Friday, July 28, 2017

Meet the Vidyard Team, Video Style: Miko Taruc

Meet the Team is our monthly chance to introduce you to the fabulous, quirky, talented people who work at Vidyard, using our favorite medium — video! For this episode, we caught up with Miko Taruc, Software Developer here at Vidyard. Discover Miko’s favourite video game of all time, and why he wasn’t allowed to be a Power Ranger when he grew up:

What Didn’t Make the Cut

Miko shared a lot more than just his love of Pokemon, so here are a few more of his answers:

What is your favorite video on the internet right now?

My favourite video hasn’t changed since it came out. – it’s still the Gandalf one where everyone walks up the mountain and he yells out his little scream:

Ahh, it makes me laugh just thinking about it.

What brought you to Vidyard?

I had originally come here for a co-op term! My interviewers came in late that day due to a scheduling mixup, which pushed back all my other coop interviews. So I didn’t have much of a choice but to say yes to this one! I ended up loving the job so much that I stuck around an extra two terms, and then stayed for full time!

The post Meet the Vidyard Team, Video Style: Miko Taruc appeared first on Vidyard.



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Thursday, July 27, 2017

4 Simple Ideas for Great Blog Video Content

Contrary to popular belief you don’t need Hollywood-esque production value to create great video content for your blog. Frankly speaking some of the best blog video content stems from fairly simple ideas that are properly executed to create compelling content.

If you would like to create great blog video content, here are a few simple ideas that should give you a good place to start:

How-to guides and tutorials

Creating a guide or tutorial that shows viewers how to perform a certain task that they may be interested in or helps them to solve a particular problem is inherently useful. As far as informative content goes it is hard to beat a good guide, and if you get a bit creative you could really make it stand out. At the heart of every good guide is a simple set of step-by-step instructions, and once you figure out what those are the only thing you really need to do is decide on the best way to show the audience how to perform each step. Check out a great site called HowToGeek.com for more examples.

Interviews

Although often overlooked, interviews can be a great type of content. This guy built a whole website just with interviews! Bear in mind you don’t have to interview a ‘celebrity’ – anyone who can speak from a position of authority about the topic or has a unique perspective could make for a great interview. If it isn’t possible to record a face-to-face interview with a subject, you could even record footage from a video call instead.

Personal stories

Telling a story related to your blog’s niche can be a powerful way to foster an emotional response – particularly if the story is inspiring, humorous, touching, or something else of that nature. The video itself can either be a simple vlog, or it could incorporate other elements to help you to ‘show’ certain parts of the story.

Product reviews

Reviews have always been a popular form of blog content – video or otherwise. The advantage of recording product reviews as videos is that you can showcase the product better and pinpoint precise areas of interest to the viewer. As an added benefit product reviews are an excellent way to promote products that you feel are useful.

As you can see none of these ideas are particularly complicated, and most can be recorded with a simple video camera or a video recorder. Not only can it record the footage that you need but it also has a built-in editor that will let you edit and improve the videos that you record.

At the end of the day it doesn’t take dazzling special effects or a spectacular cinematic approach to create great blog video content. Initially you may want to experiment with different types of ideas, so that you can get a feel for what the audience on your blog responds to – and based on the ideas listed above you should already be able to come up with some topics worth pursuing.

Original post: 4 Simple Ideas for Great Blog Video Content



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Increase Customer Satisfaction and Reduce Support Load with Video

Your customer expectations are changing. They’re demanding the highest engagement from your customer support team as possible. Hi, my name is Craig Stoss. I lead the technical support team at Vidyard and today in this Chalk Talk we’re going to discuss how you can use the power of video to engage with your customers from your support team.

Video is a very powerful tool for support. It can engage with your customers in a way that goes deeper than images or text could ever do. Within that support context, if you use video, you’re going to see an increase in your customer satisfaction, you’re going to see a decrease in your time to resolution, and you’re going to see your time to resolution go down as well.

Explaining the Complex, Simply

Now, how are we going to do this? Think of something like tying a bow tie. If you were to describe that in text or images, you would have many, many steps. Your images would have to have arrows and diagrams and be very complex. But with video, you can describe exactly where to hold that tie, where to loop that through and make sure that your customer has a perfect bow tie every time.

Video can help describe these complex things very easily, and if you have a product or service that has many of steps, you can create 30- to 60-second videos and aggregate them into a video knowledge center that is branded and contains all of your content. This knowledge center is searchable, it has SEO components to be found by search engines, and it gives your customers a way to engage with you and your content in a direct way. And it’s not just one or the other. If you have a current knowledge center that’s text-based, you can embed these videos directly into your text-based knowledge center and engage with your customers at both levels.

By providing that level of self-service you’re going to see an increase in case deflection because you providing clear, less confusing examples using video. But, if a client or prospect does contact your support team, they can still send video to try and answer the question. And at the end of the video, with a tool like Vidyard, you’re going to see a call-to-action to say “Did this video solve your support case?” And when the customer clicks yes or no, it will immediately notify your CRM and your tech support reps so they can either close the case or contact the customer directly. And it’s not just for self-service. You can create just-in-time solutions that help explain those complicated ideas by providing a more engaging experience.

Personalizing the Support Experience

For example, I could say “Hi, my name is Craig Stoss. Jessie, you just contact us about tying your bow tie and I’m going to provide you with a video with all the instructions. Right after this video you’re going to see a 30-second clip with all those details on how to tie your bow tie and you can contact me if you have any trouble.” Then I can include that video on how to tie a bow tie in my reply email and Jessie will be immediately able to say yes or no, this helped me.

I’ve provided him with my name, my face and talked to him as a person and that allows me to engage with him in more deeper way. It also shows there’s no automation or bots in the background. And within Vidyard we actually think that this is quicker than writing an email because these videos are very short and very engaging. It also eliminates a lot of assumptions. Video allows you to add captions or descriptive video so that you can reach a broader spectrum of your customers with the same content.

So, today we learned how you can use video for technical support to increase your customer satisfaction, reduce your time to resolution, and reduce the cost per call. My name is Craig Stoss and I hope you learned something today.

 

The post Increase Customer Satisfaction and Reduce Support Load with Video appeared first on Vidyard.



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Wednesday, July 26, 2017

3 Sales Leaders Share Their Video Selling Secrets

Everything is changing about the technology buying process. And I’m not exaggerating – prospects are interacting less and less with salespeople, and turning more and more to self-serve content. Inboxes are more filled with more emails than ever, and chances to stick out amongst the crowd have diminished.

