So a friend of mine tweeted a link to an awesome video today. I find trying to explain social media, networking, twitter, and on and on and on to folks who are way out of the loop is terribly difficult. Thanks to these guys, there’s now a GREAT source for explaining and I don’t have to do it. Here’s a sample:
Twitter in Plain English
These guys do great work, and that’s why their whole series is on my list for how to watching.
It seems there’s a growing interest in video on the web and hence many folks looking to figure out how to get into video blogging.
My friend Bill Seaver over at MicroExplosion media posted a simple and user-friendly review of the Flip Video Ultra which seems to be a great solution if you are looking for a way to get quickly into the video blogging world.
How about you… are you using something to create video blogs? What is it? What rocks about it? What sucks about it?
If you haven’t seen the Charles Schwab commercials which popularized the cartoon look in video most recently I have no idea what hole you’ve been hiding in. Now, NewBluefx is offering this capability for most of the popular editing softwares as a FREE downloadable plug-in called Cartoonr.
I read Fast Company magazine. Well, I try to read it regularly anyways. Like Fast Company, most of the newer and popular magazines have little inset graphic images offering some kind of graphic insight to some interesting numbers. I believe these small images could be some of the best information in the magazines. Try this one for example from the May 2008 issue of Fast Company (page 48).
So companies are spending on average $1.8 million on banner advertising on web sites and a little over $300k on email advertising, yet look at the return!
So I can spend $6.53 to get an order from a client or up to $71.89? This makes me realize I need to focus more on cultivating email contacts and using those contacts more effectively.
That’s pretty easy to sell. What if I can help you reduce your cost to acquire an order? Spending less to make money is always enticing to business owners.
So here’s the killer app question. If I were find a way to help customers use email and video (ComScore estimates a 66% increase between Feb 2007 and Feb 2008 of videos watched online) in a reasonably simple fashion what are the chances I’d have a real winner? I think they are high. So, what do you think? As a consumer/customer, what marriage of email and web video would interest you?