Blog

Critique of Freshbooks ‘Revised invoice and estimate pages’ Screencast

Ben tweeted a few days back to announce a new screencast at FreshBooks (the on-line invoicing and time-tracking tool) which gives an update about their new Invoice and Estimates page.  The screencast runs for 1:26 and takes you through the new features they’ve added.

The Good:

  1. The screencast is short and to the point, it moves along at a good clip
  2. FreshBooks have a nice opening animation that shows they care about the visual look of their screencasts
  3. It is clear (for a first-time viewer like me!) that FreshBooks makes it really easy to add new items into an invoice (it is obviously less of a fuss than using Word or Excel)

The Bad:

  1. My main worry is with the audio.  Ben’s mic is accentuating the plosives (burst of air from ‘b’s and ‘p’s), a pop-filter might help and moving back from the mic should reduce their incidence.  The Pro Audio for Screencasts entry in our tutorial series has more tips including lessons on editing, producing and presenting
  2. You can hear general office background noise, this is a bit distracting
  3. Visually it would be easier to see what’s going on if a zoom was used, currently the text is very hard to read because it is so small (but you do get the general idea of how it works)

Thoughts for improvement:

  1. Add a pop-filter and/or move the mic about 10 cm above the face (so it points down at your nose) – these two tips can greatly reduce the level of plosive noise that gets recorded
  2. Record the audio in a quiet room, run it through a de-noiser to remove any background hum – our Audacity tutorial shows you how to de-noise, range compress, de-sibilant and more
  3. Use an editor that allows zooming so we can clearly read the text that’s showing the meat of the story, CamTasia and ScreenFlow both have this feature

Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

Critique of Wolfram Alpha Introduction Screencast

Today there’s a lot of buzz on Twitter about Steven Wolfram’s new (and very cool) tool called Wolfram Alpha.  This is a web-app, somewhat like Google, but aimed at making “the world’s knowledge computable”.  As an A.I. researcher I have a keen interest in this area and this screencast shows much of interest.

The screencast itself however has some flaws, here I’ll give a critique.

The Good:

  1. Wow – lots of interesting information is covered and the tool looks really interesting
  2. Nice charts, clear visuals
  3. Clear, well-paced voice (Steven’s own)
  4. Nice summary in the last minute to tell me what to expect in the future

The Bad:

  1. No story – lots of examples but they jump between many subjects so I don’t have a narrative to hang-on to
  2. Too long!  13 minutes in total, generally we keep our introductory/tour videos to 2-3 minutes for maximum retention
  3. Too many subjects covered – this is of interest to biologists, fact-seekers, cross-word puzzlers, engineers and, well, everyone
  4. No way I can embed a copy in my site for viral distribution

The Ugly:

  1. Video dimensions are way too big, rather than widescreen or 4:3 it is closer to a square so on my MacBook I can’t see the top and the bottom of the video at the same time.  Since the queries are typed at the top and the results fill the whole screen this meant I had to keep scrolling up and down to view everything.  UPDATE on my 1680×1050 Ubuntu Desktop inside Firefox I still can’t see all of the video, a thin section is still lost.  Was this recorded using an upright display (with the thin edge at the top) rather than a conventional display?
  2. The file is an SWF rather than FLV or MP4 video, this meant that when the download stalled (and it had to – it was so large) I had to reload it from the start rather than having a progressive download resume from the cache

Thoughts for improvement:

  1. Fix the video size – make it 640×480 (this fits 99% of viewer’s screens) so we can see it all at once and use FLV rather than SWF
  2. Tell a story – rather than show many facts instead think about building up an interesting story that shows the power of Alpha
  3. Make several screencasts focused on appropriate disciplines so the stories are really relevant to me and my tribe

Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

Screencast Tutorial Part 9 – Polish for your screencast with animations and slides

Having dealt with the need for a well-recorded narration, you should also consider using an animated logo, animated segments and slides.  Each has their place in a professional-looking screencast.  This is part 9 of our screencast tutorial series.

Animated logo:

When a screencast start with an animated logo, maybe 3-5 seconds in length, it stands out from other screencasts as being ‘a bit special’. The simple reason is that most people don’t have the skill to create animations so they are avoided, so anyone creating a screencast with an animation has clearly gone the extra mile.

Leaving out the animation is a mistake – animators are easy to find (I recommend our Richard if you’d like to out-source this task) and are happy to create a short animation around your logo or graphical assets.  You can integrate the animation as a short video segment in your video editor so the backing music and narration flow over the top.

