Archive for tribute videos

D-Day for Mercury Marine? Video as Corporate Culture

I was privileged to produce Mercury Marine’s 50th Anniversary video 20 years ago. It was a celebration of an entrepreneur’s vision,  a company’s impact on society, and, in much subtler ways, it’s impact on its surroundings– Fond du Lac, Wisconsin.

The local impact– on employment, community growth, local pride, freshwater recreation heritage– was never pointed out directly. It was there in the amazing visual documentation founder Carl Kiekhafer left behind of his surroundings through 16mm film and pictures. Mercury’s founding in Cedarburg. It’s purchase of the Coriam Farm in Fond du Lac to be the home of it’s amazing growth. It’s incredible impact on watersports, including Tommy Bartlett’s Water Show in the Dells. The national dealer celebrations Mercury hosted in Wisconsin.

I write this because today (Sunday, August 23, 2009) Mercury’s union rank and file will vote on whether to accept concessions in order to keep Mercury’s headquarters and plants in Wisconsin.

I don’t have a bone to pick or a dog in the fight. What I do know is this video demonstrates the incredible impact Mercury’s corporate culture has had on Wisconsin. To see it go the way of so many other corporations that have left, merged, been bought, or otherwise disappeared from the scene would be a distraught moment indeed.

We have short memories, and more and more companies seem to want to forget their past. The man who hired me for the Mercury gig, Ed Huck, often said “What’s past is prologue.” But what prologue is there if you ignore your past?

Here in slightly shortened form, is “50 Years of Leadership.”

The Art of the Interview: How to be Invisible

Interviewing for an audio-visual enterprise is an ancient art.

In a good documentary, the star of the interview is the person being interviewed. The interviewer is typically off-camera, and if the interviewer is really good, you’ll never see them or hear them speak. Why?

They ask questions that get full answers.

The art of the interview has been bastardized by today’s TV performer who wants not only to look handsome or pretty, but also smart. So they ask a lot of rapid fire questions. They’ve only got a minute, and they are thinking Emmy. So these questions contain major hints at the answer the interviewer is looking for.

Interviewer: Tell me about how horrible you must feel now that you’re house has burned down?

Interviewee: I feel bad.

Well, yes. But it can be worse. I often hear local cable interviewers ask the question this way:

Interviewer: The fact that your house burned down must make you feel awfully bad, doesn’t it?

Interviewee: Yes, yes it does.

Interviewer: How bad?

Interviewee: pretty bad.

Pretty bad, indeed.

In a corporate long form documentary style video, an ideal scenario is the video that can be “narrated” solely by the interviewees, through their own words, in complete and meaningful sentences. Suffice it to say that this is hard work. You must ask the right questions in the right fashion and then have the editing chops to put it together into a compelling narrative that has a beginning, middle, climax, and end. The interviewee will not be a talking head on camera, so you have no excuse to make your interviews TV style, where editing would cause unsightly jump cuts (therefore giving the producer an excuse to edit less. More gross profit!)

Some producers will pretend that TV style interviews are the right way to sell business-to-business products and services. That’s ridiculous. Looking at two talking heads blathering on without b-roll, music, or story is an absolute waste of a company’s dollars. That producer has no intention of working for his or her money.

We believe in interview style videos, just as surely as we believe in unstaged actualities to convince audiences of a product’s quality or a company’s intent or philosophy.

Yes, it takes longer, and it costs a bit more. But the shelf life can be very long, and the impact multi-tiered. Its a technique that works at meetings, or on the web. Consider this technique for your next video.

An example can be found by clicking on the image below.

Excerpt from Corporate Founder Story Video

Excerpt from Corporate Founder Story Video

Tribute Video “How-To” Book Now Available

Tribute Videos are videos that celebrate a person, couple, group, or institution. They can be engagement videos, anniversary videos, memorials, retirement videos, milestone birthday videos, company histories, leadership stories, school reunion stories, award-winner portraits, and more. They are at home in the living room, rec room, boardroom or ballroom.

Tribute videos are how I got my start. (See “AVSquad” in the links.) And they remain the most satisfying of the work that we do. There is nothing like telling a people story.

A lot of people are into video these days, some as a hobby, some as a potential profession, some as part of their job duties. There is a perception that video is easy, thanks to point and shoot miniature cameras, computer editing, and thousands of tipsters on-line telling you how easy it is and selling something– usually hardware.

But hardware is only part of the problem, and hardware and editing software are covered pretty readily via training web sites, DVD lessons, and more.

