16 May 2024 World leisure: news, training & property
 
 
HOME
JOBS
NEWS
FEATURES
PRODUCTS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION
PRINT SUBSCRIPTION
ADVERTISE
CONTACT US
Sign up for FREE ezine

SELECTED ISSUE
Health Club Management
2015 issue 3

View issue contents

Leisure Management - A picture speaks 1,000 words

Marketing

A picture speaks 1,000 words


Video can ignite your social media, but you need to know how to use this medium to its best effect. Manraaj Sunner offers his practical advice on how to maximise its impact

Video marketing all photos: www.shutterstock.com
Will your video be funny, shocking, quirky? Decide what reaction you want all photos: www.shutterstock.com
YouTube has a huge global audience, with over 4bn video views a day all photos: www.shutterstock.com

Brands and businesses are using video, but few are realising its true value as the ignition point – the spark – of a targeted social media marketing campaign. Likewise, many brands and companies are embracing social media, but not getting as much out of the experience as they could.

With a videocentric approach, video serves as the centre of conversation from which layers of additional conversation evolve across social networking channels, blogs and forums – often extending into traditional publications and beyond.

This conversation goes from being about the video, to being about the brand or business behind the video, and then to the products and services offered by that brand or business. It then evolves into a conversation about the fans of the brand, to the people behind the brand, and so on…

As with any successful marketing effort, this requires proper planning and execution. I’ll explain how our agency goes about attacking this process, from start to finish, and will offer some fresh ways for marketing executives, gym managers and fitness entrepreneurs to look at video as a crucial piece in the social media puzzle.

Step one is not ‘go shoot a video’
Too many campaigns fall flat, or flat out fail, because they start with a video and end with a plan of what to do with the video. That’s retrofitting, and that can be more costly than doing something the right way the first time.

We start off by establishing objectives that can be measured against hard goals – like more website traffic or increased sales – as well as soft goals like a greater number of blog mentions, retweets and interviews.

Next we identify the target audience. Who is the ideal customer and where are they online, right now?

Then we establish what the video will be about, what will be the bigger conversation surrounding that video, and where and how that conversation will happen. The time to figure all that out is not after you have posted the video.

Content is king – so be creative
The video should be engaging, and above all shareable. Make it funny, shocking, quirky, confounding… whatever adjective you choose, make sure it’s something worth talking about.

The video itself is not, and should not be, enough to tell or sell the entire story. This is where a lot of marketers go wrong, packing too much into one video or making it into an out-and-out advertisement.

Online videos don’t always require insane production values, but they do need to be valuable. Three questions we ask before writing and shooting any video are: Firstly, how will this video add value to people’s lives? Secondly, should the video be funny or entertaining, shocking, controversial? Which genre if any will best fly with our client’s audience? And thirdly, how likely will people be to share the video if given the opportunity? Why should somebody care about it enough to watch it? After that, we outline and write the script, then plan the shoot.

Understand the medium
Unlike other forms of media including TV, radio, print and billboard, social media is not a broadcast channel intended to reach the masses, but rather an interactive channel intended to mingle with the masses. As such, time and attention need to be given to setting up the right channels and building relationships.

Is your audience mostly on Facebook? LinkedIn? YouTube? Twitter? How much time do you have to spend on social media marketing each week? These factors will help determine which and how many channels are selected and developed.

One last thing to consider before locking down a video shoot is integration. Will the video be part of a larger marketing strategy including TV, radio, banner, video pre-roll, website integration, PR? This is an important thing to consider, especially if you’re working with multiple agencies. As mentioned above in regard to retrofitting, integration is much easier and more cost-effective the first time around.

Long live the video
Shoot and edit the video – including pre-production, casting, crewing up and executing – according to the script and objectives. After post-production, the video is encoded for the places it will live online for a very long time.

To establish the video as the originating medium, we upload to YouTube. Remember, your video shouldn’t just be used once for a short stint campaign – it should be used constantly from the point of creation forward.

Video search optimisation is very important at this point, so research is always key.