You can see a simple and very effective example here for Kontagent, this is the video we created for their homepage, it includes a 4 second opening animation:

“We also have a cool new marketing video, which was produced by the great guys over at Procasts in the UK. If you need a demo video done, you should definitely check them out at ProCasts.” – Jeff Tseng (founder)

Animations and Slides:

You can further differentiate your screencasts from other run-of-the-mill recordings by using other packages such as Adobe AfterEffects.  For the open-source ad filter AdblockPlus we chose to ‘embed’ the screencast into a computer monitor – the audience includes many first-time Firefox users so we wanted to give the viewer plenty of context so they understood what we were showing them.

The result has been an overwhelming success – the screencast is embedded in AdblockPlus.org’s homepage where it gets 600 views a day, it has over 79 five-out-of-five ratings at YouTube and has won several awards.  This wouldn’t have been possible with us going the extra mile and using AfterEffects.

Now you’re at the end of our 9-part screencast tutorial.  If you found it useful please do leave a comment.  You will probably want to receive a notification about the forthcoming eBook (see below) for more information about screencasting.

Do you want more of your visitors to use your software? We make professional screencasts.  Get in Contact and we’ll help you convert more visitors into users, sell more of your software and reduce your support costs.

Become a better screencaster – read The Screencasting Handbook.  We’re distilling 4 years of experience into our book, this blog series you’re reading was the first inspiration that we should write everything we know into a book to make you a better screencaster.


Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

‘How to Start Screencasting’ podcast online

Do you want to know the benefits of screencasting for your business and how you can easily get started?

Andy White of Wire World Media interviewed me for the Internet Marketing Podcast episode 48 Ink, Paper and Screencasts a couple of weeks back, we’re the last 12 minutes of the hour-long marketing podcast.

Topics covered include how screencasts convince more first-time visitors to try a product, how screencasts reduce support-costs by letting the viewer solve their own issue and how to get started using free and commercial software.  Also discussed is my plan to start revealing the positive statistics of using screencasts on conversions from A/B tests.

This podcast is listed with others and useful articles in our screencast interviews post.

Full transcript:

Andy:  So here we are on a rather windy day outside in Pavilion Gardens in Brighton, and I am sitting with Ian Ozsvald.

Ian:  Hello Andy.

Andy:  Hello there.  Now Ian, let’s just do a little bit of transparency at the front.  Ian does own a business called ShowMeDo, is that correct Ian?

Ian:    Yes, co-founder in the business, ShowMeDo, and I run a screencasting company called Procasts.

Andy:  And Procasts do screencasts for people, screencasts being ?

Ian:    A screencast is a video showing software in action.  It can show a web app or desktop software running in a video.  If you go the Apple site and you see their videos, those are screencasts.

Andy:  Brilliant.  So, what we want to talk about today in this brief interview is the reason why doing a screencast to promote your business or your product is a good idea.

Ian:    Thanks Andy.

I run a screencasting company and I’ve got a big thing about education.  I love teaching people how products and how skills work.  So, what I want to do in this interview is explain to you why you should be using screencasts in your Website.

Now, a screencast is a demo of software.  You have a 2 or 3-minute video showing the software in action.  This means that your first-time web visitor who’s never seen your product before, rather than forcing them to wade through screens of pictures and text trying to figure out if your product does what they need, instead they see it in action.  They get a nice, comfortable voice walking them through the product, they see it solving the problem that they’ve got, and at the end of it, they know whether your solution solves their problem.  And if it does, fabulous, they can get involved.

Andy:  Now, I’m guessing that this type of approach is particularly good for people whose product is actually software.  Would that be right?

Ian:  Absolutely.  If you’ve got a desktop software product on any platform, or if you’ve got a web application, then this is ideally suited for you.  Of course, if you’ve got a real-world product, you’ve got a physical product somebody uses in their hands, then you can’t use screencasting.  You’re going to need to use a real-world video, and we see that advertised on the tellie all the time, so we know that technique works.

But with software products, pretty much nobody is exploiting the technique of screencasting, except perhaps for Google and Apple and I’m really pushing for everyone to get involved with screencasting and try it out.  You can get started with paying no money at all, and the results really can be quite dramatic.

Andy:  Now, how does somebody, perhaps who is not technical, Ian, make a screencast?