Because buyers are evolving, salespeople have to evolve as well. And fast. So that’s why we were so excited to hear from Tonni Bennett at Terminus and Kyle Norton at League last week for this panel webinar we hosted with Sales Hacker called 3 Ways Top Sales Teams are Killing it with Personal Video. Tonni, Kyle and our own Tyler Lessard dropped 30 minutes of non-stop sales smarts, but here’s a few highlights that really stuck out:

How is your team driving attention with cold prospects?

“We’re starting with a video…” is always a good way to start any discussion in my humble opinion, but it’s extra relevant after Tyler asked our panel how they’re helping to re-ignite dead leads, and bring opportunities back from the grave.

“We’re trying to personalize our messaging so that instead of saying ‘we do this, we do this, we do this,’ we’re opening with something like ‘hey, I saw you do X, Y, Z’ I thought this might be relevant.” Tonni continues, highlighting that this kind of conversation can be lengthy in the course of an email, but video makes this kind of discussion a snap.

Video has now become the first touch point for every sales interaction at Terminus, and Tonni’s team isn’t just throwing that effort into the wind. This new cadence approach has a 40% open rate, 37% higher CTR and a 5.5% higher reply rate over their text-based approaches.

Is personalized video changing the face of email?

We think so, and Tyler was quick to point out why. “It showcases that you really are delivering that one-to-one message. When people are inundated with these automated emails… that when you see a video that lands in your inbox with a personalized message on a whiteboard, you know that it was recorded just for you.”

Tyler goes on to say that while text emails haven’t fully gone away yet, sales people are getting a bit dependent on templates that are growing tiresome. As a CMO, he’s not stuck under a rock, or wasn’t eaten by a T-Rex. And sadly, Tyler goes on to say he does not have 15 minutes next week to talk about something he’s never heard of from a company he’s never interacted with before. Are your prospects feeling the same?

Is video messaging for everyone?

Many businesses worry that video is going to be too much work for their team to get started. Or worse, they feel like they have time to put off jumping on the video wagon until later. Kyle has some news for you – that window of opportunity is closing fast.

Who is video messaging for? “I would say it’s for anyone who wants to get more opps, and close more deals!” Kyle laughs, adding “If you’re camera shy, you have to get over it otherwise you miss out on using a pretty powerful tool.”

Creating sales videos has never been easier, and Kyle and his team have been seeing huge successes with adding video to their sales cadence.

3 Ways Top Sales Teams are Killing it with Personal Video

Want to hear the full 30-minute discussion, and all the awesome insights shared in between these clips? This panel is now available on-demand so sign up here to watch the recording at your leisure!

The post 3 Sales Leaders Share Their Video Selling Secrets appeared first on Vidyard.



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Tuesday, July 25, 2017

4 Tips for Creating a Top-Notch Sales Enablement Strategy

Ensuring reps have the tools and collateral they need to be successful is hard — especially for leaders in high-growth companies, where scaling creates a constantly evolving environment. Creating a strategic sales enablement plan will make your team more productive and help you reach your goals each quarter.

Sales teams can close more deals and create lifelong customer relationships with time-saving hacks that put training and evaluation first, and content delivery that is easy to consume, memorable and effective. Here are four of the best ways to build out your sales enablement strategy.

Build a sales enablement strategy early in the life of your business to establish a strong foundation that you can continuously build on as you grow

As soon as possible, pinpoint the bright spots in your team’s process, as well as the areas that need improvement. Assess which reps are most productive and successful, and answer questions like:

  • What tools are they using that help them work most efficiently?
  • What are they saying on calls that’s effectively resonating with prospects?
  • Have they found a way to structure demos in a benefits-driven approach that the rest of the team could learn from?
  • How are they positioning your product against competitors?
  • Is there a particular customer segment they’re seeing the greatest success with?
  • What content are they following up with that helps prospects move forward in the sales cycle?

And finally, what of all this can be standardized across the rest of the team? Compile these answers in a central location and develop a playbook and technology roadmap using what you learn directly from your reps.

Look for sales tools and content that can become part of your reps’ workflows to save time and improve efficiency

Focus on tools that reduce rather than add steps in the workflow. The key here is finding tools that are simple, seamless and integrated.  For example, browser extensions that can pull information while reps prospect on LinkedIn. Or a link they can pop directly into an email to minimize the back and forth of scheduling, like Calendly.

Tools that live in workflows reduce the amount of the non-selling work reps must focus on, while also increasing their chances of actually adopting the tools and seeing success.

When it comes to content, video is an innovative sales enablement piece that, when used in tandem with other digital and traditional marketing content, can reach prospects most effectively.

Sales and marketing should work closely together to develop and leverage video content to craft demos that focus on the benefits of their product, making it more clear and easy to digest for the prospect in a few quick bites. If reps are using video in their prospecting emails, they can use a CTA button with a Calendly link embedded at the end of the video to capture new leads and quickly convert them.

Video can also be used as an educational piece to nurture prospects that are in earlier stages of the marketing funnel. Transition your written blog content to videos featuring top thought leaders in your company and leverage across email campaigns and on social.

Quantitatively measure sales enablement success and make improvements along the way to maximize ROI

To improve sales within your organization, identify areas in the sales cycle where reps are struggling, and find a way to establish a quantitative baseline. For example, if video content is a focal point in your strategy, you can pull analytics from your video-hosting platform. Vidyard accomplishes this by offering a view of who’s watching the videos your individual reps are sending out, how long they’re watching before they drop-off, and whether they are re-watching portions of the videos. Use these metrics to determine what’s driving the most engagement—and what’s not—and make tweaks to constantly evolve and optimize your strategy.

You can also use gamification to measure sales reps’ competency and develop skills further. Use an app integrator like Zapier to setup automated rewards based on your workflow. When a sales rep contacts X number of leads or reaches X number of sales, they can earn a token. Those tokens can be cashed in for a reward that makes sense in your team and company culture and all these metrics can be automatically tracked through your CRM. Maybe the top three sales reps in a quarter get to have an in office video game tournament and winner gets a sweet gift card to Dave and Buster’s.

Gradually and smoothly transition to a better sales enablement process as needed to align with business priorities

Use metrics and feedback to determine when to implement a new step. Look at results; analyze, then make adjustments accordingly.

Keep sales reps engaged with quick email videos highlighting new training tools or giving shout-outs to top performers.

The key to improvement is to start small: pilot a new solution with your most senior reps, get them accustomed to using that new solution in a particular workflow, and gradually expand to the rest of the team.

