From Strings to Stella: Branded Entertainment
Monday, November 30th, 2009 | 2 Comments »Two quick links, both forwarded to me by Alan Beard in the last 24 hours:
How to Create Product Demo Videos that Get Social Media Attention: 6 Strategies to Increase Sales
via Marketing Sherpa
“Aaron Miller, President, ProGuitarShop.com, sees online video as the perfect medium for selling the retailer’s boutique electric guitar effects pedals.
In late 2007, ProGuitarShop.com was primarily an eBay retailer struggling to build traffic to their website. Miller’s team created a new strategy that avoided focusing on search engines. Instead, they built traffic through social networks, mostly by video marketing through YouTube.
Two years and more than 550 videos later, the team captures about 45,000 unique video views daily on YouTube and between 15,000 and 20,000 on their website — all from a niche audience. Sales have doubled each year since the effort began.”
Stella Artois Ditches Old-Time Campaigns, Creates Retro “TV” Station
via Fast Company
“How long is it until companies begin sponsoring full-on TV shows of their own and publishing them on the Web? That doesn’t sound too much different from television entertainment in the 1950s and the rise of soap operas. And now, the economics make tremendous sense: Why bother creating TV ads if you can get a few million views with no distribution costs while simultaneously creating and having final cut control over far more ambitious content?”
How long indeed? It’s happening already. One by one, brands are realizing the power of creating a constant flow of interesting, inexpensive media — forgoing the overhead-rich worlds of TV and traditional advertising.
The Fast Company asks how long it will be until a brand asks the creators of a show like Gossip Girl to create extended storylines with brands in center stage. Not too long, I feel. But the question for aspiring and independent creators is — if I don’t work for a network and I don’t make a TV show, what career path can I take to get better cred with brands?
It’s something I’m wrestling with myself.
The answer is that you have to have proof of your work. And, following the logic trail, you have to have work to get results!
If you’ve followed my career — and I know all six of you reading this have — you’ll see Pepperdine University (recognizable brand), Mann Theatres (regionally known brand), my own project Flipper Nation (350,000 views + awards), deals with ABC (again, a brand), Historical Tweets (4.7 million page views this year), and only now do I have an opportunity to step in front of brands.
The shackles are off. Make something. Put it online. Do it again. Brands don’t want a one-time hit, they want someone who can deliver results. So don’t be the one-timer. Keep working, keep crafting. Keep getting better. In time, the results will come. And so will the brands.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Alec McNayr, sponso RING. sponso RING said: Alec McNayr » Blog Archive » From Strings to Stella: Branded …: “How long is it until companies begin sponsoring full- http://url4.eu/r8OS [...]
[quote]If you’ve followed my career — and I know all six of you reading this have[/quote]
Reader #2 checking in for duty, sir! Great post, Alec. Thought-provoking. I can think of at least three or four different endeavors in which this affects how I produce what I produce, and how I can better craft it to succeed. Thanks as always for the provoking.