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Posts Tagged ‘video on my website’
By: admin | Posted: Wednesday, August 4th, 2010
You’ve already been told by several trusted individuals that you need a video on your website, or you have several videos that belong on the web, and you need a quick and efficient way to start posting them.
Now what?
FORMAT FOR WEB VIEWING
Your video needs to be converted to a web friendly format that is small in size but rich in both visual and audio delivery. There are literally dozens of video formats in the world but only a handful that are web friendly. I suggest the following formats; MP4, FLV, FV4, h.264 and Quicktime.
Since your video may not have started out as one of these, you need a converter. Free or inexpensive converters are available on the web. Conducting a search for “VIDEO CONVERTER” should result in many hits from which to choose. Download, install and start converting.
CHOOSING YOUR PLAYER
This is a little like shopping for your Converter, only more important. The Player you choose will be presenting your video content either as an integral part of your web site or as a portal for all web videos and your web videos are only being temporarily featured therein. The other content is an unknown and not under your control. Not good.
Unless it is your intention to create a global web video portal, it’s better to pick and choose the content to which your viewers will be exposed. EZWebPlayer is just such a player. Feel free to conduct a search like you did for your converter, but take it from one who has been there and done that, EZWebPlayer has the features you need and then some.
Go to www.EZWebPlayer.com, click on the FREE TRIAL button and get started. The install procedure to your site is a revolutionarily simple process. For each page upon which you’ll be playing videos (yes, it supports multiple sites for no extra charge) simply fill out the data fields with your connection info, and start uploading your videos. It’s so simple, you’ll actually enjoy this part of your web video configuring.
Viewers can either be presented with that one important video, or choose from a drop down menu. Videos can start playing automatically or wait for the play button click. Title, description and even views count are completely customizable.
And what about advertising? Woo hoo! You’ve hit the jackpot. For no extra charge, you have at your fingertips the ability to insert images and videos over or in between your video features; WITH LINKS. Yeah, really.
For more info and to also see the new Word Press Plugins, go to www.EZWebPlayer.com. There are samples and other videos to see.
There is only one, uncomplicated video player for your web site that is both simple to install and simple to operate and doesn’t require one to learn a new coding language. And that would be EZWebPlayer. A Player for beginners and beyond.
By Stu Marks: Chicago Area Media Designer & video consultant.
Follow the instructions for installing the one time code set on your web page.
Upload your first video.
We hope you found this tutorial helpful! Thanks for visiting!
By: clintpollock | Posted: Wednesday, July 28th, 2010
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Mike Pudlo, video producer for IncreaseSalesWithVideo.com discussing how to get your videos streaming online in a flash. Whether you are filming in HD or still using that NTSC camcorder this series will help with your rendering settings, server options and overall a better understand of rendering HD and NTSC videos.
How to export High Definition video files to upload and stream on your website.
So what is HD?
HD stands for High definition, a 16:9 aspect ratio, providing a wider screen then the Standard 4:3 (SD) And this is where size does matter, similar to how the higher a digital photo’s DPI setting are related to the quality of print, the more the dots the better the picture, or in video more lines better the video.
720p, 1080i and 1080p are all HD settings – the number stands for the vertical lines that create the image and the letter describes the type of scan used to display the picture. P for progressive, one whole frame per capture, or I for interlace which captures the top ½ of a frame which merges with the bottom of the next frame to complete the picture.
Today, I’ll be using Adobe’s Media Encoder from CS5 to demonstrate this process.

Before we get to deep into the render settings, we’ll have to select what file format we want our video exported as. For HD there are primarily two container types, Flash Video (FLV/F4V) or H264 (mp4). The file format I want to use is a flash file using the h.264 video codec, creating a F4V.
While you can export a full 1080 HD video, good luck getting anyone to truly appreciate the full quality video unless they have a 20+” monitor, live in Amazon Cloud’s server room and operate a very high-end processing pc. Not to say that a great looking picture isn’t achievable it just won’t be true HD as many proclaim to stream.
It’s important to adjust the width and height dimension of your video accordingly. Theoretically you can use any width and height but non optimal dimensions can cause poor image quality and even reduced frame rate. Use a multiple of 16 for the best looking video to upload to your website.
I’ll be using 1280×720 for my video dimensions which is also many of the mainstream video hosts accepted ratio for playback.

The overall goal for your exported file is to have a high quality looking and sounding video that can be easily streamed and viewed by anyone with a highspeed internet connection. Highspeed is the key. HD video requires a lot more bandwidth then the standard SD video.
