I am starting a free training series called the Course Creation Alchemy Formula. Learn how to plan, validate, create, market, and launch your course quickly to generate our gold for the people you serve.
Category: Streaming
Zoom meetings, Live Streaming, and other video presentations have become our new normal. Make sure you are presenting a quality image of you online to give people confidence in you. Look professional or at make sure people can see and hear you well.
Take a look at your image on the screen from the viewer’s perspective. Does that person look professional?
Lighting
I am amazed how many people who should know better look like they are presenting from a garden shack.
The main problem is inadequate or poorly positioned lighting.
Make the best use of what you have.
Turn on all of the lights.
Make sure there are no lights visible to camera behind you.
Sit by a window with natural light in front of you or to the side. A 45 degree angle works well.
Add more lighting.
I use an inexpensive soft-light from amazon. Household lamps, shop lights, LED lights, and reflective surface to redirect light on to your face can help.
Tip: You can bounce harshe lights off of walls and ceilings to avoid glare and reflections in your glasses.
Camera
Sadly, most laptop and desktop computers have disappointing cameras built-in. Chances are that your phone has a much better camera built-in.
Attention to lighting will help the camera.
Consider getting a quality separate webcam that clips on to your computer or sits on a tripod.
Microphone
Most of the time the microphone built into your computer is adequate.
Sometimes there can be problems with noise from the computer, echo, or poor quality.
You can get better sound by using a headset or adding a stand-alone mic.
There are many many options.
I use an iRig HD microphone that sits on a little tripod. It has fantastic sound and can also plug into an iPhone for interviews.
There are many similar and inexpensive mics available at Amazon and local stores. Your local music store likely has a good selection.
Many podcasters are now using large condenser microphones on a mic stand. Looks cool and sounds great.
Natural Backgrounds
Try to have a nice looking background in the shot. Nice shelves with flowers and books can look good. Avoid the possibility of your partner coming out of the shower naked, forgetting that you are live!
Virtual Backgrounds
We broadcast from our motorhome and do not have a good natural background.
So we use green-screen that we made from foam board and green paint that we bought at Michaels. We cut the board to fit the contour of the dining area in our Class-C motorhome.
The newer computers have enough video processing power to use a virtual background. A plain colored wall or green screen will help.
Scripting Tip
Most people do not sound natural reading from a script.
However, it is usually worth the time to write out a script to help clarify your message.
Outline Tip
You can take a small flip notebook and write the title of your talk and say 5 main points.
Hang it over your computer screen as close to the camera as possible so that you can glance at if needed.
Just Do It
You will get better with practice. So simple setup up your lighting and microphone to make you look good and broadcast often. Every day is good.
Like many entrepreneurs during the COVID-19 disruption, you may have been doing Facebook Live, YouTube Live, and Zoom sessions instead of doing presentations at meetings and conferences.
And sometimes you have been absolutely brilliant whether you have a few or hundreds catch your presentation.
You can capture and repurpose your genius with the strategies I describe in this article. I will give you ideas and tips for doing it yourself.
I am also available to help with the process if this is not your dream activity!
You can skip over the techy stuff to the section called Done For You Special Offer.
Repurposing Your Golden Content
I am suggesting that you capture the video, transcribe the audio, edit the transcript, and create a ‘swipe file’ of content for reuse and repurposing as part of your Marketing Wheel and product development.
Here are some places to use your Golden Content:
- Blog Posts
- Social Media Posts
- Newsletters
- Training Sessions
- Direct Marketing
- Podcasts
- Books
- Magazine Articles
- Membership Content
- Online Courses
- Content Marketing
- Radio Ads
- Use Your Imagination …
Capturing the Video
There was a time in the recent past when you could download High Definition video from Facebook live or use a utility like 4K Downloader to extract HD video from Facebook and YouTube.
However, something changed with Facebook and that no longer works. It seems we can only download low quality Standard Definition (SD) files, taking us back to the days of VHS tapes!
