Well put!

So following on from what I was just waffling about, do you feel there
are decent places to go to reach out to your potential audience, or do
the directories & other video hosting sites etc all seem to offer a
similar, fairly generic and unfocussed, sense of community/audience?

On the otherhand I know in the past quite a lot of people had problems
working out what pidgeon hole they might fit into, or making
assumptions about who the target audience is, what genre theirvlog is,
etc. Its easier for themed shows of course, and so also easier for
them to harness the traditional models of marketing, netowrking, etc?

I dunno, I guess 'group' functions on the likes of youtube are part of
the surrent solution, but I still find nearly everything and everyone
quite randomly, perhaps I would like a structure imposed that cannot
be done, I dunno, oh microcommunities where are ye? I mean do most
peoples blogs get enough comments for the individual sites to feel
like communities? Doesnt feel that way to me, generally, but maybe my
expectations are out of whack.

Cheers

Steve Elbows

--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "Jay dedman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >  1) What is the value of a YouTube viewer and subscriber .
> >  2) For those vloggers who have posted to YouTube, what value have you
> >  seen?
> 
> here's an example.
> we posted a video on our site:
>
http://ryanishungry.com/2007/04/22/wendy-tremayne-and-mikey-sklar-green-pioneers/
> 
> Mikey (who's featured in the video) uploaded it to Youtube:
> http://youtube.com/watch?v=xO6YZa2ZB44
> 
> About 5,000 people watched the video on our site.
> About 50,000 people watched it through Youtube. (we must have been put
> on the front page)
> 
> Is there a difference?
> I guess not really. We certainly got more relevant comments on our
own site.
> Like Quirk says, its important to reach out beyond the communities we
> already know.
> I think its important to have your own site so you control your
> archives and context in which to watch your videos. But go ahead and
> put them other places and see how it works out.
> 
> For Youtube, I find that the most regularly popular ones are more just
> people talking into webcams. people have discussions, arguments,
> joking etc. its extremely social.
> 
> So again its not an either or for me...
> what i appreciate is when Mikey and Wendy (in the video) send it to
> all their friends because we helped tell their story. Word starts
> spreading and information is exchanged. Wendy is now here at Maker's
> Faire(http://makerfaire.com/) and said she had 5 people come up to her
> to find out about her project in NM. That's the connection I seek.
> 
> with any creator...i think its important to make stuff with the
> audience you want to reach in mind. Just throwing it on youtube and
> expecting something to have effect just seems harmless at best.
> 
> Jay
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Here I am....
> http://jaydedman.com
> 
> Check out the latest project:
> http://pixelodeonfest.com/
> Webvideo festival this June!!!!
>


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