Google Hangouts – they are hot right now
and every brand wants to do one but I’m afraid they can be disastrous and look
awful.
If you don’t know anything about Google
Hangouts, they are a way you can broadcast live from your Google+ account,
which upon completion will then automatically upload to your YouTube Channel.
You can link with up to 10 people on screen and invite people to come and watch
the live broadcast.
Go and watch a few and you’ll soon
appreciate why people like Graham Norton are paid huge amounts of money for
doing wonderfully entertaining live television. Most are terminally boring,
they are badly filmed with bad lighting and the people they link up to, who are
usually at home on a webcam located in their bedroom, look and sound atrocious. No one has
rehearsed, no one has prepared –it’s carnage. And on top of this they don’t
have enough bandwidth, so it’s jumping all the time
Here is a Hangout that House of Fraser did
this week:
I wanted to stab myself in the head after
two minutes but then it became so bad, it was funny.
If you have been involved with making TV
commercials all your life, which I have, you know how tough it is to create
something which looks good and is compelling viewing but here are my Hangout tips:
1.. Just because you can invite
people to a Hangout, doesn’t mean you have to, especially if you don’t know how
they are going to sound, where they are going to be, and what their broadband is
like.
2. Treat it like a piece of
programming, think about the set, the branding and make sure you have adequate
bandwidth.
3. Rehearse and prepare.
It doesn’t have to be learnt like a script but you can be sure that Graham
Norton has done his homework, knows what he wants to ask and what direction he
wants to take the whole programme before he starts. Improvisation takes far more effort that reading lines.
4. Take a tip from television stations and
make sure you are plugging the hell out your Hangout on every social channel before it
happens. I think House of Fraser had 14 viewers.
I’m sure House of Fraser will get better
and they have learnt some useful lessons but if you’re a brand and you want a
successful Hangout, it needs as much thought as any other aspect of your
marketing. Good luck!
Well said, when big brands try to do Google Hangouts or YouTube videos it really is like watching your parents trying to be cool. It just doesn't work. You want to be a success at YouTube then start becoming a nobody.
ReplyDeleteI've written a blog post in response to this blog piece, which you can read here, hope it gives a giggle if anything. http://happyberrycrochet.blogspot.co.uk/2014/02/can-big-brands-get-social-media.html
DeleteVery interesting and amusing!
Delete