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courageous decisions presentation previews

· Blog, Client Videos

Catriona Wallace

 

Rob Pyne

Annalie Killian

Previews Soap Creative and Xbox

· Blog, Client Videos

Hi everyone,

Here are the latest versions of the videos with everyone’s feedback implemented. We’d love to hear what your thoughts are!

Proposal video draft

https://vimeo.com/77886488

Titanfall v03

https://vimeo.com/77114601

Xbox One Racing Team v03

https://vimeo.com/77114602

Cosplay v03

https://vimeo.com/77114606

Ryse v03

https://vimeo.com/77117976

Killer Instinct v03

https://vimeo.com/77117980

Dead Rising v03

https://vimeo.com/77117981

Forza 5 v03

https://vimeo.com/77019787

FIFA 14 v03

https://vimeo.com/77019788

Interstitials and vIdeos that are signed off

End video v03

https://vimeo.com/77117982

Interstitial 1 after FIFA 14 Forza 5 v03

https://vimeo.com/77114600

Interstitial after Cosplay and Ryse v03

https://vimeo.com/77117978

Interstitial 02 v03

https://vimeo.com/77114605

Xbox Intro v03

https://vimeo.com/77019786

Xbox Driver Interview v04

http://vimeo.com/74303833

With music bed

http://vimeo.com/74796275

Xbox Driver Shootout v04

http://vimeo.com/74296208

With music bed

http://vimeo.com/74791333

One Life Live It – Video Preview

· Blog, Client Videos

Hi Simone, Below is the link to the final cut of Simone’s promo video.

Simone Promo – Video Preview v03

http://vimeo.com/74092089

What is courage?

· Blog

[four_fifth]

What is courage?

[/four_fifth] At Hunting With Pixels we’re very excited about a project we’re running for the wonderful people of Coraggio, Australia’s great leadership community. As part of the project we’re interviewing business and thought leaders on what courageous decisions entail; what is courage? How do we manage doubt? How do we make better decisions? Last Thursday we played the current version of the clip the Courageous Decisions event in Surry Hills, more on that later http://vimeo.com/72803248

Get involved

We’d love to hear your thoughts on what courageous decisions are. If you’ve got something to share we’d love to hear about it!

ELS Video previews

· Blog, Client Videos

ELS videos draft versions

Hi everyone, here are two first drafts of the SBS and MSIT videos. Still a fair bit of work to be done and we need some high resolution footage of Brisbane to make the story work, but we’d love to hear what your thoughts are about this as a starting point!

Sydney Business School video

http://vimeo.com/73829551

MSIT Brisbane

http://vimeo.com/73829550  

video previews for Tami

· Blog, Client Videos

Hi Tami, We started working on cutting your interview at AHPM, just wondering if you’d be o.k. with us using a quote on a video around Courage we’re using an event around courageous decisions?

Courage

http://vimeo.com/72803248

Hunting pixels our core values

· Blog · , , , , , ,

Why are values important

A while back we did an exercise with the wonderful Kat Kinnie of Thought Cloud around values. Values matter, there no question about that. The question for me was; how does it matter for the rebrand of Hunting With Pixels?

Did we go backwards?

What I realised was that we started our thought process the wrong way around. We started with thinking about the clients we’d love to work with, then work back to how we should project ourselves to create the connection.

 Personality vs Character

What we were trying to do is to assume a personality. That’s not a bad thing necessarily; we all assume different versions of our own personality depending on the situation. We all have a formal self, and a parent self and a neighbour self, a football club self and so on. All these personalities are you, but with a slightly different emphasis to suit the situation; that’s natural and totally fine.

Character

Character is what you actually do, not what you project. When it comes to our business, core values and character really matter, because they’re the basis of our brand identity. Personality is what gets people interested, character is what builds a sound business. Our client expect high quality, consistency, social intelligence and trustworthiness. That’s based on core values and hard work.