Conclusion

Sales enablement isn’t easy, and it’s never finished. The most successful sales teams  collaborate with their marketing team on an ongoing basis to provide the insights they need to develop meaningful, innovative content to engage, and ultimately convert, the right leads.

By choosing tools that complement your reps’ workflows, tying in your marketing team to build a strategy, rolling out changes slowly and finding a way to quantify each aspect, you’ll close more deals than competitors who still rely on email threads and clunky spreadsheets.

The post 4 Tips for Creating a Top-Notch Sales Enablement Strategy appeared first on Vidyard.



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Friday, July 21, 2017

How to use Video in your Email Marketing Campaigns

Email campaigns are a great way to share your video content, but people are still a bit unsure about how to include video effectively. In this post I’ll share some tips and tricks to help everybody add the special sauce and really amp up their nurturing campaigns.
Use video in your email campaigns

The Top Question about Video in Email Marketing

A lot of people ask me “Ian, can I stream video playback in an email?”. The answer to this question is sort of. The image below outlines which email clients support video, but as you’ll notice, you have to be careful with this pie chart. Because the two major email clients (Outlook and Gmail) do not support video playback, you have to get a bit creative to give your readers an interactive video experience.

(Image courtesy of VideoEmail.com)

(Image courtesy of VideoEmail.com)

That said, here’s my 4 tips to work around the playback challenge and incorporate video in your emails:

1. Within your email, include an image from your video and put a play button over top of it to mimic the look of a typical video player:
Here you’re adding a visual indication that a video is part of your email with the play button. When readers are prompted with this play button, they’ll click the image and be directed to a landing page – or a branded video sharing page – with your video embedded. Using a compelling image to link readers to your video content within email works really well to increase click through rates.

You can also use a GIF instead of a static image; however, you should choose an ideal first image for the GIF in case the email client does not support GIFs (darn Outlook), and freezes at the first image.

video image within an email campaign

2. Embed video on your landing page and set it to auto-play:
Because you’re technically redirecting folks to a landing page with your video embedded, you’ll want to catch their attention right away and auto-play is a surefire way to do this (it also requires less clicks from your viewers).

3. As a general guideline, your video should be 30-90 seconds for top of funnel campaigns and 1-30 minutes for individuals further down the funnel:
Because attention spans will vary depending on a prospect’s progression through the sales funnel, you’ll want to make sure your emails, and the videos within those email campaigns, are highly targeted.

When sending communication to top-of-funnel leads, the associated video should be short and sweet and doesn’t necessarily have to go into product details. The whole point is to attract new contacts and guide them into the sales funnel.

For prospects you’re targeting who are further along in the funnel, consider including videos to answer questions you know they have about the product, detailed product demos, or personalized videos about how the product solves problems within their industry.

4. Place a call to action during, or at the end of the video that suggests a clear next step for your audience:
If you’ve managed to get your readers to become viewers, you’ll definitely want to direct your them to more content they might like, encourage them to share the video with social buttons, or have them fill out an Eloqua form at the end of the video.

Building a call to action can be as simple as prompting viewers to “download our white paper” or as strategic as including a contact form at the end of a video. A form can collect even more details to push into your marketing automation or CRM contact records for future lead nurturing and segmentation.

Here’s an example CTA I built for the end of a video:
My video call to action

You can also check out some best practices for video CTAs by my buddy Micheal Litt in his Demanding Views post.

Tracking & Measuring your campaign

You can send as many emails as you want, but if you aren’t tracking responses, you won’t know if your videos are effective or not. All email marketing systems can tell you who’s clicked on your email, and which links they clicked within the email – video or otherwise. Tracking beyond this info is where things get more interesting.

For our video campaigns, we use Vidyard to track not only who watches the video, but how long each individual viewer watched our video and where they dropped off or lost interest. For instance, if Steve watches our home page video, but never returns to our site, it’s safe to assume he was not as engaged with our content as Monica, who watched our Eloqua integration video, visited our blog, and watched more video content on our Space Academy.

Capture new leads with forwarded emails

If someone really likes your email/video they may forward it to a friend.
If their friend’s contact information isn’t stored in your marketing automation or customer relationship management system, you’ll want to make sure there’s some way for this new contact to put up their hand and request more information.

Vidyard offers email gates that can be added before the video plays and customizable calls-to-action that follow the video wherever it’s viewed. Optimizations like this can help you capture lead data anywhere your video goes, and it’s important to have this sort of strategy for capturing information from viewers who want to self-identify as interested prospects.

Easily Creating Video for Email

While recording and sharing video through email hasn’t always been easy, new tools like ViewedIt have emerged to allow marketers, support professionals, and salespeople to take advantage of this powerful medium.
ViewedIt is a free Chrome plug-in that allows you to record your screen, a specific tab, or your camera and automatically attach that to an email in Gmail or Google Apps. You’ll be able to see who watched the content, how much, and whether they re-watched portions of the content. It’s perfect for quickly sharing a video voicemail with a potential customer, putting together a walk-through to answer a support inquiry, or sending out a CEO update or internal news to your team.

Oh the places your video will go!

What if someone likes your content so much that they publish it elsewhere (blog, press, social media etc.)? Or if they use your video within re-published content? Well, the same functionality will apply. You still get all the data, lead generation, and the built in calls to action regardless of where your video ends up out on the Internet. This applies to YouTube annotations, and Vidyard’s calls-to-action.

If you’re using video in your email campaigns, how’s it working? How are you tracking your success? What’s your average click through rate when you include videos? Tell me in the comments below – I’d love to hear about what’s working and if you find these tips helpful!

The post How to use Video in your Email Marketing Campaigns appeared first on Vidyard.



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Thursday, July 20, 2017

Video Success Starts with a Strong Video Strategy

Most businesses are investing in video as a way to improve marketing and sales performance and deliver a better customer experience. Yet most companies are still taking a reactive approach to video production instead of a proactive approach to a video strategy.

My name is Tyler Lessard, and in this Chalk Talk, we’ll explore why you should develop a video strategy and how to do it in a way that aligns with your business goals. Most marketing and sales teams that I speak with understand the inherent value in video content. They know that it works to engage new audiences, to educate prospects through the buyer’s journey, and to build more personal relationships that help sales teams close more deals.

