Archive for category Video Production

The Important Ingredients Of A Photography WebSite Website Video

KICKPICS Website - Professional Martial Arts Photography,(Video), found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rjpI6u4Komo is an example of a photography website video. The two essential components of any successful photography website video are a set of photographs to display and nice background music that will complement the photographs. A third important factor is the spacing between photograph to photograph. This video uses a gap of about 5 seconds. This is enough time to see each photograph, but not too much time so that the viewer will get bored.

While many of the photographs in this web video are of amateur kick boxing, the video as a whole is immensely popular on You Tube, having racked up over 100,000. The essential ingredient that makes this video so appealing, is the effect generated by the interaction of the background music with the photographs. The background music consists of a male and female rap song. And the repartee between the male and female rapper contrasts very effectively with the martial arts photographs. As we view a photograph of a man with his foot pressed against the face of his fellow combatant, we hear the male and female rapper engaged in an even more primal warfare, the combat between the sexes.

The fun of watching this video is watching the boxers featured in the photographs seeking to break down the guard of their opponent, while listening to the male rapper trying to and ultimately succeeding in breaking through the defense of the female rapper. “I want you on my team,” he says, “So does everyone else,” she replies.

A male combatant viciously kicking his opponent with a heavily shoes foot, reminds us that the male rapper is viciously competing with other men for the attention of the female rapper.

“Just let your guard down,” the male rapper says, “Don’t get mad, don’t be mean,” “Don’t get mad, don’t be mean,” she repeats. The music reminds us that this real primal combat of life is for something good something positive. Not ultimately me against you, but me with you. Once the male rapper can break through the female rapper’s defense, he can get to something soft and nice. And the female rapper who starts out as his combatant can become his friend.

Although the video is not meant as an advertisement for martial arts, it does awaken an interest in the field, as it shows us that the principles of martial arts apply to other struggles in life, including love. A viewer might decide he should take some martial arts training, as well, as that will sharpen up his ability to be successful with women. At the same time, the video is definitely liable to interest viewers in seeing the photography website. There is a link at the bottom of the video and the webmaster reports getting an overall 7,000 hits per month to his website.

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Showing Off The Beauty Of Your Product

Beauty is one of the important elements, which needs to be incorporated into a corporate video. Beauty is a quality which imbues an object with attractiveness. In the same way as viewers are attracted to unique content, viewers are also attracted to beautiful content. Finding beautiful content to present to the public is a unique challenge for every industry, because each industry has beauty in a different form. Locating the beauty and presenting it, will greatly enhance the appeal of a corporate video to the public.

Locating that which is most beautiful in a given industry is not always so obvious. In a company, which provides large above ground containers for volatile fuel, for example, a photo of the production plant with row after row of these large steely containers sitting in a lot waiting to be delivered has beauty in symmetry. A video made for an environmental group, has a much more obvious source of beauty, and it will serve to prove my point.

The environmental corporate video by Edward Wallace can be found at http://vimeo.com/3217927 . The Canadian environmental protection organization that produced this video has a very conspicuous source of beauty. The stunning outdoor scenes of nature captured in their video are not mere attractive add-ons, however. The beauty of untrammeled nature relates directly to the purpose of their organization, which is to preserve these wild pristine places. This is essential. The video is not merely throwing in beautiful images to attract views so that it can then deliver the message. Rather, in a very real sense, the beauty is the message. In that sense, and in this usage the video illustrates the famous poetic adage that “Beauty is Truth and Truth is Beauty.”

The incorporation of beauty into a corporate video, may not always be done so appropriately. For example, if a mountain climber reaches the summit of a tall mountain, and a video captures exquisite footage of a snow capped mountain summit, a breath-taking panorama and the perilous drop below, there is certainly beauty within the segment. However, that beauty is not intrinsically related to the wrist watch which has continued to tick despite the rugged trek to the mountain peak. The sturdiness of the watch, in fact, is one of its minor feature compared to the beautiful intricacy of its dials, wheels and or digital circuitry, which never miss a beat and keep accurate time for years.

