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 Put Audio & Video Web Site On Your

As a company that sells streaming media services for a living, we get questions everyday about what needs to be done to make an audio or video presentation that will stream well over the Internet. Most of these inquiries come from small businesses with limited budgets for marketing and advertising. They are always pleasantly surprised when we tell them that they can do it themselves!

Let’s start with an audio only presentation:

  • Write out your script first! Focus on two to three points that you feel are essential to explain your products or services. Keep the script simple. If your site offers a wide variety of goods or services, you might consider several different messages with each one keying in on one or two important areas.

  • Have someone who is not familiar with your business review the script and your site. Be sure that they understand your message. If they don’t, rewrite it!

  • Practice reading the script until you feel completely familiar and comfortable with it. (You can hire professional voice talent for reasonable rates if you’d prefer not recording the audio yourself.)

  • Use the best quality tape recorder available to you. A cassette recorder is fine.

  • Use a high quality brand name audiotape.

  • An external microphone that plugs into your recorder is preferable to the one that comes built-in. They are very inexpensive and produce a better recording.

  • Do your recording in a quiet place with as little background noise as possible. (That one seems pretty obvious, doesn’t it?)

  • Speak naturally! It can help to have a friend or colleague act as an audience to give you focus.

  • Record your presentation several times. Select the one that will sound the most natural and inviting to your site visitors.

  • Send the tape to the encoding (streaming) vendor. They’ll take it from there!

A video presentation takes a little more time and effort, but you really can do it yourself. Your home video camera will work just fine! All of the same rules you used to make your audiotape apply here including the use of an external microphone. Good quality videotape is essential. The following suggestions will help you prepare a video presentation for your site that should stream very well:

  • Keep the camera steady! Put the camera on a tripod or brace it against something solid like a table or a wall. If you must pan or zoom, do it very slowly. (Too much motion can cause a “blurry” stream.)

  • Simplify your frame. Think about where everything is going to be. People coming in and out of the frame can create movement that may cause confusion.

  • Stay focused. A lot of auto-focus cameras can’t focus properly if you are too close to your subject. Five or six feet away is a good distance. Don’t try to shoot through a window; the camera will focus on the glass.

  • Good lighting is essential. Try to light your scene from the front. Don’t stand in front of a window; the backlighting will cause you to be in silhouette. Try shooting outside if possible.
  • Use the fastest record speed. This will insure the best video quality.

  • Record in a quiet place. Hold the mike close to your mouth to cut down on external noises.

  • RELAX AND ENJOY YOURSELF! It really shows. Practice until you feel comfortable.

If you have additional questions or concerns, your streaming vendor should be ready and able to assist you.

Early adopters of Rich Media techniques, streaming being one of them, have already started to reap the rewards of higher click-through rates and increased conversion rates. If your message is meaningful and relevant to your site visitors, your streaming presentation will add to their enjoyment of visiting your site and encourage them not only to buy but also to return and buy again!

Ronni Rhodes is the owner of WBC Imaging, an Internet company that specializes in web site enhancement utilizing streaming media technology. With her husband, Don, a digital media engineer, they work with companies to incorporate streaming as part of successful and meaningful sales and marketing programs.

Streaming audio opens the world

Unlike most people these days, I did not grow up with a computer. My parents didn't believe in it. They were pretty old school academics, and preferred that we spent our time reading, playing music, and developing our chess skills instead of playing on the computer all day. In a lot of ways, I am actually grateful for this early experience. I think I have a longer attention span than most of my peers, and I developed some skills that I wouldn't have, had I been playing online video games! And best of all, I really developed an appreciation for the Internet because I couldn't take it for granted when I was growing up. I love having access to search engines, blogs, and Wikipedia. My favorite part of the Internet, however, is streaming audio music.

I actually wasn't exposed to streaming Internet radio until I was in college. I was working at the campus radio station, and was upset that I couldn't hear the shows that my friends were doing from home. You see, I was in a broadcasting dead zone, far away from the small, micro power campus transmitter. When one of my colleagues suggested that I listen to it through streaming audio, I had no idea what he was talking about. He had to explain streaming music audio. We had been broadcasting online the whole time, and I was completely unaware of it!

When he explained it to me, I thought it was the coolest things in the world. He actually laughed at me a little bit, but I didn't care. I used to be a fan of short wave radio when I was younger, and streaming audio gave me all the things I liked about it. I could listen to radio stations from all over the world with ease. And unlike a short wave transmitter, streaming audio would work all the time. I wouldn't get distant, faint signals from across the world, but high quality live transmissions as if I were listening to a local radio station!

Nowadays, I listen to streaming audio almost all the time. I'm not a big fan of streaming audio books, but I listen to live Internet radio whenever I am at home working on the computer, or just hanging out. I suppose it spoiled me – I can't find any radio stations I like in the car because my very favorite ones are halfway around the world!