Posts Tagged ‘ Video ’

Working the TV Tech Beat

October 22, 2010

vod ip television digital CDN content delivery network

TV Everywhere is the buzzword in the industry.  It’s an initiative shared by high-speed data providers, like Comcast and Verizon; TV networks of every sort from Animal Planet to the Z Channel; and Apple, Google, Hulu and Roku.  TV when you want it, where you want it, with a good dose of advertising on the side. 

Lots of video eats massive quantities of bandwidth.  Cisco predicts that 90% of all IP traffic will be devoted to video in just a few years. All the words ever spoken would take up about 5 exabytes of storage. We’re looking at new thresholds of video for consumption at 10 exabytes and up.  Hard to believe there were only three television networks once.

Our client Verivue has figured out a way to help networks deal more efficiently with this influx of video traffic.  It’s a practical way of looking at the problem.  Essentially it means storing the popular stuff closer to you.  That’s no mean feat either.   

But this smart new company promises to help bring about this new television revolution.  This week we were out in front of the press that covers this biz.  Some good stuff here and real potential to bring TV everywhere.

Verivue Acquires CDN Technology Provider CoBlitz

Verivue’s CoBlitz buy addresses “uncompensated traffic”

Verivue Acquires CDN Technology Provider CoBlitz

Verivue CEO: Tier 1 telcos look to build CDNs as video traffic surges

 
 

Verivue Acquires CoBlitz For Video Caching: VOD Startup to Offer Service Providers Solution to Ease Over-the-Top Video Load

 

 

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What’s Your Brand Personality?

August 30, 2010

One concept I developed for Yankee Magazine was “Faces of New England.” The idea is simple and easy to execute with a few key skills.  It’s a malleable concept that can be modified by all sorts of companies in their efforts to engage audiences and enhance their social networking. 

One of the most interesting people I sat down with was Bill McKibben.  Bill is an American environmentalist and writer who writes about global warming and alternative energy and pushes for more localized economies.  As I do more work in Clean-Tech, I’m frequently reminded of Bill and the clear, patient way he explains some pretty alarming things going on with our planet today.  He makes you THINK.  Although that might hurt a little, it’s pretty good exercise, regardless of your politics. 

Bill has a new book out: “Eaarth.”  Here’s an excerpt that’s getting a lot of play in light of the massive flooding in Pakistan:

 One of the key facts of the 21st century turns out to be that warm air holds more water vapor than cold: in arid areas this means increased evaporation and hence drought. And once that water is in the atmosphere, it will come down, which in moist areas like Vermont means increased deluge and flood. Total rainfall across our continent is up 7 percent, and that huge change is accelerating. Worse, more and more of it comes in downpours. Not gentle rain but damaging gully washers: across the planet, flood damage is increasing by 5 percent a year.

 Bill is of course referring to global warming, which is part of the growing trend toward sustainability.  Although global warming has become a political hot-button, it’s hard to refute the benefits of sustainability – conserving our precious resources, taking care of our planet and making the world better for succeeding generations.  It’s an issue of growing importance to consumers.

The point is that in this new world of communications, every successful business is working harder to reach and engage their customers.  The growing dominance of social media compels marketers to abandon their old hard sell in favor of a content-driven marketing conversation that can facilitate meaningful brand relationships with customers and prospects.  Increasingly, socially conscious businesses are creating a positive effect on consumers and differentiating themselves from their competitors.

Social networking is a pervasive trend that is even affecting B2B companies with sophisticated audiences. Creating a blog, launching a Twitter feed or Facebook fan page is just the beginning of a strategic social networking campaign.  It’s the content that you deliver that is key to fostering relationships. 

Sustainability may be important to you.  Or, perhaps you have an outstanding team of engineers, unparalleled customer service, or bamboo packaging.  Whatever.  Businesses today require a smart, strategic communications program that brings their brand to life and connects with their customers. 

Develop your brand personality.  It’s the multi-dimensional brands that have the potential to inspire, to make customers take a closer look, and ultimately – hopefully — happy to give you their business.

While you’re thinking, here’s that interview I did with Bill McKibben.