In the mountain video, beauty is transferred from another source and applied by juxtaposition to the object actually featured in the footage. Such a tactic can work at times, but it can also backfire as the viewer is secretly thinking, “You mean you have nothing intrinsically beautiful about your product to show me?”

When, as in the environmental video, on the other hand, the beauty directly relates to the message of the video, a resonance is created, because the increased attractively directly touches on the heart of the matter. The beautiful imagery, furthermore, imbues the video with a certain degree of sincerity and even passion. People watching the images of the environmental are moved to want to save the environment as they see the morning sunlight glistening through the trees, and here birds singing their morning songs and watch as a herd of elks standing shyly in a broad shallow creek, turn to look, with mild concern, at the humans filming them from a distance.

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Using A Famous Song As Background Music For A Corporate Video

4Ward is a Canadian company specializing in branding, web video production and photography. Their 2008 corporate video is posted on the web. Their corporate video is striking in that they have chosen as background music, the popular song “Here it Goes Again,” by OK.

The song is an exciting song, which won real prominence because of the incredible viral video made to the tune of that song. The video features the band members performing an incredible walk dance on a series of treadmills in a gymnasium. The treadmills are lined up in two rows and set to run in alternating directions. As the band members walk/dance from treadmill to treadmill, to the tune of the music, they create some incredible visual effects. The visual effects illustrate the theme of the song as well. In the song, the protagonist is always getting in the groove and in the mood, with a girl, apparently, when something outside of his control occurs. Treadmills, like life, never stop moving and make it impossible to merely stand still. In that regard they illustrate the theme of the song that something always seems to happens when life is going along great.

The choice of Here it Goes Again, as background music for their corporate video apparently reflects the company’s esprit de corp. Videography manufacturing is a fast paced business. Just when one project is under control, the phone rings and another project comes along. The pace never stops and people working in videography on online marketing are constantly busy, but constantly loving it.

Both of these themes are expressed by the video song selection. While the song laments the fact that
something always goes out of control, just when things are going great, the song response is an dutiful and upbeat accpetance, “Oh well, here we go again.”

If asked to place the visual display of the video on a scale ranging from storyline, to illustrative of the musical beat, I would put it close to the second end of the scale. The images appear in a collage style and are more suggestive of activities the company is involved in then specific temporal portrayals of actual activities.The work held together stylistically and is loosely held together by occasional captions. The captions tell us the company has 40 branches throughout Canada.

The video addresses the fast paced world of computer video and visual advertising. As a corporate video the work shows off the ability of the company to create motion graphics. The captions note that the company makes flash, 3D animation, print design, package design and web design.

People who are familiar with the images used in the musical collage will probably relate to this video the best. Much of the material presents products of desktop publishing, including photographs, text designs and online arragnements. Other segments present clips of videos made for important clients such as Yamaha.

As a viewer, if asked how the company could better the production of their corporate video for future years, I would suggest using a song that is slightly less domineering. It is a tune that is so popular on You Tube, that anyone hearing it immediately wants to see the viral video that goes with it. The meaning of the song appears to express the pace of life of the industry, and that is captivating and amusing. I personally would relate a little better to a visual storyline which presents a more unified visual theme. I would want to see a bit more coherence and correspondence between the images and the script. However, it is worthy of note that the video has been popular, as corporate videos on You Tube go, with over 25,000 views. And that’s a lot more views than many very coherent looking corporate branding videos get.

The company touts itself as specialists in branding, and there is successful branding with this video. While overpowering, the song definitely appears to convey the corporate image 4WARD is trying to portray. These are people who know how to live and breathe in the fast paced Internet video and web marketing environment. And in the computer world, we tend to trust faced paced people. People who can make it have fun from 4 until 10, as the song describes, and then shrug off a sudden unexpected event, which ends the good time, and then go with the flow, are the kind of people we know we can trust with a marketing project.

