Daily Video Challenge
Posted 10-24-2008 at 01:32 PM by Robert Plank
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_GumvcEots
Do you struggle recording talking head or screen capture videos on a daily basis? Or do you want simply want to use video to pump out lots of content and infoproducts at a time, but you cannot create them consistently? I used to have that problem, so I added a small daily task to my schedule, starting yesterday, that I challenge you to record one video every day.
This is going to be a daily video diary for your business. (I recommend a Camtasia video, not a webcam video... but in some niches, Camtasia doesn't apply very well.) Here are the rules:
Rule 1: I don't want you to show it to anyone other than yourself, just stick it in a folder somewhere. You can turn this into a paid product, or show it to ONE business associate but do not just give it to the general public for free.
Rule 2: I don't care what it's about as long as it relates to your business. In an example video, I spent 18 minutes explaining how my business fared that month, how it compared to previous months, and what things I changed. You can record for 5 minutes or 30 minutes, but it has to be in one take.
Rule 3: If you end up showing it to someone else, it has to be a paid product. Membership video, DVD, one time product, whatever... just DON'T give it away as a blog post.
For a long time, I could write consistently because I have lots of practice, especially from blog posts. But I had trouble making videos when I wanted to. Just take me up on a 30-day trial period and record a daily video, even if it is only five minutes long.
Robert Plank, internet marketer, PHP programmer, and 23 year old homeowner, made an average of $10,000 per month every month in 2008. Update him with your progress on your own daily video challenge on his blog: http://www.robertplank.com/daily-video-challenge
Do you struggle recording talking head or screen capture videos on a daily basis? Or do you want simply want to use video to pump out lots of content and infoproducts at a time, but you cannot create them consistently? I used to have that problem, so I added a small daily task to my schedule, starting yesterday, that I challenge you to record one video every day.
This is going to be a daily video diary for your business. (I recommend a Camtasia video, not a webcam video... but in some niches, Camtasia doesn't apply very well.) Here are the rules:
Rule 1: I don't want you to show it to anyone other than yourself, just stick it in a folder somewhere. You can turn this into a paid product, or show it to ONE business associate but do not just give it to the general public for free.
Rule 2: I don't care what it's about as long as it relates to your business. In an example video, I spent 18 minutes explaining how my business fared that month, how it compared to previous months, and what things I changed. You can record for 5 minutes or 30 minutes, but it has to be in one take.
Rule 3: If you end up showing it to someone else, it has to be a paid product. Membership video, DVD, one time product, whatever... just DON'T give it away as a blog post.
For a long time, I could write consistently because I have lots of practice, especially from blog posts. But I had trouble making videos when I wanted to. Just take me up on a 30-day trial period and record a daily video, even if it is only five minutes long.
Robert Plank, internet marketer, PHP programmer, and 23 year old homeowner, made an average of $10,000 per month every month in 2008. Update him with your progress on your own daily video challenge on his blog: http://www.robertplank.com/daily-video-challenge
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