Tag Archives: marketing video



Don’t Be Afraid To Ask For Help

Posted on February 20th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

You don’t know it all. Seriously. You don’t know it all and neither do I. That’s why it’s important to surround yourself with people you admire.

These are people who can point you in the right direction when you need help. I try to surround myself with people like this in multiple areas, and I’m never surprised with how it pays dividends.

The most important person is my wife, Katie. She’s flat-out the best. I turn to her for advice on pretty much everything.

When I need some shooting, editing, or storytelling advice, I turn to a pair of videographers… Murrow Award-winner Jeremy Nichols and Emmy-winner Mike Loomis.

Finally, when it comes to marketing and public relations, Gini Dietrich, Stephanie Krol, and Dyana Flanigan.

I started thinking about this after lunch last week with Gini. Her blog spinsucks.com is a must read, but as good as she is in cyberspace she’s even better in person.

An hour later, I left with my head spinning… all sorts of great ideas! It really made me appreciate all the great people in my life who are willing to help.

–Tony Gnau

Everyone Is A Media Company Now

Posted on February 15th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

If you want to create content and drive engagement, you have to realize something. You’re a media company now.

I know… “We’re not a media company. We make widgets. We provide a service.”

That’s right, but you’re also a media company. That is… if you’re interested in using social media to help your business.

Don’t believe me? Check out what major corporations are doing these days. They’re creating tons of videos, and not just talk-to-the-FlipCam videos. Highly produced, professional videos that tell great stories.

Their YouTube channels are just that… channels that they’re programming the way a TV station does. Companies are producing videos that will appeal to their specific audience.

Is it worth the money? Every business leader has to decide that for themselves, but Fortune 500 companies… corporations that rarely do anything unless ROI is involved.. are out there producing quality video content right now.

Are you ready to join them?

–Tony Gnau

How Long Should Your Video Run?

Posted on February 14th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

One of the most frequent questions I get from clients is… how long should my video be?

There are all sorts of theories behind the answers. Yes, that’s answers with an “s” at the end. I don’t think there’s a single magic formula that’s always right, but I do think there’s some guidelines you can go by depending on where you’re showing the video.

  • Social media campaigns… try to keep the video to 60-seconds or less. Social media equals super short attention spans. Give this audience something sweet and to the point to share.
  • Your website… 2-3 minutes tops. Ideally, 1-minute 30-seconds. In this case, the viewer has sought you out and wants to learn about your organization. This means you get a little more time to communicate your message. Not too much time though. They’re still web surfing, so they’re just a point-and-click away from leaving your site if they lose interest.
  • Live events… 5-minutes or less. Here I usually shoot for something in the 3-minute range. This is a captive audience, so you can flush out your story more than you can with a web video.

–Tony Gnau

Too Much Content Ruins Good Content

Posted on February 14th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

I love that the airlines put out a lot of videos. I don’t always love their videos, but this is a billion dollar industry that clearly gets it. Travelers are watching so they give them video content.

Today, I get to share one that I like from Virgin America. If you travel at all, you know about Virgin. They do everything they can to cultivate their hip image and they posted a video oozing with style yesterday on Facebook.

It actually serves as a valuable lesson. Lots of businesses have videos produced. A frequent problem is that they stuff them with too much information. Yes… too much information.

Audiences tend to subscribe to the “less is more” adage. Virgin does a great job here. The video is simple… a day at their terminal inside San Fransisco International Airport.. and the message is clear. It’s all about the airline’s style. Watch it once and you know this is an airline with its own unique style.

Virgin provides a really good flight plan to follow.

–Tony Gnau

Content Focused On Hearts First, Minds Second

Posted on February 13th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

Think about the last corporate web video you saw. Now give me the first few statistics you remember about that business.

If you’re struggling to remember, you’re not alone. We might remember the occasional fact and figure after seeing a web video, but those aren’t the things we typically retain.

Now… think of that same corporate web video. How did it make you feel? Happy? Interested? Confident in that company?

I sure hope so because that should be the goal for most corporate videos. While we don’t retain many facts and figures, our feelings stick with us.

That’s why organizations that produce their own videos need to focus on hearts first, minds second.

–Tony Gnau

Cutting Out Good Content

Posted on February 9th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

It’s been fun this week looking back at our 2012 Telly Award-winning videos. We think every project provides some valuable insights for anyone producing a video, so we’ll give you one more from the METROsquash shoot.

The lesson isn’t about what you’ll find in the video, it’s about what you won’t find. We interviewed four adults and two kids. The boy and the girl we spoke with were great, and kids tend to be a hit or miss when it comes to on-camera interviews.