But what they don’t understand is how to take a more strategic approach to what type of content they should be using at each stage of the buyer’s journey and how they’re going to expand their ability to produce great content without inflating their budgets. They’re unsure of which channels they should be using to maximize their reach, but also hit the right people with the right message, what types of insights they should be tracking to understand the performance of their videos and what type of content is generating the greatest ROI. Building a video strategy is all about building a plan and a map for the right content through the right channels with the right insights so you know that you’re getting the biggest bang for your buck and getting the most value out of video.

Start With a Plan

So how do you go about developing a video strategy? It comes down to a few main areas, and the first is developing a content plan. This is where you’ll want to look at why am you are developing video and make sure that’s understood within your team. What are the goals? This usually aligns back up to higher order business goals, whether it’s increasing brand awareness, generating more leads in pipeline, increasing customer retention, or maybe a mix of all of those. This should be clear from day one so that the kinds of videos that you’re producing always ladder back to those higher order business goals.

Once you understand that, you’ll want to start to develop a plan for what you’re going to create as a team, and in order to do that, you’ll want to think about two distinct types of videos. One are the sets of videos that are going to support your primary buyer’s journey. So no matter what else comes up on a daily basis, these are the core videos you need to better engage your audience and build more efficiency in your marketing and sales processes. To do this, you’ll want to do a needs and gap analysis on the buyer’s journey and the sales funnel. What videos do we have at each stage? And, where are there gaps that we need to fill to make sure we can offer a video journey for those audiences that want to take that path?

Secondly is looking at your website and where are there gaps where video content could help you increase conversion rates or tell a better story. And finally, what are the videos your sales teams need to be more effective in the closing cycle of new deals? Customer testimonials, product demos, and so on.

Once you understand your requirements across these, you can develop a pretty specific plan for what videos you need to build for the next three, six, or 12 months to help you in that primary buyer’s journey to be more effective.

Planning for the Unplanned

Now, we all know that things come up, and there’s campaigns and product launches and press releases that video may need to support. You can’t plan ahead on all of those, but what you can do is develop a set of guidelines for what types of videos you’re going to use, for what types of programs, and who’s going to be responsible for delivering them. To me, that is the most important part of starting to build down a content plan that enables you to have a set of priorities but also be flexible as new projects come in.

Now, you’ve got a content plan and you know what you’re prioritizing – so how do you get it done? This, again, is about building a set of guidelines to help you understand what’s the brand and the style and the tone that my video is going to be, so no matter who creates the video, you’re going to have a layer of consistency with your company’s brand and style. You’ll also need to think about accessibility and localization. When I produce a video, what are the guidelines around doing transcription or translation, closed captioning, and so on, to make sure that my videos are as accessible as possible? And finally, am I going to add interactive elements, calls to action, personalization into my videos?

You’re not going to know all of the answers up front, but what you can do as part of your video strategy is have a set of guidelines so that as you do take on new video projects, you’re actively thinking about what you need to address, and you can be more efficient in your delivery and more consistent in how you’re executing on your content.

Going From Strategy to Video Creation

Now, this is probably a big question that many of you face:  Who’s actually going to create all these great videos? And for this, I want to refer back to the idea of the production pyramid. The production pyramid is a way of thinking about who should be taking on lead responsibility for different types of videos throughout the buyer’s journey.

The way we think about it here at Vidyard is that agency partners are always the best when you’re talking about high-level awareness videos that are going to get broad reach and are really focused on building your brand. These are going to be more expensive videos, but there’s not going to be that many that you’re producing.

In the middle of the funnel for education, this is actually where you’re going to be producing a lot more of your videos. They are, you know, product demos and explainers. They are customer testimonials. These are things that you can often do in house with your own in-house video production resources. And this enables you to scale with your requirements more efficiently.

And finally, at the bottom, the decision of using in-house resources as well as empowering employees to create custom demos, custom webinars, and things like that that are going to help drive the purchase decision. So again, you may not have all the answers up front, but developing a model for understanding who’s going to take responsibility for producing different types of content is a super-important part of developing a video strategy.

Distributing and Measuring Your Content

So we know what content we’re going to create, we know how we’re going to create it, and what the guidelines are. The next step is developing a set of guidelines for distribution. How are these videos going to get out there? Which types of videos are going to go on your main website, in your resource center, are you going to invest in a video hub or a branded video channel where your different video assets live, what types of videos are going to go on your social channels and YouTube, these are all things that you’ll want to think about and set up a set of guidelines ahead of time so that people aren’t guessing once the video project is complete.

And the last piece is a strategy around insights. What types of metrics do I need to be tracking so that I can better report on the performance of my video program? You’ll want to think about three distinct areas. The video content performance, so no matter how many people watch it, how long are people staying engaged and is that content resonating? How are viewers engaging? So better understanding of who’s watching my videos, how long they’re engaging in each video, and am I going to use those insights in my marketing and sales programs. And finally, impact and ROI. What am I going to be tracking to report back on ROI? If you’re doing number two here and tracking who’s watching which videos, you can also start to pull data back out of your sales system to know which videos influenced revenue back to the business.

So this starts to give you a map for how to create a video strategy that helps make sure you’re taking a more strategic approach to the content you’re creating, the channels you’re using, and the insights you’re gathering so you can ensure you’re making the best use of your resources and delivering video in a way that’s going to have a real business impact.

Creating Your Video Strategy

Now that we’ve covered at a high-level the benefits and process for creating a video strategy, it’s time to apply this thinking to your own video campaigns. To help you get started with that, we’ve created the Video Strategy Workbook, which takes you through the 9 simple steps to creating a video strategy, from setting goals around your video content, all the way through to measuring success, and organizing your team around creating great video.

Everything in the workbook has been organized so you can fill in the details with pen and paper, and have something tangible to follow you through the process. Whether you’re preparing for your first video, or you’re a video pro that is looking to revamp your strategy, this workbook is a valuable tool for making sure every video project is set up for success.

My name is Tyler Lessard, and this has been a Vidyard Chalk Talk.

 

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Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Surpassing 100,000 Users, ViewedIt by Vidyard Leads the Way as Top Video Messaging App for Business

With more than 100,000 users in over 100 countries, ViewedIt by Vidyard is transforming the way business professionals communicate with personal video messages

KITCHENER, Ontario – July 19, 2017 – Vidyard, the leading provider of video solutions for business, announced today that it has surpassed 100,000 users of its  ViewedIt video messaging app across more than 100 countries. Enabling business professionals to easily record, share and track personal video messages, ViewedIt by Vidyard is now powering a wide range of video-based communications for marketing, sales, support, product, business operations, education and R&D professionals as well as business owners and executives. The growing adoption of personal video messaging in business comes as the global trends in the creation and consumption of video content reaches an all-time high.