 So here’s what our values look like

corporate video producers based in Sydney and Melbourne.

Hunting With Pixels core values.

Our core values

 So how does this relate to business

Here’s the thing that totally sold it for me:  Knowing and understanding your core values makes things really easy.

 Here’s what happens when you know and understand your values.

Here’s how we apply this idea.

When we made a new showreel, we wanted to add a more personal touch. So instead of showing a series of nice looking shots, we talk about the kind of people we love collaborating with based on values. http://vimeo.com/25540698

 What are your thoughts?

We’d love to hear about how you apply your values to your brand. Did it change the way you communicate?

Vine vs Instagram is short form content making us stupid

· Blog

Vine, Instagram: Short form video is king. But is it making us stupid?

Online video has been the Next Big Thing for a few years now, and the growth has been undeniable:

Internet video to television traffic is forecast to increase nearly five times between 2012 and 2017, by which time over 60% of online video is expected to be in high definition.

Source: http://informitv.com/news/2013/05/29/ciscoforecastsmassive/

But this is not yet another article about why video is a must-have.

This is about how to format your video content so it builds engagement and delivers results everytime – not by accident or coincidence, but by design. So how do you it?

How can you attract the attention of an audience that doesn’t seem to have an attention span?

Are we all toddlers now?

 As the world of online video develops and grows one thing is becoming very clear – audiences are attracted to shorter and shorter videos. This statistic speaks volumes:

 Only 20% of viewers make it past the 2 minute mark on Youtube, not matter how good it looks.

What is going on?!

 Do online audiences really only have the attention span of a one year old? Or worse, is online video a fad that everyone’s grown tired of?

 Picking up the pace online.

The reality is this – ‘short form’ is even shorter than it used to be once upon a time. Finally the penny has dropped at Twitter with the much-anticipated release of Vine; an app that allows users to upload six seconds of video. Tiny but true.

 So are we becoming stupid?

There’s been a lot of talk about Digital Dementia and how we expect more from technology and less from each other. Personally,

I find these ideas very interesting and I agree with some of the arguments, but ultimately I don’t think we’re getting stupid.

Being a professional violinist or an accomplished Nobel prize winner isn’t easier now compared to 30 years ago. It still takes ten thousands of hours of dogged application and there’s no shortage of violinists last time I checked.

New pathways of learning

The internet is not a small version of TV; it’s an inquisitive medium and as a result we have access to more information than ever before. So what does this create? Different pathways of learning. These are exciting times.

So it doesn’t mean we’re becoming stupid; it just means we refuse to sit through large chunks of information that lack relevance, engagement – or both! Although the online audience can be fickle, it can also be quite discerning – so content makers, beware!

 When we’re surfing, we’re literally building our own pathway of storytelling and learning by picking and choosing. Think of your content as a page in a book that has different content for different users.

 We used to want to write the whole book, now we write part of the book.

Short form heroes : How limitations generate creativity

But what on earth can you do with just 6 seconds of video? Turns out; a lot.

The best of Vine:

If you remain unconvinced by the power and possibility of six small seconds, cast your mind back to the early days of Twitter.

Remember when everyone agreed that 140 characters was simply too short form to be meaningful? Well you know how this story ended don’t you?

Instagram and Vine – the writing’s on the wall (or in the videos)

Vine is a video app that was bought by Twitter in October 2012 and has since been released under the Twitter banner.

Instagram has built a huge following with their snappy photo app, and has recently added video functionality.

Vine and Instagram allow users to share short form video update on social media. And in case you’re wondering whether anyone really wants something like this…

 Vine picked up 10 million users in three months. And Instagram got 5 million uploads in the first 24 hours when they added a video feature that allows 15 seconds of video.

 Clearly, people want short form video.

Twitter, Instagram, Vine: which one to use?

 Vine and Instagram are pretty awesome as tools; free, easy to integrate into social media and widely accepted as standards in a very short time.

