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    Calling Freelance Flash Animators!

     

    Are you either a full-time or part-time freelance animator? Would you like to pick up some project based marketing animation work? Well…Adelie Studios is looking for a few reliable animators with great personalities and insanely creative animation skills to work with.

    What is Adelie Studios all about?

    We are a virtual organization – we work with freelance animators, voice over artists, writers, musicians and character designers all over the country for projects on demand. This allows us a lot of flexibility when quoting projects because we can keep our overhead costs very low.

    What skills do I need?

    • We are looking to work with animators who have a strong background in Flash animation.
    • 1-2 years freelance experience producing Flash animation.
    • Used to communicating, working independently and meeting deadlines in a virtual environment.
    • Experience producing animated marketing videos or a strong interest in producing marketing animations.
    • Creativity oozing out of every pore and not afraid to speak up as everything we do is collaborative.
    • Sparkling personality to match is a must.

    That sounds like me, how do I find out more?

    Excellent! Please contact us and include a link to some of your animation work you have recently done. We look forward to speaking with you and hopefully working with you on a project soon!

     

     

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    The SOPA / PIPA Bills & What They Could Mean for Your Business

     

    Let’s say you have a website and you post regularly to a blog. At some point someone (not affiliated with your company) randomly posts a comment on one of your blog posts mentioning another company or linking to a video about that company on YouTube. Then that company mentioned sees the comment and isn’t happy about it. Rather than engaging in a conversation in the comments to defend their brand position or asking that the comment be removed; they have the power to shut down your ENTIRE domain. Sound like censorship? It is.

    The Protect-IP Act (PIPA) and the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) are bills which would give corporations and government the ability to censor websites on the net. Both of these bills had, at their heart, good intentions. However both bills are so horribly written with vague definitions of piracy that basically ANY website including any form of user-generated content could be at risk of being shutdown. Think of Google, Wikipedia, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, etc. and the implications these bills could have on the way these websites fundamentally operate if passed into law. All of these websites rely heavily on user generated content. SOPA /PIPA would completely alter the way Americans would be allowed to use the Internet. Key word in that last sentence is “allowed”.

    It also presents a nightmare for web hosting companies which will be forced to police all of the domains that are hosted by them. Let’s say you own a boutique baby clothing store and you had a post about how babies do the cutest things on your website blog and someone posted a link of their baby dancing to a top 40 song. If that top 40 song’s recording company were to claim that this content were piracy, your web hosting company would have to shut down your ENTIRE domain as soon as the complaint was received. There would be no pre-shutdown notification email and no friendly ‘please remove this from your site’. The next day you’d wake up and like flicking off a light switch – your entire website would be gone.

    Companies such as DreamHost where the Adelie Studios website and blog are hosted, have over 1.2 million domains that are hosted by them. If this layer of enforcement were required because of the liability they’d be forced to take on, you can all but say goodbye to affordable web hosting. DreamHost has their own response denouncing the bill and the negative effects it would have in their blog post “Don’t drop the soap, drop SOPA!

    As a small business producing niche animated content and marketing animations for the web, both of these bills are incredibly frightening to us. Fight for the Future produced a great little animation (which we are always fans of people using animation) to explain and illustrate the way these bills could potentially censor the internet. Check out their animation below.

    SOPA comes up for a vote on Tuesday, January 24th. To find more about the SOPA & PIPA bills yourself and to see what actions you can take, visit: http://americancensorship.org/

     


     
     

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    Should I Use Animation or Live Action for my Marketing Video?

    You know you want to watch the A-Ha video so just click it already.Seldom do animation and “live action” video blend as seamlessly as in the 80′s video by A-Ha “Take On Me”. Would it have been as effective with just real actors or all animation? I don’t think so. However in business there are specific instances where one or the other is the best solution to get your message communicated clearly.

