Archive for the ‘Tips’ Category

Revisiting overlay transitions

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

In a previous post, you learned how you can transition overlays into and out of the VideoAd viewing area.

Since we first introduced transitions, we’ve made them work even better. Now, you can set an overlay’s entry transition independent of its exit transition.

Take a look at this brief sample VideoAd for a pizza restaurant. Pay special attention to the three promotional statements that enter the viewing area from the bottom and exit out the top.

Also, notice the Best Pizza logo. Early in the VideoAd, it grows onto the screen and then, toward the end, it slides off to the left.

Overlay transitions give you a lot of bang for your buck. They’re extremely quick and easy to set up. And they add large doses of sophistication and visual appeal to your advertisers’ VideoAds.

Overlays make VideoAds more effective in a number of ways. Type “overlays” into the Search box to learn more.

Tour the Timeline

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Cross-platform ad buys make sense for both you and your advertisers. When the same ad runs both on television and online, you make more money and your advertisers reach larger and more diverse audiences.

But don’t let the online versions of those cross-platform ads end up as what Gary Stein in Online Video Advertising’s Breakout Moment calls “broadcastware.”

By “broadcastware,” Stein means ads that never make the digital leap, that remain mired in television think and fail to take advantage of the interactive possibilities that online offers.

With the VideoAd platform, it’s easy to turn passive TV ad footage into a digital-ready, interactive online video ad. In this post, we’ll focus in particular on two convenient features of the Timeline:

Overlay management

For the purposes of this discussion, let’s assume the advertiser you’re working with is a travel agency promoting a trip to Barcelona, Spain.

After you upload the advertiser’s TV video file, the Studio looks something like this.

Studio with uploaded TV spot in Timeline

Studio with uploaded TV spot in Timeline

The 30-second TV spot you uploaded, shown here in red because it’s selected, appears as a visual in the Timeline.

Now’s your chance to cross the digital divide.

Given the nature of television, all the TV-spot can do is verbally encourage viewers, who want more information about the Barcelona tour, to contact the travel agency by phone or email.

In the VideoAd version, you have other, much more powerful options.

If you add a lead capture overlay, viewers can request information about or even sign up for the tour right from within the VideoAd.

Overlay that opens a lead capture form

Overlay that opens a lead capture form

You can also add website link overlays that viewers click to visit the travel agency website or to open an annotated map of Barcelona that shows the tour highlights.

Website link overlays linked to pages on the travel agency website

Website link overlays linked to pages on the travel agency website

Each overlay you add is automatically added to the Text row on the Timeline. You have full control over each overlay’s position and duration.

Overlay selected in the Text row of the Timeline

Overlay selected in the Text row of the Timeline

To position an overlay in the visual flow, drag it along the Timeline. To set how long an overlay remains visible, drag the handle on its right end.

Dragging an overlay handle to set how long it's visible

Dragging an overlay handle to set how long it's visible

To learn more about overlays, see The power and glory of overlays, Don’t forget lead capture, and The power of video and image overlays.

Selecting and re-ordering Timeline elements

Unlike television ads, online VideoAds often play only in response to viewer actions, such as clicks or mouseovers.

This means that, when you create an online version of a TV spot, it’s essential to take the time to make the VideoAd as inviting as possible.

One of the most effective ways to make a VideoAd more inviting is to add a compelling image as the VideoAd’s initial thumbnail.

Here’s how the Timeline might look immediately after you upload a compelling initial image to the Barcelona tour VideoAd.

Initial image added to right end of Timeline

Initial image added to right end of Timeline

The initial image is the first image that viewers see so you need to move it from the end of the VideoAd (far right on the Timeline) to the beginning (far left on the Timeline).

However, if you simply drag the image from right to left, you’ll shift the elements on the visual row while leaving the overlay elements in place. This means that you’ll have to reposition all of the overlay elements in relation to the video clip.

This is when you can take advantage of the Timeline’s multi-select features.

