Putting the right message in the right place

Posted by uStudio

In the past, we worked with some­one that wanted some help cre­at­ing a video dis­tri­b­u­tion strat­egy for a new product.

We thought we could def­i­nitely help.

Then we got to see the video.

While it was extremely well pro­duced, its focus was on sell­ing the viewer on a prod­uct. Actu­ally, it was a hard sale for the product.

The video wasn’t the prob­lem though. Con­tent like that can be nec­es­sary and effec­tive to close gaps in infor­ma­tion for a poten­tial buyer and lead them to a purchase.

The prob­lem was what the client ini­tially wanted, a dis­tri­b­u­tion game plan.

This video was so focused on the last stage of the sales cycle that its only nat­ural home was on the product’s pur­chase page. Putting it “in the wild” on video por­tals (like YouTube) felt very forced and the mes­sage was flat, if not abra­sive to the viewer.

What was needed was a video that spoke to the pains that the prod­uct solved, thus cre­at­ing a dia­log with a poten­tial buyer. From there, the viewer of the video could opt into the next step: vis­it­ing a site with a more focused mes­sage on how prod­uct X could solve the problem.

Some­where on that site is where this video belonged. When we did dis­trib­ute it out­side of their site, the view counts were low and the con­ver­sion to a a sale was non-existent.

The two take-aways here:

1) Think about who you want to talk to and what part of the sales cycle they are at. Then tai­lor your video (if not mul­ti­ple videos) to them.

2) Think about where that mes­sage lives and how your poten­tial cus­tomers will react to it.

It’s easy to come up with a great pitch, and get­ting superb pro­duc­tion value at an afford­able cost is read­ily avail­able, but those two things won’t add up to a sale unless you’re putting the right mes­sage in the right place.