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Posts Tagged ‘community’

A Spidvid Infographic

April 7th, 2011

I’ve long been fascinated with infographics from a visual, information, and content intake perspective. I figured it was time to create an infographic for Spidvid because our community has been relatively active and has accumulated some decent statistics over the past few months. So I published a tweet (@Spidvid on Twitter) asking for a talented designer to collaborate with us in creating one, and Joshua Murphy of element3media kindly reached out and designed the Spidvid infographic art that you see below.

This is just the beginning of our community’s successes, and vision to become the world’s largest open and collaborative filmmaking ecosystem ever built in the history of mankind. If you need some sort of help/advice on your short film or web series, or some seed funding to develop your content, then please reach out to us and let’s discuss how we can partner up!

Cheers to infographics, innovation within the online video space, and especially to our community for producing remarkable video entertainment for the world’s audience to enjoy and share.

Spidvid Infographic

Stay updated on everything Spidvid by getting our blog delivered to your email inbox, or read it in your favorite RSS reader. And if you don’t have a Spidvid profile yet, then create one now!

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How To Promote Your Videos – Collaboration Edition

March 2nd, 2011

Travis Gordon is a video creator who manufactured the brilliant fantasy action web series Spellfury which has now amassed over 3 million views throughout its incredible existence! In addition to being a web series creator, he also teaches others on how to promote their videos to receive more views, comments, likes, subscribers, and love.

Spidvid has sponsored his latest video “How To Promote Your Videos –  Collaboration Edition” and it’s a worthwhile watch to learn how to collaborate with other talent to improve your production and entertainment quality, and how to leverage each other’s networks to drive more video views, and attract more overall attention for your team’s content.

If you create videos that may interest us to sponsor, please contact us and let us know how we can mutually benefit together.

Jeremy Campbell community, resources, video blog , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The 12 Step Process To Web Series

February 14th, 2011

Hi, my name is Ralph and I make webseries.

Sound like the introduction at a twelve step meeting? Yes. Is the compulsion to spend all of your time and often much of your own money creating content that may or may not ever gain you recognition or monetary gain something that requires attending a support group? Absolutely! But the group you should join is not one that strives to get you over your addiction to creating, but one that helps make your efforts worthwhile. Do such groups exist? Most definitely! In fact, by reading this on Spidvid.com, you’ve already found one of them.

Let’s back up a bit. Not too long ago, if you put all your time and resources into making a short film, or harder still, a feature, you didn’t have many options for getting viewers and recognition. If you spent lots of money on film festival entry fees and happened to find some that decided your project was something they wanted to show, you might develop a following. Best case scenario, a distributor would pay you for your work and promote it to a larger audience. In some ways it was a simpler time, because it was easy to know which path you wanted to take. There weren’t really any other ways to do it. As with anything, there were pros and cons to this very linear system, but if you ask me, I’ll take the world of New Media that has emerged since the advent of widespread broadband internet access and the public shift to viewing more content online.

Now, if you create something you’d like people to see, there are dozens (maybe hundreds?) of sites where you can post it. Some will get you more views than others, and most don’t lead to financial gain, but your work can be seen, which is one of the points of making it, right? But what if you are more serious about taking your need to create to the next level, so it’s more of a career than a hobby? In keeping with the “Twelve Step” metaphor I started with, I made a list of twelve concepts and resources that can help with projects you have high hopes for. I’m following them as I work towards completing Season 1 of “Causality”, the sci-fi webseries I’m currently producing and directing (www.watchcausality.com), and they will help you as you develop and build projects you’re working on.

1. Be passionate about the story you want to tell. Don’t create something just because you think other people will like it. In other words, if you hate Musicals, don’t make a “Glee” style program because it’s popular.

2. Don’t try to do every job yourself. It sounds prestigious to be a Writer-Producer-Director-Actor-Editor…until you realize that if no one else is a part of your project it means either a) you’re a control freak, or b) you couldn’t sell anyone else on your idea. Your project WILL be better if you use your passion to bring others together to create it–provided that you:

3. Assemble the right team to bring your project to life. That doesn’t mean find people who think exactly like you, and who know exactly what you know. It means find people who have complementary ideas to yours and skills that you don’t. It’s scary to do this–you’ll see your project become something different from what you first conceived, but its life force will grow exponentially as more people add their inspirations to yours.

4. Organize the team like a business. Define roles clearly, have regular meetings with agendas, action items and deadlines, and create a level of accountability. Even if no one is getting paid, setting a professional tone will help keep things on track and encourage the team to continue to take their jobs seriously.