Click the T at the far left end of the overlays row. This selects all of the overlays.

Click the T to select all overlays

Click the T to select all overlays

Then, press CTRL (or the Command (Apple) key on the Mac) and select the video clip in the visual row. Drag these related elements together to the right until the initial image is in its proper location on the far left.

Selecting and moving multiple overlays and the video clip

Selecting and moving multiple overlays and the video clip

To learn more about the power of initial images, see Better thumbnails mean more views.

Reports – It’s all about the numbers

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

For you and your advertisers, it’s all about the numbers.

Advertisers want to know what they’re getting for their advertising dollars.

You sell advertising based on its ability to perform.

In this post, we’ll walk through the performance reports available in the VideoAd platform and describe some best practices for accessing and generating them.

We’ll answer the following questions:

What types of performance reports are available?

As a group manager, you have access to:

All reports are in PDF format that you can easily open, save, print, and email to advertisers.

Summary reports by VideoAd

Summary report for several VideoAds in an account

Summary report for several VideoAds in an account

Useful for: Providing advertisers with a high-level snapshot of how one or more of their VideoAds are performing.

Includes: Graphical displays of views, clicks, interactions, and playthrough. A tabular presentation of engagement and exposure rates for each VideoAd.

Generated by: Selecting the VideoAds you want to include, specifying a date range, and clicking the Generate Report button in the Dashboard.

Detailed performance reports by account

Detailed account report. Data shown for one VideoAd in report.

Detailed account report. Data shown for one VideoAd in report.

Useful for: Analyzing a VideoAd’s performance on an on-going basis and optimizing the VideoAd to perform better.

Includes: Summary engagement and exposure statistics for each VideoAd accompanied by detailed graphical displays of impressions, interactions, views, and clicks.

Generated by: The platform, automatically, every week and every month. Available in the Advanced Analytics section of each advertiser account or by email.

Tip Not sure what a particular statistic means? Check the glossary of performance terms included as the last page in each account report.

Summary performance reports by group

Group report with summary data for each account.

Group report with summary data for each account.

Useful for: Maintaining a high-level perspective on the account activity within a group. Comparing the performance of accounts across the group.

Includes: Summary of activity across all accounts. Tabular presentation of engagement and exposure rates for each account.

Generated by: The platform, automatically, every week and every month. Available in the Advanced Analytics section of the group manager’s account or by email.

I’d like more details about working with reports.

How can group managers easily monitor their accounts?

The easiest way to stay informed about the performance of VideoAds and accounts in your group is to receive automatically generated account and group reports by email.

Setting up email receipt of automated reports

Setting up email receipt of automated reports

To set up email receipt of reports, sign in to the account with reports you want to receive and go to the Reports tab in the Advanced Analytics section.

For example, to receive group reports by email, sign in to your group manager account. To receive specific advertiser account reports by email, sign in to each advertiser account.

You can have reports sent to just one or several email addresses. In the Email to list, separate multiple addresses with commas or spaces.

I’d like more details about setting up email receipt of reports.

Can group managers generate custom reports?

Yes they can.

From within an advertiser account, you can generate account reports customized by date range and the specific VideoAds the report includes.

From within your group manager account, you can generate group reports customized by date range.

You generate custom reports on the Reports tab in the Advanced Analytics section.

Generating a custom report

Generating a custom report

This picture shows how to generate an account report that covers the time period from January to April, 2009 and includes only VideoAds with data.

As custom reports are generated, they are placed into a Customized Reports list on the Reports tab.

Customized reports list

Customized reports list

To open a PDF report, click the link. To delete a report, click the red x.

I’d like more details about generating custom reports.

Tip

You can quickly generate custom account reports for specific time periods from within your group manager account. Under Individual Account Reports, select a time period, and then click to open a PDF report.

Individual account reports for a specific week

Individual account reports for a specific week

When you generate individual account reports using this method, you can’t specify which VideoAds the report includes.