I’d recommend using at least 1.5MB per second and up to 4MBps for your bandwidth. If you are using the 1280×720 dimensions I mentioned earlier then I’d stick with at least 2.5MBps data rate.


For audio, I have found that 44.1megahertz and at 96kbps with the AAC codec provides a rich audio through the majority of the web video players.
Once you confirm the frame rate is the same as the source and you are ready to export.

It’s always a good idea to save your preset and name it accordingly.
There are a handful of video editing software programs but not all of them will export HD file into the best streaming format. A useful free program to convert your HD video files into a
streaming format is Prism Video Converter, some other pay to use programs to research are VirtualDub and AVS converter.
I hope this helps get your video uploaded to your website.
Mike Pudlo
Video Producer
www.IncreaseSalesWithVideo.com
www.EZWebPlayer.com
By: clintpollock | Posted: Sunday, July 25th, 2010
Let us assume for a moment that you want or need everyone that you can grab to watch the video on your website. If you are in business, or are responsible for promoting your church videos, this is an easy assumption.
Then, here are some simple guidelines to not only grab viewers, but to keep folks coming back as well as exponentially grow your list of followers.
Information Content is King
In your video collection provide a service if possible. Providing a service creates in your archive real value to the viewer. This can be done in every video, or just one video a week or month. Short, informative videos a resample to write, assemble and publish. You can use PowerPoint to create slides that bullet point and feature your information.
Giving back to your community is a real asset to your business, to you, your employees, those who watch your videos, and of course, your community at large.
“What service can I provide?” you might ask.
Realtors can publish seasonal landscaping tips, tips on selling homes, making property more valuable, etc. Churches can publish holiday celebration events around the community, specific community safety information, time change reminders, recycling locations, leaf removal services, the list is endless.
Your Geographic Uniqueness
If you want to benefit from a growing list of followers, you are in competition with tens of thousands of other video sources. But, this does not mean that your videos have to run higher and jump further, with ever more expensive special effects, new camera techniques and custom jingles such that you find yourself spending thousands on outsourcing and gear. No, the strength of your content is in your unique information or location, not your abilities as a video producer.
If folks see your video, but are too far away to take advantage of your geographically based business or church event, then don’t worry about marketing to them. Market to Your Crowd. Your crowd is that group of folks who can best benefit from your message or product.
If you are a real estate agent, then you can hardly spend time marketing to the whole world, when your properties are right there in your tri-county area. You may market broad enough that folks moving to your area will catch your message, but most of your market lives close enough to shop at the same stores you do. You’re really marketing tom
you neighbors.
Include information that locals, or those who want to become locals will be looking for. Schools, churches, shopping, recreation, lower tax base (where is that, by the way?) etc.
Any national parks nearby? Shoot a welcome segment in front of your local claim to fame.
Break it up.
Using the same format for every video can become boring unless the content is so good that it is always looked forward to. If your content is not killer, like hang gliding or underwater scuba diving, then make sure to use interesting visuals to break up your boring talking head shots.
One week, shoot from your church or business parking lot with your building in the background. The next week, shoot from a local venue. While you are at an away event, shoot a segment there for future use, etc.
Interview employees, customers and trusted vendors. Children are great video sources. Just make sure that Mom and Dad are involved in the agreement to put little Mildred and her cat Fluffy on screen.
Realtors have an endless supply of materiel in the form of new properties.
Feature your;
- best
- least expensive
- most potential
- largest
- easiest to move into
- closest to town
- best from out in the country
- in the neighborhood voted most colorful or economical, or friendliest.
The list is endless.
Also, you can use the Press Release Format. Cover related but varied topics. Talk about events or programs that are in your industry but not about you. Car dealers are known for donating their cars for dignitaries to ride in during parades. That’s a great PR move. Realtors can host business mixers at their office or a large hotel suite. Video your happy clients at one of these mixers and get their permission to place the video on your web site. Most happy customers are glad to help.
If your church has an Easter egg hunt, or a summer picnic, the pastor can interview some kids, adults and families having a good time.

Smiling, happy positive faces and comments from the heart are what grab folks and keep them coming back.
Smiling, happy positive faces and comments from the heart are what grab folks and keep them coming back.
Be Direct, Clear and to the Point in Your Message
Communications 101 always deals with this one, important fact: you are dealing with the general public when you publish a video. Dealing with the public can be both simple and complex, depending on what you’re used to doing, and what you’re trying to get across in a short video.
