This link has been bookmarked by 189 people . It was first bookmarked on 22 Nov 2007, by Marco Díaz Calleja.
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03 Dec 09
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The Secret Strategies Behind Many “Viral” Videos
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26 Nov 09
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15 Nov 09
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05 Nov 09
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23 Oct 09
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17 Jul 09
nocatsterUpdate: Dan has a follow up to this post, here. This guest post was written by Dan Ackerman Greenberg, co-founder of viral ...
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15 Apr 09
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03 Apr 09
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16 Mar 09
Heinz WittenbrinkFaustregeln für die Produktion viraler Videos: "Over the past year, I have run clandestine marketing campaigns meant to ensure that promotional videos become truly viral, as these examples have become in the extreme. In this post, I will share some of the
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05 Mar 09
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23 Feb 09
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06 Feb 09
Elias SkenderidisHow to make a video viral...Strategy and tips for successsful viral videos
viral video strategy tips youtube advertising media socialmedia
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10 Nov 08
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Recently, I’ve noticed a trend towards titling videos with the phrases “exclusive,” “behind the scenes,” and “leaked video.”
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If we have multiple videos, we post all of them at once.
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04 Nov 08
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I don’t care how “viral” you think your video is; no one is going to find it and no one is going to watch it.
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In other words, not all videos go viral organically – there is a method to the madness.
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But good content is not necessary to get 100,000 views if you follow these strategies.
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Don’t get me wrong: the content is what will drive visitors back to a site. So a video must have a decent concept, but one shouldn’t agonize over determining the best “viral” video possible
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Generally, a concept should not be forced because it fits a brand. Rather, a brand should be fit into a great concept.
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The core concept of video marketing on YouTube is to harness the power of the site’s traffic. Here’s the idea: something like 80 million videos are watched each day on YouTube, and a significant number of those views come from people clicking the “Videos” tab at the top.
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Daily Most Viewed
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It seems obvious, but people see hundreds of videos on YouTube, and the title and thumbnail are an easy way for video publishers to actively persuade someone to click on a video.
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As we edit our videos, we make sure that the frame at the very middle is interesting. It’s no surprise that videos with thumbnails of half naked women get hundreds of thousands of views.
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he thumbnail should be clear (suggesting high video quality) and ideally it should have a face or at least a person in it.
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Everyone loves a good, heated discussion in the comments section - especially if the comments are related to a brand/startup.
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We can’t let one user’s negativity taint everyone else’s opinions.
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But a heated comment thread (done well) will engage viewers and will drive traffic back to our sites.
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This is the wrong way to think about YouTube marketing. If we have multiple videos, we post all of them at once. If someone sees our first video and is so intrigued that they want to watch more, why would we make them wait until we post the next one? We give them everything up front.
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These days, achieving true virality takes serious creativity, some luck, and a lot of hard work. So, my advice: fire your PR firm and do it yourself.
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24 Oct 08
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23 Oct 08
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The Secret Strategies Behind Many “Viral” Videos
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This guest post was written by Dan Ackerman Greenberg
, co-founder of viral video marketing company The Comotion Group
and lead TA for the Stanford Facebook Class
. Dan will graduate from the Stanford Management Science & Engineering Masters program in June. - 1 more annotations...
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content is key
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create some sort of controversy in the comments section below the video
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we’ve worked on 80-90 videos and we’ve seen overwhelming success
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The core concept of video marketing on YouTube is to harness the power of the site’s traffic. Here’s the idea: something like 80 million videos are watched each day on YouTube, and a significant number of those views come from people clicking the “Videos” tab at the top. The goal is to get a video on that Videos page, which lists the Daily Most Viewed videos.
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If we succeed, the video will no longer be a single needle in the haystack of 10,000 new videos per day. It will be one of the twenty videos on the Most Viewed page, which means that we can grab 1/20th
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licks on that page! And the higher up on the page our video is, the more views we are going to get.
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If we have multiple videos, we post all of them at once
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If someone sees our first video and is so intrigued that they want to watch more, why would we make them wait until we post the next one?
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“How the hell did that video get so many views?”
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help market a series of viral clips they had created in advance of a blockbuster
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Needless to say, the studio had invested a significant amount of money in creating the videos but every time they put them online, they couldn’t get more than a few thousand views.
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YouTube allows you to tag your videos with keywords that make your videos show up in relevant searches.