I recently spent a few days exploring options to get around this.
One very promising free option was to use QuickTime to capture the screen.
Here are the basic steps. You may need to track down some YouTube demos for the finer points.
Here is the option for capturing the screen in QuickTime:
Select the input driver for recording the system audio:
The challenge is that your Mac does not have an option to record the system sound.
You will need a third party driver to direct the system sound to a mic input. We are using iShowYou. There are alternatives and most screen capture utilities come with their own.
Configure the sound output to send the sound to your speakers AND the recording input.
The usual behaviour of your computer is to send the sound you your speakers of headphones and the sound will not be recorded with the video.
If you send to the iShowYou driver, you won’t hear the video.
You can get around this by configuring an Multi-Output Device that is an aggregate of a driver like iShowYou and your normal sound output device.
This will take a little research to figure out.
Click here for the video where I learned this trick.
Select the Screen Area
This was free and worked perfectly for me the first time.
However, for some reason the images in the video would get stuck after a few minutes.
And QuickTime was not able to save the video.
This may be a quick with my system.
I suggest that if you are on a budget and have the resources to configure the sound (if not you, then a technically savvy child or friend), I would try this first. Before moving on to paid and open-source programs.
Using a Third-Party Screen Capture Program
Since the nifty QuickTime solution stopped working, I tried a number of free and paid programs.
Most has a similar approach as the QuickTime solution above.
Most automatically installed the drivers to capture the system sound.
Some were very awkward, especially the Open Source programs.
A few had poor results such as jerky video.
I eventually narrowed it down to Camtasia, ScreenFlow, Snagit, and Movavi Screen Recorder.
I opted for Movani Screen Recorder because it was simple and reasonably priced. One of the others may be good for you if you plan to do more than what I was trying to do.
Click Here for a Review for Free and Paid Options
Capturing Video from YouTube Live
If the video from YouTube Live is on your YouTube account, you can download an HD file through your YouTube Studio account.
Also utilities like 4K Downloader may work for you on YouTube.
Avoiding the Need for Screen Recording with Ecamm Live
Moving forward, you can vastly improve the quality and production value of your live streams by using a program like Ecamm Live for Mac.
The video at the top of this article was created with Ecamm Live, then edited with FinalCut Pro.
ECamm Live can record up to 4K video on your computer as you are broadcasting to a live stream.
You can simply load the local file into a video editor a go from there.
Similar programs exits for Windows.
Transcribing the Audio
The next step is transcribing the audio.
At one time this was a very expensive proposition.
And if you have ever tried doing it yourself by hand, you will appreciate how difficult and time-consuming this could be.
Some of the options include:
- Paying a service to do a transcription and edit.
- Using a service to do a machine translation then edit yourself.
- Hire someone to look after some or all of that.
Here is what I do for myself and for clients:
- Use Simon Says to do a machine translation.
The service is reasonably priced, does a decent job, and has a good interface for listening to the recording and editing the text. - Edit the transcript to suit the purpose. Sometimes I just want to document the video so that I can quickly find content for future projects. The machine translation is close enough for that.
Preparing the Audio File for Transcription
While it is possible to simply upload the captured video to the transcription service I will generally do a quick edit on the video first and export the audio for uploading.
I use FinalCut Pro, but Quicktime and most paid and free video editors will work.
Here is my process:
- Trim the video front and back to remove dead air and unusable video. No point in spending time and money on unusable video.
- Adjust the sound levels. Final Cut Pro has a Loudness button and a quick slider to bring the overall level of the sound to be optimal. You can use equalization (EQ) to remove hiss and other noises.
- Edit out stumbles and dumb things you or your subjects may have said that you can find easily. Again, no point in paying to document mistakes.
- I leave finer editing like color correcting and titling for later.
- Exporting the audio with the video in its rough shape will provide a transcript with matching time-codes.
- Export the audio. Most of the standard formats like mp3 will work, so often the default export format will work with little fuss.