5. Set a schedule, and do your best to stick to it. As early as you can, decide when the key steps of production will be done: When will the script be finalized? Pre-production begin? Principal Photography? When will the final product be ready to post? Of course, things will happen that may change your schedule, but creating a timeline and setting goals will keep you and your team from losing motivation, and it will prevent having an unreasonable number of steps to take all at once.

6. Research where you want to publicize your finished product. You may think it’s too early to worry about that if you’re just starting pre-production, but it isn’t. There are dozens of sites that host and promote independently created content, and they are all different. Some will allow anyone to post, whereas others require submission and acceptance like a film festival. Some are considered more prestigious than others, or specialize in specific genres (Like www.Scifinal.com. They stick to Science Fiction, obviously.) Knowing your target distribution site(s) will help you plan, and remind you to keep the genre and/or quality requirements in mind, so that when you’re finished you can post your project in the most prestigious locations possible, draw a large audience who likes your topics, and potentially court sponsors.

7. Develop a community around your project from the start. Even back in the days when film festivals were the only way to get your work seen, smart producers spread the word about their films whenever and however they could That way, there was already an audience waiting to get into their screenings when they played at festivals. It was much harder then, but now you have the Internet. Use it! A lot. Blog, Tweet, and Facebook, about your project. Be careful not to just barrage people with promotional messages, but make it interesting to become part of your project’s community. Have a contest, give away merchandise, invite others to contribute creatively, offer parts in your show, whatever you can do without jeopardizing the quality of your work. Check out UK filmmaker A. D. Lane (@indywoodFILMS on Twitter) for a real primer on how to do this.

8. Become part of the community of creators. The mechanics of production have become much easier since the advent of consumer cameras and editing systems, so a heck of a lot of people are making things and posting them online. Quality and professionalism varies quite a bit, so find some shows/films/sites that you respect, and develop relationships with the creators. Most of them are doing what I recommended in step 7, so you can find them all over the place, like Twitter, Facebook, etc. At this point in the evolution of online entertainment, we all want to encourage the world at large to take us seriously and introduce more people to quality independent online productions. So, even though there is an element of competition, most creators are excited to connect with others who have a similar goal.

9. Use resources where you live. Many large and mid size city governments have a Film Commission or Media department that can help with locations, permits, etc., and many places have private organizations that are dedicated to helping artists. I live in Seattle, where we are lucky to have several places to look to, including the Office of Film and Music (http://www.seattle.gov/filmandmusic) and private organizations such as Northwest Film Forum (http://www.nwfilmforum.org) and 911 Media (http://www.911media.org) Look around– it’s a safe bet that no matter where you live, there are places not too far away that can offer some support.

10. Don’t spend all your own money! If you’re trying to be a professional, you can’t just self-finance your work. If you want to build a career, you need to show that you can convince others to invest in your vision, and spend that money wisely. Unless you’re established already, or have lots of wealthy patrons, you will likely have to spend some of your own money; but don’t neglect crowdfunding outlets such as http://www.indiegogo.com and http://www.kickstarter.com. There are other creative ways to raise funds as well, including pursuing product placement sponsorships. So see what others are doing, and decide how you can preserve your own Retirement Fund and still make your project.

11. Don’t get discouraged. Things will not always go well. People you were depending on will back out, time and money will be limited, shoots will go poorly, and you’ll wonder if anyone really cares about this thing you’re making. That’s a normal part of production, so roll with it. I don’t mean keep a false sense of positivity–recognize what went wrong, figure out why, and take steps to prevent it from happening again. But don’t let it derail your project. Leadership is very important. If you can show that positive action is being taken to make things better, your team will stick with you, and help you move forward to better days.

12. Expect Success. This is your chance. If you followed Step 1, you chose to commit to making something that you dream about a reality. Don’t skimp on that. Use your passion to draw together the most talented collaborators and know that you CAN find the time and money that you need to produce your project. Don’t let people tell you what can’t be done. Evaluate challenges realistically, but keep the attitude that you WILL do what you set out to do. If you find you can’t go over an obstacle, go around it. Expect to complete your project, draw millions of fans, and get funding for your next idea. Take comfort in the fact that many before you have done it, and strive to do it even better than they did.

