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Answer Upon - Guidelines for Writing Successful Business Video Presentations
How to Generate Sales Referrals re of our professional recommendation?Generating sales referrals and repeat business is necessary to expand your business and ensure the success of sales professionals. At times, the importance of sales referrals is often overlooked or not emphasized enough. This can be the difference between top producers and over performers versus under performers and those who comes close to attaining their goals.It is important to acknowledge and recognize your clients regularly especially those that gives you the most business. These clients can be referred to as your ‘gold clients’ and should be given attention and treated with care (all clients are important). If customers are satisfied with you Visualization and the creative concept We now look for answers. It's time to visualize. Go to your imagination and become a member of the audience. Block out the censors and critics, and delight yourself with images, sounds and music. ·What do you want to see, hear and feel? ·What interests you? ·What would move you from complacency and comfort to risking something new? Allow time for images and ideas to come to you. Never reject an idea. And don't miss those bits and pieces of ideas that present themselves as vague, ill-formed, or too avant-garde. Welcome them. Let them grow and identify themselves. Reex How To Get A Job Guidelines for Writing Successful Business Video Presentations
- Preproduction and Video Treatment DevelopmentAre you're trying to learn how to conduct a job search, how to expose yourself to career opportunity, or how to increase/establish your personal Internet presence prior to or while looking for a job? This article summarizes 10 points executives job seekers should keep in mind as they look to land their next job opportunity. By keeping these basic principles in mind you'll be light-years ahead of those who don't.1. It all starts with your resumeMost executives fall into the trap of trivializing the importance of having the best possible resume by saying, "I communicate my value and the substance of my career best in an inter Successful presentations directly create a bridge between your client's purpose and the audience's motivation. As writers and producers, we search for ideas to help us make that match. We find those ideas—by asking the right questions. Communications and training presentations support a problem-solving process initiated by our clients. Our challenge is to relate our client's goal to the needs and desires of the audience. While our clients focus on how the goal benefits the organization, our focus is how it benefits the audience. There must always be a benefit for the audience. Audience expectations What does an audience want from a corporate or educational video presentation? Learning theory tells us: ·People learn what they need and want to know right now. ·They are most interested in information and skills that give them greater control over their life experience. ·They see themselves as experts in their own lives and want to be treated as such. Responding to audience expectations As video professionals, we need to support these needs and desires, build on them and never diminish them. We satisfy the audience's needs in the following ways: ·The presentation neither over nor underwhelms by presenting too much or too little information. ·The information is immediately usable. ·The pacing allows the audience to feel they have control over the experience by going neither too fast nor too slow. ·The format or creative treatment engages their imagination in ways that allow them to identify with the problem presented and see themselves taking control and succeeding at the solution. The video environment provides an opportunity for the audience to reevaluate and adjust their viewpoint, and try out new behaviors. They rehearse new behaviors and skills in their mind's eye. By the end of the presentation, they decide whether change is worth the risk. Waiting for answers Screenwriter Syd Field says, "Writing is the process of asking the right questions then waiting for the answers." This also is an excellent description of the preproduction process. During its early stages, we focus on left brain, logical analysis concerning our client's goal and the audience's motivation. In the later stages, we begin the right brain work of trying out various treatment ideas—ways we can use the medium to convey our message. The essential questions are: ·What creative vehicle will work best? Do we need drama, parody, comedy, documentary, an interview or panel discussion? ·What's the right answer, how can we determine that answer—and then be sure of our professional recommendation? Visualization and the creative concept We now look for answers. It's time to visualize. Go to your imagination and become a member of the audience. Block out the censors and critics, and delight yourself with images, sounds and music. ·What do you want to see, hear and feel? ·What interests you? ·What would move you from complacency and comfort to risking something new? Allow time for images and ideas to come to you. Never reject an idea. And don't miss those bits and pieces of ideas that present themselves as vague, ill-formed, or too avant-garde. Welcome them. Let them grow and identify themselves. Reexa Creativity Management: the Value of Frameworks the audience.What do creativity managers do?Replace the word management with the word