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A Story in Every Mile

January 15, 2010

Wrapped up a video recently with the North of Boston visitors bureau.  The simple idea was to key in on their “Story in Every Mile” theme.  With the explosion in user-generated video, this campaign offers some neat ideas for social networking.  We happen to be huge fans of the North Shore (with the exception of January), so this was fun to do.  

The vid is currently appearing on their home page.  Check it out @ North of Boston.org.
And keep in mind that there are some really cool things you and your business could do with video.

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Why video?

January 3, 2010

“Why video?,” you ask. 

There’s an old copywriter adage: “don’t just tell them; show them.”  Unlike ads, video content can engage people with good story-telling, while showing your product in action. Or perhaps showing your customers in action, or some insight into what makes you different.

What’s changed dramatically in the past few years is how inexpensive it can be to produce custom, high-quality videos.  And today, with your website, and simple video player integration you can easily engage your customer.  Instead of telling them, you can illustrate authentically, what really sets you apart.

In fact, check out our fun “Synchronicity Episode.”  It’s a simple video about us that certainly has a great beat. Ipswich River Media: The \”Synchronicity\” Episode 
 
Tap into the power of story-telling and communicate a targeted, personal narrative that correlates with your brand.  Where banner ads simply flash a message, and rich-media ads only invite interaction, good content and Webisodic series hold the customers’ attention for minutes at a time, and lure them back again to see what’s new.

If you’re a high-tech company, consider a video or two with a dynamic engineer talking genuinely, simply about what’s new.  If you’re a restaurant, let your chef give a cooking tip, or videotape the fresh vegetables as they come in.  You’re only limited by your imagination. 

Videos also can be terrific openers for a sales meeting, or a customer gathering.  Get the most bang for your buck.  But most importantly, give people a better sense of your “brand.”

 

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Communicate with Power

January 3, 2010

Customers and prospects are deluged with information – Tweets, email, ads, Facebook, direct mail, news, etc. etc.  Today, your communications needs to be consistent and create an impression. 

It’s more important than ever for businesses to build a brand that reflects their values.  It may be something simple like quality or technological expertise.  But companies are working to convey values that connect with their customers.  “Sustainability” is one example. It has increasingly become an important value for consumers — and something they look for in the companies they do business with. 

My first schooling in ‘sustainablity’ was provided by the Chief Sustainability Officer at UNH. (See cool video we did with him here:

 

Sustainability is important to the operation of that university.  It reaches far beyond recycling and smart energy use.  It includes a close look at local resources, their measured use, and their advantages over resources from far away.  It includes art and culture, believe it or not.

UNH is committed to sustainability and they ensure that they communicate that.  It’s part of who they are.  It makes a difference to many of their customers (i.e. students).  It may not be what you’re about. But it is important to consider what sets you apart.  What is the impression that your communications provide.  It’s important to make an impression today.  It’s easy for customers and prospects to overlook you entirely.

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Visualizing Fun

December 6, 2009
Here’s an interesting look at one of the new advertising strategies being employed out there. In this case, a gaggle of account folks take several days on a cruiseship.  Their task is recording the fun things people are doing on board — its immediate, visceral and, I’m willing to bet, effective.  We can tune into Good Morning America or the Royal Carribbean site and see what we think.
The thing is, this is the sort of thing we’re doing at Ipswich River Media.  Video can give people a special insight into what it is that sets your organization apart.  A good quality video doesnt have to be expensive or a massive undertaking.  Sometimes it’s just a view that helps people get a better sense of what you’re all about.
The good news: you dont need to buy TV ad time.  That video will attract your web viewers.  You can show it in your lobby or give it to your sales guys.  Be smart, leverage it in your social networking efforts.  A good video can get a lot of mileage and helps you stand out from the crowd.  And if it’s fun too, well so much the better.
July 22, 2009
Advertising
The New York Times

Selling Cruises to Couch Potatoes in Real Time

 By DOUGLAS QUENQUA

 WITH apologies to Andy Samberg of “Saturday Night Live,” JWT never thought it would be on a boat.

