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		<title>Thoughts on What&#8217;s Under New Media&#8217;s Hood</title>
		<link>http://videostory.com/wp/2009/07/thoughts-on-whats-under-new-medias-hood/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2009 14:10:20 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://videostory.com/wp/?p=222</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;m about to deliver a presentation in two hours or so. Every Tuesday morning, a group of local business people gather for something called a &#8220;BNI&#8221; meeting&#8211; Business Network International. BNI is a structured networking referral group. We have about 20 members in our group, which means that each individual gets to make a ten [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m about to deliver a presentation in two hours or so. Every Tuesday morning, a group of local business people gather for something called a &#8220;BNI&#8221; meeting&#8211;<a title="BNI" href="http://www.bni-newyork.com/pages/bni.php" target="_blank"> Business Network International. BNI</a> is a structured networking referral group.</p>
<p>We have about 20 members in our group, which means that each individual gets to make a ten minute &#8220;pitch&#8221; three times a year on what kinds of referrals would be good for their own business. It&#8217;s hyperlocal, which is good in general, but probably not perfect for me since my goods <strong>(custom meetings, videos, DVDs, Web Video and Web Sites)</strong> tend to be somewhat higher ticket.</p>
<p>We meet at<a title="Cafe Verde Phillipsburg" href="http://www.cafeverdenj.com" target="_blank"> Cafe Verde</a> in Phillipsburg, NJ, which is a very nice place, and also happens to be a client. We started working on a video / web marketing package for them about a month ago. And this is NOT a high ticket relationship, but it is an important one.<strong> It is a proof of concept relationship.</strong> The web+video marketing combo relies on a lot of things, all of which are defined by the fact that the web is somewhat measurable, search rankings are somewhat controllable, and video is turning out to be a key component to succeeding in defining success in measurement and ranking.</p>
<p><strong>I&#8217;ve been through a lot of media in my career: </strong>slide-shows, multi-image extravaganzas, filmstrips, industrial theater, video for meetings, multi-screen video, electronic presentations, visual databases, &#8220;Instant&#8221; a-v&#8217;s for meetings with early electronic recordable still cameras, panoramic video through anamorphic shooting and playback, PowerPoint, interactive cd-roms and DVDs, and even custom video-on-demand,  e-learning and content management systems.</p>
<p><strong>Always about a year too early. So we&#8217;ve got some arrows in our back</strong>, but we broke a lot of ground and can claim we were among the first in many of these areas.</p>
<p>My company has done web sites before&#8211; plenty. But my company was bigger back then. It was a different time. The bandwidth wasn&#8217;t there for video, there was no such thing as WordPress, FrontPage was the &#8220;mature&#8221; web development software, and Dreamweaver was on V1.0.</p>
<p>That meant that web sites were expensive, and not very creative. They took a lot of programming, and if you weren&#8217;t careful you could lose your shirt. The emphasis was on the back end, and it&#8217;s endless pursuit of perfection, and I was a <strong>front end</strong> kind of guy. <strong>Content, Creative, Design&#8230; then execute.</strong></p>
<p>It seemed we sold  something, then almost immediately started to program. The programming applications had some flowcharting visualization built in, but all of it was in the hands of one person&#8211; approvals were therefore difficult, changes were plenty, and projects seemed endless. It was all in one person;s head.</p>
<p>Doing a DVD was a bit different for me. Being, in fact mostly video, and being a pretty straightforward (IF GRUELING) programming process, we were better able to visualize how the DVD (or cd-rom) would work. <strong>We used flowcharts, and those flowcharts were created by our writers, who had to build the sales and persuasion logic that drove the whole process to begin with.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Besides, we had been down this road before, so we knew what to do.<br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>Writer always made us different.</strong> That we didn&#8217;t realize the important role writers could play in the architecture of the web was understandable. The web was links, clicks, pictures, some copy blocks, or a lot of fill in the blanks surveys or grabbing data from here and showing it there. I know. We even built our own e-commerce system.</p>
<p>Years have passed, the web has matured, there&#8217;s tools for everything, and advertising and Google&#8217;s role in the web have brought<strong> standards and measurements</strong> to the field very reminiscent of magazine and newspaper readership studies. There has also emerged a standard language for building websites, and the bandwidth is now such that, thanks to YouTube and other video hosting sites,<strong> video is the big gorilla carrying viewership and search optimization on its back.</strong></p>
<p>Welcome home.</p>