optimisation.That's what creativity managers do: they optimise the quality of the idea pool (creativity) and the implementation process (innovation).There are many methods of optimisation and the creativity leader must be aware of all of them, in other words, he or she must synthesise them for optimal effect.Areas [within creativity] that need managing include motivation, organisational culture, organisational structure, incremental versus radical effects and processes, knowledge mix, group structures, goals, process and valuation.Areas [with Audience expectations What does an audience want from a corporate or educational video presentation? Learning theory tells us: ·People learn what they need and want to know right now. ·They are most interested in information and skills that give them greater control over their life experience. ·They see themselves as experts in their own lives and want to be treated as such. Responding to audience expectations As video professionals, we need to support these needs and desires, build on them and never diminish them. We satisfy the audience's needs in the following ways: ·The presentation neither over nor underwhelms by presenting too much or too little information. ·The information is immediately usable. ·The pacing allows the audience to feel they have control over the experience by going neither too fast nor too slow. ·The format or creative treatment engages their imagination in ways that allow them to identify with the problem presented and see themselves taking control and succeeding at the solution. The video environment provides an opportunity for the audience to reevaluate and adjust their viewpoint, and try out new behaviors. They rehearse new behaviors and skills in their mind's eye. By the end of the presentation, they decide whether change is worth the risk. Waiting for answers Screenwriter Syd Field says, "Writing is the process of asking the right questions then waiting for the answers." This also is an excellent description of the preproduction process. During its early stages, we focus on left brain, logical analysis concerning our client's goal and the audience's motivation. In the later stages, we begin the right brain work of trying out various treatment ideas—ways we can use the medium to convey our message. The essential questions are: ·What creative vehicle will work best? Do we need drama, parody, comedy, documentary, an interview or panel discussion? ·What's the right answer, how can we determine that answer—and then be sure of our professional recommendation? Visualization and the creative concept We now look for answers. It's time to visualize. Go to your imagination and become a member of the audience. Block out the censors and critics, and delight yourself with images, sounds and music. ·What do you want to see, hear and feel? ·What interests you? ·What would move you from complacency and comfort to risking something new? Allow time for images and ideas to come to you. Never reject an idea. And don't miss those bits and pieces of ideas that present themselves as vague, ill-formed, or too avant-garde. Welcome them. Let them grow and identify themselves. Reex Strategic vs. Operational And How It Affects A Small Business Owner g too much or too little information.For everyone who runs their own business, they know how easily they can be pulled from one task to another and eventually they can have the sense that the business has begun to spin out of control. Not knowing how to keep the focus of the business and how to handle the day to day tasks has a large impact on how a business runs and how well it can succeed.As a business owner, it exciting to come up with the ideas of where you want to take the company and also how you see the company getting there, is it ideal for you to also handle the task and details of actually taking the company to the level, not necessarily. Forward thinking business owners l ·The information is immediately usable. ·The pacing allows the audience to feel they have control over the experience by going neither too fast nor too slow. ·The format or creative treatment engages their imagination in ways that allow them to identify with the problem presented and see themselves taking control and succeeding at the solution. The video environment provides an opportunity for the audience to reevaluate and adjust their viewpoint, and try out new behaviors. They rehearse new behaviors and skills in their mind's eye. By the end of the presentation, they decide whether change is worth the risk. Waiting for answers Screenwriter Syd Field says, "Writing is the process of asking the right questions then waiting for the answers." This also is an excellent description of the preproduction process. During its early stages, we focus on left brain, logical analysis concerning our client's goal and the audience's motivation. In the later stages, we begin the right brain work of trying out various treatment ideas—ways we can use the medium to convey our message. The essential questions are: ·What creative vehicle will work best? Do we need drama, parody, comedy, documentary, an interview or panel discussion? ·What's the right answer, how can we determine that answer—and then be sure of our professional recommendation? Visualization and the creative concept We now look for answers. It's time to visualize. Go to your imagination and become a member of the audience. Block out the censors and critics, and delight yourself with images, sounds and music. ·What do you want to see, hear and feel? ·What interests