    Imagine that you were going to create a video for a company that manufactured gear assemblies primarily marketed to engineers. Rather than show the gear assembly in action using slow motion filming or animation, you instead choose to have the CEO fumble through showing how the gear assembly works by moving it around in his hands. Now add that the CEO doesn’t exactly have the most dynamic personality for video. Doesn’t sound like a good fit does it? If you were an engineer considering this gear assembly, would you rather see it in action or watch someone move it by hand completely removed from the environment that it would be operating in?

    There is a little truth in the above scenario. We had consulted with the company’s marketing agency who pitched this idea and we adamantly advised both the company and the marketing agency against doing this. Thankfully this didn’t come to fruition as the clumsy result could have been a complete waste of the company’s money and worse yet – unusable. The truth is live action film and animation both have their strengths to convey very diverse messages and achieve different objectives.

    Live Action

    Film or Live action is great for communicating sentiment. One of it’s greatest strengths is forming a bond between the viewer and the person onscreen. When you have someone onscreen who has a captivating personality whether that be the CEO, a charismatic engineer or a testimonial from one of your brand advocates, that passion can easily be sensed and felt by the viewer. If that personal energy is palpable in the video, that can be a great way to personalize a company. Some great ways to use film include:

    • Non-profit organizations: If you have a non-profit organization for children, wouldn’t you want to show how those children are helped by the organization? Live action does a great job of “tugging at the heart and purse strings” for online viewers. Using video with email is also a great way to increase donations for non-profits.
    • Testimonials: How many times do you see a “testimonials” link on a website and then you click there and maybe read a few of them. You never read them all though, do you? Now imagine how powerful those testimonials would be if they were videos of real customers sprinkled throughout your site. It’s not only more engaging to the viewer but it puts a face to a testimonial which makes what they are saying more believable to the viewer.
    • Company profiles: Putting a face and a personality to a company can help begin building that relationship between the viewer of your video to hopefully get them to become a future customer. Many people immediately think CEO, but that may not be the case. If you have a passionate customer service representative or a product engineer they may “speak” more to your audience than the CEO might. Just make sure whoever you choose has “camera presence” – speaking clearly and coming across honestly.
    • Physical products: If you are in an industry where the viewer is buying a physical end product, showing the finished product in action will boost viewer engagement and their comfort level with the product. Products like this include things like  automobiles, showcasing real estate properties or high end decorative ceramics. You can still animate segments, such as how that automobile’s engine is designed to be more fuel efficient, but when someone is researching a product, they want to see the finished product in action.

    Animation

    One of animations greatest strengths is it’s flexibility. If you wanted to film your CEO screaming from the mountaintop you’d have to hire film crews, helicopter units and loads of sherpas to bring all that film gear up the mountain. With animation you can animate that scene for a fraction of the cost. Your imagination is your only limitation. Animated marketing videos are also a fantastic way to communicate a message that may be difficult to explain other than by using conceptual animation. Some great ways to use animation in a marketing environment include:

    • Software Services: Software as a Service (or SaaS) are typically very hard to communicate what they do with live people on camera; it’s almost always animation. This is particularly true because most software solves a problem or makes a task easier. Without illustrating an example of a problem solved by the software, chances are the viewer isn’t going to understand how it works.
    • Branding: If your goal is to create a lasting impression while communicating what your company does with visual appeal, then there are few ways that are more effective than animation. With an animation you can get creative with your messaging but still keep all of the brand logo colors, fonts and “look” of the brand completely consistent with all of your other marketing including your email marketing.
    • Greater Product Understanding: With animation you can get down to a granular level of explanation of a product that is very difficult to do with live action. People also prefer to learn through audio/visual methods so if they have the choice between reading a PDF document of the product specs or watching a short video that does the same thing. 99% of the time they will choose the video.
    • The Fun Factor: Let’s face it…animation can be hilarious. Do you want to make a super hero fighting against banner ad wielding flying monkeys? You can do that with animation. When a viewer is laughing and having fun they are more receptive to retaining that information and possibly sharing it with family or friends. That sharing is the fuel that increases your chances of the video possibly going viral. 