The power and glory of overlays

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Say you’re running an advertiser’s 30-sec TV spot as a VideoAd.

Arguably, the most powerful way you can add value to that VideoAd is through overlays.

Overlays are text, image, or video objects that you place on top of the content of a VideoAd.

A recent study shows that text overlays increase the amount of a video ad that viewers watch and the percentage of viewers who watch the entire VideoAd.

While the power of overlays may lie with their ability to increase viewers’ exposure to an advertiser’s brand, the true glory of well-designed overlays is how they engage viewers and encourage them to interact.

To understand how you can harness the full power and glory of overlays, take a look at the following demo VideoAd featuring a hypothetical pizza restaurant called Best Pizza.

The VideoAd illustrates how you can:

Transition overlays onto the screen

Every overlay in the VideoAd, including the Best Pizza logo, takes advantage of transitions, the most recent overlay feature added to the platform.

  • The logo in the upper left corner grows in toward the beginning of the VideoAd and shrinks out toward the end.
  • Authentic Italian Pizza!, a plain text overlay, slides in and out from the top.
  • The animated Contact Us! overlay fades in and after a few seconds fades out.
  • Click to order now! slides in and out from the left.
  • See our full menu! grows in and shrinks out.

Adding transitions brings overlays to viewers’ attention and adds visual appeal to the entire VideoAd.

How do I set overlay transitions?

Keep viewers who click from leaving your website

You want your advertiser’s VideoAds to perform well. At the same time, you’re not real crazy about the idea of viewers clicking overlays in VideoAds and leaving your website.

Now both you and the advertiser can get what you want.

Play the demo pizza VideoAd again. When the Contact Us! overlay fades in, click it.

The Google map of the hypothetical restaurant’s location opens in a frame on top of this blog post. Click Close in the upper right corner of the frame and you’re right back on the website where you started.

How do I set links to open in a frame?

Add interest with animation

You probably noticed that the Contact Us! overlay is animated.

Advertisers who want to add a light touch to an offer or promotion have a small collection of professionally-designed animated overlays to choose among.

Animated overlays collection

Animated overlays collection

How can I animate overlays?

Use calls to action to capture leads

Play the demo pizza VideoAd until you come to the Click to order now! overlay. Click the overlay.

A color-coordinated lead capture form opens where viewers can type their names, email addresses, phone numbers, addresses, and pizza orders.

When a viewer clicks Send, the pizza restaurant receives the order in an email message at a specified email address. The message will look something like this:

Lead capture email message

Lead capture email message

In addition to having a convenient way to process delivery orders, the pizza restaurant also has an on-going supply of contact information for highly qualified leads to whom it can send newsletters, special promotion announcements, and more.

Tip Go ahead and submit a pizza order. Just don’t expect to actually have a pizza delivered.

How do I set up lead capture?

I’d like to read more about lead capture.

Encourage clickthroughs by making the entire VideoAd a link

Place your cursor anywhere over the VideoAd as it plays and notice that the cursor changes to a hand. The entire VideoAd is hot.

This greatly increases the likelihood that viewers will click the VideoAd and end up right on the webpage where the advertiser wants them to be.

How do I turn my entire VideoAd into a hyperlink?

Add depth with image (and video) overlays

Seconds after the demo pizza VideoAd begins playing, the pizza restaurant’s logo transitions onto the screen. The logo remains in the upper left corner throughout the VideoAd, reinforcing the Best Pizza brand.

The logo is an image overlay. Image overlays work just like text overlays. You can associate them with URL’s or lead capture forms.

In this demo, clicking the logo opens the Mixpo home page. An actual advertiser can associate a logo with the URL that best supports its promotional goals.

Tip Take a close look at the Best Pizza logo. It’s transparent. The VideoAd platform supports transparent images in GIF and PNG format.

I’d like to read more about transparent images and image and video overlays.

To see detailed instructions for adding video and image overlays, visit the Create page, and then click How do I add videos and images as overlays?

