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James Brown Marketing » YouTube http://www.jamesbrownmarketing.com Internet Marketing Services To Increase Your Business & Start Making YOU More Money Today with James Brown Marketing www.JamesBrownMarketing.com Mon, 06 Feb 2012 12:28:21 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v= Marketing With YouTube http://www.jamesbrownmarketing.com/marketing-with-youtube.html http://www.jamesbrownmarketing.com/marketing-with-youtube.html#comments Wed, 09 Sep 2009 19:53:08 +0000 JB http://www.jamesbrownmarketing.com/?p=35 5 Rules for YouTube Success!

According to current Alexa rankings, YouTube is the number three most visited website on all of the Internet, surpassed only by Google and Yahoo. Millions and millions of users flock to YouTube every day to indulge in viewing and commenting on videos, spending what, for some, can often turn into hours staring at the monitor.

In this article we’ll look at 5 key points that can help lead to success, should you decide to give YouTube a run as your next big marketing medium.

1) Know your target demographics.

That goes without saying when we talk about marketing, but let’s just explain why it applies here. YouTube users, while varied and diverse, can generally be narrowed down enough to speak about generally. While everyone from four year olds to Grandma spend time on YouTube, the people who live and breath YouTube are going to be your 18-35 males.

While females in the same age group do also use YouTube quite a lot, and there are many users older and younger, the 18-35 male demographic are the people that are going to spend hours a day surfing YouTube and sending videos back and forth between their friends (this is important!)

Sure, this demographic tends to be the most desirable one anyways in many cases, but if your target audience sit outside this range, there are likely much better ways to spend your time and money than YouTube.

2) Go viral or go home.

A video of me feeding my dog or taking my garbage out might be entertaining to me (“look how well I poured that cat food! Not a bit spilled”), but that’s probably the extent of it. If you’re going to try and use YouTube to get your message out, your ultimate goal should be for your video to grow virally.

That word, viral, is said so much these days that it’s going out of style, but there’s a reason, it’s important! You want your video to spread around, as quickly as possible, and to be seen by as many people in your demographic (and in general) as possible. Otherwise, why are you even using this medium in the first place? When you sit down to plan your campaign, always have this in mind.

Any ideas that come up that don’t reek of potential to spread quickly likely aren’t of any value. While you never know exactly what will go viral (I’m sure the parents that posted a video of their baby laughing didn’t expect almost 74 million views to date), you can generally tell whether something has the potential, as there are some aspects that essentially all the videos that really take off.

3) Make it funny, make it weird, make it shocking, or don’t make it.

Going viral happens because someone sees a video and deems it so awesome that they simply have to email it to their friends, their mom, their boss and their priest. As stated above, mundane videos won’t do this. If you want to ensure that your video has the potential to spread like wild-fire, you pretty much have to make sure that it’s funny, weird, shocking, or some other form of general awesomeness.

If you look at the top 25 most watched YouTube videos you’ll notice that while some may be cute, some may be cool, the aspect that you see most represented is comedy. Whether it be comedians or little kids being bitten by their brothers, things that make people keel over laughing tend to spread the fastest and widest. Whatever method you choose to go down to give your video the legs it needs to run across the net, there are certain warnings to heed!

4) Know your brand and know what it means to your customers.

There is a certain danger with viral video marketing, namely that many of the things that tend to go viral can also have a tendency to be on the edge of cleanliness, and certain brands may end up being hurt more than they stand to benefit.

Take the “Landlord” video, made famous by starring Will Ferrell and available on FunnyorDie.com. 61 million views for a video that isn’t on YouTube is a massive success. As viral as they come. However, the real star of this video isn’t Ferrell, it’s the landlord, who is a cursing, beer drinking…little girl. Funny? Sure. Viral? Sure. But does your brand want to be associated with swearing, boozing toddlers?

Maybe it does. Maybe your brand is edgy and your customers won’t look at such an association negatively. But maybe not. Always make sure that whatever your video is portraying isn’t going to conflict in someway with the core values of your brand.

5) Figure out what you want from the video and design it to deliver on that goal.

What do you want your video to do for you? Do you want it to build brand awareness? Do you want it to help sell something? Do you want it to drive traffic to your website? It’s very important that you recognize exactly what your goals for the campaign are, and that you realize a few truths about YouTube and it’s viewers.