“Video now represents 73% of all internet traffic and has emerged as the most impactful way to communicate in both our personal and business lives,” says Michael Litt, CEO and co-founder of Vidyard. “Video is much more engaging than text-based communications, and it inspires immediate action. We built ViewedIt to put the power of video into the hands of everyone across the business, and I couldn’t be more excited to see how the community is embracing personal video messaging as a better way to communicate and share their ideas.”

ViewedIt by Vidyard offers a seamless experience for recording custom videos from within the Google Chrome browser and instantly sharing via Gmail, Outlook, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and other online channels. Users can track who’s watched their videos and how long they tuned in, giving them unique insight into how their content is being consumed. Originally built to help sales professionals stand out and connect with customers in a more personal way, the expanding community has found countless new ways to use video messages to communicate, educate and share ideas. To celebrate the milestone of 100,000 users in 100 countries, Vidyard has shared 50 Ways to Use Video Messaging to Make Business Personal Again to showcase some of the many ways that business professionals are enhancing communications with personal video messages.

 

Real Business Results

Emails with personal video messages generate higher engagement and response rates than those with long-form text, with the most dramatic impact surfacing with sales professionals. Multiple businesses have reported a 300%-500% increase in response rates to outbound sales messages when using personal videos.

“Personal video messages have had a huge impact on our ability to connect with potential clients and generate new sales opportunities,” said Tonni Bennett, VP of Sales at Terminus, a leading provider of Account-Based Marketing solutions. “Our sales team is now using ViewedIt to cut through the noise, connect with prospects on a personal level and revive big deals that have gone quiet. Video works because it gives you the opportunity to tell a more impactful story, and to develop trust and empathy with your audience.”

Innovative B2B companies such as CentiMark, Hootsuite, HubSpot, League, Shopify, PostBeyond, Terminus, and Vision Critical are embracing personal video as a way to stand out and boost the performance of their sales and go-to-market teams. Taylor Mihail of Vision Critical, the 100,000th user of ViewedIt by Vidyard, noted, “Video has dramatically accelerated my ability to connect with new sales prospects because unlike emails and phone calls, it stands out and truly humanizes my conversation.”

ViewedIt by Vidyard is free to download and can be used to create, share and track an unlimited number of videos. Advanced features for businesses such as Microsoft Outlook and Salesforce integration, enhanced content security and the ability to send and track on-demand marketing videos and custom video playlists are available with an annual subscription to the Enterprise version.

More Information:

About Vidyard

Vidyard is the video platform for business that helps organizations drive more revenue through the use of online video. Going beyond video hosting and management, Vidyard helps businesses drive greater engagement in their video content, track the viewing activities of each individual viewer, and turn those views into action. Global leaders such as Honeywell, McKesson, Lenovo, LinkedIn, Cision, Citibank, MongoDB and Sharp rely on Vidyard to power their video content strategies and turn viewers into customers.

 

The post Surpassing 100,000 Users, ViewedIt by Vidyard Leads the Way as Top Video Messaging App for Business appeared first on Vidyard.



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Tuesday, July 18, 2017

50 Ways to Use Video Messaging to Make Business Personal Again

The rise of video as the king of content has been quite the sight to behold. Now accounting for 73% of all Internet traffic and more than 25 billion daily views on Facebook, SnapChat and YouTube alone, the pace at which we’re devouring video is staggering. And in the wake of its rise to stardom in our personal lives comes a fascinating shift in how video is impacting the way we communicate as businesses and professionals.

As a marketer myself, I’ve seen first-hand how powerful video can be for engaging audiences. It connects on a more human level, delivers information in a way that we process faster and retain longer, and enables us to tell better stories while infusing emotion into our message. Simply put, video is the next best thing to being there in person. So it should come as no surprise that its use in business is quickly growing beyond its traditional roots in marketing and training.

Thanks to advancements in various key technologies, we’re now seeing the rise of personalized and interactive video, social video, public and private live streams, secure internal video sharing and real-time video conferencing. We’re also seeing the rise of personal video messaging – a simple way for anyone to capture and share short video messages that are more impactful than text-based emails, but don’t require a live two-way conversation like phone calls or video conferences. In some ways, it’s the best of both worlds.

Today we shared that ViewedIt by Vidyard, a simple app for personal video messaging in business, has surpassed 100,000 users in more than 100 countries using it for a highly diverse set of use-cases. 

Whether it’s for onboarding new employees, sharing the latest executive message, or connecting with customers in a more personal way, the adoption of video messaging is growing exponentially as the tools to enable it become more accessible – and free – and as more Video Natives enter the workforce. Originally built to help sales professionals stand out and connect with more customers, the ViewedIt community has found countless new ways to communicate with video messaging. So today we’re sharing 50 ways to use personal video messages inspired by feedback from our community! If you’d like to start trying these ideas yourself, just download the free ViewedIt app in your Google Chrome browser and get started today!

50 Ways to Use Personal Video Messages for Business

Employee Collaboration

  1. The TL;DR email shortener: Cut down on those emails by recording a short video that clearly explains your message.
  2. Make the complex simple: Don’t write a long essay, use a simple video message to explain a complicated idea to fellow employees or team members.
  3. The meeting recap: Quickly recap meetings and collaborative brainstorms to share key takeaways with others and help with idea retention.
  4. Tribal knowledge sharing: Capture new lessons learned and best practices in a simple format that others can learn from and better remember.

Marketing Teams

  1. Product marketing: Record custom videos to educate your customer-facing teams on new product, positioning and pricing updates.
  2. Competitive intelligence: Keep your team up to date on new competitive intel with videos that clearly explain updates and how they compare to your own offerings.
  3. Marketing communications: Using video messages to update teams on announcements and external comms to ensure they have all the key context.
  4. Creative design: Use short videos to solicit or provide feedback on product design, website design, and other creative assets.
  5. Content marketing: Before you launch a new content asset, record a video to educate your internal teams on why it’s so amazing and how they can help to promote.
  6. Video blogging: Spice up your blog posts and improve SEO by recording and embedding custom videos to complement your text-based posts.
  7. Digital marketing: Use screen capture videos to share website updates with internal teams in a way that enables you to explain both the what and the why.
  8. Event marketing: Use the power of personal video to improve outreach to potential partners, sponsors, speakers, and attendees for your upcoming events.