Studio Tip

With this release of the platform, overlays are easier than ever to manage in the Studio. You can now select all or multiple overlays and move them as one unit.

To learn more, visit the Best Practices page, and then click Move elements together on the Timeline.

Which upload option should you use?

Monday, March 30th, 2009

When it comes to uploading video and image files to the Mixpo platform, you have two options:

These options aren’t created equal.

In this post you’ll learn about the differences and get advice about the best option to choose.

Local processing option

Question Answer
Advice? If this option is available, use it.
Why local? Transcoding, that is, processing files into a format the VideoAd platform can use, takes place on your computer.
Who can use it? Anyone using a PC running Microsoft® Windows® XP or Vista® and either the Firefox® (version 1.5 or higher) or Internet Explorer® (version 6.0 or higher) browser.

I’d like to see a list of file format and hardware requirements.

How do you do it?
  • When prompted at sign in, install the Mixpo Media Transcoder, a small browser extension. Without this vital little extension, file processing can’t take place on your local computer.
  • In the Studio, on the Visuals tab, click Your Computer.
Details?
  • It works better, it’s faster, and it gives you more control than server processing.
  • Media files are imported directly into the VideoAd you’re editing.
  • If you run into a problem importing a video file using local processing, you can try the server processing approach.
  • Won’t work unless you download a small browser extension.

Server processing option

Question Answer
Advice? If you use a PC, try local processing first. If you use a Mac, this is your only option.
Why server? Transcoding, that is, processing files into a format the VideoAd platform can use, takes place on the Mixpo servers.
Who can use it? Anyone. If you can access the Dashboard, you can use server processing.

I’d like to see a list of file format and hardware requirements.

How do you do it? On the Create a New VideoAd tab, click Upload Media.
Details?
  • VideoAds created using server processing require a slightly newer version of the Flash Player (version 9, update 3) than VideoAds created using local processing. This means that more viewers will be prompted to upgrade.
  • It requires more management. The platform automatically creates a new VideoAd for each group of simultaneously uploaded files. If you intend to use the uploaded files in existing VideoAds, you have to delete the automatically-created ones.
  • It’s slower than local processing.

Show me detailed instructions on how to upload videos and images.

Maximize the INFO menu

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

In spite of the grim economic outlook, online video ad spending is projected to grow during 2009.

Obviously a number of factors, including the ever increasing availability of broadband, contribute to this trend.

But a significant part of the reason advertisers are turning to video ads is because they’re effective. The “lean forward” nature of the medium results in more brand exposure and higher levels of viewer engagement.

The Mixpo platform includes a number of tools designed specifically to increase VideoAd engagement. To keep your current advertising clients happy and attract more, you’ll want to take advantage of all of these tools.

One powerful tool you may have overlooked is the INFO menu.

In this post you’ll discover:

What the INFO menu is

The INFO menu is an action menu that is built in to the Mixpo VideoAd Player.

Viewers of a VideoAd can click an INFO menu option to open a webpage, send an email message to the advertiser, or share the VideoAd with others.

While a VideoAd is playing, INFO is visible in the upper left corner of the ad.

Closed INFO menu as VideoAd plays

Closed INFO menu as VideoAd plays

When the VideoAd finishes playing, the INFO menu expands automatically.

Expanded INFO menu

Expanded INFO menu

In addition, at any time while the VideoAd plays, viewers can pause their cursors over INFO to expand the menu.

Make the menu work harder for advertisers

The options in the expanded INFO menu shown above are the default options. You don’t have to live with these defaults.

We’ll talk more about the three sharing options in the next section. In this section, we’ll focus on the website link and email options.

Let’s face it. The labels More Info and Inquire are hardly inspiring. They’re placeholders, really, designed to communicate the functions of the options and meant to be changed.

By customizing the labels, you can tailor them to a specific advertiser and increase the likelihood that viewers will click.

For example, here is how you might customize the options for a pizza restaurant.

