Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

All Hands Support

Friday, August 20th, 2010
Recently, the team at NewRelic (an app monitoring tool we use at Wistia) announced that they crossed the 5,000th customer mark, an impressive feat for a two-year-old company. But instead of espousing about how great they are and high-fiving over their growing pile of cash (which would be justified), Lew Cirne (@sweetlew), the founder and CEO, decided to spend his time describing how a 32 person company handles 24/7 support with no support staff. In Lew’s words:

Each and every support request is handled by a development engineer who has full access to our entire source base, and the full authority to do whatever is necessary to make things right. This includes agent tweaks, production patches and—on rare occasions when we mess up—free upgrades.

The NewRelic approach resonates with me. It’s an approach that guarantees that the right people are hearing about the right problems and that customers know that you take their problems seriously.

In the comments on Lew’s post, there was feedback from Ben Congleton, the CEO at Olark, (the live chat widget we use and love) who said:

Every member of our team does a rotation on support. I think the key issue is to make sure that 1) everyone in the company knows why they have a job [hint: it's the customers], and 2) An engineer with full commit access rarely needs to escalate anything (so quicker service).

Ben is highlighting another part of the same story: that employee motivation should be aligned with happy customers, and that fast and excellent customer service is important.” would work better.

Noticing a trend?

Well, it turns out that we do support in a very similar way to both NewRelic and Olark. In our case, we call it All Hands Support, but it’s basically our spin on the same story. It means that everyone in the company takes shifts on managing the chat widget, answering the phone, and calling to check in on customers.

The benefits of a shared support system are enormous. Not only can you more easily automate technical issues, but you also end up improving your company’s messaging, reducing confusion around features, modifying pricing elements that don’t jive properly, and cleaning out issues from every other customer-facing element of business.

Fixing problems is critical to growing a business, but more important is knowing what to fix next and how to prioritize a laundry list of other evovling issues. There is no better way to do this than to make sure that everyone has a pulse on customer needs.

There is a new breed of company that doesn’t rely on the traditional models for scaling businesses. These companies can move faster on the right problems, keep customers happier, and build better products. If given the choice, I’ll always pick this new breed over the establishment. It’s great to be surrounded by such great company.

New Wistia Badges

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

By popular demand, here are two brand new Wistia badges. We’ve created light and a dark versions of each, so they’ll look great on any page background. Thanks for helping us spread the Wistia word. We truly appreciate it.

Slim Badge

Great for putting above or below a video. Here’s an example of one in wild — though this one has been tweaked by the great Dan Benjamin.

Code for the white text version

<a href="http://wistia.com/?badge"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:12px;color:#fff;margin:0;padding:0 10px 0 0;position:relative;top:-3px;display:inline-block;text-shadow: #333 1px -1px">VIDEO HOSTING BY</span><img src="http://static.wistia.com/images/badges/wistia_100x96_white.png" width="100" height="16" alt="Wistia" style="border:0;margin:0;padding:0;display:inline;"/></a>

Code for the black text version

<a href="http://wistia.com/?badge"><span style="font-family:Arial;font-size:12px;color:#000;margin:0;padding:0 10px 0 0;position:relative;top:-3px;display:inline-block;text-shadow: #ccc 1px -1px">VIDEO HOSTING BY</span><img src="http://static.wistia.com/images/badges/wistia_100x96_black.png" width="100" height="16" alt="Wistia" style="border:0;margin:0;padding:0;display:inline;"/></a>

Label Badge

If you want a bit more meat, this is the badge for you. Perfect for a page footer.

Code for the white text version

<a href="http://wistia.com/?badge"><div style="font-family:Arial;font-size:11px;color:#fff;margin:0;padding:0;padding-left:10px;">VIDEO HOSTING BY</div><img src="http://static.wistia.com/images/badges/wistia_label_alpha.png" width="145" height="39" alt="Wistia" style="border:0;margin:0;padding:0;"/></a>

Code for the black text version

<a href="http://wistia.com/?badge"><div style="font-family:Arial;font-size:11px;color:#000;margin:0;padding:0;padding-left:10px;">VIDEO HOSTING BY</div><img src="http://static.wistia.com/images/badges/wistia_label_alpha.png" width="145" height="39" alt="Wistia" style="border:0;margin:0;padding:0;"/></a>

Want your own Common Craft video?