No one is training people on how to tell a compelling story. How to interview, how to move pictures, how to choose music, how to pace videos, how to get a visceral reaction from an audience!

That’s where “Tribute Videos for Love & Money” comes in.

Tribute Videos for Love & Money

Tribute Videos for Love & Money

It’s an ebook that details my communications beliefs and systems. If you like samples of my work, and you want to know how and why certain creative decisions were made, this is the place to start. It concentrates on the “Tribute” people story type of video, but frankly, if you can tell that kind of story, there isn’t much you won’t be able to do as you grow your capability or career.

For more information, go to videostoryschool.com.

I hope you like it and find it valuable.

Tribute Example 1: Family History

This family history DVD  was created as a Christmas gift from parents to their sons and daughter and their childrens’ children. What an amazing and thoughtful gift. While it preserves photos and especially 8mm films that had not been seen in decades, the larger story is the interviews from the parents that pepper the story. This excerpt hopefully will give you the flavor of a compelling, lasting keepsake not possible in any other way.

The Kind of Video You Need in a Depression: The Tribute

When times get tough, and we examine what’s really important, we realize the importance of friends, family, people and places in our lives.

We take a hard look at the “things” in our lives. We’re quicker to make judgments, and pare back frivolous things, and conserve and treasure more those things that provide the most comfort and respite. For some, they must have books. Others, perhaps movies or music. Some people must have live theater. We make our choices, we make adjustments in our budget, and we we’re happy for what we have.

This past few months created occasions where I realized the importance of one of my favorite kinds of video: The Tribute. “Tribute” is an all-encompassing name that essentially means some form of life story, family history, celebratory story, or honorary review.

It’s what got me into the business. When my father turned 50, I produced a slide show. A simple, single tray click-click that was (however) carefully timed to a full soundtrack featuring his favorite music, recordings of family members past, slides and pictures and press clippings of accomplishments, and even a part narration from a very bad imitator of Howard Cossell.

100 people were in attendance, and I was stunned by the positive reaction. I repeated the technique (this time with two slide projectors and a dissolve mixer to make the picures fade into one another) a few years later for a college event or two, and finally for my sister’s engagement party.

All of these are still dragged out of the closet and rewatched some 40 years later (they’ve been transferred to video, of course). Less and less of the original audience can be in attendance, of course, making these showings even more special. Little did I know what kind of investment they would be– an investment that grew in emotional value year by year.

Nobody lives forever. In the case of my father’s 50th birthday, well, he was gone just 11 years later. My mother died just 5 years after the event. I’m so glad I created that show.

My mother and father celebrate Christmas in New York City.

Last fall, my brother, who has produced these kinds of videos since the mid 1990′s, called to say that he had a job he didn’t have the time to handle. Could I do it? I admit it, I asked: “How Much?”

But the how much is never the make or break in these cases. The customers (unless it’s a corporate tribute to a retiring executive) always think the price is too much, and we always think the hourly rate for the effort put into these is way too small.

Enter the recession.

The matriarch and patriarch of The Smith Family (we’ll call them) wanted to encapsulate their “story” for their four children and their dozen or so grandchildren. This was very proactive– they had an incredible wealth of pictures, and a dozen or so 8mm films no one had seen in ages, and in the case of the children (now in their 40′s and 50′s) and grandchildren, perhaps these had never been seen.

We took the approach of interviewing Mr. and Mrs. Smith. Theirs was a WWII romance, s New Jersey story, a suburban sprawl story, and it paralleled the story of the country tremendously. But mostly, there were their memories. Razor sharp, warm, and incisive.

I’m proud of the result.

Then in February, I turned 60 and for the first time ever, someone (my brother) produced a tribute video for me. I was blown away by the surprise, and even more blown away by his work.

Corporate videos come and go. This year’s “Exceeding Your Expectations” becomes last year’s news, management changes, the themes change, and the videos change. “More with the 90′s” becomes “Making it in the New Millennium”.

By families have more permanence. And yet in today’s digital world, who can make sense of, or even physically project, the film and slides and tapes of yesteryear? And beyond that, how do you make it a story?

I know how to– very well, in fact. As I pointed out– I’ve done it, and not just for families, but for corporations, civic leaders, and church dignitaries. Tributes focus on what’s best about people– their upbringing, their character, their accomplishments, their likes and loves, even what they learn from their mistakes. They become stories of character– and that is something companies should afford to pass along from department to department and employee to employee.

In the next few posts, that show the power of the Tribute– how it can emphasize love, prosperity, achievement, togetherness, and purpose.

Perfect for a recession.