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What Makes A Corporate Video Exciting?

The University of Kibangsaan Malaysia produced their latest corporate video, which is published on You Tube. Presumably, the video targets people such as Malaysians living in the West, whom the university would like to contribute money to their endowment, and or send their children back to Malaysia for their education.

Based on the video content, the University apparently decided to feature important discoveries and breakthroughs made at the University, which have lead to social, technological and economical advances for humanity. The approach is certainly meritorious, and as the corporate video describes the list of advances, one can appreciate that many of these contributions are exciting cutting edge scientific developments. The discoveries presented include computerized monitoring of the eye movements of a driver to look for evidence he is too tired to drive and a computerized robot with the capability of detecting even minute smells.

Having plotted out the content of the corporate video the university and videographers next had to decide how they wanted to organize their material. They chose a format not unlike the dialogue in the famous John Lennon song, Imagine. In Imagine, the late John Lennon presented his ideas as a series of parallel sentences each starting with the word imagine. The song was set to softe melodious music composed by Lennon.

The UKM corporate video, they presents a series of questions and responses about the future set to a soft slow playing background. For example, the first caption starts with a question, “What if a computer could see what your eyes cannot?” Another caption responds: “Driver drowsiness detection system developed by the faculty of engineering.” Question: “What if we could invent a machine with a sense of smell? Response: “The optical e-nose detects smells up to a millionth of a micron.”

The entire 9 minute video consists of additional segments organized just like these, up until the very end. In the background we watch imagery related to the discovery begin touted, and or the people who developed it. In the final segment, the video poses a series of questions without answers. Who is driving the nation forward with a strong sense of national identity?” “Who has the will to advance humanity? Finally, “What if it is a National University? Then the video flashes the name University of Kibangsaan Malaysia.

While the video is long and repetitive, I think it would be a mistake to call it boring. The question response format calls attention to the amazing breakthrough each discovery has brought to ongoing human progress. However, with respect to the visual presentation I do believe the video missed presenting enough clips of the discoveries in action and therefore may not have reached to the level of excitement it could have.

For example, the video initially poses the question as to what if a computer could see what your eyes cannot? And it then presents the driver drowsiness detection system. The question and response arouses interest. However, the video fails to show a depiction of the produc being used in real life. A visual presentation of a driver driving down the road at night and almost falling asleep and being aroused by the computer and then pulling over, would have, in my opinion, added more excitement. This type of vidual segment would have been comparable to contemporary videos of androids, which feature the androids performing a variety of feats on screen and talking to people. The question and answer format wins for consistency, yet by the end everyone knows what to expect, and so it loses some effectiveness. Furthermore, after a while viewers probably would like to know the name of the university presenting this research. While this might make some of the watchers stay to the end, it could also cause some of them to lose focus on each individual discovery. Finally, the one short appearance of the name of the University, which is the subject of the video is probably not enough to create powerful image branding. I would recommend that the name should have come out at the beginning, so viewers can associate all the advancements with the University.

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A Consistent And Thorough Corproate Video

What do people want to see when they look at an airline carrier corporate video . They want to know that the airline is modern and up to date. They want to see images of sleek attractive airports and planes gliding effortlessly through the air. They want to know about awards the airlines has won, their record of safety. And they want to hear about the cities and countries serviced by the airlines. The Malaysia Airlines Corporate Video does this, and more.

The video begins by emphasizing the experience and importance of Malyasian Royal airlines. Not only has it been in operation for more than 50 years, it was also the official airlines of the Malaysian Royal family. It changed to become the official carrier of the newly proclaimed state of Malaysia. We are assured to hear this is the finest airlines in Malaysia.