Press and Analyst Relations

  1. Pitching stories to reporters: Stand out with reporters by pitching new story ideas in a way that introduces yourself and creates a more personal connection.
  2. Spicing up your awards submission: Record a short video to share, in your own words, why you should win and include the link in the ‘additional information’ section.
  3. The analyst briefing recap: Record a short summary video following analyst briefings to summarize your key points and encourage them to share with other analysts.

Sales Professionals

  1. A warmer cold outreach: Use webcam or screen capture videos as a better way to reach out to cold prospects and to explain exactly how you can help their business.
  2. Customized product walkthroughs: Don’t be shy! Press record and capture a short product demo to get your prospects eager to hop on a live phone call.
  3. Pre-meeting connect: Reduce meeting cancellation rates by sending a video message before your meeting to verify the details and build a more human connection.
  4. Post-meeting recap: Following a customer phone call or meeting, record a short video to summarize key points and next steps that they can easily forward to other colleagues.
  5. Sales proposal walkthrough: Ensure all the final decision makers understand your value by recording a short video walkthrough of your sales quote or proposal.
  6. Up your email signature game: Record a short video to introduce yourself and your role, and add it to your email signature with a hyperlinked thumbnail image.
  7. Sales tool training and FAQs: Help your sales reps better understand how to use sales tools with custom walkthrough videos for common processes.
  8. Sales coaching: When coaching sales reps on new tips or ideas, record a quick video to show them exactly what you’re talking about and how to walk the talk.

Customer Experience Teams

  1. Welcoming new customers: Put a face to your name by welcoming new customers with a personal video message from their account manager, support rep, or your execs.
  2. A better customer onboarding experience: Onboard new customers with personalized tutorials and walkthroughs that show exactly how they can use your solution.
  3. Custom demos for new features: Quickly record a screen capture video to summarize new product features and how they can help a specific client.
  4. Faster, better customer support: Stop sending text-based instructions and screen captures, start using video to show exactly how to solve an issue.
  5. Ongoing customer communications: Update your customers on company news and product updates with video messages that stand out and get noticed.
  6. Congratulate your customer: Share a video to celebrate a customer’s special moment or milestone.

Product Development Teams

  1. Project management: Share video messages to clearly summarize project plans and to keep teammates aligned on key deliverables.
  2. Design and UX reviews: Use custom screen capture videos to solicit or provide feedback on user experience design updates.
  3. Product feedback solicitation: Encourage other teams and customers to provide product feedback via custom videos that clearly show, and explain, their perspective.
  4. Quality assurance: Record short videos when submitting a bug report to show exactly how to reproduce an issue and what results you are seeing.

IT and Help Desk Teams

  1. Here, let me show you: Show employees exactly how to resolve common issues with a custom screen recording that leaves no room for misinterpretation.
  2. Application training and FAQs: Help employees learn how to use different applications and tools on their own time with custom, on-demand walk-through videos.

HR and Talent Development

  1. A better hiring experience: Use custom video messages to connect with prospective hires before and after the interview process to add that personal touch.
  2. Welcoming new hires aboard: Make new employees feel like a part of the team by having teammates and execs welcome them with personal video messages.
  3. Employee onboarding and FAQs: Compile a sample process for hiring managers, or a library of short, on-demand videos that address key onboarding topics for new employees and common FAQs.
  4. HR how-to videos for employees: Use custom videos to show employees how to update their benefits, navigate the org chart or use other HR-related applications.

Finance, Legal and Business Ops

  1. Budget report reviews: Cut down on time spent in fact-to-face meetings by using video messages to recap and clearly explain budget reports.
  2. How-to videos for employees: Use screen capture videos to show employees precisely how to submit expenses or invoices to save everyone valuable time.
  3. Contract reviews: When reviewing a contract internally or with third parties, try a custom video to talk through any questions or feedback to ensure your concerns are clear.

Employee and Executive Communications

  1. Team updates and communications: Make your team updates more personal and engaging with personal videos that recap performance and team priorities.
  2. Monthly or quarterly business updates: Deliver your company performance updates in a more engaging and memorable way than the same old emails and slides.
  3. On-demand Town Halls: Hit record and capture your Town Hall meetings, company stand-ups, and other important meetings to share with remote employees.

Industry-Specific Use-Cases

  1. Education: Use short video messages to clearly explain new assignments and equip students to capture presentations that can be watched easily on-demand.
  2. Real Estate agents: Easily record and share quick video tours to help your clients learn more about properties before making the trip onsite.
  3. Insurance agents: Send personal video invitations to key prospective clients to drive them to join information sessions or follow-up on next steps.
  4. Legal and Professional Services: Improve communications with key clients by sharing video messages to explain complex topics and share new ideas.
  5. Construction and Property Management: Record short videos to share updates on project status or to highlight potential issues or concerns.

If you’ve started to use personal video messaging yourself, please add a short comment below to share how you’re using it today and any tips you have for other potential users. We’d love to see this list grow to 100 ways!

The post 50 Ways to Use Video Messaging to Make Business Personal Again appeared first on Vidyard.



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Welcome to the Business-to-Human (B2H) Movement

This post was originally published on Upshot.

Businesses don’t care about your content. They don’t read your blog, click on your ads, or buy your products or services. People do.

People are emotion-generating machines. Of course, we want to do well at our jobs, get promoted—but we also want to be entertained. We want to laugh and enjoy time with our friends and family. Most of all, we want a sense of community. That’s what modern B2B marketing lacks: the human factor.

Enter brand, or I should say: re-enter brand.

In the 1.0 marketing world of the 1990s, brand was king. VPs of marketing would throw logos on pens and host company tradeshows, while sales teams basically cannibalized growth. This was the “get a badge and move into ACME CORP headquarters and sell to that one customer for the rest of your life” era.

People are emotion-generating machines. What emotion does your #brand convey? @akennada @vidyard (Tweet this!)

Then came marketing automation in the early 2000s. Every online article and discussion was centered on the rise of the CMO and the use of automation as a means of scaling growth through technology. This allowed a single marketer to reach hundreds of thousands of people through email, and the power shift of growth moved from sales to marketing. But in this transfer, brand was pushed out almost completely.

Even today, if you search for B2B marketing best practices, 9 out of 10 articles are on demand gen, account based marketing (ABM), and these traditionally “growth-oriented practices” that were crystalized during that web 2.0 period.

What’s happened, however, is we’re all onto the trick, and we’re tired of getting emails. If you’re like me, you spend the first hour or so of every day deleting emails that are obviously sent via some type of marketing automation platform. Consumers—and I use that word deliberately—are tired of being automated.