INFO menu for pizza restaurant

INFO menu for pizza restaurant

On the other hand, this is how the options for a home building contractor might look.

INFO menu for building contractor

INFO menu for building contractor

Tip Choose the INFO option labels in the context of the entire VideoAd. For example, if the VideoAd includes an overlay that encourages viewers to Request a Free Quote, you might want to use a different call to action in the INFO menu.

Tell more more about overlays

To customize the options, in the Dashboard, locate the VideoAd you want to customize. Click Publishing, and then click the Customize tab.

Customize tab where you choose INFO option labels

Customize tab where you choose INFO option labels

When you customize the website link and email option labels, you also specify the URL and email address you want to associate with the options.

I’d like more details about customizing the INFO menu

The sharing options

By default, the INFO menu includes three sharing options:

  • Send to a Friend Allows viewers to specify the email addresses of up to 10 friends. These friends receive an email message that contains a link to the VideoAd’s landing page.
  • Copy Link Automatically copies the URL to the VideoAd’s landing page. Viewers can paste the URL into a webpage to provide access to the VideoAd from their own websites.
  • Embed Video Allows viewers to copy the embed code for the VideoAd so they can embed it into their own websites.

What is a VideoAd landing page?

The sharing options make sense for advertisers who publish VideoAds on their own websites or on directory profile pages. It’s in these advertisers’ interest to see their VideoAds distributed as widely as possible.

On the other hand, when advertisers buy banner ad space through online publishers, the sharing options may not make sense.

To turn off the sharing options, in the Dashboard, locate the VideoAd you want to customize. Click Publishing, and then click the Customize tab.

Turning off the INFO menu sharing options

Turning off the INFO menu sharing options

In the Sharing section of the Customize tab, clear the check boxes for the sharing options you want to turn off.

INFO menu with sharing options turned off

INFO menu with sharing options turned off

With the sharing options turned off, the expanded INFO menu contains only the website link and email options.

Bring the INFO menu to viewers’ attention

After you customize the INFO menu, you want to make sure that viewers of a VideoAd notice that the menu is there.

We provide you with a couple of alternatives for attracting viewers’ attention:

  • Point to INFO with a banner.
  • Highlight INFO with a glow.

You can customize the text in the banner and set the frequency with which it appears.

Banner pointing to INFO menu

Banner pointing to INFO menu

The text in this banner corresponds to one of the options viewers will find when they expand the INFO menu.

You can customize the color of the glow to match or contrast with the colors of the Player controls.

Glow highlighting the INFO menu

Glow highlighting the INFO menu

The glow automatically pulses on and off throughout the VideoAd.

You set the banner and glow options in the Publisher on the same Customize tab where you customize the INFO menu options.

I’d like more details about customizing the INFO menu

Take advantage of transparency

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

Transparent images are images that have a transparent background. They are still rectangular in shape with a definite width and height but, since you can’t see the background, they appear to have irregular boundaries.

For example, this is a transparent version of the Mixpo logo.

ad-1209-logo_small_trans

Transparent images as visual overlays

Company logos frequently have transparent backgrounds. Logos are likely to be the most common type of transparent image that advertisers want you to include in their VideoAds.

Tip While logos are vital brand elements, they usually aren’t integral to a VideoAd’s key message. To place a transparent logo on top of the content of the ad, add it as a visual overlay.

Tell me more about adding visual overlays.

This brief VideoAd demonstrates the use of transparent images as visual overlays.

Transparent images as VideoAd content

In addition to placing transparent images as overlays on top of the visual content in your VideoAds, you can also add transparent images to the Timeline to include them in the body of the VideoAd itself.

Transparent tree image in body of VideoAd

Transparent tree image in body of VideoAd

For example, here is the transparent tree image included as a visual element on the Timeline.

Tip Remember that the background for VideoAd content is black. If you add black transparent images, such as the villain or axe from the demo VideoAd above, to the Timeline, they’ll be invisible in the VideoAd.