Ian:  Now, a couple of years ago, you would have to download a piece of software to your machine, and it was software for Windows and for Mac machine.  You would install and you would run it, and it would capture the entire screen and the audio feed coming in from a microphone.  So, it’s a bit like using an editing piece of software on your PC.  You have to have some savvy using video editing software.  It would record your screen.  You would have scripted your presentation beforehand.  You’re going to run through your presentation, showing your user ñ just like having a demo with a friend sitting next to you, showing them what’s going on, clicking around, and at the end of it, you’ve got a nice video, which can you put onto the web.

Now, in the last six months, there’s been some interesting developments.  Three companies are now offering free web-based softwares.  One of them is Jing by Techsmith.  Another one is Screen Toaster.  And, the third one is Screencaster.

Each of these, they’re free services.  You go to their Website, you say “start recording,” it downloads a small applet, and it just starts recording your desktop and the audio feed from your microphone.  So, you can get started with no money at all.

Andy:  Now, I’ve heard of Screen Toaster.  Do they all work in pretty much the same way; basically, you download a small, sort of, client that runs on your machine, and then it uploads it to the mother ship, as it were?

Ian:  Absolutely.  From what I remember, with Jing you download an applet, which you install on your machine, then that runs locally.  So, every time you use a new machine, you have to install this bit of software.  Screen Toaster and Screencaster, they’re using a Java applet inside the browser, so you just click “record” and it just download what it needs.  You haven’t got to install anything, and it just starts recording off the bat.

Andy:  And do you get a chance to edit if you make a mistake, or do you have to redo it from the beginning?

Ian:  That’s the interesting thing, showing the immaturity at the moment of the online recording software.  With the online tools, you can’t edit your video.  You have to download what you’ve recorded and edit it offline, so on a Mac using iMovie perhaps, and on Windows, using one of the many editing tools.

But, if you’re using the desktop-based software like Camtasia on Windows and ScreenFlow on a Mac, they always come with an editor built in, so you can do all your editing there after you’ve recorded your video.

Andy:  Brilliant.  Now on your site, on Procasts, your exposing some steps, aren’t you, that show how effective having a screencast is?

Ian:  Well actually, what I’m intending to do is show the stats from ShowMeDo, because I am a co-founder of that site.  I’ve worked with clients and demonstrated some pretty interesting numbers.  For one of the clients, we’ve double his sign-up rate just by putting a video on the front page, and for another client, we decreased their support emails by 25%, and basically freed up one day of a guy’s time per week by making him not go through the same steps on a support query.  So these are pretty good numbers.

But, because their stats are private, I can’t expose those.  And really, to fulfill my aims of education, I want to expose real good, analytic data, and so I’m doing an experiment with ShowMeDo at the moment where I’m using videos on the sales page to increase the conversion rate, and I’m recording the stats.  I’ll be exposing those stats in their raw form on my blog, and then going through a number of A/V tests trying out different video styles, presentations, different ways of including the video, all to demonstrate exactly the right ways to increase your conversation rates using screencasts.

Andy:  So, where do people need to go to look at your blog, Ian?

Ian:  You need to come to my blog.  That’s blog.procasts.co.uk.

Andy:  Now, do you have any tips for people that are just about to embark on doing some screencasting, do’s and don’ts, Ian?

Ian:  Absolutely.  One of the first things you should do is think about who your audience is, first of all.  You want to isolate one group of people that you’re presenting to, and then you want to craft a script up front.  If you sit down and you just blather away for 10 minutes trying to come up with things on the fly, you’re going to have lots of um’s and er’s and gaps, and the video’s not going to be very well targeted.  No one’s really going to want to watch it.

But, if you know who you’re presenting to, what you’re teaching them, and you keep your script to 2 to 3 minutes (I always try and aim for 2 minutes), then you’ve got a really snappy, nice presentation, you’ll get your message across, and 80% of the viewers then will understand what you’re trying to explain and they’ll move on straight away.

If you go and start with the online free software, like Screen Toaster, then you can get up and running without paying any money, and you can just experiment for free.

Andy:  Do things like Screen Toaster make it easy to embed the video on your site?

