The Art of Filming an Interview | Top One Report | In My Opinion

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“First and foremost, interviews are connected to credibility. We have been trained to think that if a person is interviewed about something, then they must have a special insight into the topic about which they’re being asked. In other words, if you’re worthy of an interview, you must know what you’re talking about. And do you realize that you can interview yourself? It’s quite common to see an interview on the nightly news that only shows the interviewee, and never the person asking the questions. Sometimes you don’t even hear the questions being asked. So instead of looking right at the camera, look off to the side and pretend to be answering someone’s questions. See how that could be good for selling something?”

via The Art of Filming an Interview | Top One Report.

In my opinion

If you are thinking about doing video interviews of yourself or your clients, this is a must read article.  I myself have been doing interviews of Wisconsin businesses who are using social media using my Flip Video camera.  My intent was to find more examples of business using social media and try to document the answers to the very questions being asked of me.

Breakfast and Video

The Social Media Breakfast Madison just had a great presentation by Requisite Video on video guidelines.  We talked about how to make choices when it comes to video.   Sandy Kallio one of the attendees was nice enough to provide a good recap of the event and I have added embellishments so please check out that post here: Do It Yourself Video | Requisite Video Speaks at SMB Madison

FaceBook Fan Page Ideas

Brandyn Olson , Requisite Video talked about Requisite Video’s  Facebook fan page being more active than his Website during the recent Social Media Breakfast Madison.  He also shared his strategy to spread content over Facebook and YouTube vs. pages hidden behind pages on the company Web site.

There is a strategy of posting video to different social sites.  There is a different appreciation of the narrative that should be placed in the specific social site context.  That strategy for posting to Twitter vs. LinkedIn vs. FaceBook vs. YouTube can really help the link follow and interest by your followers.

Wendy Soucie Consulting Facebook Fan Page - Youtube tab

Wendy Soucie Consulting Facebook Fan Page - Youtube tab

Some people don’t believe that FaceBook is the best place to upload your video. The more common approach is to upload to YouTube and link to FaceBook.  It means that you friends and Fans cannot easily find those videos again from the video page.  If you are posting your videos solely to FaceBook page, you should watch your Insights and track the activity.

In testing out this premise,  I found out that you can create a tabbed page with a third party YouTube plug-in.  It seems to be working OK so far on the Wendy Soucie Consulting FaceBook page.

How to measure the impact of video

The way to get new business is through networking and social media interaction. It’s up to you to decide what success looks like and begin to track the key factors that might drive new leads and revenue. Make sure that each video has a call to action at the beginning, middle and end.

  • Track total ecosystem numbers in all social spaces
  • Ask fans questions about video
  • Track comments
  • Track links and embeds
  • Track favorites
  • Track subscriptions
  • Track views
  • Track action by using landing pages for each social site on your “home”
  • Track marketing actions with track able phone numbers.

Through YouTube, you can see how long people are watching before they leave – meaning they might miss the call to action at the end.  This might clue you in to shorten up your videos and insert a call to action in the middle of the clip.

Consider having a script for the interview, to stay on message which can really help you be more organized.

When NOT to do it yourself.

  • When you’re not sure what results you want
  • When you’re not sure what your message is,
  • When your goals are not achievable with the tools and resources you have
  • When you’re branding yourself or your company.
  • When your time is worth more than the cost to hire a professional

Consider professional help for these opportunities to make a great first impression.

Please share your video experience and stories in the comments.

 

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5 Ways to Make Video a Social Experience | Social Media Examiner

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Video is very hot and there’s a strong social media connection. Are you using video to promote your business? Do you know the best ways to leverage this growing form of content?

What follows are 5 ways you can tap into the exploding video frontier—and achieve many social media advantages.

via 5 Ways to Make Video a Social Experience | Social Media Examiner.

They highlight the following reasons on this post:

1. Post  videos to your Facebook profile

2. Be active on YouTube

3. Join live-streaming sites

4. Use the video functions on social aggregators

5. Shoot your own video blog

Well I have been working on # 1, 2 and #5 so far with some good success.  I run a Social Media Breakfast – Madison monthly meeting and our next one will be about video and we plan to UStream the meeting for the first time.

I have started to video blog periodically during long drive time between appointments.  I don’t make every post a video.  When I have 1 hour or more of interstate driving, I find that video blogging is safer than trying to make phone calls.  I make a list of a variety of topics, turn the video on,  then just start running down the list with breaks in between so its easier to edit into sections.  I have a sticky permanent tripod for my flip video to hold it in place and away I go.