Because transparent images are often dramatic and compelling, you might want to consider using them as initial thumbnails for VideoAds set in mouse-over-to-play or click-to-play mode.

I’d like to know more about uploading images.

The Dashboard: A guided tour

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

As Mixpo’s VP of Marketing, Glenn Pingul, points out in a MediaPost Online Video Insider article, “at the end of the day, effective advertising is really all about the message.”

Glenn’s point is that, while online video technology is “poised to be the next driver of change in advertising,” it, like all technologies, is only “an enabler” that can never ultimately drive a VideoAd’s effectiveness.

Unquestionably, technology can’t compensate for poor content.

However, one of the truly powerful aspects of online video technology is its ability to teach. The Mixpo platform allows advertisers to closely monitor VideoAd performance and make changes on the fly in response to performance data.

Over time, this analysis-based experimentation can give advertisers a sophisticated understanding of the types of “messages,” to borrow Glenn’s word, that drive engagement and response.

In this article, part 1 of a 2-part series on performance analysis, we’ll take a guided tour of the Mixpo Dashboard and examine how the Dashboard’s data displays help advertisers become more knowledgeable content creators.

In part 2, we’ll go deeper with a look at Advanced Analytics.

Here’s what we’ll cover in the rest of this article

An overview of the Dashboard

The Dashboard functions as the home page for a Mixpo account. It’s the place where you manage the account’s VideoAds and get a real-time, at-a-glance appraisal of how each VideoAd is performing.

Dashboard - the account home page

Dashboard - the account home page

In addition to graphical displays of performance data (each of which we’ll discuss in more detail below), the Dashboard provides you with a performance summary for each VideoAd.

Summary performance data

Summary performance data

Tip Pausing your cursor over the summary list opens a small window that contains more detailed performance data.

Let’s spend a little time with the summary shown above to see what it tells us. If you’re a little fuzzy about what terms like Engagement and Exposure mean, you might want to read What do terms like engagement rate and exposure mean?.

This VideoAd is doing a pretty impressive job of holding the attention of viewers who decide to watch it. On average, viewers watched 88 percent of the VideoAd and 75 percent of viewers who started the ad watched it all the way through.

In addition, of the almost 210,000 people who landed on the page where the VideoAd is embedded, .50 percent took some action with the ad by viewing it, clicking a link or lead capture invitation, or interacting with the Player controls.

Given that typical click rates for display ads average around .10 percent, a .50 percent engagement rate is pretty impressive.

While this VideoAd is performing well, the advertiser might consider testing a different thumbnail image or initial call to action to try to boost the views-to-impressions rate even further.

I’d like to read more about thumbnail images.

VideoAd Activity

The VideoAd Activity section of the Dashboard displays impressions, views, and clicks over time.

VideoAd Activity - Impressions highlighted

VideoAd Activity - Impressions highlighted

Hover over a line or bar to display specific numbers and dates.

VideoAd Activity - Clicks highlighted

VideoAd Activity - Clicks highlighted

Hiding impressions gives you a clearer sense of the number of views.

The power of this time-based display is that it uncovers patterns. For example, suppose, in response to the summary data we discussed above, an advertiser switches thumbnail images. View and click patterns in the Video Activity section will show whether or not the new thumbnail had any effect.

Careful scrutiny of impression patterns might also help advertisers develop a sense for the best times to run ads in online publications.

Playthrough and Engagement Profile

While the VideoAd Activity section displays chronological time, this profile presents viewer actions in relationship to the length of the VideoAd itself.

Playthrough and Engagement Profile - Playthrough highlighted

Playthrough and Engagement Profile - Playthrough highlighted

In the Playthrough chart on top, the green bars show the percent of viewers who stopped watching at specific points throughout the VideoAd. For example, approximately 620 viewers stopped watching this VideoAd almost immediately while 1500 watched it all the way through. More than 200 viewers liked the VideoAd enough to replay it.

