Re: [videoblogging] Advice on how to get to 100-250k views a day (quickly)?

2007-11-12 Thread Mike Meiser
Well said rupert.


On a side note, I just caught an episode of the latest Epic Fu, btw.
It's amazing to see how far it progressed.  When it started it was
trying to hard to aim at a young audience, definitely not for me. Now
that it's matured I think it reaches that same audience, but it's also
much more paletable and likeable for an older audience as well.  Quite
simply it has matured, it's definitely one of the most well produced
and best targeted general audience video podcasts / blogs out there.

I've see litterally thousands upon thousands of GA (general audience)
podcasts, from a whole slew from former techTV people, dozens from
Revision3/ the digg crew. Hundreds from mid level newspaper and
magazine publishers from NYtimes, regional ABC affiliates, Washington
Post, lifestyle magazines... and pretty much across the board they ALL
completely fail to connect with their market.

Quite simply put they're either "throwing content up that hopefully
people will watch"... or alternatively... talking at you... without
any real understanding of what their audience is.

The one thing that makes a great blog, vlog or audio podcast a great
audio podcast is a well defined, well connected, recipricating
relationship with an an audience and a community.  Rocketboom, ask a
ninja, Epic Fu, Wallstrip, most obviously Ze Frank you see this
over... there are some very specific keys as to how they connect but
I'm not going to spend my time laying them out for Jason.  The bottom
line is if you want a mass audience you have to earn it.

The only advice I will give him is the same things that work in blog
space... boingboing to engadet, are the very same things that work in
vlog space.

BTW, I'm a fan of Veronica's, but I did not care for and still don't
care for any of those CNET videoblogs.. I'm sure they have their
market, but the bottom line is they fit right into that category of
what all the other mainstream newspaper and lifestyle magazines are
doing. It's as if they want to be TV. You can't just flip on the
camera and talk into it. They're as blank and impersonal as the
thousand yard stare.  They're not looking at me, they're not talking
to me.

P.S. I forgot to mention Mobuzz and Webalert as two other examples of
better shows on the net, but then there's a bunch I've missed.

-Mike

On 11/11/07, Rupert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey Jason,
>
> This might not be the right place to ask those questions.  Most (not
> all) of the producers here are working organically and personally
> with much smaller audiences and are creating uncommercial content.
> Directly commercial How Do I Get Rich/How Do I Get Famous/How Do I
> Get A Million Views questions from new contributors can be met with a
> bit of a backlash.
>
> But here's my two cents: You want regular six figure viewing figures,
> I'd say the only guaranteed way to do it from a standing start is to
> get featured on Youtube every time.  I would imagine, given your
> profile and Veronica's, and the quality of your show, you could
> probably get a chat with them.  Get a meeting in Palo Alto.  Ask them
> how featured status is decided.  Play whatever game they outline.
> Get Veronica to interview Chad & Steve ;)
>
> However, the value of those views - and how interested the viewers
> are in your show or your brand - is another matter.
>
> My feeling is that to get any value or meaningful response from your
> viewers, you need to build audience and loyalty organically.  All the
> social network/social media groups you've set up are a good start.
> But they're not a quick fix.  Or a road to instant viewer riches.
>
> Youtube featured status IS a quick fix.  BUT - beware of the quick
> fix.  You need friends and passionate advocates, not 100,000 people
> calling Veronica a stupid bitch for no good reason or telling her to
> take her clothes off in the Youtube comments section.  You take the
> shortcut, that's what you're courting.  It can get pretty brutal
> there for featured shows.
>
> I advise you to look at EpicFu (formerly Jetset) - Zadi and Steve
> have done it about as right as possible, I think.  They've been
> developing their show and their fans for a long time, and are now
> getting 1m views per week.  They cover a lot of ground, screen on
> multiple networks as well as their own site and work very hard at
> it.  They have their own social network, which is integral to their
> show.  Seems to work well for them.
>
> I also advise you not pay any attention to my advice.  I'm a
> videoblogger.  I'm happy with a two or three figure audience, not
> six.  I want to keep personal contact with my viewers.  I have
> nothing to sell and no intention of making it my business.  None of
> my opinions are based on any experience of building a promotional
> show with a big audience.  Good luck with it.
>
> Rupert
> http://twittervlog.tv/
> http://twitter.com/ruperthowe/
>
>
> On 11 Nov 2007, at 19:55, Jason McCabe Calacanis wrote:
>
> We launched Mahalo Daily with Veroni

Re: [videoblogging] Advice on how to get to 100-250k views a day (quickly)?