you? ·What would move you from complacency and comfort to risking something new? Allow time for images and ideas to come to you. Never reject an idea. And don't miss those bits and pieces of ideas that present themselves as vague, ill-formed, or too avant-garde. Welcome them. Let them grow and identify themselves. Reex Presidents of the United States Should Have More Entrepreneurial Experience than Law Experience or answersThe other day someone asked me in our Online Think Tank why I was a President Bush Supporter. We were discussing atmospheric ambient surface temperatures, you might consider this Global Warming, Climate Crisis or Climate Change. The very first thing that came to mind was that he was not a lawyer, he has an MBA and actual experience running a business.Then the gentleman who loves Governor Richards in New Mexico for Democrat President in 2008 said that only one of President Bush’s businesses was really successful. I thought that was an interesting comment. Because the reasons most businesses in the United States are not successful is either due to la Screenwriter Syd Field says, "Writing is the process of asking the right questions then waiting for the answers." This also is an excellent description of the preproduction process. During its early stages, we focus on left brain, logical analysis concerning our client's goal and the audience's motivation. In the later stages, we begin the right brain work of trying out various treatment ideas—ways we can use the medium to convey our message. The essential questions are: ·What creative vehicle will work best? Do we need drama, parody, comedy, documentary, an interview or panel discussion? ·What's the right answer, how can we determine that answer—and then be sure of our professional recommendation? Visualization and the creative concept We now look for answers. It's time to visualize. Go to your imagination and become a member of the audience. Block out the censors and critics, and delight yourself with images, sounds and music. ·What do you want to see, hear and feel? ·What interests you? ·What would move you from complacency and comfort to risking something new? Allow time for images and ideas to come to you. Never reject an idea. And don't miss those bits and pieces of ideas that present themselves as vague, ill-formed, or too avant-garde. Welcome them. Let them grow and identify themselves. Reex CEM Can Improve Customer Loyalty re of our professional recommendation?‘A 5 percent increase in customer retention increases profits by 25 to 95 percent.’‘The greater the loyalty of customers, employees, suppliers, and shareholders, the greater the profits reaped .’This is the received wisdom from experts on the nature and importance of customer loyalty. Yet in a world of product and service commoditization and as the timelag between imitations to innovation declines, how can organizations differentiate themselves to build loyalty?The answer lies with Customer Experience Management creating the ‘emotional responses and connections with products and brands tha are difficult to build in any other way’ . Visualization and the creative concept We now look for answers. It's time to visualize. Go to your imagination and become a member of the audience. Block out the censors and critics, and delight yourself with images, sounds and music. ·What do you want to see, hear and feel? ·What interests you? ·What would move you from complacency and comfort to risking something new? Allow time for images and ideas to come to you. Never reject an idea. And don't miss those bits and pieces of ideas that present themselves as vague, ill-formed, or too avant-garde. Welcome them. Let them grow and identify themselves. Reexamine your ideas in light of your client's goal, the audience's motivation, the budget and resources). Look for the best fit and select your creative concept. Structure Now you have one more consideration—structure. Surprisingly, our audiences don't care as much about creative concept as they do about structure. Their perceptions are carefully developed by commercial television and Hollywood films. Their first perception concerns "seat time." Seat time refers to the amount of time the audience is willing to sit before taking a break. They are conditioned by commercial television to 10-minute (or less) segments separated by commercial breaks. The second perception concerns storytelling. Hollywood films (and other forms of storytelling) influence audiences to expect a journey. They hope for a structure built on a series of twists and turns that leads to a new awareness where significant problems are resolved. This doesn't mean structure depends on character-based stories. It does mean we need to structure even a straightforward presentation of information according to the principles of good storytelling. Information is always meted out in ways that build, pique, and then satisfy our audience's interest. The treatment Finally, it's time to write the video treatment. This includes your goal and audience analysis, and the structured creative concept. Every successful treatment solution is unique. It results from the time, thought and care you put into asking the right questions then waiting, searching, and being available to the right answers. It begins with a solid relationship with your client and ends with a solid relationship with your audience. The treatment now is your vehicle for communicating with the client and the guide for developing a successful presentation.
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