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Instead, we’ve discovered that you can use tags to control the videos that show up in the Related Videos box.
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In other words, not all videos go viral organically – there is a method to the madness.
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I’ve noticed a trend towards titling videos with the phrases “exclusive,” “behind the scenes,” and “leaked video.”
- 12 more annotations...
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the thumbnail should be clear (suggesting high video quality)
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Everyone loves a good, heated discussion in the comments section
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delete comments – if someone is saying our video (or your startup) sucks
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one comment for every thousand views
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the wrong way to think about YouTube marketing
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all of them at once
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why would we make them wait
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we delete our second video then re-upload it. Now we have another 48-hour window
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Rinse and repeat
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YouTube allows you to tag your videos with keywords that make your videos show up in relevant searches.
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use tags to control the videos that show up in the Related Videos box.
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the long tail of a video
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my job: to get at least 100,000 people to watch my clients’ “viral” videos.
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ur clients give us videos and we make them go viral
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The videos were 10-20 seconds each,
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80 million videos are watched each day on YouTube
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We choose three or four unique tags and use only these tags for all of the videos we post
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unique tags, tags that are not used by any other YouTube videos
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full control over the videos that show up as “Related Videos.
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The Secret Strategies Behind Many “Viral” Videos
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Content is NOT King
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good content is not necessary to get 100,000 views if you follow these strategies.
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a brand should be fit into a great concept
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Here are some guidelines we follow:
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Make it short
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Design for remixing
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Don’t make an outright ad
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Make it shocking
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Use fake headlines
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Appeal to sex
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19 Oct 08
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15 Oct 08
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13 Oct 08
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- Blogs: We reach out to individuals who run relevant blogs and actually pay them to post our embedded videos. Sounds a little bit like cheating/PayPerPost, but it’s effective and it’s not against any rules.
- Forums: We start new threads and embed our videos. Sometimes, this means kickstarting the conversations by setting up multiple accounts on each forum and posting back and forth between a few different users. Yes, it’s tedious and time-consuming, but if we get enough people working on it, it can have a tremendous effect.
- MySpace: Plenty of users allow you to embed YouTube videos right in the comments section of their MySpace pages. We take advantage of this.
- Facebook: Share, share, share. We’ve taken Dave McClure’s advice and built a sizeable presence on Facebook, so sharing a video with our entire friends list can have a real impact. Other ideas include creating an event that announces the video launch and inviting friends, writing a note and tagging friends, or posting the video on Facebook Video with a link back to the original YouTube video.
- Email lists: Send the video to an email list. Depending on the size of the list (and the recipients’ willingness to receive links to YouTube videos), this can be a very effective strategy.
- Friends: Make sure everyone we know watches the video and try to get them to email it out to their friends, or at least share it on Facebook.
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one of which is grabbed from the exact middle of the video
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11 Oct 08
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- Blogs: We reach out to individuals who run relevant blogs and actually pay them to post our embedded videos. Sounds a little bit like cheating/PayPerPost, but it’s effective and it’s not against any rules.
- Forums: We start new threads and embed our videos. Sometimes, this means kickstarting the conversations by setting up multiple accounts on each forum and posting back and forth between a few different users. Yes, it’s tedious and time-consuming, but if we get enough people working on it, it can have a tremendous effect.
- MySpace: Plenty of users allow you to embed YouTube videos right in the comments section of their MySpace pages. We take advantage of this.
- Facebook: Share, share, share. We’ve taken Dave McClure’s advice and built a sizeable presence on Facebook, so sharing a video with our entire friends list can have a real impact. Other ideas include creating an event that announces the video launch and inviting friends, writing a note and tagging friends, or posting the video on Facebook Video with a link back to the original YouTube video.
- Email lists: Send the video to an email list. Depending on the size of the list (and the recipients’ willingness to receive links to YouTube videos), this can be a very effective strategy.
- Friends: Make sure everyone we know watches the video and try to get them to email it out to their friends, or at least share it on Facebook.
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one of which is grabbed from the exact middle of the video
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08 Oct 08
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19 Sep 08
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10 Sep 08
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04 Sep 08
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26 Aug 08
Dave DuarteHave you ever watched a video with 100,000 views on YouTube and thought to yourself: “How the hell did that video get so many views?” Chances are pretty good that this didn’t happen naturally, but rather that some company worked hard to make it happen.
