Stories - an experience for your audience -
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Rescooped by Hans Heesterbeek from Tracking Transmedia onto Stories - an experience for your audience -
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Attitudes, Behaviours and Storytelling. Social science and twenty-first century ideas.

 

Another interesting video from "Power to the Pixel" 2012 about the presentation of Wayne Fletcher*.

 

Among the topics covered:

- storytelling from the audience's perspective

- how should we think about innovation

- people and innovations, people and storytelling

 

Excerpts:

 

"If we want to be successful, innovators or communicators in the twenty-first century we need to think very carefully, very closely to the motivations that people have to consume."

 

"If you understand the internal and external structure that govern certain action you're more likely to be able to influence those actions in the future.

 

I think the same applies in communication and in storytelling: if you understand the motivation the people have to consume certain types of entertainment and media then you're more likely to be able to produce content and media that people want to consume and share."

 

*for a short bio: http://bit.ly/Um05Ke

 


Via mirmilla, siobhan-o-flynn
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Rescooped by Hans Heesterbeek from TV Everywhere
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Four Weird Things the Internet Is Doing to Our Understanding of Television

Four Weird Things the Internet Is Doing to Our Understanding of Television | Stories - an experience for your audience - | Scoop.it

...When it comes to delivering audio-visual content to a wide audience, the Internet has lowered the barriers to entry so far that anyone with even the dinkiest camera can become a major broadcaster. The television industry may face a crisis of overhead when a large number of scrappy upstarts deliver comparable value with almost no fixed costs. Also, there are some aspects of the television business that the Internet simply does better, specifically when it comes to reaching an audience.  So there is the scent of blood in the water, and out of the resulting frenzy a few lessons have appeared. Here are four of them.  

- There doesn’t have to be a difference between a “channel” and a “show.”...
- Programming can now be delivered to your television set through a remote control...

- Marketing and distribution are often the same thing...

- Television is no longer that different from publishing...


Via Peter Rosenberg
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Rescooped by Hans Heesterbeek from TV Everywhere
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Four Weird Things the Internet Is Doing to Our Understanding of Television

Four Weird Things the Internet Is Doing to Our Understanding of Television | Stories - an experience for your audience - | Scoop.it

...When it comes to delivering audio-visual content to a wide audience, the Internet has lowered the barriers to entry so far that anyone with even the dinkiest camera can become a major broadcaster. The television industry may face a crisis of overhead when a large number of scrappy upstarts deliver comparable value with almost no fixed costs. Also, there are some aspects of the television business that the Internet simply does better, specifically when it comes to reaching an audience.  So there is the scent of blood in the water, and out of the resulting frenzy a few lessons have appeared. Here are four of them.  

- There doesn’t have to be a difference between a “channel” and a “show.”...
- Programming can now be delivered to your television set through a remote control...

- Marketing and distribution are often the same thing...

- Television is no longer that different from publishing...


Via Peter Rosenberg
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Rescooped by Hans Heesterbeek from Transmedia: Storytelling for the Digital Age
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If Content Is King, Multiscreen Is The Queen, Says New Google Study

If Content Is King, Multiscreen Is The Queen, Says New Google Study | Stories - an experience for your audience - | Scoop.it

Ingrid Lunden: "New research out from Google, working with market analysts Ipsos and Sterling Brands, puts some hard numbers behind the often-noticed trend of how people in the U.S. are using a combination of phones, tablets, computer and TVs to consume digital content."


Via The Digital Rocking Chair
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