Uploading the Audio
Services like Simon Says provide various ways to upload the audio.
The simplest way is to upload the audio file from your computer.
You can also select the file from cloud services such as Google Drive and Dropbox.
I usually create a project folder for the video, audio, and transcripts in Google Drive. So I will upload the audio file to the project folder and select from there.
Done For You Special Offer
- Review your online content and goals to choose the best live streams to capture and transcribe.
- Capture the selected live stream video clips.
- Do a preliminary video edit.
- Optimize the audio.
- Export the audio.
- Upload the audio for transcription.
- Hand edit the machine transcription.
- Download the edited transcription.
- Create a report with suggested golden content to repurpose, including suggested headlines and locations.
- Upload the video, audio, transcript, and suggestions to a project area on Google Drive.
The complete rate is $8 USD per minute of video captured from your live stream.
We can start with a free discovery call and a small pilot project. A ten to twenty-minute live stream is a good place to start.
Please use the form below to request a free discovery session. Include your goals and links to some of your online videos to help me get a sense of what you are doing.
— Greg Dixon
Are you live streaming yet?
Even before the coronavirus lockdown, Facebook Live and YouTube Live were great ways to get your message out.
Ecamm Live for Mac has many broadcast and presentation options to greatly enhance your presentations, including:
- Greenscreen backgrounds
- Support for multiple cameras (great for broadcasting services and concerts.
- Include remote guests or cohost through Skype for interviews and summits.
- Scene switching.
- Presentation slides.
- Video injections.
- Onscreen titles and images.
- High-quality recording to hard drive for future editing and use.
- Stream live to Facebook, then immediately send it to YouTube.
- More streaming options available.
Facebook Live
Are you an entrepreneur who relied on live presentations to groups?
Facebook Live is a perfect way to get your presentations out there.
Also great for daily sharing.
All you need to do simple Facebook Live is a smartphone or webcam and an account.
Ecamm takes you to a much higher level of presentation.
Broadcasting for Services and Concerts
Many organizations have had to cancel their live services and concerts.
The place to start is Facebook or YouTube live with what you have.
The next step up is to use something like Ecamm Live to allow multiple cameras and audio from the mixing console.
Great Tutorials for Ecamm Live
There are many fabulous video tutorials for things you have thought of doing and somethings you will want to do once you know what is possible.
Free Trial and Inexpensive Subscriptions
There is a free trial available to give it a try.
The monthly subscriptions are tremendous value for what you get.
This is a top-tier professional tool.
I highly recommend giving Ecamm Live a try.
Learn More about Ecamm LiveThe coronavirus pandemic has cancelled many live events people are avoiding contacting people in groups.
This can ground your business to a halt if you depend on presenting at events and for groups.
It also may change the way you interact with clients and the people you serve.
All is not lost.
Make Lemonade Out of Lemons
This shift may prove to be a blessing as you enable you to gear up to reach a worldwide audience for your message, solutions, and services.
Free Webinar
Signup for a free webinar where I will discuss ways to transform your presentations from live to online.
Some of the presentation tools available include:
- Facebook Live
- YouTube Live
- Podcasts
- Social Media Platforms
- Online Meetings
- Webinars
Free Gift For Attendees
Receive a free guide for quickly transforming your presentations from in-person to online. Most of the tools for doing it yourself are free or inexpensive.
I will also offer a way to work with me to add sales components to your presentations.
Transform Your Presentations WebinarHow I Can Help Your Success
- Facilitating Webinars and Summits. I can moderate a webinar with up to 5 presenters and thousands of attendees.
- Helping you get set up to broadcast your messages.
- Helping with marketing and training videos.
- Online Courses and Memberships
- Help with copywriting:
- Presentation Slides
- Offers
- Social Media Campaigns
- Blog Posts
- Newsletters
- Training Content
Joint Venture Opportunities
Have a product and a market?
Let’s discuss a plan for your success.
Contact Greg Dixon at greg@sharedvisions.com
Transform Your Presentations Webinar