Monthly Archives: August 2010

Advanced Bootcamp: Canon Training 5D Level II

Canon DSLR 5D Boot Camp Attendee learns how to line up a shot
Are you thinking about shooting with the Canon 5D or 7D DSLR cameras?  Are you going to use it for 2nd unit photography, multi-cam, background plates or SPFX shots?

Using the Canon DSLR 5D can be a tricky thing. Even once you’ve mastered the basics there is still much more to learn. The Association has a great Boot Camp on how to use the camera. However, the students who took Level I The Boot Camp, were so enthusiastic about the hands-on experience with the Canon DSLR, that many wanted to go even further. Due to the high demand, The Association decided to put together a course to give as much specialized experience as possible, and make a Level II workshop.

Canon DSLR 5D mounted on a rig

The Association‘s Canon DSLR: Pro Level II Class is now available for those people that wish to extend their knowledge on how to use the DSLR. The Level II workshop will be going through the work flow from start-to-finish while applying what we learned in Pro Level 1. Individuals wil be put to the test as they shoot on location using a full range of gear and mounts.

The Level II Boot Camp helps to teach how to use rigs, monitors, special mounts, hand helds, dollies, as well as applying advanced cinematography techniques to get those perfect shots. Students will shoot interiors and exteriors while using a wide array of equipment as well as shooting parts of an action scene on set.

Snehal Patel adjusting settings on the Canon DSLR 5D
If you’ve taken the Level I Boot Camp workshop, you’ll be pleased to know that Snehal Patel, a veteran in the use of DSLR cameras as well as production and post-production, is running the Level II Boot Camp. He will talk you through diverse shooting situations. You will be required to film a portion of a short scene that will be created by the class.  The scene will involve handheld shots, dolly moves and car mounts. After the Boot Camp, we will edit and color correct the footage that the participants shoot, and create a reel.

For those looking for more hands on work that have mastered the basics, this is the workshop for you. This is a practical Boot Camp that has less talk and more walk. By the end of the workshop, each person will be competent and confident when they walk on a set, ready to use the DSLR.  If you haven’t taken the Level I workshop, you can look into that and work your way up so that you can master the DSLR.

Employees and Corporate Social Media

I’ve already talked about how consumer generated content can help create relevance for a company.  It’s not any different when it comes to employees, except that employee-generated content is probably even more relevant! Who else knows a company better than it’s employees?

Corporate social media campaigns might seem like a hassle if you have a lot of employees, but actually more employees might make a large campaign even easier. When you have a lot of employees, you can spread the reponsibility for creating content out across more shoulders.  This is a good thing if you are able to weed out and control the runaway trains. By that I mean employees who don’t use good common sense when blogging as part of enterprise social media.

I’m assuming here that your company has great products and service, and treats employees well.  A company with poor service and disgruntled employees should not get involved in social media without a comprehsensive plan that includes fixing those points.  Such a company may not escape alive.

Edelman Trust Barometer 2010 Study

That said, here’s the deal.  An Edelman Trust Barometer study asked people, “Who do you trust?” ANSWER: People like me. Search engines determine relevance based on whether or not you can engage people. Employee generated content is writen by real human beings, and thus should be more engaging. Engagement on a blog (or any social media profile, such as Facebook) is exactly what you want.

Brownies are ALWAYS relevant!
When was the last time you had a strong urge to connect with a corporate logo?  Yeah, I didn’t think so. Well, if you had 20 employees, and each once wrote one 3-5 paragraph per month for the company blog, you’d have plenty of decent, relevant content to choose from.

Investing in some long tail keyword research to guide your employees on what to write will also help increase your relevance.  The office “mom” might want to write about the last brownie recipe that was a hit at the office, but if your company produces car parts, it won’t do much to increase your company’s relevance in the eyes of your consumers (or Google).

Staying on the Cutting Edge With the Canon 5D Camera

The Canon DSLR is revolutionizing video production in both film and television and is becoming more popular by the day. More and more TV pilots are shooting with the Canon DSLR 5D.

The Association has teamed up with Snehal Patel, a veteran of the Canon DSLR 5D in production and post-production, to run intensive 5-hour BOOT CAMP workshops for industry professionals who want to use the Canon 5D and 7D cameras for film, television, or custom video production.

This is a real hands-on workshop, on a professional sound stage with set and an actress.  We will have a green screen, monitors, lights and plenty of gear, including the latest DSLR accessories.

