Friday, November 20, 2015

4 Ways to Create Brand Buzz with Video

4 Ways to Create Brand Buzz with Video



4 Ways to Create Brand Buzz with Video


image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Explainer-Video-Header-Image1.jpg
Explainer video header image

Animated explainer videos are popping up all over the place.
No longer do you need a big budget and endless man hours to produce one.
Today it is much easier.
The high costs and long lead time associated with an explainer video used to make them an automatic point of difference. But just like pretty much anything else these days, production isn’t the hard part anymore. (It’s the less obvious stuff that matters now)
Ok so they aren’t hard to create, but what is the point of making one in the first place? What will they do for your brand specifically?
Explainer videos are a great marketing tool that can reveal any type of product or service in a quick and entertaining way.

Standout from the crowd

Many marketers consider these videos a must have for a startup or online business. Not because they just explain stuff; but because they create buzz for your brand, help you standout from the crowd and educate your audience about what you do.
Here’s the thing: everyone can create these things pretty easily now. This means to make an impact on your audience, creating one isn’t enough. You need to find a new level of quality.
Let’s take Gigtown’s explainer video as an example (recently selected by Hubspot as one of the best explainer videos around) and learn four ways you can create brand buzz with video for your brand:

1. Use colors to increase brand awareness

The whole idea of brand awareness is to make people recognize and recall your brand when it’s mentioned or when the brand logo appears anywhere on the web.
From the very first advertising strategies unique colors have been used to grow brand awareness.
More than a Century ago, Coca-Cola decided to change the green colors of the original Santa Claus into the red and white of their brand. Now Christmas (Yes, the whole idea of Christmas!) is red and white thanks to Coca-Cola. Shocking, huh?
In order to grow brand awareness with an explainer video, you need to leverage your brand colors as much as possible. Then, after watching your video, people won’t just recall the fun story, they will create a connection with your brand colors.
Here’s a screen capture of the Gigtown app and their logo (taken from the explainer video you’ve just watched):
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gig-town-app.png
Gigtown app

and the logo…
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gig-town-logo.png
Gigtown logo


Brown, orange, black and white – Gigtown’s colors.
Now let’s analyze a few branding details from the explainer video that you may have missed, but Gigtown have deliberately included to create a subconscious connection to their brand.
Below, the t-shirt and headphones of the character are colored with a particular combination of orange, black, brown and a sprinkling of white. That wasn’t a random decision: those are the main colors of the brand.
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gig-town-explainer-video-image-of-person.png
Gigtown explainer video image of person

Now check the backgrounds and visual elements on different segments of the same video. Everything is driven by the same combination of Gigtown’s color pallet.
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-explainer-video-screenshot.png
Gigtown explainer video screenshot

and…
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-explainer-video-screenshot-2.png
Gigtown explainer video screenshot 2


Again, coloring makes it easier for the viewer to link the explainer video with the brand, and also make them recall the video (even weeks after watching it) when bumping into the company’s logo on the web.
Brand awareness is a fundamental part of your audience’s purchase decision.
Luckily, explainer videos are here to make the recalling part easier for you.

2. Make your audience the star of the video

It’s not enough for customers to learn to recognize your brand; you need to build trust with them because brand trust is one of the main purchase decision factors and that road is the one that leads to the highest prize in marketing: brand love!
In order to grow trust within your audience and prove that you really care for them, you need to show that the service you’re promoting with your explainer video has been specially made for them, and the best way to do this is by creating animated characters that look like your potential customers.
Gigtown is a mobile app made to discover, contact and book local musicians to play in venues. So the video has two different target audiences: the musicians and the people who book them. Both target audiences are mostly men (and, to a lesser extent, women) from the USA, between 20 and 35 years old. They’re mobile users that love to listen to music and attend rock concerts; they’re unstructured and play it cool.
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-target-audience-in-video.png
Gigtown target audience in video

and…
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-target-audience-in-video-2.png
Gigtown target audience in video 2

and…
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-target-audience-in-video-3.png
Gigtown target audience in video 3

You can see how every animated character in the explainer video is based on Gigtown’s target audience. The only one that differs is the bad guy: the evil middleman that wants to scam the main character.
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-bad-guy-in-video.png
Gigtown bad guy in video

