Updates from March, 2010

  • 9 Social Media Topics that Need to Die

    emarti 2:13 pm on March 25, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags:

    1. Getting More Followers and Fans

    Unless you can tell me what the hell they’re going to do for you, how you’re going to mobilize them, and what you’re going to give back to them that makes it worth their while to grant you their attention and continue to give it, who cares? People aren’t marbles, and you don’t get any points for collecting a bunch of staring eyeballs that are waiting for you to do something significant. Attention only matters if can move people beyond noticing, and into investing their time and energy. (More …)

     
  • Streaming Live Video Through Brightcove

    clybecker 12:46 pm on March 25, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Live, Stream

    Interested in streaming live video through Brightcove? It’s actually pretty easy! Here is what you need to get started:

    Fill out a support request HERE and note that you would like a live video player set up in your Brightcove account

    Gather the equipment that you will need

    The 3rd item pictured here is a PYRO AV Link external video / audio card. It’s nothing fancy, just something we had in one of our production studios. We use it to send audio from a mixing board, and video from the camera, to the computer via firewire so we can stream it that way.

    Download and install needed software:

    • (PC – Free) Limelight adapter for Adobe Flash Media Live Encoder
    • (you need to download and instlall both of these for PC, Adobe first, Limelight second)

    -or-

    • (Mac – Free to try, $449 to buy) WireCast

    In my example I used Adobe Flash Media Live Encoder so here I will give you the settings that I used:

    1. In the Output section on the right, under the check box for Stream to Flash Media Server, use the following for the FMS URL (pick the location that is closest to you):
      • rtmp://fmspush.iad.llnw.net/brightcove/036 (VA – Ashburn)
      • rtmp://fmspush.ord.llnw.net/brightcove/036 (IL – Chicago)
      • rtmp://fmspush.dal.llnw.net/brightcove/036 (TX – Dallas)
      • rtmp://fmspush.lax.llnw.net/brightcove/036 (CA – Los Angeles)
      • rtmp://fmspush.sjc.llnw.net/brightcove/036 (CA – San Jose)
      • rtmp://fmspush.lga.llnw.net/brightcove/036 (NY – New York)
    2. In the Stream field, use the following:
      • (this will be given to you when your support ticket above is filled)
    3. Click on the Connect button.

      • Username: brightcove-036
      • Password: fhrik8
    4. On the left, select your settings for the video and audio encoding.
    5. Click on the green Start button at the bottom.

    Once you click start you will be able to view your live stream (URL will be provided when your support ticket is filled).

    Brightcove does not save a copy of the video that you streamed live! If you want to save a copy make sure to check the box for “Save File” in the encoder. Then when your stream is done you can upload this FLV file to brightcove so you will have an archived copy.

    In brightcove you can treat this like any other video. You can add it to a playlist, put a water mark on it, change the title and description… basically everything you do with your brightcove video already.

    Here is a clip of the Crash Kings from our KNDD live broadcast:

    Here are some additional resources and support items from brightcove:

    Delivery of Live Video
    http://support.brightcove.com/en/docs/delivering-live-video

    Advertising and Live Video
    http://support.brightcove.com/en/docs/advertising-and-live-streams

    Cheers and happy streaming!
    -Charlie

     
  • Brightcove Scheduled Maintenance Notification Tuesday, March 30th

    Jen 8:42 am on March 25, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    We would like to inform you of a scheduled Brightcove Maintenance event for Tuesday, March 30th.

    Special Note: Some of the new features that were to be deploy during last night’s scheduled update will appear after the maintenance window scheduled for tonight (Thursday, March 25th 12:01am US ET). Please refer to notification sent on March 18th and this page; Features and Service Changes.

    Event: Brightcove Platform Maintenance  March 30, 2010 .

    Timing: Scheduled maintenance will begin at 12:01 AM ET / 4:01 AM GMT on Tuesday, March 30th and last up to 1 hour.

    Expected Impact:
    Videos will continue to play in your live players for your viewers during this period. Similarly, uploads are expected to be unaffected.

    The following services will be temporarily unavailable (with the expected duration of the unavailability being much less than the full hour of this maintenance window):

    logging in via the Studio – or *any* system that requires your publisher credentials.
    editing your user profile
    adding users to your account
    registration of new users

    Note: Users who are successfully logged in prior to the start of this maintenance (and remain logged in) will be able to continue using the services throughout this maintenance period.

