Welcome back!
Whether you are doing an online interview over Skype or hosting a ‘scope or a Google Hangout, you want to look and sound good! I give you the easiest strategies ever to rock your next online interview. As always you can watch the vid or read the text below at your leisure. Enjoy! And let me know if the video helps!
There are thousands of gifted and passionate experts in the world today who are on-line sharing their stories. Unfortunately I am often disappointed when I click through to watch an interview and the video quality does not support the strength of the content. Crappy quality shooting is a turn-off for a viewer as your videos say as much about the quality of your skills and products as your website and print materials do. Here are eight secrets you can employ to elevate your next online interview or Hangout! Gotta keep your vids on par with the tremendous value of your content. Good luck!
- Eye contact! You should be looking at the web cam when speaking and not at your own on-screen image or on-screen notes. Viewers are savvy enough to know that if you are looking at notes, or watching yourself talking, you aren’t really engaging with your audience. By addressing the web cam itself, you maintain eye contact with your followers and the person you are recording an interview with. If a viewer has taken time out of their day to watch your video, you should honour them with your attention.
- Make an effort. Web cams can be surprisingly forgiving in terms of how your skin looks, but we all should put in some effort. You are your brand! Style your hair, look neat and presentable (I can hear my Mum saying that). Gals should keep the make-up colours neutral and soft. Guys you can apply some mattefying products if you need them to cut shine and pay attention to your hairline and bridge of nose. If your persona is unshaven and rugged, go for it but otherwise, keep it clean. Notice in the vid above that my hair is a disaster!
- Keep the backdrop simple. That simplicity will allow the viewer to focus on you and your content. Lose the outdated framed print art, ditch the bad office plants, kick the dried flower arrangements to the curb and find another background that doesn’t feature your cheapo shelving unit from university days. I know this might sound like tough love but you’ll thank me when you see the results.
- The lenses on your webcams are wide. Really wide. The rule is simple….don’t sit to close to the camera when recording. The closer you sit, the wider your facial features will look. My head is the size of a small planet so I don’t try to accentuate that!
- Lighting separates the wheat from the chaff, people. If your videos are dimly lit then you look less professional. It is that simple. Put in some effort to give yourself a healthy glow. You can use an office window or a desk lamp. Make sure the light source points at you from behind the web cam/laptop. You should feel the light on your face. If the light source is slightly above eye level and right in the middle of your face (over top of the web cam) then you will look really good. If you light yourself from high above you get raccoon eyes and if you light from down below you look ghoulish. So a desk lamp or a window shining directly onto your darling face from slightly over top of the camera and just above your eye level is the sweet spot.
- Framing well, is super easy to do. Viewers (and your interviewer) want to be able to see you clearly, so if you position yourself so that your shoulders and head are right in the middle of your computer screen with the camera placed at the top/middle of your monitor (most computers have an integrated camera already in the best spot), you should be well lit (because your desk lamp or a window is already doing its thing…) and look perfectly balanced within the frame.
- Camera height can be really flattering or make you look like you have a couple of chins. If you are recording from your laptop, raise the laptop up on a box, a few books, whatever is handy and quick. The goal is to get the camera on your device to be slightly higher than your eyebrows. This tilt down to you will be really flattering to most people. Same thing when using your desktop, just prop up the monitor so that the web cam is slightly higher than your eyes. If you look down into the webcam you’ll look overbearing and super authoritative. If you put the camera so far above your head that you are looking up at your interviewer/audience, it will give the impression that you are inferior. An interview is a conversation so look at the camera at eye level.
- Sound! Sound quality is so important in video production. I have witnessed great content this year get drowned out by air-conditioners, street traffic, people in the next room, and soft-spoken presenters. My advice is to buy the best microphone you can afford and find a quiet room to shoot in. Studies show that viewers will tolerate a poor image but have little patience for crappy sound. You want people to click play, share and buy your wares not delete out of frustration.I bet your onscreen image in an interview (or ‘scope or Hangout) can be as powerful and effective as your brand. I have faith in you. Happy filming!
Thanks for watching,
Allyson
P.S. If you’ve done an awesome Periscope, interview or Google Hangout, share the link below!
2 comments
chocky
Your scopes are brilliant. I hope people head on over and have a look!
Erica Ross
Great information!!!! Thank you. Love your presence and style. So funny too. ‘Shlumpadump’. Ha ha.
I’m regularly scoping on Periscope. @danceourwayhome