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Seven Deadly Video Marketing Sins
Written by: Jerry BaderArticle Overview: So you want to develop a Web video campaign to put on your website and add to YouTube and all the other Web video directories. Maybe you even want to create a new video micro site to promote that hot new product or service you're about to launch. You want it done right, professional, slick, and you want it to be effective. Well of course you do.
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Seven Deadly Video Marketing Sins
So you want to
develop a Web video campaign to put on your website and add to YouTube and all
the other Web video directories. Maybe you even want to create a new video
micro site to promote that hot new product or service you're about to launch.
You want it done right, professional, slick, and you want it to be effective.
Well of course you do.
You know you
need to hire a firm that has the creative staff capable of not just shooting
video but professionals who can write, direct, edit, and add all the post
production elements you need, including signature music, sound design and on
screen text. But are there other things you need to be aware of in order to
maximize the return on your investment? You bet there are.
There are lots
of production companies that just want to crank out the work at the lowest cost
without providing any marketing guidance as to what works and what doesn't.
Perhaps these firms don't know the difference or perhaps they just don't care.
The company you hire should be willing to provide some advice as to the best
way to present your message so that it delivers the best return on your
investment. Too many Web videos are technically proficient but lack any
marketing impact. The last thing you want is a bland, boring, lifeless
presentation that goes in one ear and out the other.
When you're
ready to add video to your marketing and sales tool kit make sure you avoid the
following seven deadly video development sins.
Doing It Wrong - 7 Web Video Mistakes
To Avoid
1. The need to get it all in.
Everyone wants
his or her money's worth. There is absolutely nothing wrong with that as a
general principle, but getting your money's worth means more than hiring the
cheapest bidder or cramming every possible product, service, benefit and
feature into a single video.
You're better
off creating a series of shorter videos each about two to three minutes in
length, and each focusing on a particular aspect or sales point. Ten minutes is
generally the maximum you can hold someone's attention, but it will be more
effective if you break that ten-minute presentation into a series of shorter
segments. By creating a presentation that flows from one focused video to the
next, you lead your audience logically through a voyage of discovery that is
far more interesting and memorable than a single over-stuffed
information-onslaught that overwhelms the audience. Each video becomes an
opportunity to re-enforce your marketing image and embed your brand personality
by consistent use of color, style, format, and message.
2. The desire to appeal to everyone.
Whatever you
sell, not everyone is going to buy it. No matter how good your offering is
there are people that you are never going to convince. We believe a properly
implemented video presentation is the most effective method of delivering a
marketing message, but no matter what the evidence, there are some people who
just won't buy into the idea. If you try to appeal to everyone you will end-up
appealing to no one and you will waste a lot of time, money and effort in the
process. Trying to appeal to everyone merely dilutes your message.
By
concentrating on the most appropriate market segments allows you to fine-tune
your message. And if you create a series of videos each highlighting a
different aspect of your offering as described earlier, people will be able to
pick and choose what they are interested in and what they want to watch. In
this way your audience won't get bored or frustrated by listening to things
they may already know, or are just not interested in hearing.
3. The fear of commitment.
Marketing is
all about creating an identifiable, unique identity, a personality that people
will recognize and remember: a brand. It's what will set you apart from your
rivals and give you a competitive edge; if done right, it's the one thing your
competitors can try to copy but will never be able to duplicate.
Success
requires a commitment to your brand image and to the marketing strategy from
which it flows. Strategy is the big idea that guides everything related to your
business, and it should not be confused with tactics. Tactics are the ways you
implement strategy. If you confuse strategy and tactics, you will find yourself
running in circles never accomplishing anything.
If you commit to
and successfully target one market segment, you not only establish and enhance
your brand image but you also create a 'drag effect.' For example, the success
of Apple's iTunes and iPods dragged their computer sales along with it. Once
people became Apple customers for one product they were more likely to buy
another; and even though iPod advertising was originally aimed at a
youth-oriented market, it's success dragged both younger and older consumers
along for the sales ride.
4. The need to accommodate everybody's
agenda.
