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The 4 C’s of successful multimedia. Stephen Masiclat Director, Graduate Program in New Media Management The S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications Syracuse University. Other titles I considered. Multi-tagging for multimedia Optimizing multimedia for the web
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The 4 C’s of successful multimedia Stephen Masiclat Director, Graduate Program in New Media Management The S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications Syracuse University
Other titles I considered • Multi-tagging for multimedia • Optimizing multimedia for the web • From Image to Web Object • Flickr has fckd you
Meta-tagging. . . not so much • The 4 C’s of successful online multimedia are • Context • Connection • Customer-centricity • Cheap cost
Context means. . . • . . . media are situated within a series of web structures • html or xml • served by databases • has a presence that is calculated
meta data ≠ clear context • Images or video are separate and distinct from the words that represent (or tag) them, and since semantic analysis is currently easier than image analysis, the words that count more. • Renee Magritte began visual exploration of the distances between images, concepts and the words we associate with them. . .
Things are even more difficult now • Problems like semantic distance and polysemy cloud the way we understand* pictures as web and contextualizing objects. • understand=[organize, categorize, relate, describe, use, ascribe meaning(s)]
What’s in a word? • Let’s develop a semantic map of a word: green.
A student-generated semantic map of green green [G]=[n30, k51] k max= 435
A student-generated semantic map of green The map or graph of possible contexts for a word like green is too large to be accurate. Therefore, we layer on additional data layers like external page links
Green is tricky . . .many words are • So we measure other proximate data (like well-structured text, captions and meta-tags and inbound text links. • Meta data alone won’t do it • The degree of semantic correlation is measured with statistical tools similar to Cronbach’sa
So we structure a good deal of text around the media data <video>. . . • Page <title> • Meta data (keywords and descriptors) • Proximate text structured in <table> and <div> and, in HTML5, <figcaption><hgroup> and <summary> tags
. . . and measure of the semantic distances between terms • High correlation with semantic difference is taken to mean useful, high-quality data. • A large number of terms, repetition, low correlation coefficients are signs of low-quality data.
Context through SEO No jargon! No excessive technical detail Words that your audience uses
The second C.Connection. . . through links. . . • When people link to your video in a contextual way, it improves your PageRank score. • πT= πT (aS + (1-a) E) • Wandering through several photography sites I found <a href=“http://www.myphotosite.com/myNewsPhotoPageX.htm” > a great photograph of Kermit the Frog.</a> It’s actually a photo of a kermit toy, but the setting makes it a poignant. . .
. . .and through contextualized links • In addition, if many people link to the page, add comments and link-backs, the page becomes a large* validated referrant. • Do you remember the Google bomb?
Connected multimedia is: • Video people react to and comment upon. • Content people can freely use to help make a point. • Available for a long period of time from a stable source (a permalink)—it stays connected. • A subset of your total online portfolio or YouTube channel, photoblog or flickr-type page.
The 3rd C. Customer-centric • Communicators interested in communicating ensure people can get to the media in a sensible way. [Dervin] • People get to media from sources they trust. [Pew] • They trust their friends • They look at the video their friends recommend • They look at the video and stories that are e-mailed to them
Customers have gravity • Video travels best over social networks or through trusted sources. • People generally don’t look for video news, they assume it will come to them. • —from Lee Raine, Director of the Pew Internet Project
People use news as a social currency (1) • 72% of Americans who follow the news at least now and then say they enjoy talking with friends, family, and colleagues about what is happening in the world • 69% feel that keeping up with the news is a social or civic obligation • 50% say they rely on the people around them to tell them when there is news they need to know
People use news as a social currency (2) • 57% of internet users share links to news stories • 30% of internet users get news on typical day through their SNS use • 13% follow news organizations and journalists on SNS • 6% get news via Twitter feeds
Customer-centric, it turns out, means letting people post, re-tweet, point to and otherwise use the video stories you create. • So how do you make a living?
The 4th C. Cheap • The problem of realizing value for work is systemic. • The mass audience is gone, and with it, the multiplicative power of mass distribution. • The audience that’s left is a large collection of very small niche-interest groups that are geographically disparate.
You can’t rely on Chris Anderson • News isn’t amenable to long-tailed cost-recovery • Freemium won’t work without a means of converting sporadic users into regular users with an up-sell path. • You need the ability to pool content with other providers to create critical mass of content that can be shared and embedded. You need a content distribution network.
Can you rely on yourselves? • Can NPPA develop a content distribution network? • It’s like AP, but allows regular people to syndicate content on social media sites, as well as online news organizations to syndicate to their sites.