Ian:  With Screen Toaster, you get a download link and they embed the video in their site, and I believe you can embed that video into your site.  Certainly, you can upload to YouTube, and you get some analytics out of that for free, and then you just take the video and you embed it into your site.  Alternatively, and I’m including this in my screencasting tutorial that I’m running on the blog at the moment, you can download the video, put it into your own site,  (6:55 unintelligible) based, and then using free JavaScript tools, embed that video; no adverts, no YouTube related video links, just your video in your site and play it to your users.

Andy:  You touched on something really interesting there, because when I first started this conversation with you, I was thinking, “Oh crikey, yes, this would be really good for people that perhaps have some software that they’ve developed, or maybe they’re a consultant and they want to show people how to do basic stuff.”  But, you mentioned support, and I had forgotten completely about support.  I mean, commonly asked questions; how do you do ABC where ABC’s a very commonly asked thing.

Andy:  Absolutely, yes.  One of my clients here in Brighton, they came to me and said that one of their guys was basically losing a day a week answering a query for users to their subscription service.  How did they stop paying every month?  And, they would be a bit confused about the process.  Commonly, they weren’t terribly web savvy user, they needed handholding, they wanted reassurance that they weren’t going to get their credit card cancelled by going through the cancellation process, so they kept on phoning up and sending in emails.

So, I created a video, just a very slow, well-paced video, 5 minutes long, going through all of the steps, lots of reassurance, and then overnight, this chap stop receiving support requests, and one day a week was freed up.  So, that’s a fantastic way just to stop spending your time and money repeating the same questions and answering them, and instead, get on with developing your product.

Andy:  So Ian, thanks so much for talking to us.

Now of course, your Website for the Procasts is

Ian:  Procasts.co.uk.

Andy:  And if anybody wants to, then obviously, go visit us.

Ian, what are your plans for the next few weeks?  I know you’ve got some requests, haven’t you?

Ian:  My big plan is to run a campaign to help everyone get a screencast into every Website.  I really want to see more people adopting the technique of screencasting.  So, once I finish the 9-part tutorial – I’ve got a few episodes to publish in the next few weeks – once that’s finished, I’ll be publishing a new series on the blog discussing how to get a screencast into your Website, why you need it, and how it will increase your conversations, and everything you need to do to get those screencasts in there.

Andy:  Well, some great tips there.

Ian Ozsvald of Procasts.co.uk, thank you very, very much indeed.

Ian:  Thanks very much Andy.


Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

Screencast Tutorial Part 8 – Record Professional Audio

So far we’ve covered scripting, visuals and recording in this screencast tutorial.  What about the audio?  The quality of your audio really matters.  If you get your audio wrong, the perceived quality of your video will be lower than if you had reasonable audio but poor video!

“And audio has even been shown to affect the audience perception of the quality of a presentation more than the visuals.

So, sound has the power to raise (or lower) audience perception of visuals, but visual doesn’t have the power to change how the audience perceives the audio.” – Creating Passionate Users, January 2005

There are some basics that you can easily take care of:

  • Don’t use a 3.5mm jack-plug el-cheapo mic.  The 3.5mm mic is analogue, the sound is sampled inside your computer and typically electrical noise from the motherboard is introduced into the audio.  This raises the background noise level which lowers the audio’s perceived quality.  Also – cheap mic typically have poor-quality microphone components which distort your voice
  • Do use a USB mic or more expensive specialist hardware.  £40UK (approximately $60USD) USB microphones are far superior to 3.5mm mics.  Here at ProCasts HQ we use £300’s worth of sE2200A condenser mic (details below), phantom power and a FastTrack USB XLR to USB converter
  • Prefer a condenser mic to a dynamic mic (note – condensors normally require their own power source and are often more expensive)
  • Only ever record in a quiet room.  Background noise like birds, traffic, rain can’t really be removed.  You can try with a tool like Audacity but the general rule is that you should always start with the cleanest audio recording you can manage
  • Practice your script beforehand – this way you’ll avoid ‘ums’, ‘errs’ and the like
  • Do some practice recordings to check for sibilants and plosives (‘esses’ and ‘pees or bees’).  You can edit these out with an audio editor (see a demo in our Audacity screencast above) but generally you want to practice moving your mic so the source recording has the fewest number of problems
  • If the plosives (above) are a problem, hear the difference in Gasto’s screencast on using a pop filter at ShowMeDo.

At the end of the day if you want really clear narration that picks up all the nuances of a human voice you do need to spend several hundred pounds on good audio equipment, or out-source the job to a professional (we can help you there).

