Thursday, October 15, 2015

10 video blunders that many nonprofits commit

1. Making your CEO your default spokesperson

Many organizations gravitate toward having their CEO or highest-ranked leader narrate their video. This choice might seem logical, as well as politically expedient.

First, ask yourself: Is he/she a good storyteller? Is he/she a good communicator?

What makes a video effective is engaging the audience. If your CEO is weak as a storyteller, it’s best to choose someone else on your staff to speak. If need be, your CEO can have a smaller role in the video.

2. Not having your video in your brochure

Don’t mistake video as an opportunity to regurgitate your latest marketing brochure. It’s a completely different medium.

You can show it all on video, from the people you serve to how you serve them. It offers a different opportunity to showcase a dimension of your work through imagery and sound in a way that no other collateral can.

It’s not about facts and figures; quite frankly, those make for boring storytelling. Focus instead on capturing the human spirit of your organization. People want to meet the men and women who are the pillars of your success. They want to meet those individuals—patients, clients, beneficiaries—whose lives you’ve touched. Those stories beg to be told.

3. Not choosing the best people

The best way to connect people to your cause is by letting them hear directly from people. People are the heartbeat of your organization. Casting, therefore, is the key foundation to wowing your audience and can determine your video’s success or failure.

Encourage your staff to appear in and shoot their own videos. Learn how in this free guide.

Dedicate ample time to choosing people with strong voices; you may even want to enlist your production company to vet possible options. People are key—don’t rush the casting process.

4. Not choosing your best programs

Pressure from donors and board members inevitably steers nonprofits into making uncomfortable decisions. Featuring small-scale or less active programs simply to satisfy a donor or senior staff member is bound to limit the reach of your message, and your organization will lose out on its chance to make an impact. Show your best programs; it’s their chance to shine.

5. Forgetting to consider your audience

The biggest mistake that many organizations make is creating the video that they want to see or the video that will please the board of directors-and neglecting what will actually make the audience respond. Without that piece, you miss out on a great opportunity for engagement.

Video storytelling ultimately is about expanding access to your organization. Nonprofits should focus on making videos accessible to the people they want to attract to their cause.

The better you understand your audience, the more precisely you can target the video to capture your audience’s interest.

6 & 7. Forgetting to consider your venue and making your video too long for its own good

Be it for television, YouTube or a gala, different screening platforms require discrete methods of video storytelling, as well as recognition that regardless of the platform, people’s attention spans are shorter than ever.

We tend to suggest one- to two-minute videos for Web content and four- to five-minute videos for galas and events. If your video will be shown at a gala, keep in mind that most people there won’t be familiar with your organization, as most attendees come as a favor to the honoree. Videos in those settings should tell a story efficiently and with significant emotional power.

Be honest with yourself about how long it really takes to tell your story. Too much story is not a good story. Create a narrative, and stick to it; the tighter the message, the stronger it resonates. Your audience will thank you for being kind to its attention span.

8. Thinking your video is a one-time gig

Video costs are driven up primarily by the number of days shooting, so it’s OK to double-dip and repurpose raw footage for other videos and projects. Use interviews, visuals and even finished videos on more than one occasion and maximize your return on your significant investment.

Showing a video at your annual dinner? Post it on your website, too. Making an informational video? Show it at recruitment events, and link to it online afterward.

Communicators at nonprofits should always think about how to strategically reuse video content.

9. Reacting instead of pro-acting

Creating a video is an intensive process that requires full attention from you, your staff and your beneficiaries. If you choose to make a video, make sure it’s the right time for the organization.

A classic mistake is entering the production process for political reasons. If you do, you may find yourself struggling to find the right story and wasting a lot of time and money.

10. Having no end goal

Video is a strategic tool that accomplishes a purpose for your organization.

To that end, you’ll need to answer key questions prior to the production process:

  • Who will see this video?
  • What message do I want to communicate?
  • How does it fit into my organization’s overall strategic plan?

Your intentions must precede the decision to produce a video, as they will dictate the video’s story and structure. Regardless of whether you’re spreading the word, paying tribute, remembering, celebrating, fundraising or marketing, think ahead: You’ll want to invest in a good product you can use for a long time.

BONUS TIP: Story trumps everything

Think back to that great movie you saw or great novel you read. It all comes down to a good story with a great beginning, middle and end. Keep that in mind, and your video will end up making your donors weep and, most important, write checks.

Joe Fox is the co-president of Fly on the Wall Productions. A version of this article first appeared on NonProfit Quarterly.

from Ragan.com http://ift.tt/1RL0947 via Professional Video services
from Tumblr http://ift.tt/1MFuxNa

No comments:

Post a Comment