Posts Tagged branding
How Not To Make A Video Boring.
Posted by SEO Services in Video Production on July 12th, 2010
The University of Kibangsaan Malaysia produced their latest corporate video, which is published on You Tube. The video emphasizes the work the University is doing to teach western topics in the native Malyasian language, so presumably the decision to create a corporate video in English is based on the desire to target wealthy Malaysians living in the west, who will potentially support the Univeristy.
After watching the video, I concluded that the University and videographers had decided to present important dicoveries made by University faculty, which are contributing to the social, technological and financial progress of mankind. The approach is certainly meritorious, and as the corporate video describes the list of advances, one can appreciate that many of these contributions are exciting cutting edge scientific developments. The discoveries presented include computerized monitoring of the eye movements of a driver to look for evidence he is too tired to drive and a computerized robot with the capability of detecting even minute smells.
Having plotted out the content of the corporate video the university and videographers next had to decide how they wanted to organize their material. The videographers and or University decided on a video format, which somewhat resembles the song Imagine by Beetle John Lennon. In Imagine, the late John Lennon presented his ideas as a series of parallel sentences each starting with the word imagine. The song was set to softe melodious music composed by Lennon.
The UKM corporate video, they presents a series of questions and responses about the future set to a soft slow playing background. For example, the first caption starts with a question, “What if a computer could see what your eyes cannot?” Another caption responds: “Driver drowsiness detection system developed by the faculty of engineering.” Question: “What if we could invent a machine with a sense of smell? Response: “The optical e-nose detects smells up to a millionth of a micron.”
The entire 9 minute video consists of additional segments organized just like these, up until the very end. In the background we watch imagery related to the discovery begin touted, and or the people who developed it. In the final segment, the video poses a series of questions without answers. Who is driving the nation forward with a strong sense of national identity?” “Who has the will to advance humanity? Finally, “What if it is a National University? Then the video flashes the name University of Kibangsaan Malaysia.
I wouldn’t call this a boring video, because the question answer format does generate amazement about the achievements. The wording of the questions focuses on the remarkable aspect of each discovery. However, with respect to the visual presentation I do believe the video missed presenting enough clips of the discoveries in action and therefore may not have reached to the level of excitement it could have.
To illustrate my point, the video starts by posing the question “What if a computer created by man could see things your human eye can’t see?” The question makes you think and then the next caption introduces the driver drowsiness detection system. The question and response arouses interest. However, the video fails to show a depiction of the produc being used in real life. A visual presentation of a driver driving down the road at night and almost falling asleep and being aroused by the computer and then pulling over, would have, in my opinion, added more excitement. This type of vidual segment would have been comparable to contemporary videos of androids, which feature the androids performing a variety of feats on screen and talking to people. The question and answer format wins for consistency, yet by the end everyone knows what to expect, and so it loses some effectiveness. Furthermore, after a while viewers probably would like to know the name of the university presenting this research. While this might make some of the watchers stay to the end, it could also cause some of them to lose focus on each individual discovery. Finally, the one short appearance of the name of the University, which is the subject of the video is probably not enough to create powerful image branding. I would recommend that the name should have come out at the beginning, so viewers can associate all the advancements with the University.
A Successful Imagistically Focused Trade Show Video
Posted by SEO Services in Video Production on June 6th, 2010
The mark of a successful company is one that can be challenged with a project that takes them to a new level of excellence, and can successful meet the challenge and fulfill the expectations of their client. Diginovations, home of creative video solutions, was challenged to create a trade show video for Microwave Radio Communications for the 2007 NAB trade show. Microwave had rented prime space booth, and so their trade show video would be the first video seen by visitors to the 2007 NAB convention convention floor. By 2006, HD video was the accepted standard at NAD, so this added yet one more requirement to the exacting challenge.
Diginovations accepted the challenge, and created an exciting video, which drew myriads of spectators to the Microwave Booth.Their video was imagistic, it was a branding video, and it succeeded in capturing and conveying the excitement, which wireless radio communication has brought to broadcasting.
The video excelled in its completeness. In four minutes, it presented all or most of the types of exciting scenarios that we think of as being associated with wireless communication. We watch as television crews travel by helicopter to cover on the minute spots news events, accidents, sporting events, rescues, fires. We watch broadcasting crews setting up their equipment and dismantling it. We see several fast motion segments which transform the routine actions of the broadcast crew into rapid action scenes that serve to convey the sense of urgency and haste which we associate with on the spot broadcasting.
Spliced in with scenes depicting the news events being covered and the means of transmission, are shots of the front line cameraman capturing the raw news footage. Shots of skiing, and other winter sports are emphasized, in the video by the Boston video company.These scenes reflect strong editing inclusion choices because these are sports which connote speed, accuracy, action, all elements that enhance the image the video is creating about Microwave Radio Communications.
The visual story line is backed up by exciting synthesizer music, which presents an enlarged theme not unlike the short music spots we are used to hearing before live televised broadcasts. While the video presents occasional captions, which enhance the branding, they present some of the written material in a very creative way. The company name is blazoned on the inside of their large concave disc microwave broadcasting antennae, which appear in the video from time to time.
The Microwave Radio Communications %KLINK3% presents exciting ways in which branding can be conveyed through good choices of video footage, which convey the imagery that people expect and want to see, in the companies field of endeavor.
How To Make A Good First Impression In Business
Posted by SEO Services in Marketing on July 1st, 2009
Ensuring your brand remains consistent across the entire marketing mix and across every communications channel is essential to maintaining a consistent and coherent image in any competitive marketplace and should be the first consideration of your marketing agency.vThe variety of different marketing channels available to any company today each have their own specific demands and their own rules. A design might look great on your business card or letterhead but may look completely different on a poster, tube card, direct mail piece, display advertisement or online in your website.
Print management with a view to not only cost effectiveness, but also how your brand is expressed to its maximum impact across all above, below and through the line channels is vital to effective communication with your target audiences. Central to all this is the initial corporate id design, aside from its creativity and how it captures the spirit of your proposition, how effectively it can be translated across all those myriad expressions will determine its longevity and impact. There are a few important points to remember when designing logos or corporate ID and here are some guidelines to a successful outcome:
A logo designed in a vector based program such as Illustrator allows for much more flexibility in terms of colours and will give you a much clearer image especially if there is text in the logo and you want to be able to use it in large format. Bearing this in mind, it is often not a good idea to use a photograph in a logo. If you can?t use a vector based program then design it large!
Stick to using just one or two fonts in your logo. Over-use of different fonts will often leave a logo looking cluttered and unprofessional. Any text used in a logo should be clear and legible, or don?t use text at all.
You may need to use your logo for a variety of different purposes and in different ways. Remember that what looks good on A4 print materials may not be so wonderful by the time it?s been expanded to fit exhibition graphics or a billboard. Whatever you create should be able to work well from the smallest to the largest of applications.
You may want to use the logo on black or white backgrounds or dark or light coloured backgrounds so the logo should work equally well as a stand-alone element or in a coloured box. Allow for the fact that your logo may need to be used in mono or single colour as well.
You have probably seen some designs that you like but try to make your logo as individual as possible. There is nothing wrong with using aspects from other logo designs that you find appealing, but in the end you want to be noticed because your logo is original.




