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How To Create A Video Campaign Concept
Have you ever had a good idea, maybe a great idea, only to
find that someone else already did it? Frustrating.
You want to be a success and who doesn't? It's why you do
what you do, why you put-up with what you put-up with? But
it all gets so frustrating.
As much as you'd like to believe otherwise, there just aren'
t any secrét methods, special potions, or motivational DVDs
that are going to make you a success in thirty days, but
there are things you can do that will help. Sure working
hard helps but working smart is even better. So how do you
work smart? Well you can start with presenting your core,
marketing message to your targeted audience in a way that
engages the spirit, informs the intellect, and embeds in
the mind. And if you want to be cutting edge, the way to do
it is with audio and video.
What A Difference A Difference Makes
Anybody who has ever tried to raise monëy for a project
from a bank, or contacted an ad agency for help has heard
the question, "What makes your company different?" If you
don't have a different product, different process, or
different way of doing or presenting what you do, you are
nevër going to raise a cent or make an impact on the market.
Yet most companies blindly continue to follow the market
leader, and wonder why they nevër attain the level of
success they hope to achieve.
If you want to be a success, you have to reinvent your
company as something unique, so when the time comes to
present your redefined vision to the world, you will
actually have something to say, and something worth
listening to.
Lateral Thinking, The Creative Laxative
Once you've decided to develop a video marketing message
that focuses on what makes you different, you will want to
know where begin.
This is a creative process that can be scary to business
executives trained in left-brain linear thinking. Learning
to think creatively is hard and for most people it goes
against everything they have learned.
Creative thinking has been called 'thinking outside the box,
' right-brain thinking, or simply thinking differently.
Author Edward De Bono calls it 'Lateral Thinking.' De Bono
argues linear thinking stifles imagination because it
suffices at the first seemingly acceptable solution rather
than looking for innovative alternatives:
In ordinary traditional thinking we have developed no
methods for going beyond the adequate. As soon as something
is satisfactory our thinking must stop. - Edward De Bono
Where You Begin Is Where You End
One method of jump-starting the creative process is to
think backward: you begin at the end, because where you're
going will inform how you get there.
Create Your Memory Tag or Slogan
A well thought-out slogan or tag line focuses attention on
the critical point-of-differentiation, the thing that
establishes your brand identity. A good slogan serves as a
memory device, a positioning tool that implants itself in
your audience's mind and stays there.
No matter how many times the advertising agencies convince
the 'pooh-bahs' at Coca-Cola to change their slogan, Coke
will forever be "The Real Thing," and Pepsi will be "The
Choice of a New Generation," at least to my generation.
These were excellent examples of how to focus on a single
element and establish a differentiating identity between
competing products that for the most part are just about
the same. Then of course you have 7-Up with "The Uncola"
slogan that was the best of the bunch, but was
unfortunately dumped for some lame reason. Each of these
soft drink slogans established market-turf for their
company, and each helped differentiate the product while
establishing identity in the audience's mind; and no place
is anything said about cost, quality, or any of the other
conventional selling points that small companies are so
fond of touting.
Develop Your Story
A well-designed video commercial takes your audience
through the three stages of storytelling: The Setup with
inciting incident, The Crisis with problem escalation, and
The Resolution with viewer satisfaction.
Your slogan or tag is the punch line that highlights your
resolution; it's what you want your audience to remember;
it's your marketing message destination; and it's where you
want to end. Now all you have to do is work backwards to
the beginning.
This method of development helps you avoid saying too much:
yes, there are many things you want to say, most of which
are valid, some of which are relevant, but few of which are
applicable to the delivery of an effective Web video
presentation. The more you say to an audience, the less
they hear. Stick to a simple story that leads to a
resolution based on your memorable punch line or what TV
screenwriters call 'the button.'
Invent Your Hook
Once you have your basic commercial storyline with a
beginning, middle, and end, you need to make sure you have
a hook: the thing that's going to pique audience curiosity
and make them stick around long enough to view the entire
presentation. The hook should center on the 'inciting
incident:' the motivating situation that propels your
onscreen representative to find a solution to the problem
at hand that ultimately leads to the resolution represented
in your 'button' or punch line.
The Geico Caveman is a great example of a hook that demands
attention, and draws the audience into the series of mini
dramas that constitute this award winning ad campaign; all
based on an incredibly simple, yet brilliant, tag: "So Easy
A Caveman Could Do It." You don't need expensive special
effects or exotic locations; all you need is an imagination
and a message that can be delivered with a memorable one
line "button."
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Nothing is impossible to a willing heart.
John Heywood
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