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10 articles posted in ‘Articles’

Information, news and updates on speaking to camera

Video clichés: Just say no to clip art

Don’t let clip art creep into your videos or you will look old fashioned and not convey the professional image business demands.

No clipart sign

This is the first in a regular series on business video clichés, starting with something we have all been guilty of: needless clip art.

Creating slides by hand we had enough trouble writing legibly with marker pens; few had the skills for illustration. With the arrival of PCs in the early 1980s we could add simple line art and everything changed.

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Neutral backgrounds: Focus attention on you

A busy background invites viewers to investigate that rather than paying attention to you and your message. Go neutral whenever possible.

Andrew Biss in front of bookshelves

TV and the web are very different mediums. While TV viewers lean-back and passively entertained or informed, the web is interactive; we lean-forward, actively looking for new information, searching for the next button to click.

One way TV productions set the tone for a scene or interview is by consciously adding objects into the background. While the work of set dressers is important on TV, you face different challenges.

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Video length: Half are gone in 60 seconds

The longer your video, the less viewers make it to your final call to action. Around 2 minutes is a good balance of content and attention.

Audience attention span curve

Unlike text, we can’t (yet?) scan video; we must decide whether to invest our time and attention to watch a video.

Length is key to this decision. However, we are not creating appointment TV, so if visitors don’t watch right now, the chances are they never will.

We need visitors to click the play button now and watch to the end, but how much of a typical online video are people actually ready to sit and watch?

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See yourself: Turn webcam mirroring off

Cameras see the real you, not your familiar mirror image. Turn your webcam’s mirror mode off to get used to seeing yourself like this.

Andrew Biss holding up 2 books

In yesterday’s post I suggested you work with your webcam on. But what, exactly, do you see? Well, we have a lifetime’s experience of seeing ourselves in a mirror, which is very different from how others see us.

Normally we don’t care; it is only when we see ourselves on screen that we wonder why we look so strange?

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See yourself: Turn your webcam on

Most people are not used to seeing themselves on screen, so work with your webcam on to get used to seeing yourself as others see you.

Desktop screenshot showing webcam window

I won screen-time by having my face on the screen while working. I became more relaxed on camera and used to seeing myself on screen.

To try this trick you will need to find the option that forces your webcam’s video window to stay on top. If your webcam window keeps disappearing behind the active application window (or you work full screen a lot, as I do), then the de-sensitizing effect is lost.

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Web video: A quick introduction to embedding

This quick overview of the moving parts that need to come together for web video to play help you better understand the video workflow.

YouTube code segment

While you will have seen video on hosting services such as YouTube, Vimeo, Brightcove and others, Sell to Camera focuses on videos embedded in your website or blog. So, this post gives you a high level overview of how video embedding works.

It is therefore important for you to have a clear understanding of the concepts behind video embedding. You will need to understand how the different parts of the software stack work together to display your video.

I will not go into low level technical details here, just cover the core issues you need to know. So, let’s get started and what better than with a video from Pink Floyd.

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9 questions: A colleague considers web video

My colleague Claude Reibel sent in some excellent questions about adding video to a business website. Here’s a longer version of my reply.

Woman peeking between fingers

Many (most?) companies are making too little use of video in their sales and marketing activities. I think the reason (to a large extent) is that video is a new medium for mainstream business, and anything new is always scary.

Putting screencasts up on a website is often a first step. In the software business, of course, this is more widespread and common practice for a while. Where I see a real reluctance and companies holding back is showing real people on screen.

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Stop hiding: Short hello videos make all the difference

Even in the B2B world it’s people who do business with people, so you need a short video to say hello and briefly introduce yourself.

Group with paper bags over heads

“This does not apply to us”, I hear you say. “We are B2B and our buyers make purely objective purchase decisions. They do not care who we are.” I have seen this way of thinking a lot in the enterprise software business. Just look at supplier websites and it is clear that they think their people do not matter to prospects.

As Seth Godin says, B2B buyers are just consumers spending other people’s money. People are people and B2B buyers also are also making emotional and subjective decisions. ROI studies, technical evaluations and the rest are often just cover stories.

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Apple Mac: No need to switch for professional videos

Watching Apple’s Get a Mac campaign you’d think you must use an Apple Mac to create professional quality business videos. This is false.

PC and Mac characters

There are some excellent tools for Windows that are easily capable of creating the professional quality videos we need for our business.

Sell to Camera is here to give practical tips to business professionals learning to present on video. The majority of business organizations around the world are using Windows (sorry Apple fans!). So…

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Looking back: 30 years of business presentations

Sell to Camera starts with a look back at 30 years experience of giving business presentations, and the changes I have seen in that time.

Old overhead projector

I gave my first presentation aged 13; the subject was my favourite record, and the audience was my school class.

Today, 35+ years later, I can still recall my choice was Elton John’s Indian Sunset from his Madman Across the Water album released in 1971. A track that turned up again in 2005 as a sample in the Eminem-produced Tupac Shakur song “Ghetto Gospel”.

Since that first event at school, I have given hundreds of business presentations in many situations, from small one-on-one sales meetings, to large trade conferences and company-wide meetings.

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