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Enhance Your Commercial Video Using Music women headphones

3 Clever Ways To Enhance Your Commercial Video Using Music

30th July, 2018

We’ve spoken in depth about getting the best from your video production in terms of idea conceptionthe film set, film content and much more. Many video projects will require dialogue to get the point across, particularly in demonstration and ‘how to’ videos, and almost every video ever made will be enhanced by music. Music can be the key element which adds professionalism and polish to your commercial video. So with that in mind, we are going to look at three ways to enhance your commercial video using music.

 

 

A note of caution before we continue! Although there is copyright-free music available out there, you need to be absolutely certain that you have permission to use any music you choose in your video production. In brief, if you want to use a commercial song in your video, you must obtain two licenses – a synchronisation license to use the song and the master license to use the recording of that song. It’s a big and tricky subject that we don’t have space to cover here, but a master license will need to be obtained from the record label (or from the artist themselves in the case of independent artists) and a synchronisation license will need to be obtained by the music publisher. Whether you’re looking to enhance your commercial video using music or using it in a non-commercial project, for your own company or on behalf of clients, you need to make sure that the use is legal. A further element to keep in mind is that licensing music early in the project could curtail the chances of a budget issue later.

 

The Bookend Approach

We’re pretty sure that everyone everywhere has watched a video where the music throughout was distracting, if not irritating, for being too loud, the wrong pace, out of context with the video content or purpose or worse.

Depending on the type of your video project, you may find that music simply isn’t needed through the whole video. A corporate video or film, for instance, may actually benefit from having only short bursts of music or a bookended approach.

Often music can actually be more powerful when it is used intermittently – it can better accentuate a point or a climax in the video. When music is forced throughout, the viewer may get tired or bored. The bookend approach gives the viewer some breathing room and this can allow the environmental and background sound to help shape the audio of your project.

 

Enhance Your Commercial Video Using Music headphones



If you are going to use a bookended approach, it’s a good idea to pick one music track or theme to open and close the video, especially on shorter video projects.

Giving music or sound design a featured role in the opening and or closing sections of your video will help to set your tone, hold your message together, and leave your viewers with a feeling of completion. A way to do this is to pair music or sound design with an image for three to five seconds.

Using bookend music, or simply turning up the volume of the music at certain points, can also be used to divide your video into chapters or segments.

 

 

Music Throughout

While video images are great, the music in your video can really help to stimulate your audience and set the mood/tone.

Essentially, music is entertaining enough in itself that, when in the background, it can keep us focused even on otherwise un-entertaining things.

 

Enhance Your Commercial Video Using Music keyboard

 

In choosing music for your video, and to truly enhance your commercial video using music rather than turn the audience off, you need to consider your target viewer. What’s their age, background and interests? Whereas an executive of a blue-chip corporation may not identify with hard rock or hip-hop, this may be a perfect style choice for a younger audience. If you’re trying to reach a broad market or many age ranges, look for music that has a broad appeal; you won’t want to alienate or dis-engage your audience with anything too genre-specific.

You will need to decide what role music will play in your video; whether the music supports or drives the message you’re hoping to convey. If your audience notices the music too much, it could be pulling away from rather than adding to the overall impact. Be clear about whether you are conveying broad information or if you are trying to impart technical details that your viewer will need to focus on without distraction as this will dictate what kind of music you should use. Detailed technical info should have a supportive underscore that doesn’t pull the attention of the viewer, but if you’re trying to convey broad concepts, then you’ll need foreground music that evokes greater emotion.

When choosing your music you’ll also need to decide whether or not to use vocals.

Vocals under dialogue or an interview can be distracting and off-putting, but if chosen carefully they can also carry your message through, and can sometimes add some humour, if appropriate to the theme. If you choose a vocal track for your project you must work out whether or not the words support what’s happening in the scene/video. Good non-vocal tracks can often convey the same emotions without words and in many cases could be considered a safer bet.