    Conclusion

    What type of video is best for your business? The answer is  it depends on what you are looking to communicate as both animation and live action video have their own individual strengths. Your first step is to clearly identify your strategy and what the goal of your video is even before getting started. So what’s the goal of your web video – are you looking to build a personal connection between the viewer and the person onscreen or to communicate a complex message or service that may be more difficult to explain? Now go watch the A-Ha video, you know you want to.

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    Video Marketing Masters Series: Animation (Audio)

     

    Last year I had the pleasure of being interviewed for the Video Marketing Masters Series. It was a lot of fun talking about the usage of animation for online marketing applications and having a great discussion on the topic. A few of the topics we covered were the best way to get your audience to see your animated videos through your email marketing campaigns and three major reasons your audience will want to pass on your animated video. I finally got around to editing the audio down to around 28 minutes from the original 45 minute audio podcast so it’s a quicker listen, click the link below & enjoy!

     

     

    Video Marketing Masters Series Audio: Animation (0:28:01)

     

     

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    Mojo Motors and Adelie Studios Score a Win in 32nd Annual TELLY Awards

     

    Mojo Motors, the new online car shopping site that offers members-only prices on used cars and trucks from local dealers, and Adelie Studios, an industry leader in online marketing animated video production, are the 2011 Online Video Bronze Winners of the 32nd Annual TELLY Award in the automotive category. The winning video, “The Best Way to Buy a Used Car”, was selected among thousands of entries for their entertainment and originality.

    “This was an amazing animation to work on leading up to the launch of Mojo Motors,” said Eric Guerin of Adelie Studios. “Taking the essence of what Mojo Motors does, what makes it different and then condensing that message to an entertaining seventy second animation is what we love about marketing animations. Winning a Telly Award in the automotive category, where we were up against many of the largest automotive companies in the world makes the achievement even more satisfying.”

    “We are honored to be recipients of this prestigious award which celebrates the very best in broadcast and online programming,” said Paul Nadjarian, CEO of Mojo Motors. “Especially when we discovered our competition was in the thousands! Also, with advertising moving away from one-way to two-way dialogue and engagement via social media, this online video becomes a great marketing tool to immediately attract potential visitors to our site. Let’s face it, we all love moving pictures, especially animation, combine that with the unprecedented value and service message of Mojo Motors and it’s a win win.”

    Founded in 1978, the Telly Awards is the premier award honoring outstanding local, regional, and cable TV commercials and programs, the finest video and film productions, and online film and video. The Telly Awards annually showcases the best work of the most respected advertising agencies, production companies, television stations, cable operators, interactive agencies, and corporate video departments in the world.

    This year, the Telly Awards received over 13,000 entries from all 50 states and countries around the world. Silver and bronze medals are awarded based on creativity and outstanding achievement in a specific category.

    About Mojo Motors

    Mojo Motors was founded in 2010 by Internet and auto industry veterans to offer consumers more power and control over the used car buying experience. Using their experience working at eBay Motors and Ford Motor Company, Mojo’s founders created a site based on exclusive relationships with local used car and truck dealers. These dealers list discounted pricing information on Mojo that is available only to consumers who sign up for a free Mojo membership.

    With Mojo, consumers have greater control as they shop for a used car. They visit a dealer armed with discount pricing that the dealer agrees to honor because of its relationship with Mojo.

    Dealers enter and set their discounted pricing information through Mojo’s web-based inventory pricing software. This easy-to-use system allows dealers to set discounts that are competitive with other dealers in their local markets.

    With Mojo, dealers know they’re reaching serious buyers who are ready to buy a car. Mojo collects marketing fees from dealers when Mojo members purchase a used car from them.

    For more information, visit http://www.mojomotors.com

    About Adelie Studios

    Adelie Studios specializes in creating animated marketing videos and tutorial animations to promote your marketing message online in an engaging and entertaining format. Adelie Studios producer Eric Guerin has previously won five Telly Awards: two in 2011 for HubSpot’s Captain Inbound Animated Series, one in 2010 for JCSI and two in 2009 for Waste Management and Open Pages. See more animated videos and tutorial animations they have created at http://www.adeliestudios.com

     


     

     

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