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A less-than-one-minute review of my ring light, a game-changer for Zoom calls and interviews working from home

A less-than-one-minute review of my ring light, a game-changer for Zoom calls and interviews working from home

A couple months ago, I bought a ring light off of Amazon and I wrote about it, but now as you might expect, it has it gotten some major use because of all the Zoom calls and interviews I’ve been on, just like you, likely, and it’s time for an update on how it’s working.

I put up this super-quick review of the light and in summation, I do love it, I do believe it’s a game-changer, I have lit interview subjects including myself for a TV interview, worked on Zoom calls with it and have done presentations using it.

Make this one tweak to your social videos and watch them take off

It makes my space look professional and it provides an excellent filter for your face (it really softens it on the “warm’ setting! I honestly wish I could walk around with it all day.)

Here’s my previous post and here is the video review (if you can’t see it in the email, click here):

Yes, I’m on TikTok so feel free to follow me there as well!

Here is the actual link to the ring light on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3aAPo3F

Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links

This shelter took a chance and their video went viral (and how you can too)

This shelter took a chance and their video went viral (and how you can too)

A couple years ago, when I still worked in TV as a social media producer, I came across a social video that a pet shelter in Atlanta, Furkids, had done.

IT.WAS.HILARIOUS.

It was a spoof of a car sales commercial, only instead of shiny, fancy cars, they had lots and lots of cats. Tired ones, enthusiastic ones, hungry ones (all of them self-cleaning!) and if those aren’t your speed, they also have dogs!

It was such a simple, low-budget concept and the video went wild.

At the time the shelter posted it, I reached out to them to ask if my station could have their permission to use it on all platforms with credit/tagging to the shelter and they responded right away with a yes. (Watch below or you can watch here. It’ll make your day.)

For the shelter on Facebook and YouTube, it got more than a million views! How awesome!

And guess what? It got an additional 39 million views when we picked it up. Not to mention their coverage by Huffington Post and BuzzFeed. The power of social media!

So, lesson number one: You don’t have to have an elaborate video setup to execute a great idea. You just need to have an idea and do it! In fact, it took minimal editing to pull this off and he shot it on his iPhone in about 30 minutes. You just never know who will end up seeing it and sharing it, and that’s the holy grail right there – that it will get shared and land in front of the right person.

Here’s what happened after the video went viral for them:

-A television station (me) noticed the video and got their permission to use it on both television and social media. My television station happened to work with 15 other large market television stations like Atlanta, New York, and LA, so we all used the video! HUGE EXPOSURE. In addition to BuzzFeed, Huff Post, Reddit, etc.

-The shelter tells me that they raised $22,000 in TWO DAYS from people all over the world and they received dozens of gifts from their Amazon wish list. Not only that, but their followers DOUBLED, and people reached out to them wanting to WORK there! They just passed 80,000 fans on Facebook.

DO THESE TWO THINGS TO INCREASE YOUR VIDEO VIEWS AND WATCH TIME

I keep talking about businesses doing more videos, but this right here is a visual representation of what happens when you have a simple and creative idea and the power of executing it on social media.

Now, how can the success of other people help you?

That’s lesson number two: If it fits your brand and it’s a video or photo going viral that everyone is talking about, yes, by all means reach out to the poster directly and ask for permission to use it on your platforms with credit/tagging to them! This allows you to insert yourself into this viral conversation with your own page. It also helps increase exposure for them. (Share the love!)

THIS ONE SIMPLE TWEAK WILL MAKE YOUR SOCIAL VIDEOS 🔥

You can message them directly through Facebook, let them know how much you love what they’ve done, and ask the following questions:

  • Did you shoot it yourself?
  • May I have your permission to use it on all platforms with credit/tagging to you? (This enables you to use it on your website/blog and also on social channels.)
  • Is there anyone else we should credit?

Then thank them very much.

(Note: if they say they did not shoot it themselves and/or you don’t have permission, you can’t use it. But that’s OK, there’s always next time!)

