Content Creation: Videography

Videos put humans in a trance. They capture attention through movement and provoke a wide range of emotion. Those who activate video within their marketing efforts invite viewers to see, hear, and feel their message in a powerful way that makes the audience part of their story.

Like photography, smartphones are an easy way to start creating video. On your phone or with any other camera, here are a few simple techniques to keep in mind.

Orientation – If the audience will only be watching the video from their phones, a vertical orientation is fine. If you want more freedom to use the content in other ways, it’s best to use a horizontal orientation.

Stability – Eliminating jagged movement makes video more enjoyable to watch. It can feel cold to capture, but let the scene play out while the camera is stationary. If movement is required, don’t expect ultra smooth video from a handheld device. Internal stabilization helps and you may be able to get by using stabilization features in video editing software, but motorized gimbals, mounts, and tripods make it easier to be smooth with the raw footage. Stabilized video looks sharp, but also provides added flexibility. For instance, a few panned photos will be less noticeable when combined with smooth video. This can help fill in gaps to bring a story together.

Resolution – When it comes to resolution, you can always shrink high resolution down, but not the other way around. Consider shooting in higher resolutions to have more options with the footage.

Even with so much power packed into a smartphone, relying on one device is limiting. When you realize the value of video, do yourself a favor and invest in a dedicated video camera. Video cameras are fun to use with features built to deliver specific results. High-end video cameras are great and can capture amazing footage when used correctly. Unless video production is a part of your business, pricey equipment may be overkill. Lower priced options can also capture magic and are less risky to use. A good first purchase that will only set you back a few hundred bucks is an action camera with a handheld tripod. These small cameras are easy to use, capture sharp footage, and offer additional mounts to explore unique angles. Most important, the versatility and durability makes these small cameras less intimidating.

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The only trick to an action camera? A habit of using it.

Another cinematic angle that adds intrigue to any story is aerial video and photography. In the past, aerial views required expensive aircraft and professional equipment. With consumer drones, capturing high-quality aerial footage is easier than ever. With the proper licenses and little practice, anyone can rule the sky.

No matter what equipment is used, the effectiveness of video comes down to an ability to deliver something enjoyable to watch. Once video is shot, the real work begins. Anyone can shoot video, but it takes practice to capture shots that tell a story while evoking an emotional viewing experience. Organizing, editing, and stitching clips into a concise, brand-boosting video is a valuable art form that takes serious time and perpetual learning.

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Along with a deeper dive into videography, the endless debate between polished video versus live, raw video rages on in the Marketing chapter of YDNTB.

As you evolve your craft, remember that a great video is not about conveying every detail. It’s about delivering an atmosphere where viewers can emotionally feel the story being told. Make your marketing videos concise, enjoyable to watch, and rewarding to share. When videos stir up a combination of emotions that convey a consistent message in contrasting ways, your marketing becomes mesmerizing.

UP NEXT: Skill #4 – Graphic Design

Content Creation

Over the next few weeks, we’ll explore six multimedia marketing skills to make students, entrepreneurs, side hustlers, and intrapreneurs dangerous.

Skill #1 – Writing
Skill #2 – Photography
Skill #3 – Videography
Skill #4 – Graphic Design
Skill #5 – Creativity
Skill #6 – Organization

Before we begin this series, which can also be found in You Don’t Need This Book, let’s start by examining the impact of content creation. When it comes to marketing, content is the currency used to earn attention. As attention is earned, content becomes the instrument to share stories with people who care.

Telling your story is easy, but doing so without becoming too self-serving takes practice. If your voice always sounds the same, it will pave a one-way street. Instead of always pushing content, curiously pull from your audience. Be inversely charismatic and socratic by asking sincere questions and leaning into motivational interviewing habits. Actively listen and interact within these absorbing conversations.

Don’t be afraid to spread the word, but limit your storytelling until it flows into the discussion. When your stories add value within the context of an existing conversation, your narrative will be more appetizing.

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Listening, sharing, and learning from stories is how humans communicate, work together, and evolve. When applied to marketing, the narratives we share connect us to people who help us succeed.

In the information age, content is available and consumed in infinite ways. This makes attention scarce, so stories wrapped around remarkable work becomes more important. Consistency is huge, but adjust content for environments that work in your industry. Aligned, yet diversified content will optimize how the world hears your story. Formulating a combination of text, graphics, photos, audio, and video will give you an edge. Consider what content gets noticed and compare that to how hard it is to produce. No matter where content lives, make it clear why consumers should care.

As content creation continues, encourage organic engagement that can translate into repeatable conversions. In the connected era, the easiest way to do this is online. The nice thing about digital content is that it’s used in so many ways, yet it’s the easiest to create. Even if it’s taking small steps at first, it’s worth learning how to create your own content. Multimedia marketers can forge content that is quick to digest and made to share. This allows ideas to spread. You win if people share your story, so let’s make it easy.

