Analysis: Why Brands Should Skip the "Conversation" on YouTubeAuthored by Rohit Bhargava on December 6, 2007 - 7:22am.
In every other medium, from blogs to microsites to forums, comments are great. They invite conversation and offer a chance for dialogue. As a result, comments that are not relevant can usually be ignored and or caught by spam filters. Look at most blogs, and the comments will likely add to the dialogue. That's not the case on YouTube, and I think we are all noticing it. For example, watch this promotional video recently release by Google on YouTube:
Now click the link to go directly to YouTube and read some of the comments. There are people posting racist views about kids, using swear words and having all kinds of useless, mean and idiotic "conversations." Most other videos on YouTube generate similar comments that people would never say out loud. The problem with YouTube is that it has become increasingly common for hundreds of these comments to come on just about every video. I dare you to find any video with at least 25 comments that doesn't have a significant number of these types of comments. These are not just isolated dumb comments or spam ... this is a plague that seems to affecting YouTube disproportionately. For some reason, commenting on videos encourages stupidity.
Am I saying people shouldn't be allowed to discuss videos that are
posted on YouTube? No. But I think a far better solution right now is
to either moderate comments on YouTube (which surprisingly few brands
adding videos to YouTube seem to choose), or embed a video that is
posted on YouTube on your blog and encourage comments there. Comments
on YouTube videos today are just a forum for people to share moronic
comments anonymously. Comments on YouTube should certainly not be any
part of metrics to measure. Having hundreds of comments on a video is
meaningless. For any brand putting videos on YouTube, if you are
looking for conversation - my advice is to embed the video elsewhere
and choose to moderate or remove comments on YouTube altogether.
This piece was originally published on Rohit's blog, Influential Marketing, and is posted on DMW with the author's permission. Rohit's bio can be viewed here.
|
Upcoming DMW Events
September 30, 2009 | New York, NY www.nygamesconference.com
October 7-8, 2009 | Los Angeles, CA www.digitalmusicforum.com
October 28, 2009 | San Francisco, CA www.digitalmediaconference.com Events Calendar Submit a Speaker To receive event updates & announcements:
Recent comments
NavigationUser loginAds |
Daily Newsletter and NetworkingLatest Top Stories
DMW Widget - Grab it and embed!Latest Briefly Noted
PollOther Ads |
Comments
Post new comment