Monday, September 30, 2013

What I Learned About Viral Videos

(From someone who’s video didn't go viral)

THE IDEA
I became laid off after doing telephone tech support after almost 13 years.  I decided to take this as an opportunity to try something different, something that I could use my writing passion with.  It was a difficult and fruitless search and then I read an article about a guy who turned his resume into a mock Amazon product page listing.  It was a clever idea that went viral and lead to some job interviews.  I decided I could do something similar “outside-the-box” and came up with the idea of a movie trailer resume.  Thus, “Unemployed ManMakes His Resume Into A Movie Trailer,” was born.
I’ve been working on writing and video productions on the side for many years and I knew I could pull it off.  It’s also something I hadn't heard of before, so I thought this unique idea could gain some traction.  I ran it by a friend who used to work as an HR manager and now runs a resume creation service (called 5280 Resumes).  She thought it was a great idea too.
I got to work on the script, trying to balance out the resume details that needed to go in it with some interesting scenes that I could actually shoot.

MARKETING
But having the video was only half the battle; I needed it to go viral so I could be noticed by as many potential employers as possible.  I came across this article, “How To Approach The Creation of Viral Marketing Content,” by Hartley Brody from the HubSpot website.  He explained that marketing was key and 75-80% of views are in the first 3-5 days.  It needed to be pushed out to a large audience all at once.
I began to research different social media sites to see what I could set up to help get the word out.  I had the blog, YouTube channel, and a personal Facebook account, but that wasn’t enough.  I set up Twitter, Flickr, Tumblr, Google+, Pinterest, and Vimeo accounts.  (By the way, that is a lot of social media channels to keep track of.)

RESEARCH
Then I researched how to make videos go viral and found this great article, “10 ways to make your video go viral,” by Karen Cheng.  She made a time laps video learning how to dance over the course of a year.  She has over 3 million views.  This was an excellent article on the different tactics she took.  I highly recommend it.
She suggested finding social news sites and blogs with a bigger audience than you, so their viewers would see it.  So I got accounts and set up a presence on Reddit, StumbleUpon, and Digg.  I also found many marketing blogs that I’d send it to.  With Reddit, the biggest question was what subreddit I would put it on.  I looked at an article Karen linked to about, “How to get a link on the front page of Reddit.”  I spent a few weeks looking at different ones, and what the requirements were for each, and decided I would start with what she used, the “getmotivated” one.  As a backup, I would repost to the “filmmakers” one.
She also said to look at your video for what companies might have a stake in it.  I have a Dodge Challenger in the video and mentioned my alma mater, Metro State.  Her release date was on Tuesday.  People watch videos at work and you want the whole week for it to catch on.
After several weeks of marketing set up, the launch date was ready.  I scripted out what I was going to say to each media channel so I would only have to copy and paste it, or make minor adjustments.

READY, SET, GO!
The night before I went to work on downloading it to Vimeo, YouTube, Flickr, and Pinterest.  I woke up early the next morning (so the East Coast would see it when they went to work) and first put it on Reddit.  I spent the whole day getting the word out.
For Facebook, I set up an event, besides posting it on my wall.  A lot of people don’t see a particular wall post which is why I made an event as well.  I figured everyone would see it then.  I also posted it three times on my wall throughout the day.  I e-mailed it to everyone I know, and put it on my social media channels.
On Twitter, I even sent it to some celebrities I’m following.  (A long shot, but they have thousands of followers and I only needed one retweeted, I thought.)
I also sent it out over my LinkedIn site, since I was looking for a job and what better place to post it.  I also put the video on my profile page so it would be one of the first things you would see.

RESULTS
On day one I got 313 YouTube views.  Pretty good from previous videos I posted, but nowhere near the 80,000 the dance video girl got.  I only had 4 upvotes from the getmotivated subreddit.
For the second day I deleted my post from Reddit, and reposted on the filmmakers one.  I expanded my posts to the local media, TV Stations, a couple of radio stations I listen to, and the newspaper.  I sent it to IGN (a film, TV, and video game site) since it was somewhat movie related.
Total for YouTube was 419 views, so only 106 new ones.  It was already beginning to drop off dramatically.  I only had one upvote on Reddit.

