A marketing technique aiming at reproducing "word of mouth" usually on the internet and through existing social networks. YouTube Video pastiches, trailers, interviews with cast members, the director, writer, etc. You can find interviews of “the talent” trying to gain publicity for your case study films on YouTube.
Revision
Wednesday, 14 May 2014
Viral Marketing
A marketing technique aiming at reproducing "word of mouth" usually on the internet and through existing social networks. YouTube Video pastiches, trailers, interviews with cast members, the director, writer, etc. You can find interviews of “the talent” trying to gain publicity for your case study films on YouTube.
Guerrilla Marketing
The use of unconventional and low cost marketing
strategies to raise awareness of a product. The aim is usually to create “buzz”
and “word of mouth” around a film. Unusual stunts to gain publicity (P.R.) on
the film’s opening weekend, etc.
A Mainstream Film
A high budget film that would appeal to most
segments of an audience: the young, boys, girls, teenagers, young people, the
middle aged, older people, the various classes in society. Distributors often
spend as much or more than the film cost to make when distributing mainstream films
that are given wide or universal releases.
Technological Convergence
Technological convergence can be in
production, distribution and exhibition (films via the web; piracy), or
marketing (using social networking sites/ websites for promotion)
It is the growing interractive use of
digital technology in the film industry and media which enables people to
share, consume and produce media that was difficult or impossible just a few
years earlier.
Examples:
For instance, the use of new software
to add special effects in editing; the use of blue-screen; using new types of
digital cameras like the one Danny Boyle used in “Slumdog Millionaire” (The
Silicon Imaging Camera to shoot high quality film in tight spaces); you can use
the Internet to download a film rather than go see it in the cinema; you can
watch it on YouTube; you can use special editing programs like Final Cut Pro to
edit bits of a film, give it new soundtrack and upload it on YouTube; you can
produce illegal, pirate copies on DVDs from downloads and by converting the
film’s format; you can buy Blue Ray DVDs with greater compression which allows
superior viewing and more features on the DVD; distributors can use digital
software to create high concept posters; cinemas can download films to their
projection screens and do not have to depend on a van dropping off the film!
There are tons of ways in which technological convergence affects the
production, distribution, exhibition and exchange by prosumers. ( A prosumer is
someone who not only consumes (watches films) but also writes about them the
Net, blogs and make films out of them, often uploading them on sites like
YouTube, etc.
Media Convergence
Convergence of media occurs when
multiple products come together to form one product with the advantages of all
of them.
Examples:
•
More and more films
are being marketed on the Internet and on mobile phones. You no longer need
even to buy the DVDs or CDs as you can download films and music directly to
your laptop, Mac or PC. Blue Ray DVDs can carry more features than ordinary
DVDs and can be played on HD televisions and in home cinemas for
enhanced/cinematic picture quality. You can save films on SKY digital, Free-box
digital players, etc. You mobile phone has multiple features and applications.
With media and technological convergence this is growing year on year.
Play-Stations, X-Boxes and the Wii can can connect with the Internet and you
can play video games with multiple players.
Vertical & Horizontal Integration
Absorption into a single firm of
several firms involved in all aspects of a product's manufacture from raw
materials to distribution.
Example:
Vivendi Universal have integrated film, music, web and distribution technology into the company, including owning big stakes in cables and wires that deliver these services. Therefore they are vertically integrated because they own all the different companies involved in film, from production to distribution to exhibition. They are also horizontally integrated because they have all the expertise for producing media content under one roof – films, TV, magazines, books, music, games thus being able to produce all the related media content for one film under the same roof (see synergy). This is important for the control the institution has over their product/film.
Example:
Vivendi Universal have integrated film, music, web and distribution technology into the company, including owning big stakes in cables and wires that deliver these services. Therefore they are vertically integrated because they own all the different companies involved in film, from production to distribution to exhibition. They are also horizontally integrated because they have all the expertise for producing media content under one roof – films, TV, magazines, books, music, games thus being able to produce all the related media content for one film under the same roof (see synergy). This is important for the control the institution has over their product/film.
Synergy
Synergy is a common action of the
multi-media conglomerates who own the Hollywood studios. Often they will
incorporate products from their different subsidiaries. For example, one of
their Studios will produce a film, one of their TV studios will create a
spin-off series, and one of their games manufacturers will produce a game. This
will benefit the conglomerate as their products will be cross-promoted by each
other, multiplying the profits for the conglomerate. Remember conglomerates are
horizontally and vertically integrated meaning they have several companies in a
number of different multi-media fields, which allows them easy access to
synergy opportunities.
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