Video - engagement the MSN way
For several years I have been urging marketers to kick their dependence on "Moveable Type". It was a great way to scale information dissemination in 1439 but the world has moved on. Ironically it has been the publishers who have managed to seize the video content initiative. Conservative organisations like the Telegraph have morphed into a CNN/BBC hybrid with loads of video content...and they have even cracked the monetisation with pre-roll forced viewing of ads.
However, few sites have really optimised video/flash for their "successful outcome" journeys. I was recently encouraging a hotel chain to do more engaging things than "download sample menu PDF" on their site, or think of alternatives to call-out boxes with short text testimonials; by the end of the session we'd identified 20 different "rich media" opportunities to bring their hotels to life including...
- Video interview with the head chef
- Virtual tours of the gardens - season by season
- "Vox Pop" testimonials recorded before people leave
- Welcome message from Hotel Manager
I have a couple of clients who have even dismissed my over-cautious recommendations about "testing" text versus "rich media" because they know that the video/audio stuff is the right thing to do (with search-optimised text transcripts alongside!). So, why wait? Today's digital project for you...what's on my web site that would be more successful if it were in audio/video format and how cheap and quick would it be to execute (get your teenage kids to do it for you..they are the video generation)?
I admire the efforts Salesforce.com have done with a flash presentation for each of their target personas delivered by the most appropriate person...it shows an understanding of the need to tune messages to decision makers and that a personal touch is engaging...although it may be a little too cheezy for some puritan British prospects.
I have been a fan of MSN's Bring The Love Back campaign and noticed this morning that they have released the next video instalment. The idea is to promote take-up of integrated marketing by having a giggle at marketers who don't get it..."I did try and look at that Web 2 dot zero stuff you told me about but I just couldn't find the exact URL"

You'll have to look at the first video to get the point of the second one. So MSN are getting across a complex business proposition (don't be a stupid marketer...get to know and use digital marketing, preferably with us not Google!?) through video. Now who'd have thought that likely a couple of years ago.

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