Then the video begins to provide important corporate images. The airlines transitioned from a regional airline to an international airline, it is international, it has one of the largest fleets in Asia and it is a premier world carrier. Lest we worry that conditions in Malaysia might be a bit primitive, we are informed that the home airport base, KL International airport is one of the largest and most complex international airports in the world. This statement is backed up by clips of the airport, and the sophisticated subway system, which takes passengers to the nearby modern city Kuala Lumpur.

The video then presents a list of impressive awards the airlines has won: best signature dish, finest airport lounge, best airline staff in the world for four years. Having convinced us that the airline is up to date reliable and reputable, we now are presented with images of the plush comfortable interior, current and future airplane upgrades, and the redesigned cabin, along with seats that recline into a bed.

The video is notable for its thorough presentation, and devotes a segment to presentation of the exceptional award winning safety, security and consistency features of the airlines. The video also presents the Maskargo, division of the air carrier, which provides award winning air shipping service.

The video chooses to close with on screen presentation of testimonials of some of the passengers. What we read from the passengers is consistent with what we have seen on the screen.

The task of a corporate video about an airline from a third world country is to convince viewers that their airline is reliable, up to date and even more has all the features of any of the world’s great airlines. This the video does admirably. From the start which emphasizes the political stability of the country as well as the continuance of the airline despite a recent change form Monarchy to democracy, to the middle, which presents the airline corcorporation as a modern up to date air carrier, to the awards and testimonials, the video presents all the material necessary to convince viewers that it is a totally first class world airlines. The carefully crafted video narration is backed up with illustrative clips of the sleek airline in action, the modern cabin interior, the modern international airport and modern city surrounding the Malaysian airport.

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A Short Generic Website Video For The Insurance Industry

Elocal has invented the genre of short, (10-20 second), generic website videos which can be used by any business in the profession for which they are made. Because this approach to video marketing is recent, it is crucial to analyze the videos in use to determine what content and style ismost likely to successfully attract customers to companies using this type of web video on their website or landing page.

The eLocal health insurance landing page video, consists of three short family vignettes. The vignettes are backed up by a wistful electronic synthesizer generated melody. The vignettes tell a story, but it takes a while to put the pieces together.

In the first segment, a young mother is holding her baby, in a well lighted domestic environment. Instead of the joy a mother usually feels when holding her young child, this mother is anxious, distant a bit distracted, and even bites her lip. There is a sad look in her eye. What could be the reason?

In the second scene we see the silhouette of a father playing with two of his older daughters on top of a hill. In the third scene, the father, perhaps the same father is pushing his young daughter on a swing. If this is the same child as we saw in the first scene than she has grown up a bit.

There are three captions in the course of the video. Putting them together they read: ” Can you measure the value of your family?” “Find out about your health options today.”

After I replayed the video a number of times, the segments, music and captions all came together to suggest a story line.The mother may have been anxious in the first scene because she had a medical condition and knew she wouldn’t live to see her child grow up. In the second and third scenes the mother is conspicuously absent and the father is playing with the children. The setting sun against which the father and children are silhouetted in the second scene might symbolize the waning life of the mother. In the third scene, the mother the father, is playing with his daughter, the absence of the mother suggests that the scenario actually occurred.

This may not be the only interpretation of the video sequence. However, this interpretation goes along with the sad almost funereal background music. The suggestive plot line seen together with the captions suggests that the family did not have enough health insurance to pay for the mother’s catastrophic health needs. Perhaps if they had, the mother would still be living.

Each person viewing the video might interpret it differently Like rorschach diagrams, the three scenes together suggest various interpretations to individual viewers. However, most of the interpretations are likely to be somber.

In order to be fit for inclusion on many company websites, the eLocal videos frequently avoid using real actors or real scenes taken from one business of the given profession. In this web video, however, the film depicts a scenario portraying people who need health insurance, and not portraying the insurance company itself. eLocal apparently felt comfortable using real people to portray members of a family with inadequate health insurance to cover their needs.