This can be done for photos or videos of community events in your area, if you sell baby products and there is a mom in your area going viral with a post about her child you can reach out to her, if there’s an alligator crossing the road in a neighborhood you sell houses in…. the possibilities are endless. You can ALWAYS ASK. What’s the worst that can happen, they say no?

After I left television and had clients from different industries who I would post content for, I would still reach out to people whose content I thought was great and that I wanted to use or collaborate with. Even after I left TV and was helping to build pages that had small followings, they said YES. So, it doesn’t hurt to ask! Out of all the times I asked, only one person said no. When you’re building your content calendar, that’s great user-generated content you can put into the mix of your own!

Lesson three: If you have a video going viral or even if it’s just really cool, send the link to your post to your local TV stations. Slide it up in their FB DMs and let them know! When I was working on social media with a local mortgage broker, I pitched a tv station video of a home in Florida that was being sold with an underground bunker – those are rare in Florida – and the station picked it up. I also put together a video on social and someone from Maine saw it and called him!

Give the stations permission to use your video with credit/tagging to your company and page and they will run it on television and on their social pages where sky’s the limit. I personally loved getting tips like that from our viewers through our Facebook messages when I worked in news, and very often, I pitched them in our editorial meetings as story ideas and we would assign a reporter to it.

Video is only going to become more important as Instagram and Facebook grows, and we haven’t even discussed TikTok for businesses yet – that’s a very big deal!

Get in on the video game. It’s so worth it. Create your own, ask for permission for others.

As always, let me know if you have questions on video production or how to simply execute an idea like this one.

Do this to increase video views and minutes watched

Do this to increase video views and minutes watched

Probably the number one thing I would recommend most businesses do is DO MORE VIDEO on social. Whatever that form takes, businesses should take a deep dive into their content possibilities, whether it’s tutorials, highlighting products or services, or interesting interviews, there’s always room for more video.

And with the various editing software out there that are pretty easy to use, even apps and iMovie, which comes standard on iPhones, it’s also pretty easy to quickly edit something together.

So after you have your grand video ideas and you shoot them (yes, you can use an iPhone, I shoot with my phone all the time and I did put together viral social videos for a top television station using my phone as well), and you’re ready to put together your final product, these two things will help them go even further.

  1. As I mentioned in a previous blog post, USE YOUR BEST SHOT FIRST. Why? Because you have five seconds TOPS to rope a viewer into staying and if you’re showing them three seconds of a static graphic with your company name on it, they chances shrink exponentially that they’re going to stick around for more. As a former social media producer for a large television station, the one thing that launched our videos into stardom was using the best possible shot (or a variety of amazing shots first in a quick-moving sequence) to hook viewers into staying. The video autoplays in Facebook’s newsfeed, so why not use that to your advantage?
  2. The #2 thing you should add to your videos is captioning. Why? Because very often, people watch videos in places where they need to volume to be off. So, if you’re putting together a video of your talking head, there is a larger chance that people will pass on it if they are watching with the audio off – UNLESS you have captioning on. Then, you just roped them into staying a little longer, hopefully.

You can add captioning by putting words on your video in your editing software during the editing process, whether you use iMovie, or editing apps like Canva (which can be used on both desktop and in an app) or Square Edit. Canva even offers free stock video options if you need to supplement your content. I use Adobe Premiere, which is a subscription cloud-based service offered by Adobe Creative Cloud, and it offers not only Photoshop for still photos but Lightroom, an app on your phone to do quick photo edits, and Adobe Spark, which is a great desktop or phone application that helps you create awesome social graphics and even easy social videos with music that’s cleared to use.

The other way you can add captioning is without the use of any outside apps at all, but with Facebook’s built-in captioning, which can be found in Publishing Tools, and on the lefthand side, Creator Studio.

When you go to upload your video, there’s an “enable captioning” option that you can check. Just make sure that you READ THROUGH THE CAPTIONS BEFORE POSTING. Often, there are misspellings (voice to text probs!) and you can fix the spellings and also make sure the words match up to what you’re saying.