Starting a conversation
Now we have a video link or two to work with. Just a few of the things we can do to help that link see the light of day include: sharing the video with your new YouTube community, inviting new friends and emailing the link; posting the video story and a link on Twitter; embedding the video on Facebook – sparking conversation whenever possible; posting the link on LinkedIn status updates and starting a few discussions based on the bigger story surrounding the video.

The final step is to start building a genuine conversation surrounding the video. Outreach is a very important part of this process and includes reaching out to relevant influencers; launching local, topical and/or industry-related press releases; and contacting relevant online and offline publications. Just be sure the story is compelling, the video is engaging, and the product or service is sincere.

Have you made a promotional video for your fitness business? We’d love to see it.

Run a small ad campaign on YouTube

YouTube announced as long ago as 2012 that it reached 4 billion video views a day and one hour of video uploads per second. That’s the equivalent of more than half the world’s population watching one video every day. Yet as an advertising opportunity for gyms and health clubs, it’s largely ignored in favour of Google Adwords.

In a campaign we did recently for a client, the average cost per view for the YouTube advertising campaign was between £0.02 and £0.04. Compared to many other forms of advertising online, it’s extremely cheap. The £100 budget delivered around 2,400 views.

In addition, with YouTube advertising you can include a lower third message – the text box under each video – with clickable links. You can set up a YouTube advertising campaign through your Google Adwords account.

The DOs of video marketing

DO make your video entertaining and shareable. Ensure the content of your video grabs the attention of your desired audience and keeps them engrossed until the very last second. Creating something too corporate or advertisement-based gives the viewer the same experience as sitting watching an ad break on TV – something we know leads to channel hopping. Click here for a great example: http://youtu.be/dLfUgXcvq4g

DO have a strong call to action. A video without a prompt to take further action at the end of it, or simply a fadeout of a logo, is wasted energy and money. Ensure you conclude your video with something for the viewer to respond to: clicking a link, subscribing to something, a free trial or to watch another video, for example. Make it clear and unavoidable.Click here for a good example: http://youtu.be/SRiuWCGTtpA

DO keep it short and snappy. Videos that drag on lose people’s attention quickly and undo all the work you did to attract them to your video in the first instance. Share your key points in a concise and efficient manner. Give just enough information away to generate an enquiry. Click here for a good example: http://youtu.be/FmEsDFRVfDY

The DON’Ts of video marketing

DON’T talk at the camera and nothing else. Unlike a face-to-face conversation, it’s almost impossible to hold someone’s gaze in an online video. The longer you do nothing but talk at the camera, the quicker you lose a viewer’s interest. Mix in visual graphics to highlight key points as well as cut-away shots to other visuals. There’s too much undiluted face-to-face here: http://youtu.be/XsY4NNdkD7Q

DON’T take too long to get to your point. In truth, if your video’s 10 minutes long, unless you have amazing content (and we’re not talking about shots of your shiny gym floor), then very few people will watch the entire length of the video. Keep your clip to around the two-minute mark – its only job is to attract attention and incite a reaction. I’d argue that this one’s too long: http://youtu.be/nhS4VyGWm0U

DON’T wing it. Ensure your content is scripted and organised. As much as we each like to believe we possess the improvisational skills of Robin Williams, and the directive prowess of Spielberg, most of us don’t. Organise what you want to say, practise and then deliver. There’s a bit too much improvisation going on here: http://youtu.be/kHERrMXKh7Q


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

Manraaj Sunner
 

Manraaj Sunner has worked in the health and fitness industry in a marketing capacity for the last 10 years with a number of multi-site operators. He founded 3one5 Marketing, a full-service agency dedicated to working with clients from the health, fitness and leisure industries, with a focus on integrating modern marketing techniques for optimum response.

Twitter: /3one5Marketing

Facebook: /3one5Marketing

Web: www.3one5.co.uk

Email: m@3one5.co.uk



Originally published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 3

Published by Leisure Media Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385 | Contact us | About us | © Cybertrek Ltd