 

Music Without Dialogue

Video marketing relies on ensuring your music is the perfect fit for your campaign, brand and product. But what about the idea that your video features nothing but music?

 

Enhance Your Commercial Video Using Music women headphones



One of the added bonuses of a music-only marketing video is that they make great content for social networks that auto-play videos which don’t have sound to begin with.

When we’re scanning through our social media we may not always be in a position to have audio with the video’s that come up (i.e. in a hospital or at a conference – little bit rude that one, you should be listening to the speaker, but you know what we’re saying) so you can assume that your prospects may be hearing nothing at all when they catch your video on Facebook, for instance.

Videos that feature only music and have no narrative or sound effects need to be compelling enough visually to draw people in without the promise of dialogue, and this effect must be achieved with or without the sound. Of course, you need to add music which will capture the imagination of the viewer if the sound is on, but keeping in mind that often it may not be. The old silent movies are an excellent example of how this can work.

 

Need support to enhance your commercial video using music? Get in touch – we’d be happy to talk further.

Six steps to a handsome creative proposal

24th July, 2018

From our name, it’s clear we are a modest bunch here at Devilishly Handsome Productions. We often blush when clients are kind enough to compliment our professional work ethic and sexy production content.

Another skill we have is our creative writing ability – specifically the ability to respond to briefs with really, really great proposals. It’s why we rarely lose a competitive pitch and – whether the project moves ahead or not – we frequently get quiet compliments from their recipients.

Obviously these prized documents reveal a peek behind the curtain of many past campaigns, both speculative and successful. They contain secrets that must be kept. They are the silent performers that are so important to our business and, as a creative video production company, embody the secret to our success.

In an effort to celebrate this often unseen art form, we’re going to share six points that we feel create a compelling proposition that is hard to ignore.

    1. Creative Research. Ok, seems obvious, but answering the brief with brilliant ideas that are suitable for the client is the key. How we get to those ideas…. not so obvious. We undertake meticulous research and examine old campaigns for the brand or client on multiple platforms.  We learn and understand how they like to convey their voice, and we identify how that voice can evolve and strengthen their core message.  Not many brands want something completely new with little of their existing DNA. A gentle reboot of this identity that brings fresh perspective within the parameters of the new brief is the way to go.
    2. Create a narrative. Creative ideas can be hard to convey on paper.  Putting them into a linear structure is needed for the client to follow your train of thought. Much like a good piece of content, taking the client on a journey through the creative proposal breaks down barriers. We disassemble each element of the idea: story, visuals, assets, style, brand voice…and we work out how to feed each one to the client to ensure that they understand the full scope of our award-winning pitch.
    3. Visual Design. Clients are, on the whole, time poor. The last thing these guys need are long, rambling chunks of text to wade through. The idea needs to be conveyed in the fastest, most compelling way possible. If a picture tells a thousand words, you should make the proposal as visual as possible. Everybody is drawn to good design – we make sure every slide or page in our proposal is a piece of art.                                                                                                                                                                                  
    4. References/examples. However creative you might be, sometimes the people you are pitching to are… not. Always help convey the exact style and tone of what you want to do by stuffing your proposal with loads of visual references – video and imagery. To really stand out, consider creating some spec work on your own time – it has always been well received by our clients.
    5. Don’t be precious Always give as much detail and transparency as necessary… within reason. The creative industries are competitive but creative work cannot be wholly owned in this day and age. Provide more than one idea if possible. Give your best creative thoughts and give them freely – more often than not you will be rewarded.
    6. Bring extra value. We wrote an article last year about how film production companies need to work harder. Consider how the content you want to create can be adapted and retooled into bonus content for other platforms or even other campaigns. For example, could you create cut down or truncated versions for social media distribution? Added value for them – not much cost for you.

Want to get a peek of one of these prized documents for your next project? Get in touch. No cost. No questions asked.