Tag Archives: video production



An Accountant Dials Up Marketing Tip

Posted on October 2nd, 2012 | Leave a Comment

I went to a networking event yesterday, and an accountant opened his elevator-pitch with the statement, “Someone told me once the best way to sell yourself is to tell a story.”

You can imagine… I perked up.

This is an accountant. Someone who’s comfortable with numbers, not stories. He told a nice story about a client he had helped. It was quite compelling.

Good lesson for corporate video

Now think about all the corporate videos you’ve seen. All the videos that tout the company’s numbers, but don’t really tell the story of how they help clients. It happens more often than most businesses would probably like to admit.

They can all learn from a humble accountant who appears to know about more than numbers.

–Tony Gnau

Mobile Video At The Ryder Cup

Posted on October 1st, 2012 | Leave a Comment

Wow. Still coming down after a wild Ryder Cup weekend. I knew exactly what I wanted to blog about and I’m kicking myself. I didn’t take a photo.

American Express was offering mobile video players to card members for $1. They were EVERYWHERE on the course. The units were streaming the tournament broadcast live. Totally cool.

Video is a part of mobile

I blogged last week about being ready to watch the same broadcast through the Ryder Cup iPhone app, but it didn’t happen. Too much mobile phone traffic overloaded the system. I spent a lot of time trying to look over the shoulders of American Express card holders.

All it did is reiterate the rise of mobile. It’s not all about Facebook and photos, there’s a real role for video in mobile. The trick will be figuring out how your company leverage it.

–Tony Gnau

Ryder Cup App Leading Businesses Right Direction

Posted on September 26th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

I mentioned Wednesday about downloading the Ryder Cup app for my iPhone. When I’m out on the course I’ll have instant access to scoring, but that really isn’t that big of a deal because there’s a gazillion scoreboards all over the course.

No, the best part of having the app means I can watch highlights because the NBC broadcast will be streamed live through the app. I might be watching one group at the eighth tee, and hear a roar coming from the sixth or seventh green. Now I can see exactly what happened.

Mobile Video is huge

The takeaway… mobile is going crazy right now, but not all mobile apps include video and they should. eMarketer predicts more than 54-million people will watch video on their mobile devices this year. 54-MILLION!

What does this mean to you and your business? It means people are finding all sorts of ways to watch the content they crave, whether it’s on their desktop, laptop or phone. It means your video has the chance to be seen and shared across multiple platforms. It means you need to take your company’s video production seriously.

–Tony Gnau

Old School vs. New School Ryder Cup Marketing

Posted on September 26th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

Okay… I’m officially declaring this Ryder Cup week. With golf’s biggest event taking place in our backyard at Medinah Country Club, a lot of my interest is focused out there but I’m still finding blog material.

My wife, daughter and I made a family outing of it at yesterday’s practice round. I was struck by something. It’s a blending of old and new school.

Old school vs. new school

Golf loves its traditions, so head to a major tournament like this and you’ll find manual scoreboards. At the same time, you’re find huge video boards all over the course.

While walking the course yesterday I downloaded a Ryder Cup iPhone app, allowing me to see real-time scoring and video right on my phone.

Don’t get left behind

My point… you can find a place for tradition, but at the end of the day you better be on cutting-edge. Your PR/marketing/event planning better reflect what consumers are demanding.

In other words, you better be producing video.

–Tony Gnau

Ryder Cup Spurs Event Video Memories

Posted on September 24th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The 2012 Ryder Cup is set to start this Friday at Medinah Country Club. If you’re not a golf fan, imagine the Olympics and Super Bowl rolled into one. It’s golf’s biggest event, featuring a team of American golfers facing off against a team from Europe.

Medinah C.C. is one of the most well-known clubs in the world. It has hosted three U.S. Opens and two PGA Championships. The last PGA was in 2006, and T60 was thrilled to produce an event video for the members. The 20-minute DVD featured how members prepared for the event, then played host. It earned T60 its first Telly Award.

Video is an event planner essential

That video is when I began to realize that video is a must for anyone hosting an event. The video we produced for Medinah was a closed-door type of thing. It was for members only. But most events want, need, crave publicity. What better way to get it than by creating a video that takes people there.

Some invited guests might not have been able to attend. They can now. People who did attend might want to share the experience with their friends. Now they can.

Video transports viewers

 

Video is the medium that allows you to transport people to the event with them never having to be there. It allows the event to live on even after it’s over. Video allows you to take people back there when you’re promoting similar events in the years to come.

Video might just be one of the event planner’s most overlooked tools.

–Tony Gnau

Music Plays A Big Role

Posted on September 24th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

Where were you on June 17th, 1994? It’s the date behind a short documentary I saw over the weekend as part of ESPN’s 30 for 30 series. I watched it late Saturday night via Amazon Prime video, and I was blow away. It really reiterated something with me about the videos we all produce.

First… the movie. There were some pretty interesting things happening in the sports world that day. The New York Rangers’ had a ticker-tape parade for winning the Stanley Cup, Arnold Palmer played the last round of his career at the U.S. Open, Ken Griffey, Jr. hit a significant home run, and the New York Knicks played the Houston Rockets in the NBA finals.

