She’s a Brick House . . .
The wife, kid and I recently moved back to Chicago after living in California for 20 years. I suppose wanted to beat the rust belt rush that global warming will cause. After our first real winter, I’d say we’re a millennium or two ahead of the crowd.
We built a house in the city, close enough to hear the Cubs fans wailing at Wrigley Field.
One thing I noticed about Chicago is that the houses are long and narrow.

Another thing I noticed is that this is a bricklayer’s town. They use real brick with mortar and everything. In San Diego, brick is actually stamped plaster that is propped up with two by fours.
San Diego brick reminds me of the fake wood paneling on my father’s 1973 Chevy station wagon.
Real brick is expensive, so builders only put the good brick on the front of the house and use cheaper structural brick on the sides and back.
When we built our dream house (not pictured here), my wife selected a brick that is reminiscent of old Boston. It’s a deep red with character and weather marks.
The builder convinced us to pay more to match the color of the side and front bricks so it’s hard to tell where the expensive brick ends and the structural brick begins.
Chicago houses put their best foot forward leading with the good brick out front.
So what does this have to do with small business marketing?
I thought you’d never ask.
When you’re marketing your business on the Internet, you’ve gotta lead with your best, most compelling benefits.
This is particularly important with when marketing with video.
Attention spans are incredibly short, and if you take more than a few seconds to get going, you’ll lose your audience. Your online video is one click away from dismissal.
When you produce a video, grab the viewer’s attention immediately. You have less than 5 seconds before you’re in the danger zone. If you haven’t grabbed attention in 15 seconds, you’re toast.
We’re finding that the optimal length of a business marketing video should be around 30 seconds. If you have to go longer, you’re better off making two short videos that are each focused on an individual topic.
What are your thoughts, comments, questions, or ideas?
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April 25th, 2008 at 1:46 pm
I received the following comment. He makes a good point.
Hi Dick- got your newsletter and wanted to comment on
the video topic you discuss. I would disagree with the
length of time for the marketing video and here’s why:
The 30 second length spot looks and sounds like a
commercial. It doesn’t give any real information about
how that company can help the consumer looking for
information. To do that, you need much more than 30
seconds. I agree it should be attention grabbing, but
that’s way too short to gain any credibility with a
potential viewer.
Take a look at my video blog, which I use to help
inform potential viewers about medical malpractice &
accident law in the State of New York:
http//medicalmalpracticetutorial.blogspot.com
(I’ve had people call me up telling me that my videos
were the most informative thing they’ve ever seen on
the web. I’ve even had some people tell me they’ve
watched all of my videos- that’s hours worth of
watching!)
Let me know what you think.
Gerry
The Law Office of Gerald M. Oginski, LLC
25 Great Neck Rd., Ste. 4
Great Neck, NY 11021
516-487-8207
http://www.oginski-law.com
http://medicalmalpracticetutorial.blogspot.com
http://nymedicalmalpractice.blogspot.com
April 28th, 2008 at 5:08 am
I think both of you are right. It might be the difference between a small postcard and a lengthy, copy intensive ad. Both are appropriate when used correctly. Dick, don’t you just love that area of Chicago..my son lives near there, sold his car even things were just so close and fun.
best, GL HOFFMAN
http://blogs.jobdig.com/wwds