Video marketing has been on the rise for many years now, yet many marketers do not realize the real power of video content.
In most cases, brands shy away from creating video content, and lots of influencers don’t feel comfortable with it either (guilty here as well).
So how to use video when you’re not comfortable with video? Let’s discuss!
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About Christine
Christine Gritmon @cgritmon is a social media strategist teaching busy, stressed small business owners how to tell their brand stories online in efficient, effective ways that value their time, energy, and money
Christine was a speaker at #INBOUND18 giving a presentation on using social media videos which is what she is teaching us here too! Check the coverage of the presentation here.
Follow Christine’s blog here.
Questions we discussed
Q1 How did you become a digital marketer? Please share your career story!
I began my career with a decade in corporate beauty, but wasn’t a marketer per se; I helped marketers and creatives communicate, managed project details, etc. But this was before social media.
It wasn’t until I was a journalist, years later, that I was exposed to the business side of social media. It was still new, so we were all constantly learning what worked and what didn’t. I was hooked.
The newsroom also brought out my intuitive knack for personal branding, and I was promoted to help others in the newsroom put themselves out there and make connections, both online and off.
After business groups started asking me to speak about social media, I began to think this could be a career, so I left the newsroom and started Christine Gritmon Inc. in May 2016, focusing on small business needs.
In my opinion, it's become almost essential – people have become so accustomed to being spoken to in that direct and engaging way that it becomes harder to gain traction when you aren't connecting on that level #vcbuzz
— ❤️christine gritmon❤️ (@cgritmon) November 19, 2019
Q2 I’m camera-shy. Do I have to appear on video myself?
No way! There are tons of ways to use video that don’t have to involve your talking head. Here are dozen:
- Voiceover with visuals (especially of product)
- Dramatization of result of using product/service (or of problem that product/service solves)
- POV (including behind-the-scenes or events)
- Unboxing POV
- Locations of significance
- Object boomerang
- Customer testimonial (video of them OR voiceover w/text)
- User generated content
- Staff profile
- How To
- Animated text (apps can do this)
- Stock video or imagery
@vcbuzz A2: Definitely not! There are tons of creative ways to make videos without your face appearing in them. Animations, voice-overs, and more. #vcbuzz
— Squadhelp (@squadhelp) November 19, 2019
If you do video that isn’t really video, though (like over a still graphic, or animated text), please have sound that adds to the experience! I don’t want a still-image slideshow over elevator music. Say something. Add a bit of yourself in there.
I think it would be awesome! Short, sweet and well-branded (+annotated) #vcbuzz
— Anna Fox (@manifestcon) November 19, 2019
A2: Nope! Depending on the type of content, it could just be your hands showing how something works, or just your voice, or even text-only video.
— Chris Bryant ? (@The_ChrisBryant) November 19, 2019
IMO the more of (genuine) you there is in the video, the better. =)#VCBuzz
true authentic testimonials and case studies always get me buy a nutricion plan! #vcbuzz
— Anna Fox (@manifestcon) November 19, 2019
Q3 What kind of equipment do I need to start doing video?
Literally just something that can capture video footage and access to the internet to upload it. Your iPhone will do just fine.
You can get a clip-on ring light and a small tripod for your phone really cheaply on Amazon, and that should really do for most people. A little lavalier mic that plugs into your phone, too, if you want, or just your iPhone wired earbuds. Whole setup < $100.
I recently upgraded my tech: I use a Sony DSLR camera with CamLink and a tripod, a Blue Yeti microphone, and I run it all through Ecamm (even for pre-recorded videos). I also film with a larger ring light, and a simple curtain as a backdrop.
When it comes down to it, pulling your content together and getting it out there matters more than fancy equipment. You can always improve your tech. But it’s the meat of the content that will build your audience.
Well, first of all, you don't have to be the one "on stage" – lots of ways to do video without being on it – but I find looking at it as just having a conversation with a human being is best. (And, ultimately, you ARE – you just can't see them!) #vcbuzz
— ❤️christine gritmon❤️ (@cgritmon) November 19, 2019
Q4 Should I put my videos in one place and link to them, or should I upload them separately to each platform?
