The sixth edition of our Startup Outlook report is all about video and the emerging platforms that are changing the game for brands and people alike. This month’s issue profiles five companies – Broadcast for Friends from Ustream, SundaySky, Tout, Viddy and VideoGenie – through the lens of 360i’s Startup Scorecard. We created this scoring system to give brands a framework for vetting opportunities with startups.
Download all reports at www.startupoutlook.com.
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Startup Outlook: Issue 6, October 2012
1. Presented By:
Issue 6 – October 2012
Welcome to the sixth edition of Startup Outlook, 360i’s guide for how brands can evaluate
emerging technologies and platforms. This month’s spotlight is on video – when brands
harness video well, there are few better ways to engage consumers. This report explores
three ways people are sharing videos from their mobile devices and takes a look at two
technologies that allow marketers to create, capture and promote videos. Marketers who
want to look beyond YouTube and pre-roll ads should get familiar with the five entrants here:
Broadcast for Friends, SundaySky, Tout, Viddy and VideoGenie.
If you have feedback, or if you represent a startup and want to be considered for a future
edition, contact us at startup@360i.com.
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Meet the Startups
Each Startup Outlook report measures five select companies against the evaluation criteria outlined in 360i’s
Startup Scorecard. To suggest a startup for inclusion in future updates, contact us at startup@360i.com.
StartupScorecard Here is 360i’s qualitative Startup Scorecard, presenting
the four criteria to use when evaluating startups:
Value: What consumer and brand needs does the Applicability: Which brands or verticals would find
technology facilitate? If a consumer application, why the startup most relevant? Even the hottest startups
would consumers use this, and why would brands aren’t right for every brand. Some startups are more
even consider participating? If the value is high for applicable for a certain season, campaign or goal.
consumers, brands will want to find a way to get
involved.
Prominence: How can the brand stand out and create Ingenuity: What is exciting right now? In some cases,
its own experience? A rotating banner ad within a site a brand will seek out ingenuity because it’s looking to
or application won’t give the brand a prominent hook, attract media attention and get recognized as an
while sponsorships, white label offerings and product innovator. It’s also important to discern whether the
integration will score high here. offering is truly unique, or if there are more established
competitors with similar offerings that can better
achieve a marketer’s goals.
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2. Broadcast for Friends by Ustream www.broadcastforfriends.com
• Value: Ustream, launched in 2007, may not be a startup, but its new Broadcast For Friends (BFF)
offering is an exciting emerging technology product launched by one of the better known providers
of live streaming offerings. People can use BFF to stream live video directly to their Facebook page,
embedded within a post. Users can add filters that instantly appear for viewers and comments appear
in real time, with hardly any delay. Brands can have Facebook page moderators share live video
streams directly to their feeds.
BFF allows users to add filters to video, stream the video live directly on their
Facebook page and view comments in real time.
• Applicability: For brands looking to find new ways to connect with their Facebook audiences, this is
one more tool to consider. This would work best for live events, or for brands featuring celebrities or
other talent.
• Prominence: Videos are viewed via Facebook’s News Feed, rather than the Ustream app or site.
Most of the time, marketers and page owners using BFF will do so at a planned time, rather than
spontaneously, so they should consider building up demand for the live stream by creating a Facebook
event, sending email alerts and running paid media.
• Ingenuity: Before BFF, Ustream launched an app to stream live video to a Ustream channel, and com-
petitors also offer live streaming apps. The twist with BFF is that marketers can deliver video directly to
where people spend the most time online – Facebook. BFF is simple, convenient, and brings the conver-
sation happening on Facebook right back into the app to create opportunities for two-way engagement.
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3. SundaySky www.sundaysky.com
• Value: SundaySky takes any kind of data feed and turns it into a series of customized videos. This
provides unique opportunities to add video to the mix, which include using an email database to
create customized videos based on prospects’ preferences, generating a feed of products viewed
on a retailer’s site to then create thousands of customized videos used in retargeting ads, or using a
customer’s account history to create a personalized walkthrough of how to understand their bill (with
upselling opportunities embedded throughout). These are all actual examples of how marketers have
used SundaySky, with the potential to display the video anywhere, including on-site, email, mobile,
social, or in pre-roll ads.
AOL Autos uses SundaySky to input their preferences and demo data to create a customized video.
• Applicability: Given its wide range of use cases, most marketers could probably find an application
for SundaySky. What’s interesting is that in any of the scenarios above, marketers didn’t necessarily
need to use video and may not have been considering it initially; it just happened to be an effective
form of content delivery and SundaySky made it efficient to serve the content in multimedia format.
• Prominence: Brands are able to craft their own experiences with SundaySky, so each engagement
will be customized very specifically to the marketer’s needs.
• Ingenuity: Marketers are just starting to appreciate the value of “Big Data,” and SundaySky is far more
interesting for what it does with marketers’ data than the videos it produces. There are other companies
trying to address similar needs, such as EyeView, which takes video assets and personalizes them
based on user and advertiser data. SundaySky stands out because it can be used to create video
using a range of creative assets, even when video hasn’t been part of the mix already.
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4. Tout www.tout.com
• Value: Tout is a video sharing app that is focused on conversation. People or brands upload brief
videos and other users are encouraged to respond via video. It’s perhaps the closest service to a
video-based Twitter. Updates can be shared to Twitter, Facebook, or via a website widget. Viewers can
participate and respond through mobile apps on iOS and Android, or via their PC’s webcam.
With Tout, users can upload videos to their social networks and engage directly with people they follow.
• Applicability: Tout will be especially appealing for entertainment marketers. WWE, Live with Kelly and
Michael and EA Sports Madden are among the most popular users.
• Prominence: Brands can sign up as a user and Tout will feature select users within its mobile app.
Brands can also create a widget for their site that showcases video updates and viewers’ responses.
• Ingenuity: Compared to services like Viddy (the next featured startup), Tout is much more focused on
video conversation where entire threads take place via video. That can make it harder to skim and scan
a content thread, but it can be more engaging for the most passionate fans.
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5. Viddy www.viddy.com
• Value: Viddy is a content sharing application often described as ‘Instagram for video.’ Often these
comparisons do a disservice to both parties, but in this case, it’s accurate, as Viddy does seem to
function exactly as Instagram would if it included video uploads along with photos. Viddy lets people
upload brief videos, touch them up with filters and a soundtrack and share them across Facebook,
Twitter, Tumblr and YouTube. Brands in turn can create profiles and run contests, generally using
hashtags – exactly as marketers do with Instagram.
Viddy allows users to upload brief videos, add filters and a soundtrack and share them across social networks.
• Applicability: Brands as diverse as Elle, GE, Southwest Airlines and “Project Runway” are actively
using Viddy. Any marketer investing in sharing videos and soliciting user-generated content can
consider Viddy as one option, especially for reaching people via mobile devices.
• Prominence: Brands generally must build their own audience, encouraging their fans and others to
follow them on Viddy. .
• Ingenuity: Viddy is in a very competitive space, as it must go head to head with the other companies
profiled here, as well as YouTube. Yet it has done well generally by following Instagram’s approach—
meeting a consumer need with an intuitive and fun product. It doesn’t hurt that celebrities like Snoop
Dogg actively participate. Viddy and its investors will now need to see if it can mirror Instagram’s growth.
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