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11 Aug 08
Mark DavidsonOver the past year, I have run clandestine marketing campaigns meant to ensure that promotional videos become truly viral, as these examples have become in the extreme. In this post, I will share some of the techniques I use to do my job: to get at least
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06 Aug 08
Stephan MillerThe Wild West days of Lonely Girl and Ask A Ninja are over. You simply can’t expect to post great videos on YouTube and have them go viral on their own, even if you think you have the best videos ever. These days, achieving true virality takes serious cre
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05 Aug 08
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Doug PetersonThe Secret Strategies Behind Many “Viral” Videos
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17 Jul 08
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19 Jun 08
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03 Jun 08
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this didn’t happen naturally,
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02 Jun 08
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22 May 08
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08 Jan 08
M JHave you ever watched a video with 100,000 views on YouTube and thought to yourself: “How the hell did that video get so many views?” Chances are pretty good that this didn’t happen naturally, but rather that some company worked hard to make it happ
video viral marketing youtube advertising tips videos diigoimportapi
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07 Jan 08
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01 Jan 08
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31 Dec 07
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accounts on each forum and posting back and forth between a few different users. Yes, it’s tedio
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30 Dec 07
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22 Dec 07
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21 Dec 07
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18 Dec 07
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14 Dec 07
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09 Dec 07
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- Blogs: We reach out to individuals who run relevant blogs and actually pay them to post our embedded videos. Sounds a little bit like cheating/PayPerPost, but it’s effective and it’s not against any rules.
- Forums: We start new threads and embed our videos. Sometimes, this means kickstarting the conversations by setting up multiple accounts on each forum and posting back and forth between a few different users. Yes, it’s tedious and time-consuming, but if we get enough people working on it, it can have a tremendous effect.
- MySpace: Plenty of users allow you to embed YouTube videos right in the comments section of their MySpace pages. We take advantage of this.
- Facebook: Share, share, share. We’ve taken Dave McClure’s advice and built a sizeable presence on Facebook, so sharing a video with our entire friends list can have a real impact. Other ideas include creating an event that announces the video launch and inviting friends, writing a note and tagging friends, or posting the video on Facebook Video with a link back to the original YouTube video.
- Email lists: Send the video to an email list. Depending on the size of the list (and the recipients’ willingness to receive links to YouTube videos), this can be a very effective strategy.
- Friends: Make sure everyone we know watches the video and try to get them to email it out to their friends, or at least share it on Facebook.
-
As we edit our videos, we make sure that the frame at the very middle is interesting. It’s no surprise that videos with thumbnails of half naked women get hundreds of thousands of views. Not to say that this is the best strategy, but you get the idea. Two rules of thumb: the thumbnail should be clear (suggesting high video quality) and ideally it should have a face or at least a person in it.
- 4 more annotations...
-
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But a heated comment thread (done well) will engage viewers and will drive traffic back to our sites.
-
If we have multiple videos, we post all of them at once. If someone sees our first video and is so intrigued that they want to watch more, why would we make them wait until we post the next one?
-
Once our first video is done, we delete our second video then re-upload it. Now we have another 48-hour window to push it to the Most Viewed page. Rinse and repeat.
-
We choose three or four unique tags and use only these tags for all of the videos we post. I’m not talking about obscure tags; I’m talking about unique tags, tags that are not used by any other YouTube videos. Done correctly, this will allow us to have full control over the videos that show up as “Related Videos.”
When views start trailing off after a few days to a week, it’s time to add some more generic tags, tags that draw out the long tail of a video as it starts to appear in search results on YouTube and Google.
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06 Dec 07
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05 Dec 07
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04 Dec 07
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03 Dec 07
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02 Dec 07
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01 Dec 07
Michel BauwensOver the past year, I have run clandestine marketing campaigns meant to ensure that promotional videos become truly viral
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Fabian HerbelEin Profi plaudert aus dem Nähkästchen
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30 Nov 07
Onyx Godyou know what's viral too? This website:
Making dividends the easy way - http://largeamountofdough.blogspot.comviral marketing video youtube advertising advice list videos web media web2.0 movies article blog online blogging blogs optimization business popular buzz reference community remix cool resources creativity culture Search design secret digg SEO facebook s
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28 Nov 07
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The Secret Strategies Behind Many “Viral” Videos
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The core concept of video marketing on YouTube is to harness the power of the site’s traffic. Here’s the idea: something like 80 million videos are watched each day on YouTube, and a significant number of those views come from people clicking the “Videos” tab at the top. The goal is to get a video on that Videos page, which lists the Daily Most Viewed videos.