This is not the time for vague innuendoes, half truths, talking down to folks or complaining about a competitor, or the government. Strong, narrow messages, if they are necessary at all, are for smaller venues behind closed doors, not for the public venue. Unless your goal is to purposely alienate a segment of your market, and thereby drive them away, be inclusive.
Find positive and beneficial ways to tell your story and make your offer. Feature the obviously positive benefits that pretty much everyone would agree is a good thing. Example: Some churches use busses to bring children to Sunday School. What many folks don’t understand is that this is not a money making venture for any church, but an increasing financial liability. Also, most churches don’t transport children to church whose parents attend elsewhere. These two facts are important to share with the community. A) Your church is not out there stealing kids from other churches, and B) Your church is not in this for the money, but simply sharing the Gospel.
If you have a difficult or complex issue that needs explaining, you might consider only touching the high points that need less educating. But, if your product or service is visual, then here is your moment to shine, because video was obviously meant for this element.
Keep it Short
All video consultants agree that web videos designed to increase interest in a product or service work best when they are short. The powerful, short web video is probably the best returning asset in the marketing arsenal today.
Obviously, if you are publishing your 50 minute church service, the short video part is out. Long programs work best archived and then pointed to using short teaser videos. You can create a short teaser of any long event that includes high-lights and important statements, with the full video only a click away; especially if you choose the right player venue on which to post your videos. For example, EZWebPlayer.com includes simple, one-click advertising links where you can insert web links into videos at customized locations around your video.
Realtors can benefit from producing a monthly testimonial video that is short. Testimonials of real people bragging about the benefits of your product or message are the most powerful content available. And, testimonials are always short.
This concludes Part I of Care and Feeding of Your Web Video Archive
In Part II, we explore;
Archiving; a Momentum unto Itself
Frequent Additions Build Core Viewers
Socialize Your Archive
Networking 101
and Nurturing takes Commitment
By Stu Marks: Chicago Area Media Designer & specialist in Church Video Consultant, Chicago.
LINKS:
Chess piece photo by Daniel Y. Go
Crowd photo by Steve Crane
Smiling Happy Faces By Swamibu
www.EZWebPlayer.com
www.techmynd.com
www.digitalbuzzblog.com
By: stu | Posted: Wednesday, July 7th, 2010
By Stu Marks: Chicago Area Media Designer & specialist in videos for business, church and non-profit.
The summer is here. Sales managers are under fire from admin to DO SOMETHING, ANYTHING. You are running way ahead of your spending allowance on advertising but the market just isn’t responding. They aren’t responding to TV ads, radio ads, or even the old standby of direct marketing. They’re just sitting at home and not spending.
Well, there is really only one more thing that you can do. Add targeted videos to your website site, and take that $25k or $2.5K left for the summer quarter ad budget, depending on whether you’re an enterprise or a small business, and push your web page into a high position. This isn’t really a gamble; it’s more like a no brainer.
Get video on your website and do it fast.
See what happened, and is still happening to a company that was looking for a sales boost, added web video to its sales arsenal, and saw a fast 30% increase in real sales; not just leads, but a 30% INCREASE IN SALES!
Quick message-narrow target videos are not expensive or complicated to create, either. Just take a look at our own video here.
This was made with Power Point and Camtasia web video.
These products are extremely common and most offices already have Power Point. If you have MS Office, you have Power Point.
If folks are staying home, then get them at home. Put videos on your website, and promote your site.
-Promote your new store hours
-Reveal your new pricing
-Unveil the new model
-Feature your company’s already produced video. That’s right. Many companies send out regular sales tools including important and high level videos produced for trade shows, or show rooms. Feature that great video on your web site. RV Manufacturers, Pharmaceuticals, Farm Implements, Insurance, Safety Equipment, Service Alerts, Parts Upgrades, Personnel Features, Sales Awards; whatever. Push up a well made video and your viewers will respond.
-Testimonials. Take your collection of customer response cards and turn them into the gold mine they are with Testimonial Web Videos.
So, “How do I get video on my web site?’ you might ask. You need;
-A video with a strong message and call to action
-A web media management site like EZWebPlayer.com
-Enough sales staff to handle the increase
Make sure you don’t waste your time using a non-business website video player. Choose a player that not only hosts the video materiel, but tracks views, viewing characteristics (like how much of the video was watched each time) and also, choose a player that has the capabilities of playing advertisements for your viewers.