Better mics pick up more background noise and are less forgiving of blasts of energy (e.g. from plosives) so you need an ever quieter environment and a better control over your voice.

One of my first problems when starting with professional voice recording was knowing just how ‘good’ a mic could be, if I hadn’t already bought an expensive mic?  The kind folk at TechSmith have recorded the same voice to 6 microphones of varying quality, now you can easily hear how a better mic really improves the voice recording.

  • Samson C03U – $210.00 USD (MSRP)
  • Lapel Microphone – $49.95 (USD)
  • Logitech QuickCam Communicate Deluxe Webcam – apx $79.99 USD (MSRP)
  • Blue Snowball – $99.00 USD (MSRP)
  • Logitech Headset – $39.99 USD (MSRP)
  • Audio-Technica AT2020USB – $249.00 USD (MSRP)

Here at ProCasts we use an sE2200A mic, this is a high-quality condenser mic that requires its own power-supply and outputs the signal to a full-size XLR connector, this is then converted to USB via a FastTrack USB device.  We also use a big stand so the mic can be positioned above the head and moved around to get the best voice quality.

Previously we’ve used a Shure SM57, and Audio Technica ATM 73a.  I found that the SM57 picked up my strong sibilants and the ATM73a recorded my voice without much range so I sounded very flat.  The sE2200A is far superior to these mics, it records my full range and doesn’t accentuate sibilants or plosives.

For further information, read David Kane’s article ISVs Are In The Business of Software, Not Audio that explains why business-owners shouldn’t try to make their own pro-audio recording.  Whilst this might feel a bit off-putting, it does explain all the complexities that you need to be aware of if you do want to get over the the hump of poor audio recordings.

The final step in this 9-part tutorial is on ways to improve the visuals of your screencast.

Do you want more of your visitors to use your software? We make professional screencasts.  Get in Contact and we’ll help you convert more visitors into users, sell more of your software and reduce your support costs.

Become a better screencaster – read The Screencasting Handbook.  We’re distilling 4 years of experience into our book, this blog series you’re reading was the first inspiration that we should write everything we know into a book to make you a better screencaster.


Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

Screencasts boost conversions, lower your bounce-rate, increase sales and lower your support burden

Did you know that you can boost your conversions (doubling them!), reduce the number of users who bounce from your homepage (by at least 7%), increase sales and lower your support costs (by half) just by using screencasts?  This was recently discussed in the Business of Software forums.

Boosting sales:

AppBeacon.com are an iTunes competitor, Justin (CEO) wanted a frontpage video as users were telling him that they weren’t ‘getting it’.  He wanted more users to stay and get involved choosing iPhone apps on his site.  We created a screencast, it is on his frontpage, after introducing it he said:

“My bounce rate has decreased about 7 percent per day. Since having the screencast up, the site’s sign up rate has doubled.” – Justin (CEO AppBeacon.com)

Note that Justin has a clever bit of javascript for first-time visitors that pops a friendly ‘cloud’ onto the screen asking if you’d like a demo, this really drives up the number of video-views he gives to first-time visitors.  More detail.

LiveDrive.com offer a hosted FTP service with integrated Windows drag n’drop support.  The CEO (Andrew Michael) had created his own long screencast and noted that his signed-up trial-user rate went up dramatically leading to more sales (the figures were all private).

He asked us to create 5 videos (4 screencasts + 1 mobile video) which told a better story more quickly, they’re on his homepage and Demos page.  You can also see his original longer demo at the base of the Demos page.

Stories For Support:

AcumenPI run Coursework.Info, the largest coursework student site in the UK.  They were losing over a day a month to support requests on the single topic of ‘how do I cancel my paying subscription?’ from less-web-savvy users.

We created a 5 minute walk-through screencast, after introducing it their support load dropped dramatically.  I don’t have figures, they were kept private, I do have a quote:

“The video has been a big help. Our users really appreciate us going the extra mile, and it has greatly reduced the amount of time we need to spend holding their hands. Job Done. Thanks!” – Chris Newson (MD)

You can see the video on our Examples page, it is 7th down, the support page in their site is only available if you’re a paying subscriber.

HowSociable.com is a free brand-metrics measuring web-app run as a demo app for Inuda.com.  I created an introduction screencast as the first ‘real’ production for ProCasts (mid 2008), CEO Jon says:

“Adding a ProCasts screencast to our front page increased activated email conversions by 25% and reduced support requests by half” – Jonathan Markwell – CEO

AdblockPlus is often the most-downloaded extension for the Firefox web-browser.  Wladimir (author) was having to answer questions from new users about support and configuration.  As a bit of open-source support (and free advertising!) we created the homepage video for them.