Playthrough and Engagement Profile - Engagement highlighted

Playthrough and Engagement Profile - Engagement highlighted

In the Engagement chart on the bottom, red circles represent interactions and orange circles represent clicks.

Looking at the two charts together suggests a relationship between the large number of interactions viewers are taking at the beginning of the ad and the number who stop watching.

An examination of the VideoAd content shows that the advertiser placed a lead capture overlay at the beginning of the ad inviting viewers to sign up for a special offer. From the data, it appears that many viewers opened the lead capture form and instead of signing up for the offer, stopped watching the VideoAd.

Based on the Playthrough and Engagement profile, the advertiser might decide to move the lead capture overlay closer to the end of the VideoAd. This would increase brand exposure and, as a result, increase the likelihood that viewers would not just open the lead capture form but also fill out and submit it.

Viewer Locations

In the Viewer Locations section, advertisers can track, worldwide, where views and clicks originate.

Viewer Locations

Viewer Locations

Tip To expand the Viewer Locations section, click the blue plus icon in the upper right corner. To see other parts of the world, place your cursor over the map and drag.

Blue labels represent views. Orange labels represent clicks or clicks and views. Pause your cursor over a label to see specific numbers.

At its simplest, Viewer Locations shows advertisers where their viewers are coming from and might help them better target their content.

The location-based data also allows advertisers to compare the performance of ads published in regional online publications.

Website Activity

The Website Activity section compares VideoAd activity across all of the sites where the ad is embedded. It also provides advertisers with a picture of the ways in which viewers are discovering their VideoAd through Internet search.

Top Embeds

Top Embeds

On the Top Embeds tab, you see the sites where a VideoAd is embedded listed by number of views. For example, this is the Top Embeds list for one of the Mixpo product tour VideoAds. The highest number of views originated on the Mixpo website where we embedded the VideoAd.

The second highest number originated on a popular technology trends blog called TechCrunch. This is an excellent example of how advertisers can benefit from the viral spread of a VideoAd.

While viewing the product tour VideoAd on the Mixpo website, the blog post’s author clicked Embed on Your Site, optionally available on the INFO menu in the Player, to copy the VideoAd’s embed code and paste it into the post. Thousands of people viewed the VideoAd in the TechCrunch blog post who would never have discovered it on the Mixpo site.

I’d like to know more about the options on the Player INFO menu.

Tip From the Top Embeds tab, you can navigate directly to the webpage where a VideoAd is embedded. Open the website folder, and then click a URL.

Top Embeds tab - click URL

Top Embeds tab - click URL

On the Recent Referrers tab, advertisers see a list of webpages that viewers visited before viewing the VideoAd landing page. When the webpage is a search site, hovering over the URL displays the search query, including the search terms viewers used to locate your VideoAd in search results.

Website Activity - Recent Referrers

Website Activity - Recent Referrers

For example, the image above shows how a viewer discovered a local opera company’s VideoAd for a production of Phantom of the Opera by searching on video.google.com.

Advertisers can use this data to refine and improve the keywords associated with their VideoAds and increase the likelihood that potential customers will discover the VideoAds through Internet search.

Tip When viewers navigate to your VideoAd by clicking a link in an Internet search engine results list, they open the VideoAd landing page. I’d like to know more about landing pages.

Wrap up

Compelling content, not technology, is what sells services and products. But, as Glenn Pingul put it, technology is an enabler. By taking full advantage of the performance analysis tools available in the Mixpo Dashboard, advertisers can become compelling-content creators over time.

Don’t forget lead capture

Monday, February 9th, 2009

In an interesting article on ReelSEO, guest columnist Stephen Condon (VP of Sales and Marketing at PixelFish) lists some things to keep in mind when creating effective online video ads.

The second bullet in his list reads:

  • Include a call-to-action and ensure that it can be easily edited.

Condon’s point is that you need to optimize your VideoAds not just for search but also for viewer response.