Yes, it does take a little extra time to put the finishing touches on your social videos this way, but it’s way worth it. If you’re putting in the time to create videos, you may as well make your videos the absolute best they can be.

Get creative! Stand out. Get shares. Get noticed.

You are solving problems for people and there is no doubt you have valuable visuals to go along with it. Tell people all about it on your social pages.

Watch my social video example below (for subscribers who can’t see it, click here.)

Make this one tweak to your social videos and watch them take off

Make this one tweak to your social videos and watch them take off

In social media, especially in the world of Facebook, you have five seconds TOPS to grab your audience.

Three seconds, really.

The first thing to meet their eye will be the thing that helps them to decide whether or not to stay. Is that the headline? Is it a word on the screen? Is it a shot of the long, slow drip of decadent hot fudge in a closeup of a sundae?

RELATED: How businesses are pivoting on social media during COVID-19

So often, businesses (especially large businesses with massive marketing departments) start out with a shot of a human talking head before they show the video that we are all really there for, that delicious sandwich or the glistening pool with the waterfall.

Or, they start out with a title graphic with the name of their business on it.

Don’t do that.

If you are going to brand a video, put the logo watermark in one of the bottom corners and then use the 2nd or third shot as the graphic (if you must use one.) It’s even better to use it at the end and create a special graphic specific to your social videos.

Why?

Because when people are scrolling through their feed and your video begins to autoplay, your audience has a split second to decide whether or not they’ll stay or go.

If they spend that few seconds on your logo, they’re gone.

As a 20+ year TV news producer, 12 of them spent in social media editing and producing social videos, I’ve found the best way to produce your social video is to start with the very best shot, and then backtrack and tell your story from the beginning after that first shot.

Wait, what? You’re not using videos for your business on social media?

Hurry up, go back to your business, grab your team and start brainstorming: How can you use video to inspire/grab people/problem solve for someone? Do that now.

MORE:

This pet shelter used little to no tech to go viral and IT WAS AWESOME

-Two MUSTS for your social media content: Service and Storytelling

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Simple lighting for your social media

It’s hard to get the lighting right on social media using natural lighting or your lighting at home or in the office and sometimes you just need a little something extra.

I knew I needed better lighting that was simple to use and easily transportable, so I read through the reviews on Amazon and decided on a very inexpensive ring light by UBeeSize.

This ring light is 8 inches and can be attached to a tripod that can be tall (it says up to 5 feet) or shrink down to tabletop size. There is also an attachment to hold your cell phone below it, as you can see from the picture.

The light has a USB cord to plug into either an external battery pack or a laptop or computer for power; I used an external battery pack for this one.

The light comes with a cool little soft velvet pouch to transport the light in so it’s easily transportable and the best part is, on Amazon it was marked down from $39.99 to $23 and came to me same day!

It has a 4.5 star rating. Some of the reviews said that it came broken, mine didn’t. Some said that the light didn’t turn on after several uses, mine continues to turn on and off just fine.

The light also comes with a remote that you can use to start and stop your video remotely via bluetooth, or take selfie photos.

The “warm” light setting

The light has three settings, white, blue, and warm, and you can adjust the brightness on all three. I love the “warm” setting personally. You can’t see my pores like you can in the white setting. 😂

The directions were pretty self-explanatory in setting up the tripod and the light and I will have an unboxing and setup video soon on this post.

Some reviewers thought the top of the tripod was a little flimsy and I can see that, but it seems to hold an iPhone 8 just fine and it claims to be able to hold most phones.

I’ll update this post if anything goes wrong, but for now, it’s a really cool little tool that can give your social media a little kick and it’s not expensive, honestly so if it doesn’t work, you’re not out a bunch of cash!

Here’s a little demo of the lighting settings:

Here’s the link to it if you want to get it! (Disclaimer: I am an Amazon affiliate but the opinions of the products I use are my own.)