<p><strong>The video web combo offers bang for the buck unlike we&#8217;ve seen in the past 20 or so years</strong>. One way of controlling costs of course is to plan. That we have always done, and it&#8217;s not surprising that our tool-set for this is very familiar:</p>
<ul>
<li>Strategize</li>
<li>Outline</li>
<li>Propose</li>
<li>Quote</li>
<li>Wireframe</li>
<li>Site-map</li>
<li>Copy Blocks</li>
<li>Art Direction</li>
<li>(APPROVAL)</li>
<li>Refine art &amp; copy</li>
<li>Create graphics and videos</li>
<li>Webisize.</li>
</ul>
<p>Okay, &#8220;webisize&#8221; gives the work done by the web designers and programmers short shrift.</p>
<p>But what good local sight needs today is<strong> efficiency, gravity, personality, and constant change.</strong> And all the Flash in the world can&#8217;t provide the juice to pump up the search engines.</p>
<p><strong>Content can. Video Can. Change can.</strong></p>
<p>That&#8217;s the Video Trojan horse. <strong>Used to be, to sell big videos we had to sell big meetings. Now, to sell video, we sell web sites. A well produced video on the web is gold.</strong> it is sticky, has personality, gets the communications job dome quickly in site and sound, and can be parceled out at the right place on the site at the right time.</p>
<p>We have a very well developed &#8220;wireframing&#8221; process for our web sites and interactive projects. But, being around for a while, we didn&#8217;t just learned the logic of interactivity yesterday.</p>
<p>Many years ago, we produced some of the<strong> first interactive laserdiscs</strong> in the world in conjunction with AT&amp;T and Bell Labs. They provided the hardware and the operating system for their hardware, we provided the finished laserdiscs, all carefully<strong> branched out</strong> interactively, <strong>just like one of today&#8217;s DVD&#8217;s or websites.</strong></p>
<p>Here is the end result:</p>
<div id="attachment_226" class='wp-caption alignnone' style='width:248px;'><img class="size-medium wp-image-226" title="blctouchscreen" src="http://videostory.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/blctouchscreen-248x300.jpg" alt="One of the First Interactive Video Projects, by Brien Lee &amp; Company for AT&amp;T" width="248" height="300" /><p class='wp-caption-text'>One of the First Interactive Video Projects, by Brien Lee &amp; Company for AT&amp;T</p></div>
<p>We didn&#8217;t have flowcharting software; heck Microsoft Word didn&#8217;t even exist and we were just a year or two beyond typewriters. So, here is what it took to get it there:</p>
<div id="attachment_227" class='wp-caption alignnone' style='width:300px;'><img class="size-medium wp-image-227" title="ATT-Lee-Dodge" src="http://videostory.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/ATT-Lee-Dodge-300x224.jpg" alt="Tim Dodge and Brien Lee reviewe their &quot;living&quot; flowchart" width="300" height="224" /><p class='wp-caption-text'>Tim Dodge and Brien Lee review their &quot;living&quot; flowchart</p></div>
<p>A flowchart. made of masking tape and a large empty room.</p>
<p>And it worked.</p>
<p>Proving once again,<strong> content is king.</strong></p>
<p>There were something like 150 videos produce for those laserdiscs&#8211; all small segments like you might see today on YouTube. It was the beginning of short attention spans.</p>
<p><strong>Without a detailed written guidepost plan, I don &#8216;t see how we could have done it.</strong> We used three different facilities in New York City, two writers, two producers, and dozens of support personnel. That&#8217;s what video was like in those days, plus laserdisc production was a very tightly controlled process&#8211; high quality, clean rooms, test pressings, on and on.</p>
<p>Once the laserdiscs were done, the AT&amp;T engineers had to program their secret code into their secret computers to make the discs work with their secret playback systems. We didn&#8217;t have much contact with them, because they were protecting their proprietary code,  but they had our flowcharts, and they told us that<strong> the flowcharts and script segments were detailed enough</strong> that they could handle it on their own. <strong>Saving, I&#8217;m sure, hundreds of hours of miscommunication had we not had all the documentation.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Lesson learned. And not the hard way.<br />
</strong></p>
<p>Today, outside of some of the more sophisticated shooting or 3d animations, the whole job could be done by two people and a couple of powerful enough laptops. Naturally, we&#8217;d use DVD, or hard disc, or even solid state drive.<strong> The intelligence could be programmed into the DVD, or the whole thing could be put on the web with a combination of flash, video, html and perhaps php. </strong>And the code is no longer proprietary, or at least a secret. You just have to buy off-the-shelf software.<strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>But you have to be proud of the fact that our people&#8211; Linda Duczman, Lora Keller, Tim Dodge&#8211; went into the project with a plan we all developed. (And came out of it alive!)<strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>It guaranteed success, and we <em>do</em> like to guarantee success.<br />
</strong></p>
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