    Upon successful deployment of this maintenance, unauthenticated users visiting my.brightcove.com will be redirect to signin.brightcove.com in order to login.

    We appreciate your patience while we upgrade the service.  Please let us know if you have any questions.

    Regards,
    The Brightcove Team

     
  • StreamTheWorld Maintenance – 3/21

    Jen 11:47 am on March 18, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    Dear Customer,

    Please be advised that a scheduled maintenance on the StreamTheWorld On Demand Streaming Manager (formerly DManager) and Video Conversion Services will occur on Sunday, March 21st  @ 1:00PM until Sunday, March 21st  @ 4:00PM, eastern time zone (GMT -5). During this maintenance, access to these services may be slower.

    In the event of a service affecting failure or a system malfunction please dial the following number :

    From North America: 1 (800) 939-9413
    From EMEA: +41 21 331 00 29

    PLEASE LEAVE A MESSAGE, A MEMBER OF THE SUPPORT TEAM WILL CALL YOU BACK WITHIN 20 MINUTES.

    In the event that the received support service is inadequate or unsatisfactory, please contact Mr. Jean Bernard at:

    +1-514-945-0543 or at :  jean.bernard at streamtheworld.com <mailto:jean.bernard@streamtheworld.com>

    Jean Bernard
    Director, Operations

    STREAMTHEWORLD

    t. 1 514 448 4037 ext 634
    t. 1 866 448 4037 ext 634
    f. 1 514 807 1861

     jean.bernard at streamtheworld.com
      

  • A dashboard update from Daria

    Jen 11:56 am on March 12, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    Please be aware that at this time we are experiencing a database problem with the Monthly Average Forecast report on the Reports Dashboard.  The January and February 2010 numbers for the average banner impressions are not correct.

    Our database expert. Brian Smith, is working to fix the error that is causing the calculations to be incorrect.

    I will let you know as soon as this report is correct for you to use for your inventory forecasting.

    Please call me if you have any questions.

     
  • Brightcove Scheduled Maintenance Notification Thursday March 18, 2010

    Jen 9:27 am on March 12, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    Hello Gang!  See below regarding Brightcove maintenance.

    ==========================================

    We would like to inform you of a  Brightcove Maintenance scheduled for Thursday March 18th.Event:      Brightcove Platform Maintenance

    Timing:    Scheduled maintenance will begin at 12:00 AM ET / 5:00 AM GMT on Thursday, March 18th and last up to 6 hours. While no service impact is expected during the majority of this period, Publishers may see possible service interruption within the periods of 12:00 – 1:00 AM ET and 5:00 – 6:00 AM ET.

    Expected Impact:   Videos will continue to play in your live players for your viewers during these periods. The Brightcove Studio and Console is expected to be available, with the possibility of a loss of access.  Similarly, uploads are expected to be unaffected with the possibility that  processing uploads could fail with an error. If uploads error out they would need to be re-uploaded.

    Description:   Brightcove service maintenance activity.

    We appreciate your patience while we upgrade the service.  Please let us know if you have any questions. 

    Regards,
    The Brightcove Team

     
  • Important QuickPost Update

    avanhook 1:38 pm on March 10, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    Recently we have experienced some instances of slowness on specific Radiotown servers affecting your ability to use the Drupal admin site – issues have varied from general slowness to login issues. In investigating possible causes, we have identified and made changes to the QuickPost feature as it was overtaxing our systems.

    Effective immediately, we are caching QuickPosts. It may take up to 5 minutes for new Quickposts to appear on your sites. Quickposts will now update on the 0’s and 5’s in every hour. That means if you make a new post at 12:03pm, it will not show till 12:05pm when the cache clears.  ( For additional details on why this change was needed, see the end of this email.) As a reminder, Quickpost do NOT automatically refresh on any page, so if a listener is on your home page for 10 minutes and during that time you make an Quickpost update, they will not see it until either they navigate to another page or refresh the current page.

    We continue to recommend that you do NOT use the QuickPosts for contesting. Even before Quickposts were cached, they were not an effective tool for contesting because new posts did not appear until a user visited another page or refreshed the current one.

    Please know that we are investigating the possibility of having the Quickpost cache clear for individual sites upon a new Quickpost being added. This would mean that any new post you add would show up immediately on new page calls. As we know more, we’ll keep you updated on this possibility.

    If there are any questions or feedback, please let me know.  And thanks for your patience as we continue to improve our tools and look for ways to better serve you.