This Training 5D workshop teaches such things as:

  • Basic setup of the camera
  • The best lenses to use
  • The best support rigging
  • When to shoot “”flat
  • The affect of an overheated CMOS on image quality
  • Shooting out through the HDMI to Cineform or uncompressed 4:4:4
  • Setting exposure, histogram, viewfinder, and waveform monitor
  • Using Auto Lighting Optimizer
  • Mixing DSLR footage with higher-end cinema footage
  • The transcoding process
  • The Post workflow (different codecs and frame rates)
  • Sync issues come up in post and their solutions
  • Using de-noising features in post
  • Stabalizing solutions
  • Add-ons to get better sound
  • Setting the type of audio quality (bit rate, frequency, impedance, channels)
  • Using Follow Focus with any lens
  • What to use as a gear ring for the lens
  • Use of different memory cards (speed/capacity)
  • When not to use HDSLR
  • Essential accessories for making an HDSLR cinema capable
  • Addressing moiré and aliasing issues
  • Managing the rolling shutter issue

Working professionals that are filmmakers, cinematographers and still photographers have taken the Boot Camp and rave about the training:

“It was great. You guys were good. I was never in a fog… Snehal was very good
about answering my questions.”-  Daniel Pearl, ASC

“I highly recommend (this Boot Camp) to anyone who is even going to dabble in this world.  Digital SLR is clearly the direction a lot of work is going to go…” – Geary McLeod, ASC Cinematographer, ‘The Mentalist’


Or listen to Testimonials (Click on Picture Below):

PLUS!  You’ll receive a Certification from The Association of Film and Video Producers that you completed “Pro Level One: Canon DSLR”. This certificate is good for rental discounts as well. Classes fill up quickly, so RSVP today at the following link: http://www.theassociation.tv/canonbootcamp.php

Customers can Increase Your Relevance on Google Searches

When you get right down to it, getting some choice real estate on the 1st page of a Google Search is critical for just about any business. Creating relevant content on a blog can help give you a lift and get your name in the right location. The location part is easy to think with. But what’s with this relevance thing?

I wish there was a super simple answer.  If you want to be super technical, here’s a super link: http://www.googleguide.com/google_works.html

Otherwise, let’s pick up relevance on the human side of the story.

Are You Like Me?

Consumers (your target market, whatever niche that might be), tend to want to connect to people just like them. See, I just gave away the whole secret. You can be relevant to your consumer, if you give them the chance to meet your other customers online, and let them see that your existing customers are just like them.

Honestly, I’m not trying to talk in a riddle. Here’s the answer explained another way: get your customers to participate in your marketing campaign.

By inviting past customers and other consumers to participate by telling their story, and sharing it on your blog(s), you can create relevance.  It also shows you value your customers for more than just their money. Such a sign of respect can generate appreciation and often all you have to do is ask for feedback.

Tips

  • Make it easy to share by providing a landing page with a form to capture the customer’s story, feedback, testimonials, etc.
  • Give your customers an incentive to tell their story. A weekly or monthly drawing, contest or just an automatic prize such as a Starbucks Gift Card will go a long way.
  • Make sure you have a way to moderate content.  Sometimes spammers or generally grumpy people will get a hold of your blog and use it as a platform for their message. If it isn’t relevant (or appropriate), there needs to be a way for it to be removed.

Wouldn’t it be great if you could just read something, and it would be applied in full in your company by the time you got to the end of the article? Alas, somehow it never works out that way. But if you still don’t know how to be more relevant to your target market, that just means you don’t know enough about them.

Any marketing campaign suffers without some kind of consumer analysis. It is well worth the money to invest in effective market research data collection, regardless of whether you are writing simple blog posts or engaging in direct response TV ads.  Really understanding the minds of those you are trying to communicate can increase your relevance (in their minds) many times over.

How to Reduce Your PPC Budget and Increase Leads

I can’t say I know a lot of marketers who really enjoy spending thousands of dollars on Pay Per Click Google Ads.  Actually, I don’t know of any at all. And until recently, I thought of PPC as a necessary evil in order to get new leads in the door.

Some months ago I came across another way of capturing leads.  In essence it’s a PPC ad. Except that there is no charge when someone clicks! Too good to be true? Well, to be more accurate, there is a cost involved, but it’s not based on the number of clicks.  It’s a one time set-up cost (someone has to pay the programmer!).

Similar to renting a car, you always have to pay something just to rent it, and then there’s the mileage. PPC is having to pay for the mileage on top of all the costs to research the right keywords to use. This other method is like having unlimited mileage for a year.