But a client, Royal Caribbean, looking to add a sense of urgency to its advertising, decided to take a team of six JWT employees on three weeklong cruises this summer. The employees, who call themselves JWT@Sea, are creating a series of quick-turnaround TV commercials that show couch potatoes the fun they are missing as it happens. “Our challenge is to make people feel and understand that it is O.K. to take that weekend vacation,” said Michael Stoopak, business director of JWT N.Y. (or, as he prefers, president of JWT@Sea).

Seeing film of a cruise in progress “makes it feel more than O.K. It makes it feel immediate and urgent and, most importantly, attainable,” he added.

For the ads that began showing last week, a camera crew roamed the ship by day shooting candid film of actual Royal Caribbean guests and bits of scripted material, then edited the film after dark in a makeshift studio on board. They then e-mailed the files to JWT’s New York office after midnight, where another team worked through the night to complete the spots, which were delivered to the TV networks at 4 a.m. to appear that day on “Good Morning America” and “Today,” among other shows.

The real-time approach to advertising, which required doubling the bandwidth of the ship’s Internet connection, is a response to changes in consumer behavior in a time of financial uncertainty. People now are less likely to plan a two-week vacation several months in advance, and are instead waiting until the last minute to take shorter trips, Betsy O’Rourke, senior vice president of marketing for Royal Caribbean, said.

“Booking windows are getting shorter and shorter in this economy,” she said. “What we have found is that people are nervous to make the commitment.”

The first batch of ads, which Royal Caribbean refers to as “postcards,” were shown last week and can be viewed on the company’s Web site. They were shot in the format of a newsreel, with an actual Royal Caribbean guest acting as news anchor, narrating film of other guests boxing, singing karaoke and floating down a river in an inner tube.

“Debbie from Rhode Island laced up the gloves in the fitness center, and late-night explorers climbed mountains under the stars,” said Erica in the ad shot on July 15 that was shown on the 16th. “That’s the news, and I’m Erica cruising with Royal Caribbean. Why aren’t you?”

JWT, which is part of the WPP Group of companies, is planning to repeat the process on at least two more cruises in the next few months. But because the postcard ads have a shelf life of only 24 hours, the agency is also using the cruise film to produce longer, story-driven commercials that will be shown regularly. One such commercial features an 80-year-old woman who rode a zip line, at one of the ship’s private destinations. “This was something on her bucket list,” Ms. O’Rourke said.

The postcard ads are running on national network television — with a heavy concentration in New York and Miami, where much of the cruise industry’s business originates, and on travel-oriented cable networks like the Discovery Channel, the Travel Channel and TLC, the Learning Channel. For an industry with high fixed costs, companies like Royal Caribbean have “done a good job of filling their ships” since the economic downturn began, but need to maintain a sense of urgency if they want to keep them full, said Robin Diedrich, a consumer analyst with Edward Jones.

“Pricing has been the big lever that these companies have been pulling,” she said. But “companies have to be more dynamic with all their offerings, including advertising” to “persuade people to spend money on something they don’t really need.”

(Not surprisingly, the industry has seen no lift from the viral popularity of Mr. Samberg’s “I’m on a Boat” video, which satirizes the clichéd use of yachts in hip-hop culture. The video, which was first broadcast as an “SNL Digital Short” on “Saturday Night Live” in May, has 30 million views and counting on YouTube.)

Ms. O’Rourke said that Royal Caribbean had slashed prices by as much as 50 percent and had even begun offering deals on transportation to and from ports of departure. “As I like to say, it’s now cheaper to go on a cruise than it is to stay home,” she said.

The postcard ads are intended to be about more than good timing. The hope is that by showing guests partaking in more modern, youthful activities — strumming guitars on deck, for example, or working out in a state-of-the-art gym — Royal Caribbean can update the public’s image of what it means to go on a cruise.

“People’s perception of cruising had been a bit sleepy,” Mr. Stoopak said. “But when you go on vacation with Royal Caribbean, you encounter things like the rock wall, or the Flowrider, which is a surf-simulating machine, or ice skating.”

Not that everything about the cruise industry has changed. Shuffleboard is still available on Royal Caribbean cruises, Mr. Stoopak said, though it is not likely to appear in the current crop of commercials.

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