All of those events took a backseat to OJ Simpson riding in a white Ford Bronco.

The documentary pieces together the story from news coverage and some behind-the-scenes stuff surrounding all those events that day. The OJ material is familiar territory for anyone who followed the news that day, but the suspense builds and builds thanks in large part to the music chosen by the director, Brett Morgen.

Music sets the tone

Music isn’t something that should be overlooked or downplayed when producing your videos. Choose it wisely. Music is one of your most powerful tools when it comes to setting tone.

Morgen and his editor did a fantastic job with music in this documentary. It guides the audience through the story and helps recount the mood of the day.

So… where were you on June 17, 1994? I was interning in the WBBM-TV (Chicago) newsroom that day. What a crazy day to be working in TV news!

–Tony Gnau

Pottery Barn… Retailer or Media Company?

Posted on September 19th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

I tell every business leader I come across they’re no longer just a retailer or service provider… they’re also a media company. The instant a business starts producing content, they’ve made the crossover, although many don’t seem willing to admit it.

Not Pottery Barn. The home goods retailer clearly understands they are now a media company. Take one look at their YouTube channel and you can tell. They have multiple playlists designed to attract various audiences.

What’s On Pottery Barn’s Channel?

There’s some self-promoting videos about Pottery Barn products, but for the most part the channel is programmed with all sorts of home decorating-related videos. If you’re a HGTV lover, Pottery Barn’s YouTube channel will be right up your alley.

Building and audience

It’s a wonderful example of a company that gets it. They have made a commitment to content. They understand by creating interesting videos, they’re building an audience. They’re building brand awareness.

Is it working? The channel has more than 3.5 million video views. I’d love to get a look at their ROI stats.

–Tony Gnau

 

Google Executive Touts Video

Posted on September 18th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

The American Marketing Association of Chicago is getting ready for its BrandSmart conference. They sent out a video late last week previewing the event featuring Ted Souder, Google’s Head of Industry-Retail.

He talks about two things important for businesses to get a handle on… mobile and video. Souder says,

Video has really gone from the days of dogs skateboarding and kids doing back-flips off parking garages to real content, professionally done content.

It’s not just me

You get this from me four days a week here at this blog. Maybe you listen, maybe you don’t. Maybe you sometimes chalk it up to… there’s goes Tony again. Preaching about home important it is for companies to harness the power of video.

Google’s bigwigs get it

This time it isn’t me though. It’s a Google bigwig. Think they know something about business and marketing?

They see the value in video, and so should you.

–Tony Gnau

For the record… T60 is an official sponsor for AMA-Chicago and does produce event preview videos for the organization, but the video mentioned above doesn’t happen to be one.

Don’t Plan A Corporate Event Without This

Posted on September 17th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

This post is for anyone who’s hosting an event. PR pros, event coordinators or the company employee who’s been given the task of organizing an important party, launch or meeting.

You booked the venue, worked out catering, created the invites… did you remember a videographer?

Sure, a photographer might be on your to-do list, but a videographer brings even greater social value.

I’m not talking about shooting some general video, slapping it together and sending it out. I’m talking about creative video, interviews and quality storytelling that gives viewers a sense of what it was like to be at the event.

perfect for email follow-ups

Now you have something special. Now you have something to email to everyone who attended. “Thanks for attending our event.  We hope you enjoy the video we produced and share it with your friends and colleagues.”

Now you have something to email to everyone who couldn’t make it. “Sorry you weren’t able to attend, but you can still be a part of the party! Check out this short video.”

Social Media and future promotion

We haven’t even gotten to social media yet. You can share the video there as well.

Did I mention you can use the video to promote the same or similar event the next year?

You spend lots of time, energy and cash on these events, and they’re usually over in a matter of hours. Why not produce a video that allows the it to live on well after the party ends?

–Tony Gnau

Want to see how some of our clients have done it?Event Videos

Go Behind-The-Scenes At Your Business

Posted on September 12th, 2012 | Leave a Comment

Another good behind-the-scenes video today from American Airlines. Good, not great. There are some rough edits, but it’s still pretty good and I LOVE the concept.

American’s leaders understand there’s all sorts of aspects about their business people might find interesting, so they regularly do these types of videos. In this case, it’s the process of buying a new airplane.

That’s Them, Not Us

You might be thinking to yourself… sure, they’re an airline. There are tons of things they can produce videos about that viewers will find interesting. I don’t do anything special that people will watch.

Trust me. There are people at American who once felt the same way. Guaranteed there are people there who are always prepping new planes and don’t think it’s anything special. When you do something everyday, or frequently, it might not seem interesting to you, but in the hands of a quality storyteller it becomes something that will capture an audience.

Look Using The eyes of your customers

The idea is to start looking at your business through the eyes of your customers and prospects. What are the things you’re doing that might peek their curiosity?

Remember, it’s not about you. It’s about the audience. Focus your videos on what they might want to watch.

–Tony Gnau