I will admit that being in Toastmasters since 1979 has helped me immensely speak off the cuff without too many uhms and ahs. You may need to practice, but the worse thing that could happen… you end up transcribing the post to text anyway.

Social Media Case Studies

I would like to suggest one more idea:

#6 Use video to interview your clients or people you would like to be your client and write a blog post about it.

I also started to do video interviews of different companies using social media.  I have a series of 10 questions on social media usage.  I interview various businesses and then post different clips to a variety of blogs that I contribute to.  I always keep in mind that the user may not be able to view the clip and provide a brief summary of the interview, including who/why/what/where. That way I balance video with some text.

My recent interviews have been with Cupcakes A-Go-Go, Midwest Airlines, and Degnan Builders.  Upcoming is Cousins Subs.


How have you been using video at your company?


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A Year of Status Updates in Facebook | Wendy Soucie

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I always like year in review movies, stories, pictures etc., so why not do one for Facebook status updates. I didn’t think I was especially active on Facebook this year, but either the space is incredibly small or I had a lot more to say than I thought.  I find I appreciate several friend and family members who write witty, thoughtful statements. Neither wordy nor clear, but with hidden meanings for certain people. I have a long way to go…

My Year in Status – Review Facebook App

I can see where this little app that I picked up on Facebook tonight might come in handy. It was easy to edit the selected status updates from the past year.  You could actually theme a page by subject matter of updates throughout the month or year.  But since it limits you to a page and you can’t include everything on the page, I had to make some choices.  You can get more posts if you are less verbos than me and have short quips and statements.  I may try and do a monthly or quarterly review to aggregate in a different manner.  Thumbs up on this one!

One of my friends who must be on Facebook alot – did 13 pages of these.  You are in luck and I only created one for now. This reminds me of Twitter Tools plugin for WordPress that lets you pull Tweets from Twitter and make blog posts of each one, daily digests, or weekly ones (these are what I do each week).  In that tool, you don’t have the option to really select which ones go in. That is a nice feature of the Facebook app.  I could delete the posts where my grammar or spelling wasn’t right on.

A year in review of select posts...

A year in review of select posts...

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What Makes a Blog Successful | Thoughts on Blogs 12-18-09

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This is my continued effort to follow the Social Media Academy NCP Model (Network Contribute  Participate). I choose to visit various blogs on B2B strategies, marketing, customer focused strategies, business development, engineering, product development and social media. From these collected comments, I create a post of what are the best of the week.  I hope you enjoy.

What makes a successful blog – Real Time Marketer

I believe that the #1 factor for blog success, is the frequency of your posts.  Mashable and TechCrunch, are respectably the #1 and #2 most popular social media blogs.  They average over 20 posts per day.  I understand they both have teams of paid writers to continuously spit out post after post…but I am constantly checking out their sites because I know they have good quality, and I know
that information will be new and constant. It is not realistic and probably not appropriate for you to be writing 20 articles per day, but you do need to consistently be writing new content.  Social Media, more than ever, is truly an out of sight out of mind medium.  If you aren’t continuously contributing content, or posts, or tweets…you do not exist.

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In response to the above statement I, Wendy Soucie,  commented:

I also believe consistency is a factor – although if you do nothing to promote the blog it won’t matter how regular you are if no one knows it.  Making sure you understand title and keywords and the role they play to get found are also high on the list.

I have done the following to generate a consistent pattern in my posting for my social media blogs:

1. Sunday is a Twitter weekly update – I generate this automatically but go back in, edit generate a tweet cloud picture and add tags, and review.

2. Monday is a Wisconsin Social Media day where I post to my secondary blog on Wisconsin business and social media issue.  I also  comment on some news activity from the past week or weekend.  I will start posting a monthly case study interview of Wisconsin companies that are using social media, their strategies and success measurements.

3. Tuesday is a Tip and Technique day that I offer on one of the social media tools I use or train on.

4.  Wednesdays are a participation and contribute day where I search for topics and comment on other peoples blogs.  I either visit blogs I follow or use Google Alerts on keywords and phrases to find new conversations in the social ecosystem.  I collect these comments – pick a theme and post this as a collection later on in the week.

5. Wednesday and Thursday are opinion post days.  I add one to my personal blog and I add another to a column on social media I have on Madison Social Media Examiner.com (this one at least monthly)

6. Friday is thoughts on blogs day – so I take my comment compilation and post that.

7. Weekends I work on the start of articles for the next week or future.

8. Sundays I look at the posts for the week and consider some for repost on places I guest blog  such as Customer Think, Social Media Today, Social Media Academy, or End Result Marketing.

I don’t always make all my deadlines, but I am hitting my minimum target of three posts a week.