    Have a great evening,

    Amy

    Additional details for the geek in you:

    We are seeing increased activity from our stations hitting the database causing spikes that are essentially the result of the slowness experience by some stations. Digital has identified that Quickposts are accounting for over 20% of the database calls being made – to address this we have enabled caching for the Quickposts. Because every page has the QuickPost on it, it makes a call to the database each and every time a page is called. When our activity increases (which is does during certain parts of the day) this is putting a strain on our systems. Enabling caching will greatly help. As an example, prior to caching, the quickpst.php script was running an average of over 12,000 times in 60 minutes. After enabling caching, it is now running less than 1000 times during a 60 minute window.

    Amy Van Hook

    Entercom Digital

    Director of Digital Operations

    P: 503-535-0265

     avanhook at entercom.com

     
  • Permission Must Be Re-earned with Every Message

    emarti 12:30 pm on March 10, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    Some marketers might regard an opt-in subscription as the end of the permission process—but it’s just the beginning, says Stephanie Miller in a post at the Daily Fix blog.

    “Permission does not give marketers a license to just send whatever, whenever,” she argues. “In fact, more than just a one-time exercise, permission must be re-earned with every message.”

    Here’s how to implement a strategy that continues to request permission from a subscriber long past the initial “yes”:

    Send relevant content only when a subscriber needs it. It’s fine, Miller notes, to remain visible with a newsletter sent on the third Thursday of every month. But the frequency of promotions and offers should reflect a customer’s apparent readiness to buy—for instance, if he or she has made a recent purchase or is up for renewal.

    Re-engage non-active subscribers sooner rather than later. “If the messages are not resonating,” she says, “stop them, or offer to change frequency or content type.”

    Miller concedes that an email program oriented to strong value propositions will likely result in smaller subscriber files and more work for fewer records. But, she says, it’s worth it: “On the surface, it might sound like poor marketing strategy, but actually, it results in a better situation. Subscribers who really want to be on your file are always going to be more engaged and return higher response and revenue.”

    The Po!nt: It doesn’t end with “I Do.” Like any human relationship, an email-customer relationship requires work over time.

    Source: The Daily Fix. Read the full post.

     
  • Five Ways to Break the Rules of Email Marketing and Still Win the Game

    emarti 10:12 am on March 9, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , email,

    From Marketing Profs:

    One of the most common questions I’m asked starts with, “What is the best-practice for…?” For example, “What is the best-practice for subject-line length?” or “What is the best-practice for day or time to send?” or “What is the best-practice for copy/creative length?” The answer inevitably goes something like this:

    “Well, the ideal subject-line length is between [insert range] characters but that really depends on what delivers the highest number of opens/clicks/conversions… for you.”

    In other words, we can find and spit back best-practices for most email-marketing-related questions; however, I nearly always find marketers who “break the rules” with tremendous success.

    Why? Often they have tested and found that their subscribers respond better to a practice that is not considered “best.” When I think of not following industry best-practices, five examples come to mind.

    1. Overstock.com: ALL CAPS IN THE SUBJECT LINE

    If you’ve ever received an email from Overstock, one thing jumps out.

    The subject lines are, often, IN ALL CAPS. Some subject lines read “BEDDING BLOWOUT” or “CLOSEOUTS” or “FREE SHIPPING COUPON.”

    Now, industry best-practices would tell you not only to never use all caps but also to avoid the word “free” (that is now a bit more debatable). However, it works for Overstock.

    I had the chance to meet a member of the Overstock email-marketing team, and he informed me that they have done (and continue to do) extensive subject-line testing. Those types of subject lines you see above outperform the others… by far!

    Will that technique work for you? It depends.

    2. Chris Brogan’s Newsletter: A Whole Bunch of Text, Few Links, and No Clear Call to Action

    (Disclosure: Blue Sky Factory designed Chris Brogan’s template, and Brogan is a client of BSF.)

    Chris Brogan sends out a newsletter that, with the exception of a few call-to-action buttons and logos, and the Share With Your Network (SWYN) feature, is all text.

    Although industry best-practices say that email copy should include opportunities for people to click,

    Brogan’s open rate is far north of 50%, and he consistently extends his reach by double digits through SWYN; moreover, he often gets hundreds of replies thanking him and asking follow-up questions.

    If that isn’t engagement, I’m not sure what is. So, again, the practice of sending mostly text emails works… for Brogan and his subscribers.