Why? Because automation, in the traditional sense, lacks community. It lacks empathy. Customers want someone to listen to them and care about their unique struggles—not make broad assumptions based on their LinkedIn job title. They want value to be the driver of the conversation because value builds trust.

The demand gen answer to this problem is personalization at scale (ABM), but what it comes down to is how do we change the way the market thinks about our logos, executive team, and core value proposition? How do we move away from the “vendor” title and become a thought partner who’s genuinely there to help?

#B2B consumers are tired of being automated. They want value. They want #B2H @akennada @vidyard (Tweet this!)

Welcome to marketing 3.0: the rise of B2H (business-to-human). At Gainsight, for example, our goal is to celebrate the human behind the job title. As marketers, our role is to anchor around the person, the profession, and make them heroes.

The B2C world knows this. They have to, after all, because they’re selling to individuals, not “businesses.” But we’re all consumers—and that’s no different in B2B. Recently, however, we’ve seen forward-thinking B2B companies embracing this shift and recognizing that marketing efforts must be built around the human.

To put B2H in practice, let’s look at David McClelland’s Human Motivation Theory (also known as Three Needs Theory), define the three main motivators for human behavior, and lay out some real-world use cases for B2H.

3 Principles of B2H: McClelland’s Human Motivation Theory

In 1961, Harvard psychologist David McClelland extended Abraham Maslow’s research into human motivation and released the seminal book “The Achieving Society.” In which, he identified three universal motivating drivers: a need for achievement, a need for affiliation, and a need for power. B2H marketing is structured around helping consumers fulfil their desires by satisfying each of these motivators.

  1. Need for Achievement

We all want to be good at what we do. It gives us a sense of purpose and reinforces our worth, our value, but so much of B2B marketing is product-centric, which ignores this very crucial motivation.

However, if we shift our marketing to add value to our potential customers by becoming a thought partner who offers content and advice that equips them to work smarter and shine in their role, then, by osmosis, those feeling of achievement are intimately linked with our brand.

Current best practices focus on taking a challenger position against competition—to show how we’re better than Microsoft or Salesforce or whomever—but this tactic, while beneficial in sales conversations, fails to address the need for individual achievement.

When we started Gainsight, our market was so new that we couldn’t just build technology and products to go sell; we had to first help people define their strategy and processes and discover how Customer Success would fit within their organization. Without that investment in the achievement of our customers, we wouldn’t have been able to create demand for our product, plain and simple. We had to seed the market with knowledge to help individuals within companies succeed in order to spur our own growth.

  1. Need for Affiliation/Community

For many of us, we are the only one at our company who does what we do. This can make us feel isolated, alone. We need a community, and that’s where B2H comes in.

To build a community, at Gainsight we took a page from the marketing 1.0 playbook: live events. There’s a cathartic sense of relief when we meet others who are facing the same challenges we are. We can empathize and share tactics and help each other.

#Brand vs #automation. It’s not an either/or choice. @akennada @vidyard (Tweet this!)

Our events are all about facilitating the discussion of best practices to arm our customers with the knowledge to make them the hero of their organization, but rather than pushing that information down from the top, we enable the conversation through the community. We aren’t the ones on stage speaking; we are the stage.

However, you don’t want the community to dissolve once the lights come up and the last speaker leaves. This is where video can help. In addition to recording event sessions, we also interview the speakers and attendees, get a sense of the buzz in the hallways and the small intimate places to capture the value of the community. By placing all of this content on a microsite, using Vidyard, our conversations can continue after the lights have come on and the stage is empty.

  1. Need for Power

In today’s business world, power comes in the form of thought leadership. Sharing expertise and knowledge isn’t just beneficial for those individuals consuming the thought-leadership content, it also meets a third need for the person sharing. It builds their authority.

If we structure our initiatives around achievement and community properly, we create a platform for our customers to increase their authority. By investing in the success of the individuals within the community, these experts—these heroes—we have helped rise up can then become our most vocal champions. Their strength comes from the value created through B2H.

Final Thoughts

As we move into this new era of B2H, it’s easy to bring with us the trappings of B2B: an over-reliance on automation for the sake of scale; our one-sided conversations about product features; and the attitude that we’re selling to businesses, not consumers. But if we shift our focus to the human, to doing everything within our power to help them succeed, the rest will come naturally. Because we—marketers—are humans, too, and in B2H, we’re allowed once again to act like it.

 

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Friday, July 14, 2017

A Novice’s Guide to Understanding the Benefits of SEO for Businesses

I have a small website for my garage business; will SEO be helpful for me?

Will SEO help my e-commerce startup?

I have just outsourced SEO for my website, will I get more leads?

These are some of the questions that cross the minds of newbies going for SEO. To understand how you can benefit from SEO, you’ll have to learn the basics of SEO first & then see how a persisting SEO campaign can boost your business.

So What Is SEO?

It stands for Search Engine Optimization and refers to the techniques of bringing your website on the front page of various Search Engines e.g. Google, Bing, Yahoo, etc.
These techniques aim at increasing the quality and volume of traffic to your website with the help of organic search engine results.

Traffic Quality

Although you would love to have any type of visitors (except hackers though) to your site, however, if you are running a garage business and the Google is driving traffic for garbage business, will it be of any use? No. The quality of traffic refers to visitors that are relevant to your website offerings and may lead to some fruitful results.

Volume of Traffic

Once you have the right kind of visitors coming from the search engine, the more the traffic, the better it is.

Organic Traffic

Traffic to your website from inorganic means may give a temporary spike in business, but in the long term, only the organic traffic is the way forward as you won’t have to pay for it.

How SEO Benefits Your Business?

Business owners and managers are constantly looking for ways to enhance their businesses. When the traditional ways of doing business are increasingly becoming costly, the digital ways are cheaper and tend to be more efficient as well.

While having a website is the first step in online business, the sustainability and growth come from persistent SEO campaigns. The benefits of such campaigns are realized in the due course of time. Let’s take a look at some of the advantages:

Increased Traffic:

When your website appears in the top position on search engines, it starts to get a lot of clicks, and this shows in the form of increased traffic. With SEO, the site has keywords that are frequently used by the visitors to find information on the internet or making purchases as well.

Enhanced Usability

All SEO efforts are aimed at making it easier for the website crawlers to navigate and index a website, but simultaneously these efforts make the website more user-friendly as well.

The various on-page efforts which add search-friendly keywords to the site also improve the navigation structure of different inner pages as well. If these efforts make it easy for the search engines to rank your site, they also make it easy to find relevant information on the site.