That’s a lot to think about, right? Just like any “program”, some steps will be harder than others, and it may take you awhile to get through them all. I for one am glad to have sites like Spidvid to serve as a “Sponsor” to help keep me from falling off the wagon. Here (and other places) I see the community of people who take themselves as Producers, Directors, Writers, etc. seriously, and know that I belong with them. I salute all of their efforts, and cheer on anyone who has a sincere desire to create quality work. I hope this helps you do the same.

Ralph Fontaine is a Director/Producer/Actor who has lived and worked in Los Angeles, New York, and Seattle. His current project is “Causality”, a Science Fiction webseries about time travelers who come from the future to the early 21st Century. Check it out at www.watchcausality.com, and/or email him at Rfontaine@watchcausality.com

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Multiple Video Projects At a Time

February 4th, 2011

multiple hats

Are you a passionate man or woman on a mission when creating new videos? Perhaps you try to do everything by yourself, work on just one project at a time, and ultimately end up with sub-par results over a long period of time.

We all want to be multi-talented at what we do, but wearing many different hats on a project can be exhausting and you can spread your skills too thin. For every successful film project, there is a talented team behind it, period.

So you have a couple choices: a) work on one project at a time and try to do everything yourself, or b) reach out to outside talent, connect and collaborate with the individuals you need to add skill to your project, and free up more of your time to do multiple projects at a time.

For example: Jessie is an aspiring filmmaker who loves writing and shooting creative new videos, but hates editing them, dislikes using his voice for the voice over, and tries to score each of his videos but they always end up sounding rather boring to viewers. Jessie can keep pressing on with this process and settle for mediocre videos, or he can focus exclusively on writing and shooting videos and collaborate with other like-minded talent to fill in his skill gaps. This gives Jessie the time to do many projects simultaneously, allows him to complete more projects faster, and hedges his bet so he doesn’t invest a ton of time into projects that end up getting little or no success. He gives up some control and perhaps pieces of the content ownership, but gets many more opportunities at success with each new video him and his team release to the world.

Our Spidvid community is full of talented individuals eagerly waiting for new and exciting projects to be part of. If you have projects you want to launch but either don’t have the time or talent to accomplish that, then get a Spidvid account, and post a project. We will help you spread the word to the specific talent you need, and get your project heading in the right direction.

Jeremy Campbell New Project, community, resources , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

5 Tips for Getting the Most Out of Your Spidvid Profile

December 10th, 2010

Spidvid tips

So you have created a Spidvid profile but you don’t know what to do next. We’ve created a list of tips that will help you get the most out of your experience using our new media platform, and leveraging our community for video projects.

5 tips for getting the most out of your Spidvid profile:

1. Fill Out All of Your Profile Info – Tell your story and showcase your portfolio with your Spidvid profile. Embed your top videos and/or demo reel so others can watch what you’re up to, not just read about it. Include important links such as your website, blog, Twitter and Facebook profiles, IMDB page, etc.

2. Upload a High Quality Head Shot – A good first impression makes all the difference in getting your project bids accepted, and looking the part is half the job for some roles. So if you’re an actor, VFX artist, or graphic designer, expect other members to be highly critical of how you present yourself in our community. Also, if you can’t take the time to upload your picture, how will a producer trust you’ll play your part on the project?!

3. Actively Bid on Projects – The only way you’re going to get noticed and invited to participate in projects is if you start reaching out to video creators, and earn feedback from collaborating on projects. We’ve recently had several great opportunities arise for members to get involved in all aspects of some amazing video projects. From writing, to acting, to production, to promotion and beyond, no matter what part of the process you’re involved with there is a team and project waiting for you to be part of. So head over to our projects section and see if something interests you right now. If there is nothing right now that catches your eye then perhaps there will be in the near future, so subscribe to the Spidvid projects feed to stay updated going forward.

4. Participate in the Forums - The Spidvid Forums is the spot where you can start conversations about video projects, production, ideas to improve the Spidvid platform, or anything else on your mind. Create a thread about your project, post a link to it in your project description to let interested people ask questions, provide advice, give recommendations, and offer feedback to help you move forward and get your project off the ground. Additionally, the forums feature daily filmmaking and production tips, alongside a conversation section where you can connect to others in the Spidvid community.

5. STAY CONNECTED - Subscribe to our blog and monthly newsletter and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. Connecting with us via e-mail and through phone conversations is the best way to build a direct relationship with us. Our YouTube channel features several videos that demo our Spidvid platform and visually show first hand the project work flow process.

We hope you find these tips helpful for making the most out of your Spidvid experience. If a question just came to mind leave it below with a comment, or email us. Don’t be shy, we would LOVE to hear from you!

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