This depends entirely on your goal. Are you trying to get more people in total to view the video, or are you trying to build up your audience on a specific platform?
If you’re going for total views and exposure, then videos always do better with the algorithm when uploaded natively to each platform. However…
If what you’re going for is to build your audience in a specific place, it might be worth the slight reduction in overall reach in order to make sure all you traffic is building in that one spot.
What's the goal of your video—total views or building your audience in a specific place? Best practices differ, so post accordingly. #vcbuzz #VideoMarketing https://t.co/vd6zdbM7Ss
— Jaime Shine ?️ (@jaimeshine) November 19, 2019
Quick follow up: never let a lack of gear be an excuse to not create. Story is more important than ANYTHING. If you have that, the gear is secondary.#vcbuzz
— Chris Bryant ? (@The_ChrisBryant) November 19, 2019
Q5 How long should videos be for social media?
Different platforms have their own guidelines for best practices… but it’s more important to consider your own content and your own audience.
Some things are absolute: a video on the Instagram feed can’t be more than one minute; IGTV needs over a minute, and up to ten (up to an hour if you’re super special.) IG Live is up to an hour.
FB videos can go up to 4 hours(!) but shorter ones really do best, like a minute-ish. Live videos, however, should go at least 10 minutes so you have a chance to build up an audience.
It can work if you keep it moving. Look at Tasty, and those other quick-cooking videos – the same tactics can be followed for ANY how-to – speed up the film, do quick takes, make it snackable. #vcbuzz
— ❤️christine gritmon❤️ (@cgritmon) November 19, 2019
LinkedIn videos are 10 minutes max – again, unless live, where it should be at LEAST 10 minutes. Twitter vids can be 2 min 20 sec, but shorter is better on that platform.
VIDEO STATS from @OptinMonster:
— Gail Gardner (@GrowMap) November 19, 2019
Video generates 66% more leads
72% of B2B marketers and 76% of B2C marketers use video
48% of marketers are making YouTube video a priority
46% plan to focus on Facebook video
Video will be 82% of all traffic by 2021#vcbuzz
MOST IMPORTANTLY: look at your own metrics for past videos and see where people tend to drop off. Try to identify content that gets them to click, and content that gets them to click away.
Q6 What are your favorite video marketing tools?
A6a. I like Ecamm for going live and even for recording, CamLink to connect my DSLR camera as a webcam, QuiCC for captioning (it’s very accurate, and you can control the look of the captions), and https://t.co/Jz2jglfwZr for adding visual bells and whistles. #VCBuzz
— ❤️christine gritmon❤️ (@cgritmon) November 19, 2019
I’m now starting to use @QuiCC_app post-livestream: upload recording to QuiCC, edit captions (WAY more accurate than Facebook’s native tool), download the SRT file, and upload SRT to the backend of my video replay, so it keeps the livestream analytics.
A6: Great question, video *marketing.*@buffer is great for scheduling out posts in those critical first few days/weeks after a video is launched.@vidIQ is a powerful (free!) plugin that lets you see lots of amazing video data, while ensuring your YouTube upload is ? #vcbuzz
— Chris Bryant ? (@The_ChrisBryant) November 19, 2019
Our previous video marketing chats:
- Captioning Videos: The Step Most Video Creators Overlook with Meryl K. Evans @merylkevans #vcbuzz
- How to Create a Successful Social Video Campaign with @TawannaBSmith #vcbuzz
- Video and Podcast Marketing Twitter Chat with Deborah Anderson @socialwebcafe
- Visual Content Marketing Tips with Nicolina Wroblewski @TheMissNicolina #VCBuzz
- What Works in Engagement Marketing with @PR_Kristyna #VCBuzz
- How to Get 80,000 Shares for Your Article with Roxana Nasoi @roxanasoi #VCBuzz
- Best Social Media Marketing Tools with Lilach Bullock @lilachbullock #VCbuzz