    Will it also work for you? It could.

    3. Marketing Over Coffee: Ugly vs. Pretty Template Test

    In September of 2009, Blue Sky Factory Client Service Manager Joanna Lawson-Matthew ran an experiment to see how a text-heavy, design-light (i.e., ugly) template would perform against a Blue Sky Factory–designed, polished, professional, industry-best-practice (pretty) template.

    The client was Marketing Over Coffee, a weekly podcast that discusses both classic and new marketing, hosted by John Wall and Chris Penn. (No longer a client, Penn recently became the VP of Strategy and Innovation for Blue Sky Factory.)

    Original (Ugly) Template:

    New (Pretty) Template:

    Suffice it to say, holding subject line, from name, email content, and date/time of send constant, the open rate and click-through rates of both the old and the new template were nearly identical. (For the full details on the results of the experiment, see “Marketing Over Coffee: And The Winner Is…“)

    Should you be sending a text-heavy (ugly) template? Maybe.

    4. Apple: One Big Image

    Apple fans are everywhere. Many would argue that Apple can do no wrong when it comes to innovation, design, product launches, and marketing.

    I’ll let you be the judge of that; however, I can tell you that one of Apple’s email-marketing tactics that does not follow industry best-practices is its use of images.

    Nearly all its emails lead with a big image. Best-practices would tell you that is bad. (I’ll leave the deliverability side of this conversation out for now.) Far too many email clients (and users) have images off by default. So, when the Apple email lands in your inbox, it looks like this:

    See the problem? The entire top of the message is blank. To make matters worse, Apple does not even include alt text (alternative text) or the ability to click on a link. When you view the message with images on, below, you see a nice picture of a MacBook Pro as well as a call to action to “Shop Mac.” With images off, Apple loses the potential click (and conversion).

    So, what gives? How does Apple get away with that?

    At the Email Evolution Conference in Miami in February, I was fortunate to meet two of the gentlemen who are responsible for email marketing at Apple. They said they’re aware of the “one big image” issue and are looking to make some tweaks.

    However, as they told me, their emails work. Why? Probably because Apple is such a trusted brand that subscribers are more likely to auto-enable images.

    Does that mean you model your creative after Apple and include a big image at the top? Possibly.

    5. Publishers Clearing House: Breaks So Many Rules (but Gets Killer Results)

    In February 2010, Chad White, research director at Smith-Harmon, wrote “It’s Not That There Aren’t Best Practices…” in which he referenced my displeasure with the design of the Publishers’ Clearing House (PCH) emails.

    Here’s an example. Below is the top section of a recent PCH email. (I’ve shown only the top portion, as the entire email would be seven times as long—another no-no.)

    Yikes! The subject line includes my name (bad) and makes little sense (bad). The top portion is littered with big images (bad). There are too many flashing gifs(bad), caps (bad), and the letter O instead of zeros  (bad). Overall, it makes me dizzy. It breaks just about every rule I can think of.

    But here’s the rub: It works. In fact, PCH emails do more than work. They have open, click-through, and conversion rates that would make any email marketer salivate.

    I know because I spent a significant amount of time with Sal Tripi, PCH’s senior director of operations and compliance. He agreed that PCH emails are not pretty and don’t follow industry best-practices. However, they perform. They knock it out of the park. Sal’s team has tested and retested—and these emails win, hands down.

    So, should your emails look like PCH’s? Yes—assuming you are getting the killer results PCH is.

    * * *

    Remember: The next time you hear “best-practice,” ask yourself whether that practice is best for you and for your audience. Have you tested to confirm that the industry norm is really the best option? What does the data tell you? Are you maximizing your goals? Have you performed some split (A/B) testing to see whether the “anti” best-practice works better? Try it. I dare you.

    From http://www.marketingprofs.com/articles/2010/3450

     
  • Showcase of Awesome Flipper Slides

    Dan Muzyka 12:32 pm on March 8, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    Our San Francisco web guru Bob McDiarmid recently came up with a great idea: everyone share their best flippers with each other. Here are some of the ones people sent around. Please feel free to share more in the comments. Thanks for inspiring each other!

    From Bob McDiarmid in San Francisco

    This flipper just exploded off the page with its People Magazine-y quality. It also tied into the fundraising Goal for our resident marathon-running mid-days DJ. I’ve been experimenting with using splashes of feminine colour within the colour set of our site (warm browns and yellows and black)


    (More …)

     
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