Webinar: Boosting Engagement with Video
Thursday, July 9th, 2009In this webinar, Ross McNab discusses the challenges facing advertisers and the different video techniques that can be used to increase brand engagement. Click here to begin the webinar or read the entertaining synopsis below.
It may have been easier to measure brand impact in the past when there were few media channels and people spent time together having meals together, waiting together for Dallas to come on and then sitting in front of a TV for hours – but this is not the eighties!
We grew up and two devices came along. First, Microwave Ovens. I was out with friends, I was saying ‘leave it in microwave.’ Mother was going crazy – we don’t sit together to eat anymore. This fuelled the fast food culture, eating on the fly…
Second Video recorders came along. ‘Can you video this and I’ll watch it when I get back?’ Now we weren’t sitting together watching TV anymore. And we were fast-forwarding the adverts.
So where are we now? Internet – instant this, instant that. Need information, fast. Search information, find information – even on the iPhone I can be sitting in a cab, and see an advert which prompts me to search immediately. I’m getting entertainment content all over. Or I’m downloading content on Apple TV, stripping out ads on Tivo, or watching TV shows on my iPhone - our TV viewing has become fragmented.
It’s a busy world and so much is fighting for our attention. We are in the instant digital world. It’s fast-paced learning. Time is now even more precious. Now in this fragmented world it is about grabbing a few moments of my time.
We have to learn to build brand moments.
I believe you can build brand in a digital world and here’s why. Branding is about changing perceptions. People learn by repetition and more so when linked to an emotional connection. Teachers don’t just talk or show videos, they get you to write things down, get you to talk about it in groups – they get you involved, which strikes deeper connections. That is what helps you remember.
Basic psychology suggests the more senses involved, the more you are likely to remember things. A picture says a thousand words; a moving picture with sounds says millions. That is why TV and video work – they develop stories that strike an emotional connections – linked to a person or event – and that is when the change starts to happen. Traditional media has two senses involved – TV: sight and sound. Print: sight and touch. Digital connects all three – sight, sound AND touch. And none has demonstrated ths more effectively than rich media.,,,
Ross McNab | Director of Business Development
Want to hear more? Click here to view the full webinar.