END GAME
After two weeks I had meager results.  YouTube had 474 views, Vimeo had 4, Flickr surprisingly had 59 views, 1 repin on Pinterest, and 12 likes on StumbleUpon.  I had 14 friends going to my “Facebook event,” 8 likes, and 7 shares.  The only media response was from one radio DJ, but it wasn’t mentioned on the radio or posted.  I did get a response from Hartley Brody (I sent him an e-mail since his article got the marketing ball rolling for me) which was very cool of him, but I didn’t get any other responses back.
Making it go viral would have been nice, but the main point was to get some job interviews out of it.  I was told about 2 part time jobs, and got a telephone interview for a full time gig.  (I’m still waiting for the results.)

WHAT I LEARNED

There’s no way to determine what will make a video go viral.  I thought I had a good title, “Unemployed Man Makes His Resume Into A Movie Trailer,” and a good emotional story to go with it.  Everyone knows economic times are tough, and I thought I could use that for people to give a helping hand, or helping repost.  I put in a few months worth of time into social media sites, and establishing a better online presence.  But I still got less than 500 views.  You never know what the public is going to latch onto, so you can only give yourself the best shot possible, and hope for the best.  And never stop learning or trying.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Monkey Kid Book Update

It's been few and far between, but we managed to get a couple of days worth of work done on the book.  We get about a page done each time, so we're two pages closer to being done, but still a long ways to go.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Comedic Cowboy Novel

Years ago, I heard a song on the radio that made me think of an idea for a short story about a cowboy in space.  A few opening lines was as far as it got.


Much later, after reading the "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy," I decided to take that short story idea and make it a novel instead.  I was inspired by a science fiction themed comedy and I started thinking about what I could do with a science fiction comedy.  I wrote down a few ideas that I had for it, but that was as far as I got.  Until now.  I re-read "the Guide" and watched the movie for inspiration.  Then I started working on a lot more details for it today.


I'll start using my new found knowledge and see how well I can apply it to a book.  So begins the outlining for what will be my next novel.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Ben Franklin

I caught up with the Dragon feature idea to where I was at in my Anatomy of Story idea, so I needed something else to work on.  I came across some notes when my wife and I went to a traveling show at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science about Benjamin Franklin.  I started doing some research for it over the last couple of days and started to get really into it.  But I had to stop myself because I'm not ready to delve that much into something historical again.  Besides, that would be a novel in the distant future, so I don't want to spend any time on it yet.  But it is percolating.

Sunday, September 08, 2013

Dragon Animated Feature Screenplay

Many years ago, I wrote up a treatment about dragons for my wife as a gift.  I grew up playing D&D and the idea of certain colored dragons were evil, and she grew up liking all dragons.  So I came up with an idea for her about a dragon that doesn't terrorize the kingdom.  But the treatment was as far as I got.  I wanted to get to a point in my writing that I thought I could do the idea justice.

I've now written two animated features so I have a little experience under my belt now.  I also wanted to work on some of the ideas from the Anatomy of Story book that I'm now reading.  I thought I would work on the screenplay as I finish a new chapter and apply what I've learned.  I'm excited to see how much better this idea will become!

Sunday, September 01, 2013

Education to become a master storyteller

In an effort to take my writing to the next level, I purchased the book, "The Anatomy of Story:  22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller," by John Truby.  He is "one of the most respected and sought-after story consultants in the film industry . . ."  I have heard a lot about him, and watched some videos put on by Film Courage about his techniques here.  It had some good information, but a lot of it was generalized, so I bought the book to get all the details.  I'm hoping to take my writing to the next level after this.  We'll see how it goes.