Tumblr Explained in a Nutshell Released
We think more people should know about Tumblr, so we set out to answer the question “What is Tumblr?” Here’s the result. We think it turned out great!
We think more people should know about Tumblr, so we set out to answer the question “What is Tumblr?” Here’s the result. We think it turned out great!
What good are explainer videos? Why go to the expense? Is this just a me-too fad, or is there a genuine return on investment?
For some answers, let’s look at a Nutshell we produced for PlayOn. The Nutshell, combined with a simple yet well-executed Web strategy, had some amazing results that definitely made PlayOn’s investment worth it.
PlayOn came to us with an issue shared by many a tech company: They have a great product that people love once they finally understand what it is.
In response, we crafted a Nutshell that explains how PlayOn solves two problems:
1. People want to watch Internet videos in their living room.
2. Cable TV is too expensive and constraining.
In addition, we worked hard to boil down the PlayOn software and service into the simplest terms possible.
Here’s a snippet from our storyboard for the PlayOn Nutshell:
And the completed video:
Almost immediately the response to the Nutshell was positive. The video appeared on Engadget andCNET and garnered tens of thousands of views right out of the gate. What’s more, cable channel G4 picked up the video and ran it on TV.
Tracy Burman, COO of PlayOn maker MediaMall Technologies, Inc., had this to say about the release:
We have received lots of positive feedback about the Nutshell, and people having an “a-ha” moment after watching it. PlayOn has always been hard for folks to understand, and the video has really clarified it.
An effective Nutshell is only half the story, though, because explanation and understanding should lead to conversion. Here’s a look at the new PlayOn Web site, as designed by Zenwerks, a Seattle-based branding, design, and development firm:
Note how the video stands side by side with the “Get PlayOn” button. What’s more, the video has a clear call to action at the end — “Download it now!”
According to Ms. Burman at PlayOn, this simple arrangement was highly effective:
Our website conversion (visits to trial downloads) literally doubled after we launched the new simplified home page showcasing the Nutshell video.
By any standard, a doubling of conversion is pretty darn good. As we’ve always said, understanding breeds empowerment and the willingness to take action. When people understand something, when they apprehend its value, they want to own it.
That’s why explainer videos are more than a passing fancy. When deployed intelligently, they add immense value.
A good return on investment? Absolutely.
This interesting piece on Newsweek.com pulls out the old crystal ball and looks to where the Internet might be headed these days. As people tire of an endless stream of unreliable, disjointed, and often just-plain-bad content, things are trending back to an older model. That older model places gatekeepers at the top of the information food chain (editors, journalists, professionals, and other experts) as a means of vetting the content that lands in front of our eyeballs.
Here’s an interesting quote from Mahalo founder Jason Calacanis:
The wisdom of the crowds has peaked,” says Calacanis. “Web 3.0 is taking what we’ve built in Web 2.0—the wisdom of the crowds—and putting an editorial layer on it of truly talented, compensated people to make the product more trusted and refined.
Mahalo, which employs researchers to filter search results and display the “best results,” is a perfect example of this shift. Even though Calcanis sounds a little heartless to me, I think he’s on the mark with his thinking.
What does that mean for the Internet? Probably not a whole lot, other than this: Folks at the top of the media food chain are going to start throwing more money at vetted, filtered information in order to attract higher-margin ad dollars. User-generated content will never go away, of course, but the focus is shifting. The open and democratic Web (yay!) can exist alongside a growing network of “professionalized” information.
What does that mean for Planet Nutshell and Nutshells? I hope it means very good things, as my goal is to be one of the many filters that sort nuggets of good information from the scree and tailings.