How to Create Engaging Videos

Episode: VMC #333 – How to Create Engaging Videos
[right click to download the source file – ‘Save the link as…’, video-player available below]

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Show Notes & Credits: Powered by itive.net

Make a Video About Making Videos

Episode: VMC #332 – Make a Video About Making Videos
[right click to download the source file – ‘Save the link as…’, video-player available below]

This week I’ll be in Paris for LeWeb and preparing things for the upcoming days I realized that I still had one unpublished episode from last year. Since I always listen to what my subscribers ask ( I will never let you down!) I share this with you now and I’ll address the specific needs of Sonja in my next video.

@Sonja sorry for the delay but I’m sure you’ll find some interesting tips in the next episode 😉

Andrea

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Show Notes & Credits: Powered by itive.net, twitter.com/aurorans, aurorineavanture.com.

How To: Get the most out of Facebook’s Impressions and Feedback stats


Check out the original post on The Next Web!

Special thanks as usual to Zee M Kane (@Zee) for the opportunity of sharing some thoughts with The Next Web friends, and to Brad McCarty (@BradTNW) for his magic touch & contribution.

Facebook Pages’ Administrators might be happy to hear that from now on they will all be able to have access to stats on the number of impressions and on the feedback of each entry posted on their wall.

Until now this feature was available only for pages that had at least 10,000 fans, but now it’s available to all administrators. Having access to this data is definitely something that will make happy many small businesses and organizations.

Want to see what the hype is all about? Check this out:

But now that you have it, what are you going to do with it? First off, you need to understand the meaning behind the names –

  • Impressions: raw number of times each entry has been seen on the wall and in the news feed of fans
  • Feedback: Number of comments and Likes given, per impression

So let’s say that you post something and it is seen by 10 people. Of those 10 people, one left a comment and one clicked like. Your Feedback score, then, would be 20%. But you have to take these numbers inside the context of what they mean.

For instance, let’s say that as your popularity grows, you see a greater number of impressions but a smaller feedback number. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing (though not necessarily good, either). While it’s our hope that everything you post gets liked and commented upon, you have to understand that what we want and what we get aren’t always one in the same.

In any transaction-based situation, as the number of users goes up the potential for interaction increases. However, it’s not likely that the act of interaction will increase by the same number.

As is true with almost anything that you’re doing publicly, you’ll need to gauge the reaction and take it into consideration from two directions. First, is the reaction overall positive or negative? Second, based upon the first answer, what did you do that was different from what you’ve done before?

Getting the most out of any statistic is a matter of taking all sides into account. With Facebook’s addition, it will give you some insight, but it won’t answer every question. So take the information as it is given and see what interesting things you can find with it.