2007-11-11 Thread Rupert
Hey Jason,

This might not be the right place to ask those questions.  Most (not  
all) of the producers here are working organically and personally  
with much smaller audiences and are creating uncommercial content.   
Directly commercial How Do I Get Rich/How Do I Get Famous/How Do I  
Get A Million Views questions from new contributors can be met with a  
bit of a backlash.

But here's my two cents: You want regular six figure viewing figures,  
I'd say the only guaranteed way to do it from a standing start is to  
get featured on Youtube every time.  I would imagine, given your  
profile and Veronica's, and the quality of your show, you could  
probably get a chat with them.  Get a meeting in Palo Alto.  Ask them  
how featured status is decided.  Play whatever game they outline.   
Get Veronica to interview Chad & Steve ;)

However, the value of those views - and how interested the viewers  
are in your show or your brand - is another matter.

My feeling is that to get any value or meaningful response from your  
viewers, you need to build audience and loyalty organically.  All the  
social network/social media groups you've set up are a good start.   
But they're not a quick fix.  Or a road to instant viewer riches.

Youtube featured status IS a quick fix.  BUT - beware of the quick  
fix.  You need friends and passionate advocates, not 100,000 people  
calling Veronica a stupid bitch for no good reason or telling her to  
take her clothes off in the Youtube comments section.  You take the  
shortcut, that's what you're courting.  It can get pretty brutal  
there for featured shows.

I advise you to look at EpicFu (formerly Jetset) - Zadi and Steve  
have done it about as right as possible, I think.  They've been  
developing their show and their fans for a long time, and are now  
getting 1m views per week.  They cover a lot of ground, screen on  
multiple networks as well as their own site and work very hard at  
it.  They have their own social network, which is integral to their  
show.  Seems to work well for them.

I also advise you not pay any attention to my advice.  I'm a  
videoblogger.  I'm happy with a two or three figure audience, not  
six.  I want to keep personal contact with my viewers.  I have  
nothing to sell and no intention of making it my business.  None of  
my opinions are based on any experience of building a promotional  
show with a big audience.  Good luck with it.

Rupert
http://twittervlog.tv/
http://twitter.com/ruperthowe/


On 11 Nov 2007, at 19:55, Jason McCabe Calacanis wrote:

We launched Mahalo Daily with Veronica Belmont last week as some of
you might know. You can find the show at http://daily.mahalo.com and
on iTunes. We're hosting it at Blip.Tv (for now) but considering some
other options since folks have been pinging us.

I'm looking for some advice on what we can do--other than make the
best show we can--to grow the view to 100k+ a day quickly.

We did over 120k views in the first week (about 12-37k views for each
of the first four shows) which is much more than I thought we would.
We've got our iTunes page running and we're syndicating the videos to
YouTube and Facebook. We've also started a Facebook, Ning, Flickr, and
Twitter groups/accounts to compliment the program. They are getting
nice pickup.

On a business level, I'm wondering if there is anyone out there who
can bring in 100-250k views a day for show, perhaps in exchange for
exclusive hosting rights/advertising rights or something (i.e. Yahoo,
AOL, YouTube, etc).

Anyone have an distribution tips?
Has anyone done deals like this?

Mahalo for any help...

best J

i blogged about this here:
http://www.calacanis.com/2007/11/11/congrats-to-tyler-and-veronica-on- 
an-amazing-first-week-for-mahalo/






[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



[videoblogging] Advice on how to get to 100-250k views a day (quickly)?

2007-11-11 Thread Jason McCabe Calacanis
We launched Mahalo Daily with Veronica Belmont last week as some of
you might know. You can find the show at http://daily.mahalo.com and
on iTunes. We're hosting it at Blip.Tv (for now) but considering some
other options since folks have been pinging us. 

I'm looking for some advice on what we can do--other than make the
best show we can--to grow the view to 100k+ a day quickly. 

We did over 120k views in the first week (about 12-37k views for each
of the first four shows) which is much more than I thought we would.
We've got our iTunes page running and we're syndicating the videos to
YouTube and Facebook. We've also started a Facebook, Ning, Flickr, and
Twitter groups/accounts to compliment the program. They are getting
nice pickup. 

On a business level, I'm wondering if there is anyone out there who
can bring in 100-250k views a day for show, perhaps in exchange for
exclusive hosting rights/advertising rights or something (i.e. Yahoo,
AOL, YouTube, etc).  

Anyone have an distribution tips?
Has anyone done deals like this? 
 
Mahalo for any help... 

best J

i blogged about this here:
http://www.calacanis.com/2007/11/11/congrats-to-tyler-and-veronica-on-an-amazing-first-week-for-mahalo/