Act now and your Christmas bonus might just be bigger than last year’s.
By: admin | Posted: Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Simple posting of powerful and comprehensive videos becomes as ordinary as a phone call.
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Simple posting of powerful and comprehensive videos becomes as ordinary as a phone call.
CHICAGO – May 1, 2010
This year’s release of EZWebPlayer 2.0 has removed the mystery and difficulty of posting custom videos such that the distance between seller and buyer, or story teller and viewer has significantly shrunk.
With more than 9.4 Billion videos now being viewed online as of late 2009 figures from ComScore, any tool that makes posting videos to one’s own site effortless and as simple and ubiquitous as a phone call will certainly get some attention.
According to initial statistics, the early weeks of the Web based player are proving a rich ground for growth for those needing an outlet for their custom videos. The new player environment is being received well by business owners, non-profits and web designers alike.
One web manager of the largest full contact football camp in America (declared so by the Riddell Corporation), the Midwest Christian Boys’ Football Camp says, “Making the switch to automatic coding was so simple, the biggest worry was whether or not to save the old code.”
He went on further to say, “Our once annual football video posting has become a daily task now, because posting video to our own site is no longer the bottleneck. I can finally get back to simply producing the video. I no longer worry about the posting to web function.” The Football Camp’s video page can be found at www.KnowFearFootball.org.
The hundreds of users who jumped on board during the early release and marketing to the company’s own email list include church organizations, small businesses and even a government military agency seeking an efficient way to post their field communications on a secure browser.
Customer service manager, Stu Marks says, “It seems we’ve stumbled on virtually a new market segment formerly unserved by current technology. Reminds me of the 1987 Dian Keaton movie Baby Boom with the gourmet baby food.”
The big difference seems to be in the way code is handled. One way or another, anybody responsible for posting videos to their own site will be required to create or manipulate specialized code before posting it to their site in order for their viewers to see the all important video message. Stu Marks also commented, “… as a matter of fact, I see other web players moving in this direction for the future. I imagine that all web players will work this way eventually. We’re just the first.”
Another difference in this player over others is the seamless isolation the player affords to your viewers. Your videos, and only your videos play on your site. No distracting You Tube menus or scrolling advertising offers. Your video becomes a seamless part of your web site. Just click on the VIDEOS button, and there it is.
Other features include
- URL Security. No video hijacking
- External Server Compatible
- Blog compatible
- Sharing on demand
- Large server space
Please connect with us!
Clint Pollock
President | EZWebPlayer.com
The Non-Tech solution to putting videos online
www.EZWebPlayer.com
By: clintpollock | Posted: Wednesday, February 17th, 2010
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One of the most important parts of putting video on the web is to ensure it has been rendered properly. We would like to lend some best practices that we have learned during our tenure of creating web video. File size, quality, bit rate and more, all come into play. There is no all inclusive guide out there that has all of the answers. Testing is the primary way you can get your render settings just right.
Video on website is a balance between quality and file size. Yes, the majority of people have good connections. However, something like DSL can stutter even a well rendered file.
In this document we will outline video rendering best practices that will help you avoid issues with file buffering and more.
Video Editing Software
There are many desktop video editing suites and packages out there. Most are capable of creating video that will work with Flash (Our players are created with Flash). We use Adobe Premiere to edit video. Information and screen shots provided below will be based off of Adobe Premiere CS4 but, the values mentioned are industry standard terms that usually apply cross platform.
Working with Web Video – Exporting from Your Video Program.
When working with web videos there are several properties that need to be addressed for a streaming file to play correctly. I recommend using FLV or H.264 (MP4) formats to create your streaming web videos. MOV does work but we have seen issues with those files. FLV and MP4 videos are smaller in file size and offer the same if not better quality then the MOV files.
The ‘pixel aspect ratio’ of your video is important to maintain when encoding your timeline.
1920×1080 (High Definition)
720×480 (NTSC, 4:3 and 16:9)
- Our flash player plays videos best at 720×480 for NTSC and 800×450 for HD
- You can render your video any size you want as long as you keep it the same ratio.
The bitrate setting can vary depending on the overall production requirements.
- Our bitrate settings range from 500 – 1229kbps.
The audio settings are stereo, 32 – 128kbps. For longer videos, reducing this setting will help reduce file size. Changing this value usually can be done without noticeable quality loss unless one is working with extremely high fidelity gear, which would be seriously hampered by most Internet connections any way.