UP NEXT: Skill #1 – Writing

Threaded Thoughts

Let’s talk tactics. Here is a simple technique to absorb, translate, and share the (audio)books you read.

Start with one tweet, then reply to that same tweet over and over again. The result is a thread (sometimes called a tweetstorm) that combines your key takeaways and gives you a single link to share your collective thoughts.

Here are a few examples…
Tribes – Seth Godin
We Are All Weird – Seth Godin
This Is Marketing – Seth Godin
Free Prize Inside – Seth Godin (ideal for intrapreneurs)
The Icarus Deception – Seth Godin (great for students)
Startup Community Way – Brad Feld & Ian Hathaway
Think Like A Freak – Steven Levitt & Stephen Dubner
The Hard Things About Hard Things – Ben Horowitz
Angel – Jason Calacanis
Think Again – Adam Grant
Entrepreneurs’ Weekly Nietzsche – Dave Jilk & Brad Feld
The Almanack of Naval Revikant
BONUS THREAD – Big Thoughts in Little Tweets

Why is this helpful? If you’re thirsty to learn from (audio)books, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed as authors bombard you with knowledge. Passively enjoying (audio)books is fine, but this organizational exercise forces you to slow down, which reduces the numbing effect. In short, crafting concise tweets that are all connected forces you to feel the experience.

Another benefit to sharing threaded thoughts, is that each public post draws out more focused contemplation. I’ve found this technique makes me think deeper, use words carefully, and has actually made me a better writer. Such value is compounded when the entire thread can be retrieved with one link.

Lastly, this exercise generates accountability. When this exercise becomes a habit, you spend extra time with that first tweet, knowing it may become be the foundation for a neat collection of thoughts. As the thread expands, you’ll feel momentum that keeps you listening/reading. If progress stalls, the lingering sense of an incomplete project may bring you back to finish the literary journey. If you must get through something quickly, just craft a smaller thread, but include one post that lists the page numbers for areas that caught your attention. Such a hack is still better than nothing.

To be clear, this exercise is not about pirating content or echoing knowledge like a parrot that sounds smart. It’s about sharing a meaning narrative while leaning into what resonates for you, knowing you’re creating a relic for others (including your future self) to enjoy as well.

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Tag me on Twitter if you try this! I’d love to follow along and will definitely chime in if you experiment using You Don’t Need This Book.

Social Audio

Video may have killed the radio star, but our voices were never silenced and social audio is now connecting them.

What does the term “social audio” mean? Social audio is an emerging subset of social media. Think talk radio with your entire social graph. Instead of a broadcast studio, everyone is able to speak their mind directly from a smartphone. The result is unscripted conversations that feel like a live podcast, with an endless amount of hosts, speakers and listeners tuning in from anywhere.

These audible discussions strip away the text, photos, and video. Your spoken thoughts are everything in this realm, but sharing your voice is nothing new. Talk radio, music, conference calls, voice messaging and podcasts have been around forever. What’s interesting is how social audio companies are transforming one-to-many productions into synchronized, many-to-many experiences. The timing of this growing market also makes sense, as the global pandemic has created an isolated world craving new ways to stay connected.

As Jeremiah Owyang shared in his comprehensive market forecast, a lot of attention has been given to Clubhouse, but there are signals of a market that’s getting much louder. Twitter Spaces, Locker Room, Sonar, Roadtrip, Yoni Circle, Quilt, and Cappuccino are a few more pioneering platforms that have each caught my attention for different reasons. Apple, Google, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Spotfiy are surely working on clones to catch up as well.

After scanning the open airwaves, I’m betting people with large followings will be drawn back to social audio features that allow them to interact with their existing audience on established social media platforms. For talkative people looking to expand their influence, choosing to be an early adopter on a new platform could be a waste of time if the app flops, but with less noise, the reward could be the audience they seek.

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It’s hard to tell if the race to win in social audio is causing this, but more social media companies are experimenting with different ways to compensate content creators. Twitch and YouTube have this somewhat figured out, but imagine spending the day talking on Twitter Spaces. Listeners could show their support with quick tips, while sponsored conversations and other shared revenue attracts more creative talent.

If you decide to share your voice by exploring social audio, remember the words we use matter. These are live, decentralized discussions, but what you share with the world may be hard to take back as many of these conversations are being recorded in one way or another. While this data collection feels like Ursula stealing Ariel’s voice in the The Little Mermaid, we all know the social media landscape is not a private place.

Privacy concerns aside, social audio provides an innovative way for humans to communication. Unlike edited writing, filtered photos, and polished video, our voices in real-time provide raw access to what people think. How might you use social audio to engage in more connected conversations? <End of Transmission>