But apart from those cute little characters, let’s not forget that we’re dealing with a mobile app here! So lots of mobile devices were added during the video:
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-explainer-video-mobile-phone.png
Gigtown explainer video mobile phone

and…
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-explainer-video-mobile-phone-3.png
Gigtown explainer video mobile phone 3

and for good measure…
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-explainer-video-mobile-phone-4.png
Gigtown explainer video mobile phone 4

Again, all of these customer centric decisions must be worked out from the beginning of the explainer video production process. As you can see, the target audience (20-to-35-year young rock fans) has the main role in this video and they always show up in a cool way with some great custom designs.
All of this grows trust and brand love within the audience because they feel that the brand truly gets them. It seems like a simple statement, but it’s a powerful marketing move.
But that’s not all; the story has to go the same way.

3. Engage with storytelling

Storytelling is based on explaining ideas through narrative and it’s one of the greatest and most efficient ways of growing brand trust.
With a good explainer video script, and creative direction, you can tap into the power of storytelling. The story in your explainer video must focus on your target audience and on how to solve their problems. Your brand should show up afterwards, as the hero that saves the day.
Remember: your audience must always have the main role.
In Gigtown’s explainer video, the brand doesn’t show up until 45 seconds in; that’s halfway through the video!
image: http://www.jeffbullas.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Gigtown-brand-in-explainer-video.png
Gigtown brand in explainer video

4. Make the characters come alive with animation

To tie all of these branding tactics together, the animation needs to be outstanding.
If the animated characters don’t look alive they won’t grow empathy or identification with your audience. Besides, the whole video would look wrong, get pretty boring, and make people leave  in a few seconds. And that’s not a good branding result.
Many online companies underestimate animation quality and they go for the cheapest and quickest way.
Eventually, these amateur kinds of video (such as template animations) become pretty expensive, because the video doesn’t get the desired results and the marketing campaigns don’t work as expected. Don’t ever forget that an explainer video is made to stand for your brand, so it should stick out from the rest.
I hope this has been useful and valuable for your brand. Good luck!
Author: Juan Mendez is the Content Editor for Yum Yum Videos production company. For more tips on explainer video production, video marketing strategies, visit Yum Yum Video’s Explainer Video Academy, where you’ll get some free educational eBooks, infographics and slides.

Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2015/05/19/4-ways-to-create-brand-buzz-with-video/#fwgqfHSXtemvJRvh.99

Competitor Analysis | Analyze the Competition with XOVI

Competitor Analysis | Analyze the Competition with XOVI

Why You Should Forget Facebook - Jeffbullas's Blog

Why You Should Forget Facebook - Jeffbullas's Blog



Why You Should Forget Facebook

Forget Facebook

Has Facebook got you fooled?
Are you chasing likes for your brand page?  Paying for fans? Maybe it’s time to stop.
In 2008 I joined Facebook. It was the first social media network I decided to place a stake in as my online social media home. It was fun, frivolous and free. Everyone was discovering the power of multimedia sharing of their life with friends and family. Facebook obsession was apparent and addictive. It was the new digital drug of choice and 6 years later it is the world’s largest social media playground.
What made Facebook cool was that you saw “all” your friends updates.  It was hard to miss a “what I had for breakfast” share and see the latest drama and joy in a friends life.
What you shared appeared.

The Facebook “liking” frenzy

The success of personal Facebook profiles opened up the idea of Facebook for brands. So Facebook “pages” were launched! It was the start of Facebook becoming serious about monetising its business.  Brands piled in and started to build their profiles on the big social network. Chasing fan “likes” became the new shiny marketing toy and tactic.
A big list of fans drove traffic and brand awareness for free. It is called “earned” marketing. For this blog it became the second biggest social media traffic source behind Twitter.
Then something changed.

Facebook decided to filter your updates

In 2012 Facebook floated. It became a public company and the shareholders demanded a return. The pressure was on. It had to make money from its advertising. It started to become pay to play. Facebook is deciding what updates you see and don’t see.  It’s called a “News Feed algorithm”. It extends to Facebook pages and personal profiles.
Facebook is pushing you to advertise. To promote your post is now just a couple of clicks. Easy but it costs. One of the motivators to use Facebook as a page is now almost zero.Is there any point to chasing likes except for “social proof”. Some research is showing that only 4% or less of people are seeing your page updates in their newsfeeds when you post on Facebook. Here is some research from the 4129 agency on ZDnet.com showing the decline in just 12 months from 2012 to 2013.
Facebook organic reach plummets

It appears that in 2014 that organic reach is still in freefall. Zero is maybe not an unrealistic expectation. Is that possible? Jason Loehr, director of global media and digital marketing at Brown-Forman which owns the brands Jack Daniels and Southern Comfort thinks so.
The Ignite Social Media agency did an analysis in December 2013 and saw a 44% drop in brands organic reach in just 12 days.