Assumptions about viewer response

When people think of viewer response in relation to online advertising, they typically think of clicks.

For example, an ad might contain a link to an advertiser’s home page or to a printable page that includes a 20% Off coupon.

While web links are tried and true response triggers and I’d never suggest you avoid them, in this post, I’d like to encourage you to go beyond clicks and try something new in the viewer response line.

Lead capture: An effective complement to clicks

While it’s great if viewers of a VideoAd visit an advertiser’s website, it’s even better if they respond to an offer or promotion by providing their names, email addresses, and other personal information.

In the Mixpo Studio, you have two options for generating these highly qualified leads. You can:

  • Customize the Inquire call to action that is built in to the VideoAd Player.
  • Add promotional overlays and associate them with lead capture forms.

Let’s look at a couple of examples.

Restaurant

In this VideoAd, the owners of a seafood restaurant have taken advantage of both a call to action and an overlay to generate leads.

This customized call to action gives viewers a quick and easy way to request a reservation.

Reserve a Table call to action

Reserve a Table call to action

Tip The owners also customized a click call to action (Find Us!) to provide viewers with a map to the restaurant location.

This overlay informs viewers that the restaurant’s menus change with the seasons and invites them to be among the first to know when changes are made.

Lead capture overlay

Mailing list lead capture overlay

Clicking the overlay opens a customizable form where viewers provide their names, email addresses, and more.

Lead capture form

Lead capture form

Law firm

In this VideoAd, a law firm specializing in personal injury cases encourages viewers to get in touch with the firm in two ways.

This call to action makes it easy for viewers to contact the firm to ask questions or make appointments.

Contact Us call to action

Contact Us call to action

This overlay eliminates barriers by inviting viewers to explore, cost-free, whether or not personal injury cases have merit.

Lead capture overlay

Free consultation lead capture overlay

Take Stephen Condon’s advice

Don’t limit yourself to clicks. Use all of the tools at your disposal to optimize your VideoAd for viewer response.

I’d like to know more about associating lead capture forms with overlays

Please tell me more about overlays

Please tell me more about calls to action

YouTube, search engines, and VideoAds

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

In an interesting article in the Sunday New York Times, Miguel Helft described how YouTube has evolved from a video hosting and sharing site to become the second most popular search tool on the Internet.

According to comScore, in November, 2008, Americans conducted almost 2.8 billion searches on YouTube, about 200 million more than on Yahoo.

Helft describes how 9-year old Tyler Kennedy turns first to YouTube for school- and hobby-related research. “When they don’t have really good results on YouTube, then I use Google,” said Tyler.

The increased popularity of video doesn’t necessarily mean a decline in the consumption of text and other formats. It does, however, signal a trend: people are now turning to video not just for entertainment but also for reference.

This has implications for how you use the Mixpo platform, especially in two respects:

Syndication to YouTube

We make it easy for your advertisers to benefit from the emerging search and research activity on YouTube.

From within the Mixpo platform, you can easily publish any VideoAd you create to YouTube and then monitor the number of views the YouTube version receives.

Publish a VideoAd to YouTube

YouTube publishing options in the Mixpo platform. (Click to see a larger version).

To give a VideoAd the best chance of being discovered through YouTube search, be sure to fill out the VideoAd’s title, keyword, and description fields on the Description tab in the Studio.

Description tab

Description tab in the Studio

If you update the fields later, you can pass the updates to YouTube with the click of a button.

VideoAd content

If more and more people are indeed turning to video for reference as well as entertainment, advertisers can take advantage of this trend by going beyond slick 15- to 30-second promotions.

Consumers seeking solutions are looking for informative video content. This opens the door for VideoAds of 1 to even 3 minutes in length that demonstrate how a product works or explain the benefits of a service.

In the flexible Studio, it’s as easy to compile a series of pictures and video clips into a substantive product story as it is to upload existing TV footage.

I’d like to know more about uploading photos and video clips.