Coming a blank slate You pay a lot of
Things stood out to me 1. Too long intro Of the one and a half minutes, almost half a minute was spent on the introduction of the location. The online environment is not a cinema people want to know very quickly what it is about. You don’t have to introduce a fictional world. Of course the location is part of the atmosphere, but it’s no excuse to pretend it’s a feature film. It is not exciting to show the location from every angle, but it is a waste of the attention you lose with it. 2. Content-free At first I had to wait a very long time for a bit of content, but then the content was vague.
If you were there you knew
What it was about, but that was it. As an unsuspecting viewer, it was not clear to me what was important, interesting, fun or urgent about both events. What I did see is that there were people present. If that was the goal, a photo could have achieved that too. 3. An open end A conclusion or a pay-off was missing. Where one video went out like a night candle, the other just suddenly Cabo Verde Email List ended. “Thanks for the attention” is not a pay-off, but a boring PowerPoint tradition. In feature films, an open ending can work fine, but what do you want the viewer to rememr after your aftermovie? Aftermovie recordings at a business conference. Prevent the aftermovie from attention to planning and organizing an event.
Then it’s a shame if the aftermovie
Looks like an afterthought, without a message. As with any form of communication, thinking ahead is important. 1. Set a goal! What message do you want to convey to the viewer? Who should see the video? The visitor or also the potential visitor? 2. Think about which shots should not missed A shot list helps to get the message across. You can therefore think about the storyline and B2C Lead thanks to the program you can plan when to film certain things. 3. Avoid duplication A series of almost the same shots add little to the story.