As companies
grow they hire new people, and wherever there are groups of people there are
opposing opinions, and opinions can very easily turn into agendas. Your sales
people want lower prices, your accountant wants higher prices, and your
advertising people want something new; everyone has an agenda and they all
conflict with each other. The result is compromise. And compromise kills brand
personality and corporate identity.
Even big
companies with deep pockets and access to any and every expert in the world are
susceptible to agenda creep. Take the fast food giant McDonald's for example.
Their television advertising is all over the place. They use different themes,
different approaches, and even different music in almost every commercial, each
aimed at a different market with a different product offering. The only thing
that seems to be consistent is the logo and signature jingle that is slapped on
to the end of each spot. As individual commercials they my stand up, obviously
they have high production qualities but as a marketing message strategy they
become mere advertising noise rather than building on each other to form a
coherent approach and brand message. What they seem to want to say is that
McDonald's is for everyone no matter what age or food preference, and that kind
of approach only leads to a muddled message. McDonald's may get away with it in
the short term because they are McDonald's and have a long history of effective
advertising. Whether McDonald's simultaneous multiple campaign approach is the
result of a desire to accommodate different agendas, or just designed to appeal
to everybody doesn't matter, the result is the same - muddled messaging.
5. The lack of vision.
And speaking
of corporate identity, do you have one? Do you have a vision, a point-of-view,
an attitude; a perspective on how you can best serve your clients. The idea of
a corporate vision is something that is easy to ignore, after all, how much is
a corporate vision worth? It's not like you can go on eBay or Amazon and
download one for a few bucks.
I recall
seeing a documentary on a very successful clothing manufacturer. The founder of
the company was reviewing the company's latest line of running shoes. He looked
at the shoes, looked at the product manager, and said, "Where's the
logo?" to which the product manager answered, "We can add it
anywhere." The company CEO in no uncertain terms told the executive that
that wasn't good enough. The logo represented the company and the company represented
a particular lifestyle. The shoe being presented was just another shoe and that
was not acceptable. The shoe needed to fit the ideal for which the company
stood. The CEO had a vision and everything the company did had to conform to
that vision. Developing and presenting a unified corporate vision is how you
create a brand and how you build a business.
6. The fear of failure.
No matter how
good you are, you are bound to have some failures. These are learning
experiences from which you can develop new and improved initiatives. Building a
brand identity is a slow and continuous process and it doesn't always move
forward without some bumps in the road. Sometimes what initially appears to be
a failure is not a failure at all, but rather the foundation for future more
successful efforts. As long as your company has a vision of who it is, what it
does, and why your audience should care, and as long as you stick to that
vision, you will ultimately find a way to get your message across as long as
you keep trying.
Like any kind
of advertising program, whether it's video, print, or anything else, one-shot
efforts almost never show results.
7. It's all about the features.
The insistence
on promoting features without tying them to an emotional benefit is one of the
most common marketing mistakes made. You may be offering your customers the
most features available but unless you also offer them an emotional value
proposition, you will never get beyond the whose-the-cheapest kind of sale.
No matter what
features you add to your product or service, you know your competitors will
follow with something better, and probably at a lower price. It's a game no
smart marketing executive should play. Discovering the emotional value in your
product or service is not always easy when viewed from an internal perspective.
If you haven't discovered what that underlying subliminal value is and how to
communicate it then your producer needs to help you find it. It's the most
important element in building long-term marketing success.
Conclusion
There you have
it, the seven deadly video marketing development sins. No one said this stuff
is easy. It would be nice if you could just look at your analytics, and eureka,
a marketing solution would appear, but that's not the way it works. Marketing
is a psychological marathon that takes time, commitment, practice, and a good
coach you can call on to move you in the right direction.
Article Tags: branding, concept development, graphic design, marketing, music and sound design, video campaign, video directories, video marketing, website design, youtube
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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 Understanding Web Advertising Viral Marketing Lets See How it Works 8 Things That Motivate WebAudience Response 11 Ways To Drive Traffic Away From Your Website Shaping Web Audience Preference |
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