Are big brands ignoring Facebook?

Beyonce announced her new album launch on Instagram not Facebook. This is despite having over 60 million fans on Facebook and only 8 million followers on Instagram. Maybe the advice by her digital agency was that it would receive more organic reach and visibility than Facebook.
This big drop in organic reach is making brands such as Jack Daniels and Southern Comfort concentrating more on their “owned” channels such as websites, blogs and email.
Some companies such as Charity Engine are quitting Facebook. Is the age of free social media traffic from building fans and followers over?
Facebook is a leased digital property. You’re at their mercy and their aggressively tweaked news feed algorithm.

 So what can you do?

There are two key strategies that you can pursue.
  1. Roll with the Facebook changes and adapt. This means tactics such as running more Facebook competitions and posting more news updates. The Steamfeed blog has a good list of tactics worth checking out.
  2. Shift your focus from Facebook marketing reliance. Invest in building your owned online assets such as websites, blogs and email lists. Pursue an integrated digital marketing strategy!
So if you are a blogger or marketer that doesn’t have a big brand budget and you want to earn your traffic by persistent effort, engagement and creating content then you do have some other options. So you may have to forget Facebook if you don’t want to spend advertising dollars to reach the fans you have spent time and effort to acquire.

How to earn free earned and organic traffic

Here are some specific tactics to create online traffic and brand awareness without paying the new gatekeepers such as Facebook to reach your own fans.

1. Search engines

Before hitting publish on your blog make sure that you have optimized your post for search engines so you will be building your SEO. Make sure you know what your key words and phrases are that customers will be using to find you. Then create content that includes them in the headline, content and meta description. Plugins such as Yoast can provide easy guidance on those tasks.
Then continue to create and market content that covers the range of 20-50 keywords and phrases that you want to be found on Google for when potential customers start looking for answers to their questions and performing research.

2. Email marketing

Brands both big and small are growing their email lists. You should do this from day one. An email list is something you have control over. The simplest tactic is to offer something for free such as an ebook, an online video tutorial or some form of premium content.

3. Switch your social media focus

There are many other social media networks that will drive traffic to your blog and website that you don’t have to pay for. These include Twitter, Linkedin, Google+ and Pinterest to name a few. There are a couple of  channels that have surprised me over the last 6 months. They are Flipboard (is starting to drive more traffic than Facebook) and even the often forgotten Stumbleupon. I created the Jeffbullas.com Blog Magazine on Flipboard which is easy to setup and provides a very visual way to present your blog content.
Twitter is not filtered and its focus as a place for breaking news means that it very unlikely that it will ever suffer the same fate as Facebook. Twitter for me has been my biggest social media traffic source and that came from focusing on building and engaging with my followers from the day I launched this blog.
If Facebook push this too far there is a real possibility they will push brands advertising into the arms of Twitter, Google+ and other social media and digital channels.
Maybe its time to forget Facebook for your free earned traffic?

What about you?

How are you reacting to Facebook’s filtering? Have your tactics changed? Are you focusing on other social media networks, email and content more?
Look forward to your feedback and insights in the comments below.

Listen to this post as a Podcast!


Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2014/05/05/why-you-should-forget-facebook/#oUHT55mkBPXUjmaM.99

Friday, October 23, 2015

9 Awesome Reasons to Use Infographics in your Content Marketing

9 Awesome Reasons to Use Infographics in your Content Marketing



9 Awesome Reasons to Use Infographics in your Content Marketing


We live in an age of “Big Data“..which means there is more data than ever before.
9 Awesome Reasons to Use Infographics in your Content Marketing

In one day we create 1.5 billion pieces of content, 140 million tweets and 2 million videos.
Trying to make sense of the mountains and oceans of data that are now part of our knowledge world due to computers, mobiles and the web is a daily challenge.
  • Do you bookmark, file it or Evernote the link or PDF?
  • Do you punch the reference into your iPhone or iPad
  • Do you grab a pen and jot it down on your beloved Moleskine notepad?
We constantly are attempting to organise, collate and curate information that pours at at as from screens in a torrent.
Consuming that data is like drinking from a fire hose.

