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from Security Systems News, August, 2007
YouTubing the industry
Ioimage and Exacq are the
latest to take advantage of viral video marketing
By L. Samuel Pfeifle, editor
CYBERSPACE--Slowly,
but surely, the physical security industry is embracing
Internet-based viral marketing, or Web 2.0, techniques.
In February, we reported on efforts by AlarmKey, a
Reliable Group company manufacturing business software
for the security alarm industry, which posted a
whimsical analog vs. digital video on sites such as
YouTube.com and Google.com. In June and July, video
analytic appliance maker ioimage and DVR/NVR
manufacturer Exacq both posted how-to videos to YouTube
and similar sites.
In short order, ioimage (www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGGfzVGr6k8)
collected 643 viewings over the course of a month, while
Exacq (www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hsey4je37EQ) picked up 13
views in three days. Both Dvir Doron, vice president of
marketing at ioimage, and Tom Buckley, vice president of
marketing at Exacq, described the online video efforts
as "experiments," but both are convinced that
Internet-based viral marketing efforts will be an
integral part of future marketing efforts. "There's no
clear role model or benchmark for us to follow," said
Doron, "specifically not in the physical security
industry. I'm trying to look at other industries and see
what they're doing. Like information security, which
does utilize Web 2.0 very neatly, specifically on
user-driven development and support." While
acknowledging he's blending consumer and B-to-B sales
channels, Doron noted online forums have been created
where IT manufacturers allow consumers to discuss new
products before they are released, and use that
discussion to refine products.
Buckley said such efforts allow Exacq to complete the
vital task of keeping in close contact with channel
partners. For instance, www.slideshare.net is the
YouTube for PowerPoint files, and
www.slideshare.net/exacq
features one presentation that's been viewed 567 times.
"Communicating with the resellers is really important,"
he said. "By the time you get a newsletter together and
send it out to announce a new development, it's already
old news, but the Web gives you all kinds of
capabilities to communicate." He said he's using a blog
(an online newsletter of sorts that can be easily
updated with new information, see
www.exacq.com/blog) to
give resellers frequent updates, and though some
integrators might get glassy-eyed when he mentions the
word "blog," they certainly use email and have no
problem clicking on a link that takes them to the blog
where they can read about technology updates or new
marketing efforts.
How will this form of marketing and communication
grow? Virally, of course. "Since I've uploaded my video
on YouTube, I've been searching for more," said Doron,
"and I've found more security colleagues out there doing
similar things. I introduced them to my video and they
introduced me to theirs, and it's working, it's
growing."
Buckley said he's using the online networking site
linkedin.com to find like-minded people in the industry.
"I've gotten more business leads off of LinkedIn than
any other online source," he said. "I do a search for
CCTV or IP video and it brings up people who have
accounts on LinkedIn and I contact them and all of a
sudden we start talking. We've gotten both vendor
contacts as well integrator contacts through LinkedIn."
While both Doron and Buckley acknowledge that they do
lose some control over their videos once they push them
out into cyberspace, there are controls you utilize to
make sure only your intended recipients find them if
people are worried about the criminal element using the
videos to bypass security systems. In Buckley's case, he
discovered the control feature on Google thanks to his
14-year-old son.
Naturally.
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