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Our friends at Common Craft have started making custom videos again! This is exciting news for anyone who is looking for explanatory videos.

Getting a custom-made Common Craft video is one of the best ways to have your product or service explained (see Dropbox for a great example). Common Craft looks at your company from the outside and comes up with ingenius ways to simplify the most complex business processes. The problem, up until recently, has been that they’re too good at their jobs. They’ve created more demand than they could handle, so most people couldn’t get a custom Common Craft video. To unjam the bottleneck, Common Craft has partnered with another one of our friends, Switch Marketing. Switch will help do the production and management of the process so that Common Craft can focus on all the creative aspects. It’s a great match which will make Common Craft videos available to many more companies.

To learn more you should read the announcements from Common Craft and Switch Marketing.  We’ll be on the lookout for more Common Craft style custom videos to appear in the near future!

If you love data, set it free

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

At Wistia, we…love…data. Even more, we love data that helps us make better decisions.   However, when it comes to video and the best ways to use video, there isn’t much data out there.  We want to change that.

As a result, we are starting a program that will allow us to share data and best known practices around video with the community.   We are doing this by offering free Wistia accounts (free for the period of the test) to a select group of companies that want to run interesting video experiments and allow the data and results to be shared with the community. What sort of video experiments do we think would be interesting?  Here are a few suggestions:

  • small-dotHow including a video in your email affects click through percentages
  • small-dotThe effect of different thumbnail images on how many people click play
  • small-dotHow length of video affects viewer engagement

While these are a few of our ideas, we are excited to hear about interesting experiments that you guys come up with as well.

If you are interested in participating and getting a free Wistia account (during the test), please fill out the form below and tell us what you would like to do!

The Cost of Free Video Hosting

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Before we get into the costs of free video hosting, let’s start with what’s great about it. We’ll use YouTube as an example since it’s practically synonymous with free web video.

The Value

YouTube can be a great resource for driving traffic and interest to your own site if used properly. Here are the ways we recommend businesses leverage YouTube.

Search

YouTube is the world’s largest video search engine. Optimizing your videos so that they can be discovered on YouTube is a great strategy to increase your visibility and help to spread your brand.

Viral Spread

YouTube has become the de-facto standard for video embeds and is supported by every social network, blog, and web interface out there. If you’re creating viral content that you want bloggers, tweeters, and facebookers to share, you should be getting your content onto YouTube.

Driving Traffic

YouTube can help drive brand-awareness, but the ultimate goal is to drive traffic to your website. Can a viewer buy your product on YouTube? Nope. You need to hook them and bring them back to your site.

The Costs

There is a cost for all this free video hosting. The root of this issue really comes down to a difference in priorities. Your priority is to use video to drive more business. YouTube’s priority is to maximize the visitors that stay on YouTube in order to drive ad revenue. You want to bring visitors to your site and YouTube wants to keep them on its site.

Content Rights

YouTube needs the ability to make money on every piece of content that enters their system. So be aware that when you upload to YouTube, you’re granting them license to do whatever they want with your content. Here it is in their terms of service.

“…by submitting User Submissions to YouTube, you hereby grant YouTube a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, sublicenseable and transferable license to use, reproduce, distribute, prepare derivative works of, display, and perform the User Submissions in connection with the YouTube Website and YouTube’s (and its successors’ and affiliates’) business, including without limitation for promoting and redistributing part or all of the YouTube Website (and derivative works thereof) in any media formats and through any media channels.”

Branding

Perhaps the most obvious drawback of using YouTube embeds on your website is all of your videos will now feature YouTube’s logo in the bottom right corner. Would you display an ad for your web hosting provider on every page in exchange for free hosting? Not likely.

Related Videos

Want to embed a YouTube video on to your company’s site? Great idea, except for one thing: you’ve now created a permanent link on your website right back to YouTube — not the best idea for your sales funnel. And more than that, at the end of your video, YouTube displays a list of “related videos”. Imagine your product demo finishes playing and YouTube pops up your competitor’s products!

