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subject: Get More Visual To Get More Business Online by:Sandy Bell [print this page]


They say "a picture is worth a thousand words," but, nowadays, a picture or video can be worth more than a thousand clicks. Video watching is the number one social media activity performed every day on the Web. According to the Universal McCann Social Media Tracker, in 2006, 31 percent of social media users watched videos and 10 percent uploaded videos on social media sites. Those numbers sky-rocketed in 2008 when 82 percent of users watched videos and 42 percent uploaded videos on social media sites. In the report "Approaching the Zettabyte Era" by Cisco Visual Networking Index, it is projected that, "the sum of all forms of video (TV, VoD, Internet, and P2P) will account for close to 90 percent of consumer traffic by 2012. Internet video alone will account for nearly 50 percent of all consumer Internet traffic in 2012."

The number of people who utilize visual tools online continue to grow as people become more and more entrenched in technology, and more and more pressed for time. Consumers are more particular about what they view and how long they take to do so. Businesses must stand out in the crowd and adding visual aids to content is the key. It attracts eyeballs, makes difficult material easier and quicker to grasp and gives your content uniqueness and more interest. Additionally, in this day of information overload, I find people are scanning more. Breaking up a longer article with visuals increases the potential of keeping the reader to the end. A long post or article with no visual breaks is sometimes seen as too daunting to even start for the time-pressed professional.

The Huffington Post, with a Nielson NetRating of more than 4.2 million, and Boing Boing are ranked in the top ten most-popular blogs on the Internet by Technorati. One reason for their high ranking is they always have a unique or different photo that is more interesting than other news or blog sites. Boing Boing, with a Nielson NetRating of more than 765,000, also has an entire page devoted to videos. Post Secret is ranked as number 11 in popularity by Technorati, with approximately half of its content being visual. The point is: People respond to visuals. According to an article by Patricia Vakos on Phschool.com, 65 percent of the population consists of visual learners. A report on "Presenting Effective Presentations with Visual Aids" by the U.S. Department of Labor noted that three days after an event, people retained 10 percent of what they heard from an oral presentation, 35 percent from a visual presentation, and 65 percent from a visual and oral presentation. Visual aids can deliver your message quickly, as well as help the viewer remember it better and retain the information longer.

Here's a link to a video we put together (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1tzg-FMZoA) for one of our clients, The lan at Bluffview, a mixed-use development comprised of retail space and luxury apartments in Dallas. For the opening of The Art of lan gallery, the apartment complex hosted an art contest where local artists could enter an art piece and compete to win six months of free gallery space in the new gallery and a $1,000 Visa gift card. The video allowed us to spread the word about the First Annual lan Art Gala Mix and Mingle event as well as draw attention to the artsy community. In addition to getting the video out in all tradional and online PR, we were also able to share the video on social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, thus gaining exposure to our target audiences and building excitement for the event in less than 60 seconds per view.

If you want to get more business you have to make yourself visible to your potential customers. By supplementing well-written content with visual aids such as videos and photos, you can gain positive attention from your audience, enhance your "digital footprint," and better communicate your message in a clear and concise manner. Consumers are actively searching for information and they expect to find the content they need; it's the company's job to make sure the content, be it visual, oral or written, is in the right place at the right time.

About the author

Sandy Bell is CEO and founder of SBellPR, www.sbellinc.com. The firm specializes in traditional and online PR, blog writing, content writing, SEO, social networking, event promotion and online buzz building. Follow her on the Get More Business Blog, http://blog.sbellinc.com.




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