Archive for the ‘ebay’ Category:
vzaar adds video to your eBay listings
vzaar is a UK-based video startup focused on allowing eBay sellers to add video to their product listings. The company is doing a great job with tools that make it easy for the non-technical person to tap into the power of video for selling products. It has also partnered with video production services worldwide to offer an affordable, well-rounded solution for small to medium-sized eBay businesses.

vzaar is quite simply a video solution for eBay sellers. The tool has a simple purpose - it lets merchants upload their video content, and get a snippet for HTML code that can be inserted into any eBay listing. Not that revolutionary, you might think - but in reality eBay doesn’t allow any outside videos to be played on page unless it comes from a “certified vendor”. The reason? Some old school people at eBay still distrust outside code, fearing the players could carry some viruses, bugs, etc. Non sense Mr eBay, but I guess that’s besides the point: vzaar works for eBay and that’s good.
Perhaps the most interesting feature of vzaar is its simplicity. A prominent play button, no overlays, no product image distraction. Video in its purest form, delivered in a player that’s clean and simple.
What does it look like on an eBay page? Anything you’d expect: the video embedded in the actual listing.

Then scrolling down you see the video:

Now unlike other hosting services that provide the video streaming, the vzaar team really tries to solve the content creation problem by partnering with a few companies worldwide, like iSpeakVideo in the United States. We’ll make sure to cover this great little service as well in the future, but is short, iSpeakVideo allows you to get a professional spokesperson to pitch your product or brand.

If you’ve been in the video commerce space long enough, you probably know that production is one of the biggest problems for many small to medium sized businesses, and this type of integration (content creation + video service) is a winning combination for the unsophisticated user.

How this great little service priced? Very reasonably - there is a free package and a host of paying solutions ranging from $10/mo to $200/mo. Definitely worth a try!
PS: Here is a cool little video of the people behind vzaar.
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YouTube entering the Video Commerce era
YouTube has unveiled some ambitious plans to further monetize their massive user base by contextually inserting commerce links on their video pages. Amazon and Apple are early partners, with more to follow on the gaming, music and movie distribution verticals. What does this mean for the nascent video commerce space?
1. YouTube is serious about video commerce. Reading off the original blog post “I clicked to buy and I liked it”
Just as YouTube users can share, favorite, comment on, and respond to videos quickly and easily, now users can click-to-buy products — like songs and video games — related to the content they’re watching on the site. We’re getting started by embedding iTunes and Amazon.com links on videos from companies like EMI Music, and providing Amazon.com product links to the newly-released video game Spore(TM) on videos from Electronic Arts.
This is just the beginning of building a broad, viable e-commerce platform for users and partners on YouTube. Our vision is to help partners across all industries — from music, to film, to print, to TV — offer useful and relevant products to a large, yet targeted audience, and generate additional revenue from their content on YouTube beyond the advertising we serve against their videos. And those partners who use our content identification and management system can also enable these links on user-generated content, by using Content ID to claim videos and choose to leave them up on the site.
We can read “this is the beginning of building a broad, viable e-commerce platform for users and partners on YouTube”. This shows that YouTube is committed to this project and hopes to create a new business line that will nicely complement their current ad revenue streams.
2. YouTube is starting with digital products. What next? Partnering with Amazon and Apple makes a ton of sense because these types of products are most directly related to the masses of content you see on YouTube. Think songs, movies, games, software products, and other soft products that are just the perfect fit right now. However, with so many hard products currently been marketed on YouTube (anything from shoes, to musical instruments, to electric cables, to cars, etc), I am convinced YouTube is also thinking longer term about how they can get a piece of the e-commerce action and deliver the equivalent of the eBay stores to their users. In other words, I predict that within the next 3 years YouTube will provide merchant tools for small and medium sized businesses to sell their products online using video.
3. Another big jab at eBay. Google has been slowly gaining on eBay and it’s not a coincidence to see Amazon as one early partner in this initiative. It is all too clear that YouTube and Google are trying to lure merchants from eBay and deliver a compelling package that includes video, and I’m sure a payment system (Google checkout) down the road.
4. A fantastic boost for video commerce. By entering the space so early and with so much commitment, YouTube and Google are validating the video commerce space in a big way. Expect video adoption to accelerate in the retail space and benefit from this new momentum.
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