Archive for October, 2015

The Secret of My Success: 15 Ways Video Can Benefit Your Business

Tuesday, October 27th, 2015

Why would your company use video?
To celebrate our 15 years in the business, here are 15 ways your organization can benefit from video production.

1. Market your company, and its products, services, and events to potential clients and partners.
2. Improve search engine rankings by including video on your website.
3. Communicate your mission and energize your current and future donors, volunteers, supporters, and employees.
4. Train your employees or volunteers.
5. Demonstrate how your product or service can help your prospective customers.
6. Tout your successes through client testimonials.
7. Educate your members through e-learning.
8. Create a presence on YouTube, the 2nd largest search engine.
9. Establish your expertise by creating a how-to video.
10. Upgrade your presentation with animation, music, and more and excite your audience.
11. Archive your accomplishments for posterity (and future marketing).
12. Document construction or property for insurance and risk management needs.
13. Honor your colleagues’ achievements.
14. Live stream or record your event – distance and timing are no problem!
15. Build brand and product awareness – use video on your website, in your email signature, on social media, at your tradeshow booth, sales presentations, live events, or in the lobby of your building.

With these and so many other possibilities, it seems like the better question is, why wouldn’t your company use video?

Capture Video is celebrating 15 years as a corporate video production company, serving Northern Virginia, DC and Maryland by helping businesses bring their stories to life. Contact Capture Video to get your project underway now.

Now and Then: 5 Ways Video Technology Has Changed

Tuesday, October 20th, 2015

When Capture Video launched 15 years ago, the work we produced for our clients was of the highest quality … at the time. Over the years, technological advances have transformed professional video production.

Now: HD
Then: SD

Today, we shoot our clients’ videos in High Definition (HD). While shooting a video in HD doesn’t change how it is made or how it can be used, the finished product is of higher quality: HD videos have a higher aspect ratio (typically, 16:9 compared to 4:3 for SD) and they support greater color depth (10 bit as opposed to 8 bit), resulting in a better viewing experience with images that are more true to life.

Now: DVDs, Blu-Rays, and Internet
Then: VHS tapes

When Capture Video first launched, many of our clients wanted their finished video delivered to them on VHS tapes, with multiple copies so they could send them by mail or courier to current or potential clients, colleagues, partners, or media. Occasionally, we would author CD-ROMs. Today, it is de rigueur that we deliver videos to our clients on DVDs or Blu-ray discs. We also deliver a lot of videos online – with no physical deliverable at all.

Now: YouTube
Then: Adam Films

Speaking of the Internet, you may not remember the website Adam Films, but it was, essentially, a precursor to YouTube that launched 15 or 16 years ago. The idea was that people could post their short films online for others to watch. I saw this as the wave of the future, but the site failed because the technology that existed at the time wasn’t good enough to support it. Do you remember how long it took to download a video in 2000?! So long that there was only one 4 MB video on the Capture Video website when we launched. Online videos were not practical then. Businesses were limited to using video in paid or earned media, or showing it live in a sales pitch, demonstration, or other event (and crossing their fingers that the on-site AV would work as expected). Today, businesses can use video on their websites to draw people in or for search engine optimization (SEO) or they can establish their own YouTube channels. And they can still show them live, via the Internet, anywhere, anytime, on their laptops, tablets, or smart phones, or share them instantly through live streaming or by sending a link via email.

Now: 3 TB
Then: 30 GB

Over the last 15 years, storage capacity for hard drives has soared while price and size have shrunk. Take a look at this article from 1999 predicting the availability of a 30 GB hard drive for about $200 in 1999. Right now, you could buy a 3 TB external hard drive that will easily fit in your briefcase or laptop bag – that’s 300 times as much storage as that 30 GB hard drive – for $109 on Amazon. This gives clients the flexibility to have big projects, such as extensive training, delivered on one storage device instead of multiple DVDs or videotapes.  Of course, HD footage is a lot bigger than SD was (where file sizes are concerned) so we video production companies REALLY need those 3 (or in our case 12) TB drives!

Now: Final Cut Pro, Adobe Creative Suite
Then: Avid, Media 100

While Capture Video was using non-linear editing in 2000, the development and improvement of software like Final Cut Pro and Adobe Premiere have made the post-production process quicker and more affordable.  We no longer have to spend $15,000 for one editing computer, and can get a lot more power for a lot less money. For example, we can render a complex 2D animation done in After Effects in less than a day, whereas we once had an AE project render for 6 days back in 2000. Thanks to software advancements, we are also able to incorporate more diverse and sophisticated graphics and animation, including 3D modeling and augmented reality, in our clients’ video productions.

Capture Video combines its knowledge of the latest technology and trends, more than 15 years of experience, and a creative perspective to deliver videos that engage, educate, and inspire viewers. Can we help you capture the attention of your audience?

The Anniversary Party: Capture Video Celebrates 15 Years in Business

Thursday, October 15th, 2015

Earlier this year, a reminder popped up on LinkedIn: I was celebrating 15 years as the Owner, and Head Producer, of Capture Video. Just like if I were giving an acceptance speech for winning an Academy Award – and, one day, I will – there’s so much I’d like to say.

Thank you to my current and former clients! It is my honor to bring your stories to life, whether the videos tout your successes, market your products and services to prospective clients or partners, train your employees, educate your members, or honor your colleagues.

I’d also like to thank my team and my network. I hope you will join me in celebrating this milestone, as I couldn’t have done it without you.
Video Production

All my life, I’ve loved creating stories. I began writing as a child and I started producing videos in high school. After receiving my BFA in Film and TV Production from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, and then going on to work in the feature film industry, I chose to apply my creativity and professional experience to the corporate world and launch Capture Video.

I serve as the manager for every project that comes through our doors, and, for every project, I think about script writing, videotaping, and editing – even when the scope of the work is more narrow – to ensure the success of the finished video. My passion for helping businesses use video production to achieve their goals is just as great today as it was 15 years ago.

Thank you, and I look forward to working together in the future!

Capture Video was launched in 2000, in Reston, VA. We currently run our corporate video production team in Fairfax, VA and serve business in the Northern Virginia, Maryland and DC Metro areas.