What are Infographics?

They are a mix of design, writing and analysis that are ideal for an age of big data. (just like you see at the top of this page)
Some other examples can be found here -”6 Fantastic Facebook Marketing Infographics“.
Infographics are a visually compelling communication medium that done well can communicate complex data in a visual format that is potentially viral.
They take deep data and present it in a visual shorthand.
“Infographics” is one efficient way of combining the best of text, images and design to represent complex data that tells a story that begs to be shared.

What Research Reveals about Infographics

Recent research from Barbara M. Miller and Brooke Barnett discovered this about “Infographics”
“On their own, text and graphics are both useful yet imperfect methods for communication. Written language allows an almost infinite number of word combinations that allow deep analysis of concepts but relies heavily on the reader’s ability to process that information. Graphics may be easier for the reader to understand but are less effective in communication of abstract and complicated concepts. … combining text and graphics allows communicators to take advantage of each medium’s strengths and diminish each medium’s weaknesses.”
Does your industry need to present data in an effective manner to communicate and engage its customers and prospects?..Then infographics could be part of the answer.

The Growth of Infographics

I noticed the power of Infographics about 6 months ago when I included it in  blog article and was surprised by the traffic response. On taking a closer look at its popularity, I decided to use Google “Insights for Search” analytics to determine the increase in the interest in the keyword “Infographics” as reflected in search volume increases since 2004.
Infographics search growth on GoogleI discovered that since just prior to the start of 2010 to the beginning of 2012, infographic search volumes have increased by over 800% in just over 2 years.

Statistics from the social network Digg reveal that since 2007, infographics on Digg have increased by 250 times!
Now that is a trend wave worth catching!

Why Include Infographics in your Content Marketing Strategy?

When it comes down to it Infographics they may be a compelling but why use them?
Why Use Infographics

Source: Web Marketing Group

1. Compelling and Attractive

There is one thing that I have discovered while blogging is that people love facts, figures and statistics. Add some compelling images and graphics and …”voila“, you have addictive content!

2. Easily Scanned and Viewed

Human beings are highly visual and because 90% of of the information that comes to the brain is visual you need to tap into that “optic nerve”

3. Viral Capabilties

Due to infographics attractiveness the capacity for them to be shared on social networks and become viral is much higher than ordinary text content.

4. Portable (Embeddable)

When designing, developing and publishing an infographic the code to put it on a WordPress blog or website is provided as an embed code. This then creates an automatic link from their site to yours.

5. Worldwide Coverage

In a world where online publishing is now visible globally at the push of a button, infographics can provide global coverage that local print media could never do.

6. Brand Awareness

Creating an infographic that is embedded with your logo and brand displayed is a powerful means of creating a greater “Brand Awareness”

7. Increases Traffic

An infographic that is linked and compelling by its nature will drive traffic to your website band blog as people “share” and “click”

8. Benefits Search Engine Optimisation

The viral nature of the infographic medium makes people link to your site and Google will index your website higher due to Google’s “Page Rank” algorithm. This increases the importance that search engines pace on your site.

9. Shows an Expert understanding of a Subject

The research required to create an infographic will display your knowledge and position you as an expert on your category or topic.
The challenge with infographics is creating them.
There are new tools and platforms emerging that make creating them easier such as Statsilk.com and Visual.ly

How about You?

Have you created or used infographics? Have they driven traffic and created more brand awareness for your business?
Look forward to hearing your stories.
More Reading




7 Marketing Trends You Should Not Ignore - Jeffbullas's Blog

7 Marketing Trends You Should Not Ignore - Jeffbullas's Blog



7 Marketing Trends You Should Not Ignore


Marketing has been democratised.
The capability to use marketing tools and technology without having to beg or pay for attention is unprecedented. It’s a time where you can now build your own crowd to market and sell to without paying the mass media gate keepers.
7 Marketing trends you should not ignore

That’s social media.
The social media networks are at your disposal and with the right tactics and software you can create brand awareness and access to influencers and decision makers in boardrooms across the world.
This freedom to take control of your own marketing comes at a cost. The cost is complexity and time. To be effective it requires using multiple networks, constant content creation and monitoring and managing.
It’s not just multiple networks and multimedia to think of, it is also about adapting to new hardware platforms where consumers receive their messaging. This is no longer restricted to just print, TV and radio but has proliferated to laptops, smart phones and tablets. They all have their own limitations and parameters to be optimal.
Within this technology and media explosion there are many marketing trends that have been emerging that we should be paying attention to.

