting paid for it, after all, why would anyone pay if
they can get it for free? And here’s where the whole idea of deliverables comes
in, but first let’s stop thinking like a consultant and start thinking like a
marketing executive. What’s important is not the deliverable but rather the usefulness
of the material provided. Let’s call it “the take-away:” the knowledge learned
that improves one’s ability to perform and at the same time inspires confidence
in your company’s ability to provide worthwhile instruction in the chosen
field.
Commercials
Aren’t How-to Videos
If you’re an expert in a particular area you should be able
to giveaway all kinds of tips and tricks that your potential clients can use
without running out of ideas or instructional expertise. Providing interested
site visitors with a fancy PDF report, PowerPoint slideshow, or series of
less-than-helpful teaser videos all obvious attempts to merely sell the real
stuff will only turn people off. Commercials should not masquerade as how-to
videos.
Web business is not like brick and mortar business. On the
Web you are distanced from your audience by the great digital divide that
creates a natural reluctance on the part of your visitors; this remoteness is
the biggest obstacle you have to overcome because it creates a natural fear of
being cheated. And the best way to solve the problem is to offer something of
value that demonstrates your reliability and expertise, and inspires confidence
in your ability and desire to deliver what you promise.
The Four
How-To Video Elements
Even if you intend to provide useful instruction to your
website visitors, you can still get it wrong if you don’t understand the four
basic elements of giving instructions.
1. Create
Expectations
Tell people what you’re going to teach them. This let’s them
know what the video is about and what they can expect to learn. It also implies
what they aren’t going to learn so they won’t be frustrated after watching five
minutes of something they’re not interested in seeing.
2. Provide
Useful Instructions They Can Use
Provide appropriate instructions so that the audience can
actually implement what you are teaching them. Don’t leave out or skip over
critical steps because of a fear of giving away too much. These teaser videos
don’t have to be a complete course in whatever it is you do, but they should be
complete as far as the particular tip or trick you are providing.
3. Alert
Them To Common Errors
The most common mistake made in providing instruction to
people is not alerting them to common mistakes. Make people aware of the usual
signs that what they are doing is going wrong. This will inspire confidence in
your ability to teach and to deliver something that is truly useful. Nothing is
more frustrating to a potential client than to think they have followed your
instructions and the result is just not right.
4. Summarize
Remind your audience what you told them in simple memorable
terms so that they feel they’ve actually learned something that they can
take-away and implement on their own.
The Bottom
Line
In the final analysis, if your audience doesn’t leave your
website with the feeling that they are actually taking away something useful
that they can use, then you’ve failed, and you will never get them to order.
The bottom line: you have to give something away, if you expect to get
something in return.
Article Tags: creating credibility, how to videos, teaser videos, video marketing
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About the Author: Jerry Bader RSS for Jerry's articles - Visit Jerry's website Jerry Bader is Senior Partner at MRPwebmedia, a website design firm that specializes in Web-audio and Web-video. Visit http://www.mrpwebmedia.com/ads, http://www.sonicpersonality.com, and http://www.136words.com. Contact at info@mrpwebmedia.com or telephone (905) 764-1246. About MRPwebmedia People ask, "What do you do?" You could say we inform, enlighten, innovate, and create; you could also say we deliver our clients' marketing messages in memorable ways using video, audio, webmedia campaigns and websites; all created in-house from concept to implementation, from graphic and motion design to Web-design, from script writing to video-production to post-production, from music composition to signature sound design. What do we do? We motivate action by speaking to your audience's real needs. We tell your story so your brand, your message, embeds in the minds of your clients. We are corporate storytellers. Click here to visit Jerry's website 7 Tactical Reasons To Use Mini Campaign Websites Building An Online Brand WebMarketing Analysis Questionnaire 18 WebMarketing Concepts That Make A Difference HyperRealism As a Motivating Factor In Web Video |
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