“I added this video to the front page of adblockplus.org and I hope that far fewer people will be confused now about what Adblock Plus is and how you “make it work”.” – Wladimir

If you click through to YouTube you’ll see that it has had 24,000 views (approx. 600 per day) in just over 5 weeks with 55 five-out-of-five ratings and a string of very supportive comments.

Summary:

We’ve seen increases in sign-ups (100% increase), sales (anecdotal but realistic), reduced bounce-rates (7% reduction) and support-load reduction (50% reduction) simply from the introduction of well-made screencasts.

If you’d like guaranteed results quickly and painlessly then talk to us and we’ll make professional screencasts that fit your needs.  We have years of experience with screencasting and know exactly what does and doesn’t work.


Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

Screencast Tutorial Part 7 – Getting More Publicity

Previously in this screencast tutorial series we looked at embedding your screencast in your site, here we’ll discuss how you can get more publicity for your screencast.

Having produced a screencast you may want to get extra viewers using video-sharing sites.  This also makes the video easily embedded into a viewer’s blog – obviously this will only happen if the screencast is interesting to the viewer!  Social news site are sometime receptive of screencast information, I list some details at the end.

As ever if you want people to spread your message you have to give them something that they want to talk about.  If your service is new and you have an interesting product then new-sites and bloggers are likely to use your screencast if it is easy to embed -  our Ztail screencast was used by TechCrunch (Ztail Launches Innovative eBay Guarantee) in their promo piece.

For an example of a highly-rated tutorial screencast that is embedded into many sites, see our Adblock Plus screencast at YouTube.

The easiest sharing site to use is YouTube, the quality of their reproduction is far higher than it used to be.  If you upload with HD dimensions then they’ll offer an HD version which is much clearer, see this ie6update screencast we made that we uploaded in HD:

Vimeo also offer high-quality screencast reproductions but they have strong Terms and Conditions against promotional material.  They allow ’show-reel’ work from professional producers so you can see some of our work in Vimeo but if you make your own promotional screencast that is used to sell a product then you can’t upload it to Vimeo.

If your screencast is educational or about open-source then you can definitely upload it to ShowMeDo.com (I’m a co-founder).  This is an educationally-focused screencast site that supports open-source (only FOSS, not commercial tools) with a viewership of 100,000 visitors a month.

Other sites include MetaCafe, Veoh and Viddler.

Our own observations backed by others like Tubemogul suggest that YouTube will give you over 4 times as many eyeballs as other sites like Vimeo.  Whether these extra eyeballs have any true value is hard to say (just as digg.com’s traffic is often of little value) but given the ease of uploading – it cannot hurt.  Tubemogul’s research suggests that the second most popular video site (Yahoo!) has only 24% of YouTube’s eyeballs.

Social news sites may be useful to you but their users tend to have strong views about what’s interesting to them and what isn’t.  ShowMeDo’s educational screencasts are well-received at Reddit.com (my Reddit account), our screencast tutorial posts get votes at DZone.com (my DZone account).  Neither types of content seem to work at Digg.com.

You’ll be wasting your time trying to push useless content into these sites so save your effort, don’t spam (you’ll just be downvoted anyhow) and find somewhere that will find your content useful.

Joel’s Business of Software forums have threads on the use of screencasts like these two.  If you’re asking a question that fits the forum then you’ll get useful feedback from the other business owners there.  Do not spam this forum, you’ll be quickly deleted if you do!

Next – how to make your audio sound like it was professionally recorded.

Do you want more of your visitors to use your software? We make professional screencasts.  Get in Contact and we’ll help you convert more visitors into users, sell more of your software and reduce your support costs.

Become a better screencaster – read The Screencasting Handbook.  We’re distilling 4 years of experience into our book, this blog series you’re reading was the first inspiration that we should write everything we know into a book to make you a better screencaster.


Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

Editing Audio from Camasia using Audacity (5 minute Screencast Tutorial)

Whilst speaking with Daniel Foster at TechSmith I decided to create a short video that shows you how to use the free Audacity audio-editor to gain more control over your audio editing than CamTasia provides.

Note - The Screencasting Handbook covers this and lots more if you’re making your own screencasts, come and take a look.