The question one puzzles about is how people will interpret the story, and if this will motivate them to buy health insurance. I don’t believe too many people will interpret the storyline in the way I did. The video emphasizes family relationships. People viewing the short video might be inspired to contact the insurance company because they believe they must have insurance for their children’s sake. Or else they must have health insurance for themselves so they will be healthy to take care of their children. These lines of thought might be aroused by seeing the video, and subsequently inspire the viewers to contact an insurance company.

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Making A Landscaping Company Website Video

More and more businessman with company websites are realizing that a web video, which greets visitors to the web site, makes the web site more personal reaches out to visitors in a stronger way and increases the conversion rate. What are the essential elements of a web video that will turn clicks into customers. That is the central question.

Every profession has its own unique requirements, which go into producing a quality web video. However, many of the qualities which make a video work for one profession will also apply to website videos in other professions. In this article, I will be comparing three web videos that were made for the landscaping profession and are posted on You Tube.

The ATC website video posted at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYIpt0JebTc tells the story of a day in the life of the ATC company. This enjoyable video tells the story of a typical day in the life of ATC landscape workers. The background music consists of the song “Takin’ Care of Business by Bachman-Turner Overdrive.” The lyrics describe the 9-5 daily routine of workers pushing a time clock in a big city. In the morning, the workers conference, they stand around the foreman who gives then a pep talk. Then they clap hands and head to the trucks. Then one by one the trucks pull away. Next we see workers busy with various landscaping chores, mowing the lawn, trimming a bush, and setting up a wooden fence behind a garden. The scenes feature good quality landscaping work and attractive lawns and gardens. When the video is over, we have come to feel that the workers of ATC are decent hard working fun-loving guys. And we would trust them with our landscaping.

The second web video, is constructed of amateur video footage and still photos, arranged and set to music by a professional video production company. This video is compounded of stills and video segments of landscapes the company has made,along with some shots of company workers actively engaged in landscaping. The video features still and video shots of landscapes the company made, and some shots of company workers at work. The music is upbeat universal style background music. The video is not as personal as the first video. It seeks to build trust with the viewer by presenting the quality of the company’s landscape work.

The third web video is also professionally made. The well captioned product is introduced by a narrator, and then features before and after photos of various landscaping jobs the company has done.

Studies have shown that trust a shopper has for a company is a very important factor in determining whether or not he will do business with that company. Trust, it has been shown can override considerations of the quality of the work the company will produce. And for obvious reasons, a company may do quality work but if not trustworthy could cheat an individual customer. Whereas a trusty company will always be expected to do well for a customer. So which video wins more trust? Clearly number one. At the end of that video, we feel like we know the company and the workers. Whereas in video two the workers appear in a few still life shots, and in video three not at all.

What about other commonalities found in the three videos, which we might call important elements of a landscaping video. Clearly, the shots of beautiful looking and quality landscape displayed on the screen will influence a viewers decision about doing business with a company. While the first video may inspire trust by introducing the crew as decent hard working and fun loving guys, the shots of quality landscaping, manicured, well cut lawns, well trimmed beds and a sturdy garden fence are also necessary, as they allow the viewer to connect his faith in the workers with the quality work they do. Both the second and third videos also present the quality landscaping work the companies do.

General statements we can make about these videos, which apply to other professional include the observation that a website video which develops trust in a company is more likely to win customers. Also, in landscaping as well as other professions it is important to show that workers perform quality work in their profession, so that the viewer can connect his trust in the company with a belief that the workers will perform quality work.

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The Effectiveness Of Repetitive Motions In A Website Video

For the last three years, eLocal has been creating generic mini-website videos that can placed on the website of anyone in the profession for which the video was made. The videos are produced in quantity and are sold at whoelsale prices and have made website videos affordable for even the small businessman. This strategy has made the businessman feel good, but the question is whether these little mini website videos are drawing in the traffic.