Now, if you’ve watched the video, you’re probably thinking to yourself… I don’t remember seeing the boy in the video. Well, that’s because his interview was cut out.

METROsquash leaders realized something after our shoot. They had selected two students to be interviewed who attend Chicago Public School military-style academies, and each was wearing their uniform for the interview.

They didn’t want to give the impression that all of the kids they service attend these academies. We could re-shoot the interviews with the kids wearing normal clothes, but the added shoot would have cost them more money.

Instead, we suggested dropping the boy’s interview from the project. The reason was that his uniform was pretty much front and center in the interview shot. You couldn’t miss it.

On the other hand, the uniform wasn’t as prominent in the girl’s interview shot. She looks like she might be wearing one, but you wouldn’t necessarily know it was a military-style uniform.

In the end, that’s what METROsquash leaders decided to do. They had the unenviable task of telling the boy he wouldn’t be in the video. I’m sure it wasn’t something they wanted to do, but it was the right choice for the project.

It’s a bummer. His interview was really good and would have been a nice addition to the video, but sometimes you have to leave good material on the cutting room floor.

–Tony Gnau

 

Trust In Your Storyteller

Posted on February 8th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

We’re continuing our Telly Awards celebration this week with a look back at this year’s winning entries and some of the important things we can all learn from the projects.

Yesterday, we highlighted the recruiting video produced for the Warrenville Police Department. Today, it’s the “About Us” video we did for the after-school program METROsquash.

Like a lot of non-profits, METROsquash wanted to put a face on their program and show potential donors exactly what it is they do. Their video does a great job of that thanks to an invaluable asset… trust.

You see, the majority of their students aren’t exactly star squash players. They’re young kids just learning the game. It doesn’t exactly make for exciting video, and there was some concern that the slow pace of their games wouldn’t play well to an audience.

We assured them that we could still make an entertaining and informative video with a nice pace… and they trusted us. When you pick your storyteller, you have to pick someone you can trust.

We could envision how the video would be shot and played out in our minds, but sometimes it’s hard to get clients to share that vision. They simply don’t have the same experience and creative background that we do.

But they trusted us, and  it paid off. They’ve been very happy with how the video has been received when they show it.

Pick a producer you can trust, and let them roll with their vision for your project.

–Tony Gnau

Knowing Your Audience Is Crucial

Posted on February 7th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

We’re still pretty excited about our recent Telly Awards, so I thought I’d relay some valuable insights from both projects.

We’ll start today with the video produced for the Warrenville Police Department. This provides a great lesson for why it’s important to know your audience.

Department leaders wanted a recruiting video to attract young officers who are looking for their first job in law enforcement. That’s crucial information. It guided everything from the raw video we decided to shoot to the story we crafted… even the music we chose.

Quick cuts, exciting visuals, and sound bites focused on opportunities. All things that should appeal to our 20-something viewers.

If this video was being used to recruit veteran cops to leadership positions, it would look and feel totally different. That’s why knowing your audience is so important.

Always keep your viewers in mind during the creative process. Let them guide your choices.

–Tony Gnau

Clients Trust In Quality Storytelling

Posted on February 6th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

Well, I’m please to announce that T60 has won two 2012 Telly Awards.

The Telly Awards draw over 10,000 entries every year and are considered one of television’s and the non-broadcast video industry’s most prestigious honors.

We’ve now won 11 Telly Awards over the last five years, but who’s counting? :-)

See the winning entries: METROsquashWarrenville P.D. Recruiting

All kidding aside, we owe a debt of gratitude to our clients. Not just the award winners… all of our clients. Our mission is to create quality storytelling at an affordable price. We’re able to do both because our clients put a lot of trust in our creative ability.

That’s the value we try to provide each and every client.

–Tony Gnau

A 16-Minute Web Video… Are You Kidding Me!?

Posted on February 1st, 2012 | Leave a Comment

I watched an “About Us” video yesterday on YouTube that was produced for a non-profit. It was more than 7-minutes long! The crazy thing? That was the short version.

The organization has a “full-length” version that’s more than 16-minutes. Yikes!

Now, I don’t know their motivation behind these videos. Sometimes videos are produced for a live/captive audience and then posted on the web as an after-thought. But folks… even for that… 16-minutes is REALLY long.

The length of your video is mostly dependent on where you’re showing it. If its main purpose is for a live audience, I say keep it to 5-minutes or less. If it’s destined for your website, 2-minutes or less. Social Media? Try to keep it to around 60-seconds.

Now, there’s no rules here. We’ll occasionally find exceptions. Just remember, people are busy and many have short attention spans. Keep your videos short and sweet.

–Tony Gnau