By Margaret Looney
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Psy-Gangnam Style
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Journalists and news organizations
can't rely on dancing Gangnam Style to create videos worth sharing.
YouTube's Jessica Mason
offered ideas about why some videos go viral in IJNet's latest live chat. She drew from her
presentation at the recent Mashable Social Good Summit in New York on what storytellers
can learn from cat videos.
YouTube also created a free PDF guide called “YouTube for
Good” to help video makers tell better stories. She offered techniques on
everything from branding to metadata. Here are Mason's tips from the chat:
Stick to the storytelling basics
"Make sure your video is not just
someone speaking to a camera," Mason said. "Create a video that is
action-packed, surprising or original. Create something that people want to
watch until the end because they want to know what happens."
Engage your audience
"You can always let your viewers
know you want to interact with them by encouraging them to make response videos
to your story or video," she said, citing the "It Gets Better Project"
as a model for engagement.
"You can also ask them to take a
certain action, visit a website, or leave you a comment or message," she
said. "On YouTube, we find that creators who interact with their viewers
through messages, comments and on social media are more likely to have highly
engaged audiences and fan bases."
Create and share regularly to grow an
audience
Mason said you can't add a video every
few months and hope to keep your audience coming back.
"It helps if you are posting
videos regularly, even weekly, so people know they can go to your channel for
the latest news," she said. "It is also important to actively try and
spread your video. Share it on social media and ask your friends to do the
same. Don't upload a video once a year and let it sit on YouTube! Post
regularly and share, share, share!"
Follow the cat video recipe for viral
success
It's the global appeal of cat videos
that make them most popular, Mason said. "You do not need a translator to
understand them. Cat videos tell universal stories that render culture and
language barriers irrelevant. Seventy percent of YouTube views come from
outside the U.S. Try to tell universal stories that will appeal to
international crowds."
Don't worry if it's not perfect
Mason suggested higher video and sound
production values for documentary-style videos, but when the goal is to
"catch an important moment as it is happening, your video will still do
well even if the quality is less than perfect," she said.
"Sometimes when a story needs to
be told, a camera phone is your only option," she said. "Some of the
biggest news videos of the year, like the videos shot during Superstorm Sandy,
did not have high production value, but they captured a story that needed to be
told."
Source: IJNET

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