2013 1 29 mindshare digital po v vine video sharing by twitter
TRANSCRIPT
Vine, Video
Sharing by
Pedro Ramirez 29/01/2013
Background
Vine is the new social network app created by Twitter that lets you create and share short six-second
long videos and publish them to Twitter and Facebook. It features no post-capture editing and it limits
the user to a fixed set of possibilities just as Twitter did when it first launched. At launch the app is only
available in the iOS App Store optimized for the iPhone and iPod Touch. There's no word yet on when the
app will be available on other platforms. Vine has been described as the new "Instagram for video" as it
enables users to quickly capture video and publish them to social networks. Vine enters a crowded field
of other similar standard or quality compromised video capture tools (e.g., Cinemagram, GLMPS, Tout,
even YouTube with their recent camera capture app).
Details
Vine features a feed-like stream of recently published looping videos, with additional user filtering by
popularity, editor's picks, and some curated hashtags. Video starts loading and playing only when it is on
the user screen, and in contrast to similar apps, it only plays the focused video’s audio, which goes away
as the user scrolls to a different video.
There's an innovative way to capture the video and edit at the same time, by touching the screen the
recording "head" advances and stops allowing for a video narrative to be composed until reaching a
maximum of 6 seconds. Then users are confronted with a screen allowing them to share to Vine, Twitter
and Facebook.
Vine's videos are captured in a video standard that is already native to most phones and browsers thus
enabling the videos to be supported by Twitter cards and embedded and expanded from single tweets
when seen on the desktop version of Twitter. In contrast to Facebook’s new video capturing tool, Vine is
a stand alone app positioned as a new “art form” separate from Twitter’s text based tradition.
Implications
Vine is another way for brands to use Twitter as a channel for social interaction with the consumer, albeit
via short visual bursts with more emotive content. Similar to Facebook video posts, brand should explore
the most compelling video territory for their followers and fans. However, the six-second format will limit
the possibilities, either focusing a brand’s efforts or frankly confounding them. Traditional creative
agencies may struggle meeting the new formats, and indeed consumer, publisher, or artistic curated
content may be more compelling. At the launch some brands have started to experiment with Vine
creating playful and uncompromising videos "just for fun". For now it is mostly news organizations and
TV channels, although we have already seen some examples by FMCG brands. It will most likely take
some time for the platform, and brands approach to it, fully mature.
In terms of management, it will be challenging to manage shared login detail access by community and
content managers, as for now there's no back-office self-serve way to manage Vine or to connect it to
social media management tools, which may cause problems. For example, a few days after launch Vine
hashtag searches resulted in many videos containing sensitive content (nudity, violence, or medical
procedures). As a result, Vine has created a process to censor inappropriate videos and warn users of
sensitive content with a preload warning message screen. However, expect more “sexting” incidents.
Summary
Consumers, brands, and agencies are just starting to get introduced to the app. With online video
advertising set to grow by over 46.5% this year, Twitter may be setting the stage for a new online video
advertising format to add to their growing efforts to commercialize the platform. A Twitter promoted
Vine ad format may just be on their 2013 roadmap, along with an IPO.