If these videos are drawing traffic, which ones, or which type of content, in this new genre, are most effective at converting clicks to customers. In this article, I will be looking at the eLocal Garage door video # 2 found at: http://www.youtube.com/elocalvideoexamples#p/u/5/pd0xn7w5VD

This video might be aptly called the garage door dance video. In style, it is patterned after a number of videos, which use either repetitive sequences or motion graphics to display the product making a repetitive motion. If the motion is one that people enjoy doing or seeing, then they might become hypnotized by the video, as they gaze at the product dancing around the screen.

In this video, the repetitive motion is the electronically controlled garage door opening and closing. The direction of the moving door is controlled by a button being fingered by an off screen participant. The door moves up and down to the rhythm of a funky repetitive synthesizer tune which plays in the background. On close examination, it appears that the 20 second video was made by splicing 3 segments of the same segment together, with some added material. The video closes with a dark background on which the name and phone number of the company is displayed.

So is this video effective as a web video. It must be said in its favor, that pushing the button to control the movement of a garage door is a favorite motion for many people. People finger the button before leaving on a trip or vacation or a visit to a movie or restaurant. They finger it again to close the garage after returning satisfied from a dinner with friends or a movie. They finger it before going out to earn money. Admittedly, at times it can become a nuisance, and because of this we now have electronically controlled garage door buttons. But in general, the electric garage is one of the modern conveniences that people appreciate. And they part they like the most is when they hit the button and the door begins to move in the direction they want. This video decided to capitalize on human enjoyment of this motion, by presenting it in a video which repeatedly displays only that motion and almost nothing else.

One way this video might have increased its effectiveness is if they had presented a completed garage door move. People like the completion of the garage door close as well as the start. The part they hate is the long time it takes to get to the end. This video only shows a short segment of the move, albeit the exciting moment when the door curves around the guiding rails as its motion changes from horizontal to vertical or visa versa.

In addition to failure of the video to have presented a more complete move, the display on the screen is a little cramped. We see a finger pushing the button, we see a close up of the door rising up and down and its reverse and little else.

Assuming the cinematic effects were perfect, the central question is whether the idea of this video itself is a good one. Assuming the video was successful at displaying a fun aspect of operating a garage door, will it sell the garage door? Logically, it will. I conclude that the idea of this video has some merit, but the cinematic effects are incomplete and cramped.

What is the take home lesson from this video. Showing a fun aspect of owning or operating a product a company is trying to sell can be a good one. The display should be as more complete than this display both temporally and spatially.

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Human Communication In A Trade Show Video

I want to talk about an ineffable quality found in successful trade show videos. This quality characterizes videos which acheive effective communicate with the listener. It is inculcated into the video when the videographer recognizes that he is communicating with people like himself; reasonable human beings with human needs, human desires, human thoughts and human feelings. This quality is introduced into the video when the videographer dares to bare his own heart and acknowledge via the screen presentation that he or he as proxy for his client is a person like the people in his audience.

How is this ineffable quality expressed? To answer that question, I wish to compare the Dr. 2 shoes video found on the portfolio page of emotionpicturestudios.com http://www.emotionpicturestudios.com/portfolio with a sampling of trade show video clips presented by a video production company in California, http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1839990747070661993#docid=-7483874065862199317 .

In the first video a full view narrator describes a diabetic shoe. The video addresses people who need diabetic shoes or people who sell them. It presents important facts about the shoe. Yet it also presents the facts in a way that is not pure documentary, but also imagistic and branding. Information about the shoe is alternated with motion graphics of the shoe or shoe parts, rotating on and off the screen. One important impression comes through, which is that the video knows exactly who it is targeting and it communicates directly to them.

Now look at the sampling of trade show videos clips by a California video production company. The visual quality of each video appears high. The splicing job is superb. But the film has not focus, no message, no narrator, no captions, no words in the background music, which only consists of repetitive synthesizer music. In this video, it is not clear who the target audience is and more importantly who is the communicator and what is being communicated.