Blocked Messages

YouTube is an entertainment destination. And just like Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace, it’s blocked by corporate networks around the world. If you’re selling to other businesses, you should be certain they can see your videos.

The Bottom Line

Treat free video hosting as free advertising for your company or product. Drive interested visitors back to your website like you would with any other marketing channel so that you can push those visitors through your funnel.

Video: From Blog Post to Screencast in 2 hours

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

A couple of weeks ago I wrote a blog post covering the 4 Advantages of Using Video in your Email Marketing. We had a great response to that post so I thought I’d try something new, turning a blog post into a video.

I made the screencast of 4 Advantages in a couple of hours in an afternoon. I worked off of the post as a basis for the script, which meant that writing only took about 20 minutes! I recorded everything, pieced it together and what you see below is the finished screencast. I made the video with ScreenFlow 2.0, which is a nice update to the previous version.

Let me know what you think of the conversion to video. Would you rather read the post or watch the video? Which one made the concepts easier to understand? We’d love to know what you think!

BusinessWeek Top Young Entrepreneurs

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

Last week, we heard some exciting news. Brendan and I were included in BusinessWeek’s list of the top young entrepreneurs 25 or under. We made it by less than a week (as my birthday happened to be this week!). We’re humbled to be included on a list among so many other great companies. Some of you may recognize the photo from our Serious Founders photo a couple of weeks ago. This is the exciting news we were hoping to announce!

BusinessWeek has chosen 25 companies to be featured online and they’re using the power of online voting to determine which companies they’ll feature in print. If you could be so kind as to send a vote our way, we’d be much obliged.

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Serious Founders Photo

Friday, September 25th, 2009

In the last couple of weeks we’ve been asked to send out photos of the team for some upcoming press articles. So we asked our good friend and photographer Laurence Vannicelli to take a few shots on his most recent trip through Boston. We were really happy with how the photos came out and I’m sure you’ll be seeing more of them in the future.

For now we thought we’d share one with our “serious founders’ faces.” This shot was taken in the new MGH T-Stop on the red line.

seriousfounders

That’s Brendan (@brendan) on the left and me/Chris (@csavage) on the right. Hopefully it brings a smile to your face on this Friday afternoon.

1.5 Million Business Videos Served and Tracked

Friday, September 11th, 2009

Discovery

Just over two weeks ago we broke through the “Million Business Videos Served” mark. It took us about 4 months to hit that milestone.  Today we’re happy to announce that in the short span of two and a half weeks, we’ve flown right by 1.5 million embedded videos served. It is not only exciting to see such fast paced growth but to know that every one of those views can help inform and improve the videos and their messages.

Thank you to all of our fabulous customers for relying on us to deliver and track your business videos. It’s an honor to work with all of you. Thanks for driving us to be better.

A Tale of Two Prospects

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

If you’ve never used video as a part of your sales process it can seem overwhelming. Many people have asked us to simplify the explanation, we figured there was no simpler way to describe it other than turning it into a nursery rhyme.

Once upon a time there were two prospects, Jack and Jill. Every morning, Jack and Jill would run by Humpty Dumpty’s brick laying business. The duo would glance over during their runs but when Humpty would call out to them, they would point towards their destination, the top of a local hill. Even though they seemed interested in Humpty’s brick laying, Humpty could never get them to pay attention.

Then, Humpty remembered his video. Humpty sent emails inviting Jack and Jill to view a video in his Wistia account documenting his past successes and his impressive trowel work. Within a couple hours, email alerts from Wistia arrived telling him that both Jack and Jill had viewed the video.

By glancing at the statistics in his account, Humpty saw that Jack had watched only a small portion of the video, while Jill had watched the whole thing. In fact, Jill had watched several parts of the video more than once!

Video Heatmaps

The next time Humpty saw Jill, he yelled out to her, this time offering to show her some of his recent masonry work in person. His persistence paid off. Jill was happy to divert her run once she knew what Humpty was yelling about.

Humpty found out which half of the duo he should be selling to and Jill signed a deal to lay the foundation of her new house with Humpty’s business. Everybody won.

To try the video heatmaps Humpty was looking at, click here.