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Social Competition – Social Media Today

Axel Schultze had an interesting post on social competition.

“The discussions whether Social Media is a fad or why corporate executives don’t see the opportunity are pretty much history. With the inception of reporting tools, methods to measure success and models and frameworks to articulate strategies – social media entered the board rooms. And pretty quickly social media became a competitive weapon.

Competition for mind share, competition for group or community members, competition for influence. And it is also competition for better solutions co-created with the users who establish a sense of ownership and help promote the products they at least influenced. It is a competition for the more engaged support community where user support user and augment to company support team. It is competition for the smarter sales teams which may quickly develop larger and more influential social networks, with better customer relationships in those networks.”

Axel,
Here are my thoughts for the class based on some of my experiences with business over the past 6 months.  Many of the SMB that I call on are waiting to see case studies, ROI, and have “prove it to me stances”. The are very reactive in their thinking. Conversations about social competition might me the best Ah ha moments to move these organizations into action. For many, they are programed to react not lead.

Teaching people to lead by engaging in social media where listening to customers sets the trends for what they do is an important aspect of this potential class.

If SMBs have this perspective, white papers and ebooks developed thru such a leadership class would be incredibly effective. I know the past classes offered did this but were they promoted enough?  I think this should be a core result of each class.  A recent research survey on what info c-level executives find the most value: WhitePapers and ebooks.

Another piece of information from the various presentations I have given is the concern by company execs about how much email will be in their mailbox if they engage in any social media efforts.  Somehow they don’t equate social media personal connections with valid email from customers or potential customers.  This needs to change if execs are to understand the much bigger picture of their customer mindset.

In such a class,  I would also like to see significant time spent on benchmarking competitive intelligence, market info and strategies to manage the information that you do collect in a logical way.

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Social Media 401: Vince Muzik Case Study – Social Media University Global

Lee Aase speaks and teaches others about social media at Social Media University Global. I love visiting his blog because I can learn something new and because I find Lee very encouraging to me personally (he is willing to share knowledge of value).  He answers my comment posts (he is listening), he provides real examples (shares his experiences), he tries things himself and reports (shows us what works for him and Mayo Clinic). In this recent post, he is encouraging of using video to contribute to the blog experience. He highlighted a friend, Vince Muzik,  who is doing a social media documentary on the No 1 football recruit Seantrel Henderson.

In response to his post I added:
Lee,
I wish some of my video projects were about someone as exciting as the number one recruit.  They are me video blogging right now.  Although my friends (via their comments) are visibly entertained by not so much my content – but how I am doing it.

I just don’t think I am that interesting.  However, I am going to start interviewing people who are using social media in a business setting. Capture what they think worked and what didn’t as an alternative. My first one is going to start in January and will be on a startup called Cupcakes A-GoGo. They are using Facebook and Twitter along with traditional print advertising to get the word out. They were great fun (tasty too) to interview.

Its likely not something that a national publications would latch on to my stream but its all I have right now. SMUG still a good deal to make me use the tools and practice.

And since Lee is very engaged, he responded to my comment:

Don’t sell yourself short, Wendy. The whole idea of social media is that you don’t need to appeal to a mass audience. Your goal should be to provide relevant, helpful information and connect with a community. You’re doing some great things with your blog, tying some other platforms together. And it all comes down to using the tools to accomplish your goals. Vince is doing some interesting things,
and I just told his story because I’ve known him for a long time and he’s been stopping by for some tips and inspiration. I would welcome others doing posts here in the 400 series about how they’re using social media practically, whether others would think it’s “glamorous” or not.

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Why I am Thankful for Social Media – Family Relationships Part 1

Do you have a large extended family?  Do you live miles, towns, states, or even countries far apart from loved ones?

Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder

Consider how social media has significantly changed how we stay connected to family.  I have family members in Oregon, Colorado, California, Wisconsin, Rhode Island, Washington, New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusetts, New York, Vermont, Maryland, New Jersey, Paris France, and Nice France.  Does that make your issues of driving to Grandma’s house 1 hour a way seem pretty mild?

Here is why I am thankful for social media:

  • I can share pictures and video taken this summer with relatives in France
  • I can trade Facebook updates with a 67 year old brother
  • I can see my nephew’s son growup on a more regular basis from across the USA
  • I can stay in touch with the hectic lives of Generation Y family without asking dumb questions
  • I can follow the careers of people at a distance and learn some interesting professional facts
  • I can send them referrals from my network to help them with business
  • I can help my college graduate son cleanup his language, pictures and presence online

Here are the rest of my thoughts in this video blog post:

What are you thankful for?  See Part 2 – Why I am Thankful for Social Media – Friend Relationships


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