Increased Branding

It is critical for you that your website can be easily recalled by the relevant users while they are looking for information or buying a product related to you. This easy recall is the result of sustained efforts of SEO to rank the website on the first page of the various search engines.

This branding is done by the search engine optimization and is very much needed in any business. Remember how we tend to trust results that pop up in the top? When more and more pages of your website rank high in the search engine results page the better will be the brand building for your site.

More Effective

When it comes to marketing, there are various channels for it. But these different channels have their costs-benefits. From TV ads to posters to direct marketing, all are focused towards promoting businesses. But the effectiveness of these ways varies. When it comes to SEO, it is de facto the most cost-effective marketing method as it directly targets the visitors looking for the products and services.

SEO is the best inbound strategy as it enhances the experiences of the visitors coming to the website seeking goods and services. The traffic coming to the site as a result of your SEO efforts is more qualified than other marketing methods making it more cost effective than the others.

Round The Clock Marketing

One of the biggest benefits of the search engine optimization is that your site opens a 24*7 marketing channel. Your optimized site ranks on the result page not just for a single day but every day and throughout the year and until you want.

Better ROI

With SEO, you can be assured of the results that can be tracked for relevance and ROI. You can track the improvement in rankings, traffic, and conversions. The analytics provides even the granular information about the geography and the profile of the visitors who have visited the site. In the case of the e-commerce sites, you can track the path that the customers have taken to complete the sale. You can even identify the keywords your customers have chosen to reach the desired product or the service offered. If you have no e-commerce site, you can monitor the form fill-outs and the other things to calculate the effectiveness of the SEO campaign.

Higher SERP Means More Leads & More Business

With essential search engine optimization, higher ranking positions result in more productive results. It means more customers coming from the contact forms, more likes for the information provided by you or increase in the followers for your brand. All in all, it results in more business for you through the organic ways.

In The End

To avail the benefits of SEO, you must:

-Have a visitor friendly website that users find easy to navigate
-Have compelling content which is informative and complete.
-Optimize the website for robots and crawlers for improved indexing and navigation.
-Believe in persistence, as SEO brings in long term benefits than short-term fixes.

Original post: A Novice’s Guide to Understanding the Benefits of SEO for Businesses



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The Rise Of The Video-Enabled Agency

Over the past decade, the agency world has undergone a significant transformation due to the increase in software technologies available to clients. This movement, largely driven by marketing automation technologies, has resulted in marketing organizations relying quite heavily on agency partners to guide their strategy. More than ever, agencies are in a position of strength to deliver value to clients and prove the impact they are having on marketing success with the arsenal of technologies at their disposal.

If your team is looking for the next technology wave to ride – it’s video. Why? Because while in-the-know marketers understand that  video is the most engaging content type in both our personal and professional lives, many marketing organizations are still learning about the business value that lies behind the play button. In order to future-proofed your business, it is up to you as an agency partner to learn the fundamentals of what a meaningful video strategy is, the value that it can bring your clients, and how to get started.

Sound daunting? It doesn’t have to be! Fear not – we know a thing or two about adding value with video, and our agency partners have shared how they’re using video to drive real results for their clients.

“Today, your prospects are watching videos all day. 2017 is the year of video and social! 50% of your content in 2017 shouldn’t be text, it should be video.” – Brian Halligan, CEO HubSpot, INBOUND 2016

What does it mean to be a ‘video enabled’ agency?

In a perfect world, where time and resources were not constrained, a video enabled agency is an organization that does the following:

1. Uses video throughout their own business practices

2. Uses video as a key ingredient for client’s marketing success

3. Uses video as a way to develop new service offerings

Although this may be a lot to take in, there is a significant opportunity ahead for agencies who wish to become truly video enabled. At the end of the day, your clients are going to start investing more in video – if they haven’t already.  The reality is, prospects would rather watch than read. Video creates an unparalleled connection, and is able to convey complex ideas in a matter of seconds where text simply cannot.

If you, or any of your team members are looking for a way to ride this wave, and not get caught in the undertow, check out the Vidyard Partner Program! We have spent the past six years working with businesses around the world to build and measure their video strategies, and are so excited to have agency partners join our mission to power more video enabled organizations.

Hear from an agency that is well on their way to becoming fully video enabled, Media One Creative, as they discuss their experiences to date through the Vidyard Partner Program:

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Thursday, July 13, 2017

Best-in-Class Benchmarks from Ascend2 and Vidyard

Benchmarks are an important part of any industry. Computer products like graphics cards are judged against industry benchmarks to see how they rank against their competitors. In the automotive industry, cars are pitted against one another in a myriad of ways, from safety standards, to how fast a car can go from zero to sixty. Benchmarks help us define success and understand how we’re doing, either against our competitors, or against our industry as a whole.

But for marketing, especially content marketing, benchmarks aren’t always easy to come by. And statistics on distributing content? Even more nebulous. That’s why we’re so excited about this new research from Ascend2, Best-in-Class Benchmarks Creating and Sharing Content. Check out this video to learn why!

Pretty cool, right? It’s not everyday you get to hear from over 80 best-in-class businesses on how they’re developing content, their strategic goals, and what distribution channels they find most effective. So let’s break this report down a bit further:

The Most Important Objectives

What’s the most interesting thing about best-in-class businesses? Their goals and day-to-day struggles usually aren’t too far off from what every business is working towards. And for this survey, the top result wasn’t too surprising. 50% of best-in-class businesses report increasing sales revenue as their top objective.

Ascend2 Report Graph 1

Coming in second and third by a hair were improving rankings in search engines, and increasing brand awareness. Sound like familiar goals? Marketing and sales objectives are aligning more than ever, and if you want your business to ascend to best-in-class success, it’s worth keeping in mind.

The Most Important Content Types

So if best-in-class businesses are pushing for sales revenue and brand awareness as some of their top goals, what content types are they using to find success? We were excited to find that over 60% of top-tier companies consider video and motion graphics to be the most effective content type for achieving business objectives:

Ascend2 Report Graph 2

Other content in the top-5 included research reports and webinars. What this data shows is something we’ve known for quite some time now – best-in-class businesses turn to compelling, engaging content to achieve their business goals. And the most compelling call-to-action on the web is the play button!

Benchmarks for Success

Want to see the other 6 benchmarks Ascend2 uncovered in their research? Download your copy of Best-in-Class Benchmarks Creating and Sharing Content and discover the most effective types of marketing content, the gaps between objectives and metrics, and more!

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