- 18 more annotations...
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So how do we get the first 50,000 views we need to get our videos onto the Most Viewed list?
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Blogs: We reach out to individuals who run relevant blogs and actually pay them to post our embedded videos.
-
We start new threads and embed our videos. Sometimes, this means kickstarting the conversations by setting up multiple accounts on each forum and posting back and forth between a few different users. Yes, it’s tedious and time-consuming, but if we get enough people working on it, it can have a tremendous effect.
-
Plenty of users allow you to embed YouTube videos right in the comments section of their MySpace pages. We take advantage of this.
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Share, share, share.
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Send the video to an email list.
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Each video has a shelf life of 48 hours before it’s moved from the Daily Most Viewed list to the Weekly Most Viewed list, so it’s important that this happens quickly. As I mentioned before, when done right, this is a tremendously successful strategy.
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It seems obvious, but people see hundreds of videos on YouTube, and the title and thumbnail are an easy way for video publishers to actively persuade someone to click on a video. Titles can be changed a limitless number of times, so we sometimes have a catchy (and somewhat misleading) title for the first few days, then later switch to something more relevant to the brand. Recently, I’ve noticed a trend towards titling videos with the phrases “exclusive,” “behind the scenes,” and “leaked video.”
-
If a video is sitting on the Most Viewed page with nineteen other videos, a compelling video thumbnail is the single best strategy to maximize the number of clicks the video gets.
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It’s no surprise that videos with thumbnails of half naked women get hundreds of thousands of views. Not to say that this is the best strategy, but you get the idea. Two rules of thumb: the thumbnail should be clear (suggesting high video quality) and ideally it should have a face or at least a person in it.
-
Every power user on YouTube has a number of different accounts. So do we. A great way to maximize the number of people who watch our videos is to create some sort of controversy in the comments section below the video. We get a few people in our office to log in throughout the day and post heated comments back and forth (you can definitely have a lot of fun with this). Everyone loves a good, heated discussion in the comments section - especially if the comments are related to a brand/startup.
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This is the wrong way to think about YouTube marketing. If we have multiple videos, we post all of them at once. If someone sees our first video and is so intrigued that they want to watch more, why would we make them wait until we post the next one? We give them everything up front. If a user wants to watch all five of our videos right now, there’s a much better chance that we’ll be able to persuade them to click through to our website. We don’t make them wait after seeing the first video, because they’re never going to see the next four.
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Once our first video is done, we delete our second video then re-upload it. Now we have another 48-hour window to push it to the Most Viewed page. Rinse and repeat. Using this strategy, we give our most interested viewers the chance to fully engage with a campaign without compromising the opportunity to individually release and market each consecutive video.
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This is one of my favorite strategies and one that I think we invented. YouTube allows you to tag your videos with keywords that make your videos show up in relevant searches. For the first week that our video is online, we don’t use keyword tags to optimize the video for searches on YouTube. Instead, we’ve discovered that you can use tags to control the videos that show up in the Related Videos box.
-
So how do we strategically tag? We choose three or four unique tags and use only these tags for all of the videos we post. I’m not talking about obscure tags; I’m talking about unique tags, tags that are not used by any other YouTube videos. Done correctly, this will allow us to have full control over the videos that show up as “Related Videos.”
-
When views start trailing off after a few days to a week, it’s time to add some more generic tags, tags that draw out the long tail of a video as it starts to appear in search results on YouTube and Google.
-
You simply can’t expect to post great videos on YouTube and have them go viral on their own, even if you think you have the best videos ever.
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27 Nov 07
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Julia LesageMaker of viral videos reveals his strategy, with many insights into how to manipulate web viewership and ranking; clever and disturbing
business culture design digital film video tips tech tagging statistics search multimedia folksonomy space politicaleconomy Internet
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Have you ever watched a video with 100,000 views on YouTube and thought to yourself: “How the hell did that video get so many views?†Chances are pretty good that this didn’t happen naturally, but rather that some company worked hard to make it happen – some company like mine.
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