The videographer who made the first video has perspective when it comes to balancing video effects and video essence. In his video, the video effects are an accoutrement to the essential human to human communication. In the second video, the video effects become the all, and the communication becomes the type of communication that takes place on a night club dance floor. There is communication on a night club dance floor, don’t get me wrong. When the room fills with music and the strobe lights and lasers and fibre optics are creating a wild light show, there are feelings communicated. But if two people in love spend lots of time at discotheques, they still have to spend other dates at the dinner table or on a quiet patio, communicating in order to make romance evolve to a decision to create a partnership.

The same principle is true with trade show videos. Before a viewer will make a decision about making a financial agreement, he needs to experience real human to human communication, which addresses his full thought, and not merely his temporary entrancement with visual or sound effects. We see that information being presented in the first video, but not in the second video.

If I had to name that special ineffable quality I would call it focus. A video needs a focal point which represents the point of human contact between videographer and viewer, which makes the viewer believe there is a real person communicating with him through the video; and therefore, the video i9s worthy of his time and attention.

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Deciding Who You Are Targeting When Producing A Landing Page Video.

eLocal can take credit for having invented the web video genre of the generic website videos. These little 10-20 seconds web videos are made for businessmen who want to place a video on their website, but can’t afford to spend $500 - $1,000 to get a personalized custom web video. To help them along, eLocal has created a series of generalized videos.

Each eLocal video targets one profession. Any business in that profession can place one of the eLocal videos on their website and the flick will speak to their customers, as if the video were personally made for them. The message is generalized enough that the video fits in, and according to testimonials from eLocal customers, is successfully attracting customers.

As the founder of this genre, eLocal has had to create their own style and approach to production of these videos, and make their own determination as to what does or does not work. Since the pioneer in any field is just that, and is only presenting the initial solutions to the challenges of the field, it is worthwhile reviewing these videos and considering what appears to work and what doesn’t.

The eLocal appliance repair video, found at http://www.youtube.com/elocalvideoexamples#p/u/3/qbvUMbtXfjE, is one of their 3D motion graphic videos. With the assistance of their 3D imagery, the dying appliance, breaks down in a way that real machines can’t. It’s lid pops open and closes, the machine leans forward, totters and then falls on its face, as a black dial pops off the control panel and rolls across the floor.

The surrealistic almost Salvidoor Dalian like video is set to an MP3 electronic excerpt from California Dreaming, by the Mamas and Papas.

The video is a mood piece, at best. The dying appliance is reminiscent of the brown dead winter leaves in “California Dreaming.” The mood of bleak despair, found in the text and sounds of the background music, colors the video’s presentation. The protagonist in the background song, is stuck in a town in winter. He has gone into a building seeking refuge from the cold. He would like to leave town, but has made a commitment to some girl, which requires him to stay. All the while he is dreaming about being back in warm California.

The appliance owner is told to regret the fact that he didn’t call a repairman earlier. As the machine collapses, the caption reads “this tragedy could have been avoided. ”

While the video does successfully create an artistic mood, one has to consider logically, how successful it is in attracting customers. People who might see this video are visiting a repair shop landing page because they’re looking for someone to do appliance repair work for them. Yet the video depicts an appliance beyond repair. If a homeowner owns a machine which is beyond repair then he will search for a new appliance, not for a repairman. The captioned message of the video also misses the point. The text implies that if the homeowner had sought repair help earlier, the death of the appliance could have been avoided. Such a caption is mean to encourage people to seek timely repair help for their home appliances. But people who would look at this video don’t need to see that message, as they’ve already become motivated and are in the process of searching for a repairman.

In my opinion, when making a generic repairman video it would make more sense to create a video showing a repairman at work. That type of image would build trust in the viewer and make him contact the company.

The take home message from this video is to determine two things before starting production. Who am I targeting, and what do they need to hear or see to convince them to contact me. The producers of this video did not correctly answer these questions before beginning production.

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