Topics covered include:

  • Removing background noise (you can do this for all the audio or just sections)
  • Silencing periods with breathing and lip-smack noises
  • Fading in and out to cover-up harsh cuts
  • Dynamic range compression
  • Normalisation
  • De-essing using the volume control

I also discuss a way of positioning your mic to reduce the chance of recording strong sibilants and tell you how to get better control over aligning your audio with video actions.

The audio clip used is from my ie6update introduction screencast of yesterday.

Take a look here:


Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

Screencast Tutorial Part 6 – Embedding your screencast in your site

Having created and exported your screencast now you’ll want to host it somewhere so you can show it to your visitors.  The two main options are to host it externally or internally.  You are in episode 6 of 9 in this screencast tutorial series.

We’ll discuss external hosting with sites like YouTube, Vimeo and Screencast.com in the next episode.  Here we’ll discuss internal hosting – i.e. hosting the video on your own sites.

These are your obvious internal hosting options:

  • FTP in your site
  • FTP on a separate site
  • Amazon S3
  • Content Delivery Network

Inside ShowMeDo (co-founded in 2005) we serve 1TB of data (around 60,000 screencasts) a month using commodity FTP hosting.  Initially we used GoDaddy’s premium accounts and now we use a machine at WebFaction.  Generally speaking commodity hosting is cheap as chips and serves screencasts faster than they can be viewed which is what you want.

If you use your own site’s FTP allocation to serve your screencast then there’s a possibility that you’ll run out of bandwidth if you have a lean account (yes, they still exist).  If that’s the case spend some extra cash and get yourself a separate FTP host, WebFaction do a fine job.

Amazon’s S3 is pretty good, we’ve been experimenting with it.  S3 is a part of Amazon Web Services.  It doesn’t always serve screencasts fast enough but they do offer a Content Delivery Network (focusing on the US and Europe) which is bound to improve.  I have seen other companies use S3 and the results have been pretty decent.  The nice thing with S3 is you only pay for the bandwidth that’s been used.

Finally you could use a CDN like Akamai.  Typically these are expensive and only useful if you’re serving many copies of your screencast every day.  At a rough guess I’d suggest not worrying about a CDN until you’re serving over 2,000 views each day or if you have a strong viewerbase in a different country to your FTP host.

When looking to host the screencast in your site you have a choice of two main players – the long-standing JW FLV Media Player and the newer FlowPlayer.

Inside ProCasts we use the JW player (see our screencast examples), it is very well-supported, supports statistics and Google Analytics, skinning and plugins (e.g. for subtitles).  For non-commercial use it is free, for commercial use the license is very cheap (30Euros).

FlowPlayer is used by many and has growing acceptance, our client LiveDrive use it on their Demos page.  It appears to support Google Analytics but doesn’t seem to support custom event tracking.

Next – getting more exposure using sites like YouTube, Vimeo and Screencast.com.

Do you want more of your visitors to use your software? We make professional screencasts.  Get in Contact and we’ll help you convert more visitors into users, sell more of your software and reduce your support costs.

Become a better screencaster – read The Screencasting Handbook.  We’re distilling 4 years of experience into our book, this blog series you’re reading was the first inspiration that we should write everything we know into a book to make you a better screencaster.


Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.

IE6update.com In Action

IE6Update.com provides a tiny bit of Javascript that gently informs an Internet Explorer 6-using website visitor that their web-browser is out of date and needs updating.

I didn’t have a working IE6 installation and upon visiting the site I wanted to see a demo.  There was no video so…I made this 3 minute introduction.

“Ian Ozsvald, a professional screencaster over at ProCasts, graciously put together this awesome screencast that demonstrates how IE6 Update works.” – Nick Pettit of Done21

To get IE6 I settled on using Wine (Windows Emulator) inside the latest Release Candidate of Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty with a genuine IE6 install from Microsoft.

See it in action below, it will be in our screencast examples collection later.


Looking for a professional screen cast? Get in touch today via www.procasts.co.uk.


  • Professional Screencasting Blog

    Welcome to our blog, we create professional screencast productions.

    Read our mini case studies, learn more about us and get in contact if you'd like us to make screencasts that explain, educate and convert more of your visitors into paying users.

    You might also want to learn to screencast with our screencast tutorial.

  • Subscription Options:

    Subscribe via RSS Subscribe via Email
  • Pages

  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

  • Categories