Which one would you want?

The other method is the use of Call To Action buttons, or CTAs. Here’s how it works:

1. Potential customer searches online using Google Search
2. Your blog shows up on the Search Engine Results Page (SERP)
3. Along the side of the blog is a carefully crafted Call To Action button.
4. The potential lead clicks on the button, which leads to a landing page especially designed to match the message on the button.
5. The landing page’s purpose is collect information or close the sale with minimal distractions normally found on a website (anything that would navigate them away from the sale should be avoided).
Because the Call To Action is located on your virtual real estate (your blog), you don’t have to pay every time someone click on the Call To Action button.
Call To Action Button Examples

By using a blog you are increasing the chances of being found organically. Of course, the explanation above is simplified and there’s a lot more to marketing success than just having a blog. Without an effective marketing plan based on a decent consumer analysis, and really good long tail keyword research, you’ll probably find yourself in a very dark virtual room talking to yourself.

The thing to do is research some market survey companies with proven results to help navigate the consumer’s minds and hearts. Otherwise you risk running blind, which is no way to market any product or service.

Having second thoughts about leaving your PPC campaign behind? Understandable. Keep in mind that blogs we’ve tested with CTA buttons have had a 3-8% conversion rate, compared to our PPC campaigns which runs about 2% conversion rate.  Actually the industry average rate for a PPC campaign is about 1%.  So don’t think too long!  Add CTAs, and reduce your PPC spend.

 

A Really Beautiful Day With the Canon 5D

The Association shot a short PSA using the Canon DSLR 5D.  This video (link below) not only sends the message of the importance of effective communication between parties, but also displays the spectacular video quality of the Canon 5D.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0tTdFR2xVdo

The video stars Jim Meskimen and Billy Tyler. The Canon DSLR 5D is revolutionizing the film and video production, in that it renders a picture so gorgeously, that several production companies have replaced their 35mm film camera with this DSLR. In fact, the video production crew of the Emmy-award-winning TV series “House” used a DSLR on the 2010 season finale.

The Association has been training Hollywood’s finest in how to shoot with this amazing camera in our Canon Certification Bootcamps.  For more information on upcoming classes, click on the banner below.

Creating an Organic Lead Generation Machine

For a business, getting leads and increasing sales to improve the bottom line tends to be high on the priority list. Initiating a comprehensive and systematic corporate social media strategy is a key element to getting online leads, and should be coupled with highly effective Search Engine Optimization (SEO).  After all, is it going to matter how much content you have online if it doesn’t match in any way what your customers are searching for? SEO will help connect your online presence to your customers.

Any really effective marketing plan could be called a Lead Generation Machine. In this post I’d like to briefly outline the main elements for a simple plan that automatically puts you in the room with the most potential customers.  That is, in the organic search results section, as opposed to the sponsored ads area of a Google search results page.

Organic Search Results vs. Sponsored Ads

Here are the main elements you would want to be sure are included in an organic lead generating strategy:

1. Moderation Control: Avoids employees or consumers hijacking the company’s message or content.

2. Blogging: Shows up in organic search results, increases the number of indexed pages for your site (potentially increasing your rank in Google’s eyes), and gets you in front of more people than just using PPC would allow.

3. Unlimited Content Contributors: Be able to allow an unlimited number of contributors so the heavy lifting of providing content is leveraged among as many people as possible. Allowing your employees to contribute their personal views, opinions and stories will also help you build relationships with your customers.  Employees tend to know their company on an intimate level (possibly better than the owner), and clients like to connect with real people, not a corporate image.

4. Call to Action Buttons: Instead of cluttering your blog with Google PPC ads, create “Call to Action” buttons that encourage the potential lead to take the next step. Usually that would include giving up an email address so you can continue to send them relevant information over time. Think of it as a Pay Per Click ad, but minus the “Pay” part.

5. Long Tail Keyword Research: If you don’t know what this is, but you are involved in online marketing, better crack open the books. Or Google Search, anyway. Long Tail Keywords open a door onto the 1st page of Google searche results pages, if you know how to use these keywords effectively.

5. Fresh Content: Content is where most blog strategies die on the vine. Creating new content can be a lot of work. But if you’ve been in business for a while, and have been utilizing online newsletters, you’re probably half way there to a LOT of great content. Take your old email newsletters and turn them into blog posts!

With marketing campaigns migrating to online platforms, there is the additional benefit of being able to monitor every lead source and track leads every step of the way. This kind of tracking has to be carefully built in from the beginning to avoid a fragmented view of lead results, click-through rates, etc.