Firstly, people aren’t on YouTube to watch commercials. If your video is plastered with your products, logo and marketing messages, it’s probably worthless to bother going any further. A good example of tasteful branding is Seth McFarlane’s Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy, sponsored by Burger King. People watch the videos to see the funny stuff, not to see the BK stuff, so Burger King does a very short intro, which is in itself comical, and then a little bit of branding at the end. That’s it.

The next thing to realize is that it’s very unlikely people will leave YouTube to go to your website, unless you somehow entice them to. People on YouTube may love your video, and they’re happy you made it, but they don’t care about you enough to go check out your website just out of the goodness of their hearts.

Offer them something at the end of the video or in the description at the side that they can only get through your website, or they’ll never get their, especially not with so many other hilarious related videos being suggested to them by YouTube at the end of yours!

Finally, if you’re trying to directly sell something, you’d better find a way of featuring your product and making people crack up or say “wow” at the same time. Blendtec is the perfect example of this. They use video to help sell blenders by posting clips of them blending up ridiculous items like golf clubs and bricks (and people love it). Whatever your goal, define it ahead of time and make sure YouTube is a viable medium to deliver on what you’re looking for.

Making videos doesn’t have to be expensive, but it can be. That being said, money is the easy part, a great idea with an almost certain chance of success  is the hard part. It takes planning and time. The key is to analyze beforehand whether YouTube is a good medium for your business to get it’s message across.

If it’s not, don’t bother wasting all that time and money on something that won’t work for you. If it is, follow these five rules and you’ll be far better off than if you just wing it and post something up on a hope and a prayer.

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Be Like Burger King: Selling Hamburgers on YouTube and Facebook http://www.jamesbrownmarketing.com/be-like-burger-king.html http://www.jamesbrownmarketing.com/be-like-burger-king.html#comments Mon, 12 Jan 2009 02:27:04 +0000 JB http://www.jamesbrownmarketing.com/?p=21 I was reading an article today on the FastCompany.com about a new Facebook application that Burger King had had developed by ad factory Crispin Porter + Bogusky. The Whopper Sacrifice application asks you to de-friend 10 of your Facebook buddies in exchange for a free whopper.

Whether or not the application will take off is yet to be seen, but regardless of the success, or lack thereof, that this new app. will have, it’s very interesting to see Burger King making such a strong move into the world of Facebook as a means to reach its target customer base.

The group Burger King is targeting, the tweens through twenty-somethings that make up the bulk of Facebook’s user base, are pounded with ads more so than any generations past. The constant attachment to the internet comes with a constant supply of advertisements, for everything you could imagine, delivered from all angles. Predictably, these savy-surfers have become very good at simply ignoring the ads and surfing away through their games or chat or whatever content they may be enjoying. Ads aren’t considered the bad guy, but your run of the mill, cookie cutter advertisements simply won’t cut it with these folks.

S0 how does one get their ads noticed among a sea of people who’ve trained themselves to turn a blind eye? Easy. Well, easily said at least. You turn your ad into the very content that these people are on the internet to enjoy in the first place. While viral campaigns and the like are not new by any means in online advertising, gigantic companies like Burger King tend to be slow to react to the more cutting edge ways or reaching their audience. This is one reason it’s great to see BK taking such an active interest in spicing up their internet campaigns.

Another recent foray into the world of blending the line between ad and content is Burger King’s partnership with Seth McFarlane of Family Guy fame. “Seth McFarlane’s Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy” is a series of animated shorts done by McFarlane’s company, Fuzzy Door Productions, and sponsored by Burger King. Available on YouTube, the intro to each episode has the King, Burger King’s mascot, on the run from some pop-culture danger, such as the Hovito warriors from Raiders of the Lost Ark. By sponsoring these videos, Burger King has essentially produced an advertisement, but in such a way that instead of being a burden, viewers are more than happy to watch it.

That willing involvement is the key to successful campaigns on the net. People are more than happy to go to YouTube and watch the opening sequence with the King and then the short, and quite funny animation that follows. Likewise, the tongue in cheek fun of telling your friend you sold them off for a free hamburger will make Burger King’s new Facebook campaign enjoyable enough for people not to mind the fact that they’re being fed an advertisement.

Burger King has done a very good job at using new media to reach out to its target audiences, and the way that they’re going about it tells me that someone in the marketing department at BK knows what the score is when it comes to reaching out to the types of users that sites like YouTube and Facebook attract.

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