I won’t go into a lengthy comparison of features since this seems to change daily. Suffice to say that Uncle Google knows best (!).

 In lieu of an in-depth analysis, here’s a snapshot of the most fundamental similarities and differences.

Differences.

 Vine allows you to record 6 seconds, Instagram 15.

All in all, Instagram offers more features like great looking filters which will ultimately deliver the better looking videos.

 Integration into various platforms is pretty seamless but both will try to entice you to their sites; but you can relax, there are always workarounds for this.

Things we’d like to see for business video

As great as they may appear on the surface both Vine and Instagram don’t allow you to use a remote control like the internal video app of the iPhone for instance.

This means that you can’t film yourself with the phone on a stand so you’ll need to actually hold your phone while you film yourself. The result? Shaky footage and unflattering angles. Not nice.

This isn’t ideal for video bloggers who run a business so hopefully this bugbear will be fixed sooner rather than later.

 Another feature that I miss is the ability to upload your own video so you have a bit more control over what the video looks like.

It would be awesome to create something where you have a bit of control over the branding and look and feel.

 How does this short form content stuff relate to my business?

 Youtube will continue to be the go-to place for video, with no limitations on video length. No change there. However, we need to keep looking at how we can engage with short form content to keep our audience interested – and eager to come back for more.

With more short form content being used, we need to rethink how we communicate.

Considering the staggering 2 minute statistic I mentioned earlier, our audience seems to be ahead of us. Businesses simply aren’t providing the short form content that suits or even complements the learning and research style of our audience.

So do I jump on the Vine/Instagram bandwagon?

Using short form video isn’t that common yet in the business community but it’ll become part of our brand identity sooner than you think.

Short form video offers amazing opportunities for –

Instead of a standard Facebook update or Tweet, you can broadcast a short video about what you’re up to.

That’s a lot more interesting than sending another link to another article – and ultimately creates a stronger connection between you and your audience.

Video also adds a warm, personal touch to your updates. It’s a very quick way to connect.

 However, customer service is where we see the real opportunity. Producing short form videos will allow you to do business in a far more personal, engaging way and connect faster to your existing customers. These connections will last.

How do we make this work: Build a brand, not a one off

In order to make the revolution in short form videos work for you and your business, you need to build a brand. Get your message out there quickly, regularly and with creative flair.

 It’s not impossible. Just remember, ignoring this trend won’t make it go away.

 Video is quickly becoming part of how businesses interact and engage. So if you want to be ahead of the curve, start planning how you’re going to engage with video.

Consider making video part of your comms strategy and train up your team. Being able to create compelling content will be an essential business skill. So you can start by seeking out people who are genuinely interested and passionate about driving this side of your identity; it’s a worthwhile investment in your brand and your business.

 Be prepared to create short form content that cuts through the noise.

 because that’s what your competitors are doing.

Question is, are you ready to beat them to it?

More info?

Slides, more example videos, ask questions:

Add hwp/video strategy link

courageous decisions video preview

· Blog, Client Videos

Hi everyone, Thank you so much for being part of our Courageous Decisions videos. Here are two draft versions, we’d love to hear what your thoughts are!

Courageous Decisions – Main Promo

http://vimeo.com/72803248

Courageous Decisions: black and white version

http://vimeo.com/72803247

Dealing with ambivalence part 02

http://vimeo.com/73600241

Meet the Surians

http://vimeo.com/73600239

Simon speaks about courage

http://vimeo.com/73600244

Simon about doubt

http://vimeo.com/73600243

How do you deal with doubt?

http://vimeo.com/73600240

Malcolm Gladwell; thin slicing

Interesting bit around 6.26  

Dan Arielly

               

Hydraulink corporate video preview

· Blog, Client Videos

Hydraulink Video V06

Here is the latest edit of the Hydraulink video. http://vimeo.com/72801811

Hydraulink Video V07

This version has a slightly revised beginning section. http://vimeo.com/75554722