Archive for August, 2010

Video moves from luxury to necessity

Everyone loves video, especially Google, and especially if it is posted on YouTube.  However, if you are, like most technology companies, unable to justify the expense of a glossy consumer product production but do not want to be perceived as lurking down with the scrappy home videos of teenagers and hobbyists, how can you use it?

Many companies in the B2B sector lament that their product is not very visually appealing or is difficult to convey through this medium.  But this shouldn’t stop you looking at how to utilise video to your advantage.  Dedicated sites, such as electronics-video.com, are springing up to host technology content and mainstream technology news sites are increasingly including links to third party video on their pages.  Search engines, as already mentioned, also track and report video as a matter of course.  This means that there is even more competition to appear on the search page for any given term:  results for web pages, documents, videos, images and maps all vie with each other to be seen ranked on the first page.

Consequently, when a company is planning its search engine optimisation strategy it should consider using as many media as possible. This will help to maximise the opportunities to be found; conversely, not posting video will increasingly exclude companies from sections of search results.

So, having been convinced that video creation is beneficial for your company, what do you do next? First think about what could be of interest to your prospective customers that you can demonstrate – a good starting point here is to consider what you show at exhibitions or in meetings with customers.  A hands-on demonstration of how easy your product is to use will be far more compelling than a written description and you probably have the script and props already prepared; this is your existing sales pitch.  For many, this content will be perfectly satisfactory.  It can be posted on your website on the relevant product pages; included as a link on related press releases and PDF brochures; and submitted to appropriate video sites that allow uploading.

If your product or service is less easy to demonstrate, you (or your marketing communications agency) could look for a newsworthy hook on which to hang your story.  We have previously written about how companies can gain exposure through linking themselves with topical stories.  Few items seem to be as topical as Apple’s products and PA Consulting took the opportunity of the recent iPhone 4 antenna issue to produce a tongue in cheek video that manages to inform, amuse and demonstrate the company’s service expertise all on, what appears to be, a very modest budget.  The message to companies who want to promote themselves to engineers is clear: videos with relevant subject matter and which reveal more than can easily be conveyed with static text and images can be a valuable addition to the marketing arsenal.  If anyone wants slick professionalism, they can rent Avatar.

Lead Generation: making the most of existing content

When it comes to generating marketing leads, many executives will spend a lot of money on activities that yield little or no ROI. Why keep ignoring simple cost-effective ways that can deliver the same results? In many cases, a little creativity can go a long way. Shaun Pinney, blogger at HubSpot,  examines here six original ways of turning existing content into a powerful lead generator. compelling offers can be created from the content that you already have.

“Compelling offers”, write Shaun, “can be created from the content that you already have”.  He is right. These include traditional FAQs, as well as the ‘recycling’ of existing collateral material from shows or exhibition.  Another good source of material is your outbox:  if you respond by email to specific questions from a prospective client, why not turn this info into a Q&A item and post it on your website? Chances are others will find your response useful.  And it might just help your lead generation programme too.

UK Government spends £6million on AdWords – oh dear oh dear

Interesting piece on the BBC website that the UK Government spent almost £6 million on paid search. Pity they didn’t use an SEO company for less than 1% of that they would have got better results.

Same goes for many companies in the engineering and electronics sector. An esteemed colleague once said: “Nobody get’s fired for using AdWords”, Ok so it is a paraphrase of that famous quote, but we often see companies spending thousands of dollars on paid search only to find it doesn’t work and has high bounce rates etc. etc. What they really should be doing is to use a technical search engine optimisation company, for the same sort of costs they will get about three times the results and it lasts the test of time rather than blowing budget in a single click.