When working on an NTSC timeline, I’ve found that Premiere creates black bars on the right/left sides of the outputted FLV to accommodate for ratio differences. To eliminate this, render out a full quality .mpeg2 and use the Adobe flash encoder or embed the new mpeg into a timeline and then proceed to export the FLV/MP4.
High Definition
We find that MP4 files typically work best for High Definition. This term is thrown around in the web world, but the truth is the only way you can really get high definition is by having a 24in monitor. The files you play through the SinglePlayer or MultiPlayer that are labeled High Definition will be much better quality than your standard render, but there is no possible way to render a 1920X1080 file and send it to users unless you are using the Google or Yahoo vehicles . File size becomes a real problem here – a 5 minute video can become hundreds of MB’s. If you plan to offer a High Definition render be sure you offer an alternate option for users who have trouble. Ensure your web host is capable of sending these files to the viewer fast enough. Don’t forget to watch your bandwidth and storage usage with your web host – these files will eat it up. In our opinion we are not yet ready for the regular person/business to display HD web video. 50MBps home lines are coming so it won’t be long. I expect that in the next 1 or 2 years HD video will become more prevalent.
The other thing to keep in mind – FLV/MP4, etc are all rendered and compressed. The viewers computer must decode the video. If people have a slow computer, they are low on RAM, and have a lot of programs running, it can cause the computer to hiccup. This is no fault of the flash player, but the fact that the person’s computer is unable to handle that high quality of video.
Video Size & Long Videos
From the above example you can see that video file size starts to add up quickly. For this reason you want to have the right kind of render to fit your web hosting provider and your visitor’s Internet connections.
30-50Mb for a 5 minute file is typically ideal. It is also a good idea to split up videos. In other words, running a 30 minute video may not be the best idea if you are using HTTP download (which most use). The reason why – each time the user clicks play the entire file starts downloading. If they only watch 5 minutes there would have been a lot of unnecessary file transfer.
You can easily use the SinglePlayer or the MultiPlayer to split up files into “chapters” and allow the viewer an easy way to see the parts of the video they desire. 5-10 minutes is your standard Internet Video Length.
Making videos short can ensure your viewers run into less viewing problems.
Buffering
In order for the user to watch the video, it must download to their computer. There has to be a little bit of a buffer for the video to play smoothly. If your video can’t buffer as fast as you can watch it, your video will stop until the buffer catches up, only to stop again. You can see the SinglePlayer buffer below. Since this is a long video I feel confident it will buffer fine for most. I have tested these videos from DSL connections in rural locations and it has a hard time keeping up. There is still a LOT of people living in remote areas with slow DSL or Satellite connections. You don’t want to forget about them.
Clear your cache
Once the video fully downloads to your computer, it may store that and not try to download your new version next time. Be sure to empty your Browser cache each time you upload a new video. This forces your computer to go through the download process again.

Hosting your Video Files
It is important to use a fast web hosting provider. You will need at least 100KB bandwidth to send people video files. The easiest way to find out how fast your host is – upload a file that is larger than 10 MB to your host. Then download it through your FTP or HTTP and see how fast it is. This shows my web host is sending me 275KB/Second which is fast enough to handle several downloads at a time.

I have my web content on one host, and my video content on another. I use http://www.streamhoster.com/ but there are many out there.
Flash Streaming
Do you have large and lengthy video files? Your next step will be using a Flash Media Server host. Flash Media Server will stream web video in real time. This is different than HTTP download – instead of sending the user the entire file, a Flash Media Server streams it to the user as they view it. In addition, you can have multiple render settings within one file. It is possible to have an HD file, a standard render and, a small render all in one file. The Flash Media Server determines which stream it can send them and handles it automatically. This is of course more complicated to setup, render, and use but may be necessarily if you have large files or lengthy content. Click here to get an easy to use RTMP Video Player.
Adobe CS4 Example Render Settings:
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H.264, Wide Screen. |
H.264 4:3 |
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We hope you found this tutorial helpful! Thanks for visiting!
Clint Pollock
President | EZWebPlayer.com
The Non-Tech solution to putting videos online
www.EZWebPlayer.com
More Web Video articles you might like…
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How to export High Definition video files to upload and stream on your website.
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WordPress and EZWebPlayer: Uploading Web Video to Your Blog is Better than Ever!
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Camtasia Tip: Create a High Quality Web Video Without Black Bars