7 Marketing Trends

Here are seven trends that all marketers need to consider in their toolbox of tactics to remain effective and current.

1. Content Marketing

The importance and role of content marketing and how it works across social media, search, multimedia and mobile is becoming a key focus for many brands. Many companies don’t understand the importance of this trend and how it underlies almost all digital marketing. Brands such as Coca Cola have recognised this and changed their strategies to meet the web realities.
Brands have been blinded by the shiny new toy of social media eg Facebook and think that Facebook marketing is all they should be doing beyond their day to day habitual marketing that they have been doing for decades.
This is just a snippet of your activity focus. You should not be forgetting Twitter, Blogs and Google+…just to mention a few to market your content.
Content is the foundation of all digital marketing and is the reason people read, view or share.
Creating “liquid content” is vital to create brand awareness and tap into crowd sourced marketing.

2. Mobile Marketing

The rapid rise of smart phones and tablets has flatfooted many marketing managers and delivering marketing messages and content that is optimized for mobile platforms is becoming a “must”. Increasingly consumers are viewing content, receiving emails and buying products from “small screens”.
Companies need to urgently redesign websites and blogs that are “responsive” (respond to all devices screen sizes for optimal viewing and usability) to ensure they are optimising for mobile devices. Some websites are recording 30-40% of all traffic from mobile devices. That should not be ignored. It will cost you money and lead to missed opportunities.

3. Integrated Digital Marketing

Companies that are savvy marketers are realizing that digital marketing should not be one offs that are islands of isolated tactics. Social media and content is impacting search results. Google created Google+ for a few reasons including capturing social signals. Ensuring that your approach is allowing you to tie them all together to achieve maximum effectiveness is becoming key.
This is optimised and integrated digital marketing.

4. Social Media at Scale Marketing

Brands are also realizing that “doing” social is complex and is like juggling many balls at once. We are seeing the rush to develop, buy up start-ups and implement Enterprise platforms that are assisting marketing professionals to market, manage and monitor multiple social networks and even other digital marketing (eg email).
The tools to manage the complexity are emerging and evolving as the rush to package the technology accelerates. The holy grail to have one tool to manage your marketing is the mission for many software companies who see this opportunity.
This is “social at scale

5. Continuous Marketing

Marketers need to realise that a strong trend is emerging called continuous marketing. It doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t run “campaigns”. The reality is that being found online (found in social network updates, Twitter streams and in a Google search) requires constant SEO activity and content creation, publishing and marketing.
Google hates silence.
Creating, curating and marketing content that is fed into the maws of the social media beast needs to be relentless or you will left behind and you will be lost in the web noise.
To do this well requires implementing marketing automation that leverages your time and resources.

6. Personalized Marketing

The “one size fits all” approach to marketing where mass messages on television and traditional media are becoming less effective due to media saturation. We are seeing the rise of personalized marketing on e-commerce sites, websites and emails that tailor the advertising and user interface to the relevant interests of consumers.
Visit an online store once and come back and the website knows that you are male and like Nike runners. The next email that arrives has also been personalised with products that you visited while shopping online. The web is capturing your habits as it reads the data, applies intelligence and serves up information that is relevant to “you”.
This trend is being driven by technology using “big data” to increase marketing effectiveness.

7. Visual Marketing

We first saw the creep of visual marketing into the landscape when YouTube entered mainstream consciousness a few years ago. Since then this creep has turned into a torrent of visual marketing with emergence of Pinterest, Instagram and even Slideshare.
In the last 6 months this has gone to a whole new level as Vine’s 6 second snack size video and now Instagram’s new 15 second video app has marketers scrambling for creative inspiration to apply and leverage this new trend.
Your marketing needs to ride this trend to increase engagement and cut through the online noise.

What about you?

Which trends excite you or even surprise you? Have you adapted your tactics to meet the continual marketing and technology eveolution.
Look forward to hearing your stories, feedback and insights in the comments below.

Image by Shutterstock



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Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/07/16/marketing-trends-you-should-not-ignore/#y9oiHVW3PsTHJL57.99