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Archive for January, 2009

Google Analytics™. The greatest (free) metrics tool online

January 26th, 2009
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It’s amazing how many companies don’t have metrics for their site traffic readily available.  If your site is the front door of your business, don’t you want to know who’s coming in?  I’ll use a hypothetical example to illustrate the importance of quality web metrics.

Google Analytics

Let’s say you have 3 main product buckets on your home page.   These three products make up 75% of your company’s sales.  They’re your bread and butter.  In your brick and mortar retail store, these products sell at an even rate, making up about 25% of sales individually.  On the site, there’s one product that’s failing to come close to that.  If you only looked at the sales numbers that would surely tell you that you’re not selling as many units…but that’s it.

Analytics gives you a much more thorough and broad reaching look at what’s happening on your site.  Information like who’s coming to your site, where they’re coming from, how often, what time, where they’re clicking, how many pages they’re looking at and what page they’re most often bouncing (leaving the site) from are just a few of the options that are available to you using an analytics tool.

The question of which tool is really easy.  Google Analytics.  It’s a free tool (for sites with 5 million page views per month) and it is organized in a way that’s incredibility easy to use.  It’s based on a dashboard layout that allows you to view high-level information and simply drill down to minutia.  You can get a great overview of GA on their site here: http://www.google.com/analytics/

admin Web

Web Video: 5 Things you should be doing with video on your website

January 22nd, 2009
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Web video.  It’s been “on the brink” since the inception of the Internet, but languished for years due to slow and unreliable Internet connections and computers that lacked the CPU power to handle the requirements of video.  Always viewed as one of the silver bullets of content delivery, web video has finally landed.

Over the last 2-3 years many of your customers have upgraded their old 56k modem with a high speed DSL or Cable connection that delivers content to their home at speeds of up to 20mbps.  Sites like YouTube™, Vimeo™ and Fancast™ have grown exponentially over that same 2-3 year timeframe based in large part on the fact that so many users now have the adequate bandwidth to watch video without the drawbacks of the early 2000’s.

It’s time to ask yourself, “Is my business using video to effectively communicate to my customers.”

Here are 5 things you could (and probably should) be doing with video on your company’s website.  If you’re already doing some or all of these things you’re one (very big) step ahead of your competition and should be commended.  If you’re not doing any of these 5, read this.  Then pick one…just one of these 5 things and do it!  Once that one thing is done, pick another and do that too.

1)    Product Demonstration – One of the great social scientists of our time, Albert Bandura, spoke about learning through “vicarious observation.”  In layman’s terms, this just means that we learn by watching other people do something.  For instance, a great way to learn how to hit a baseball is by watching old footage of Ted Williams.   Take that same idea and apply it to your product.  If you’re selling a product or service there should be, somewhere on your site, a video that clearly shows your user (through vicarious observation) how to use the product or service.  These videos should be simple and straightforward.  Think of them as instructional videos.

2)    Viral Video – If you haven’t seen the Gatorade “Ballgirl” or the “Why every guy should buy his girlfriend a Wii Fit” video you should.  They’re funny, quirky and they show off their respective brands in a covert and subversive way.  The videos build interest in the brand without the sometimes garish “buy this now” mentality of a traditional advertisement.  Virals are not so much meant to entice you to buy the moment the clips run out, but rather to build a buzz around a product or brand.  Another great example can be seen here.  At almost 27 million views, this video has performed as well (if not better) than any broadcast commercial Nike produced that year.

3)    Company Bio – Looking for a way to tell the story of your company in a concise, easy to follow and entertaining way?  Having trouble doing that with copy?  Try a video.  A company bio is a mini-documentary about your business.  It tells the story of who you are, the culture at your company, the people that make up your company.   It may feature products and services but it’s more than that.  It exists to build brand awareness and goodwill about you and your business.  Are you embarking on a green initiative this year?  Do your company’s employees want to tell the world what a great company they work for?   Is your CEO a wannabe actor who can’t miss on screen?  Company bios are great at communicating your company’s core message in a way that’s captivating and impressive.

4)    Employee Education/Enrichment – Does your company have ongoing employee development, all hands meetings, product rollouts?  If so, they need to be video recorded, encoded and put on the company site or intranet.  These are invaluable assets that the company invest heavily in and should not be viewed as one-time events.  Capture these events on video and save them to show those employees that couldn’t make it, or who were hired on just after the event.  Hosting an event as a web video can also cut travel costs dramatically.  Imagine that you could produce a web training video for $5000 - $10,000.  This video would be on the company site in perpetuity, available for your entire staff to view.  Factor in plane tickets, hotel accommodations, per diem and lost productivity and the cost savings are obvious.

5)    Testimonials – Nothing speaks louder than the voice of a happy client.  And that client’s voice can’t be heard any more clearly than through a video testimonial.  You can always have them write a testimonial and post that on your site, but a video is much more personal and gives the end user a face to the name.  This goes a long way in adding credibility to the testimonial.  Hearing it (and seeing it) from the horse’s mouth has much more impact than reading a quote.  Salesforce™ is doing this to great effect right now.  Check out what they’re doing here: http://www.salesforce.com/smallbusinesscenter/ (click on read more in the banner area).

admin Video, Web , , , , ,

Kilroy Films - New Site

January 8th, 2009
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I’m very proud to announce that the new site for Kilroy Films is up.  Part of the new site will be an initiative to re-brand into Kilroy Media.  With the amount of work we’ve been doing in the web world, in conjunction with video work, it only made sense to expand out operations to include more than just traditional video.

By adding web design and development to the mix, it gives us an opportunity to both grow our business and offer our customers a “one stop shop” for their marketing needs.

Don’t worry,  we’ll still be offering video as a service.  Creating compelling video is something that we’ll always do and  I think we’ll only get better as we further explore the new ties between video and the web in this rich media driven world we live in.

Please check out the site and let us know what you think.

All the best and happy new year!

admin Randon