Time is not on your side if you haven’t already gotten started with your own online marketing campaign. Get started today and make the most of today’s modern lead generation capabilities.

 

 

Are you marketing blindfolded?

Shopping Malls - Cathedrals of CommercialismIt’s trite to say things are changing, but they are.  The Internet is slowly edging the brick and mortar store toward extinction, although people’s desire for community still prompts them to “go to the mall and hang out”.  And the malls get more and more beautiful. I call them the Cathedrals of Commercialism.

All this leads to the quandary facing many of our clients who want a piece of the web sales revenue. They’re needing successful methods to engage the consumer and make a sale without having to pay through the nose for Pay Per Click.

Long Tail Keyword Research can help help lower your PPC bill. Not many understand Long Tail Keywords. A good example is the difference between searching for “man” to searching for “tall English-speaking single parent wanting single woman with children”.  In other words, Long Tail Keywords are expansions of the core keyword into more specific descriptions.  LTK’s are used by shoppers who are closer to making a purchase. So their searches are for “healthy organic weight control products” and not just “weight loss”.

How do you find the EXACT terms consumers are using to find you? Two sources:

1) Post-Purchase Surveys focusing on “why did you choose our product?”, and

2) Optimized Market Research™ on your target audience.

Post-Purchase Surveys harvest extremely valuable keyword phrases and give you a window into how your consumers think. Not every consumer, just your consumer.  Optimized Market Research™ does both surveys.

Also, unlike traditional market research that focuses on everybody, Optimized Market Research™ zeroes in on the 20% of your customers that produce 80% of your revenue.  The survey is not interested in grouping them into pie graphs, but in listening to what they think and say about your product.  These results are then statistically represented and translated into information that can be incorporated into your marketing mix: verbal content, each person’s emotional profile, the imagery they associate with your product or service are all collated and tabulated.  This is how OMR lets you think and talk like your audience, so you get their agreement to listen to your message.  You’re singing their tune, in other words.
9d208a014d079af4d6f3e50cfff743ab
Most all campaigns fail because they don’t use OMR.  In other words, a company that uses OMR is at the advantage over their competitors. An example of launching a campaign without OMR is the famous story of GM being completely out of touch with their Spanish-speaking customer when they introduced the Chevy Nova.  “No va” means “won’t go” in Spanish.

Another example – we thought we knew our customer. We’ve been in business for 24 years. Grudgingly we implemented Optimized Market Research on ourselves.  Things we considered our top priority were ranked #4 by our customers. “Obviously” our customers wanted top professionalism. They did, but the #1 response to the question “What is the most important thing about The Association?” was “They’re easy to work with.”

Knowing what your consumer is looking for is the key to marketing success. Unless you prefer marketing blindfolded, we suggest marketing with Optimized Market Research.™

Custom Rig from Red Rock for YTC Films

My friend James Wvinner of www.YTCfilms.com needed a Canon DSLR 5D rig that was good for both lock-down shooting on sticks and for handheld.  He was preparing a custom video production for some heavy-duty multi-cam shoots and wanted something that had a lot of possibilities for expansion and space for add-ons.  I contacted Brian Valente from Red Rock to help us out, and he put together a custom rig configuration in no time flat. The way we had the battery plate mounted in the back balances out the rig for shoulder-mount applications, plus the AB batteries can power both the camera and the on-board monitor at the same time.  With a quick release, the rig come apart and plops right into place on the fluid head.  Gotta love it!

I’ll ask James if he can bring the rig into The Association’s next DSLR Boot Camp on August 21st: www.canonbootcamp.com

Custom RedRock Rig
Custom RedRock Rig2
Custom RedRock Rig3

Here’s how Brian put it together:

From RedRock Micro store http://store.redrockmicro.com :

DSLR Cinema Bundle

microShoulderMount Deluxe Bundle

microBalance Plus plate

microLensGears

microArm short

microMount for monitor


Anton Bauer battery power http://www.antonbauer.com :

AB Plate is either AB part number QR-SP200 or QR-SP400A

You need specific AB screws – the AB part number for the screws is 6120-5522Battery


Connector cables:

Canon DC coupler http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/590425-REG/Canon_3352B001.html

Plus switronix Dtap adapter http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/655669-REG/Switronix_XP_DSLR_C.html


Misc:

Bogen quick release  for between shoulderpad and cinema bundle

http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/554151-REG/Manfrotto_357_357_Pro_Quick_Release.html