Video content guide: Why you should start creating videos now (plus examples)
An overview of video content, including why it matters for SEO and best practices for creating your video content strategy.
Nope. Video has blown up, and it’s here. It’s there. It’s everywhere.
These days, audiences expect and demand video content from creators and brands. On average, people watch 19 hours of online video per week – and across the last three years alone, consumption increased by 8.5 hours per week.
What does this mean for marketers? For businesses?
If you aren’t creating video content yet, you should seriously consider it.
In this guide, you’ll find an overview of video content, including why it matters for SEO, best practices for creating your video content strategy, and examples of various effective video types.
What is video content?
Video content is any video format meant to entertain, educate, or inform an audience.
By the same token, video content marketing is a strategy that involves producing useful and helpful video content to attract, nurture, and convert that audience. (Read: No ads, no sales pitches.)
Video content isn’t as straightforward as you’d think. There are multiple types of videos and formats that creators and brands are producing these days, and all of them can be used to reach your goals:
- Explainer videos
- Tutorials/how-tos
- Presentations
- Live streams
- Interviews
- Video podcasts
- Social media videos (Stories, Reels, Shorts, TikToks)
- Animated videos
- Webinars
- Product reviews/demos
- Testimonials
- Vlogs
Why is video content important for SEO?
Video content helps your SEO strategy in a few key ways.
For one thing, search engines like Google stay on top of user content consumption trends. These companies know how online video has grown as a medium, and thus serve relevant videos in search results when the user’s query could be answered with a video.
For example, some “how-to” queries are better suited for a video demonstration, like “how to add text to reels” or “how to tie a bow tie.” It would be hard to teach someone how to do these things in a written blog or article, so serving up a video makes a lot more sense.
That means a lot of keywords have ranking potential if you make and optimize video content for them. (Google has a guide you can follow to help them find and index your videos so they can rank.)
Besides direct rankings, video content also helps your SEO in indirect ways. For example, publishing a blog with a related video embedded in the post can be a way to further engage your audience and keep them on your page longer.
Publishing regular, high-quality videos that educate, inform, or entertain your target audience is additionally a way to showcase the E-E-A-T (expertise, experience authoritativeness, trustworthiness) for your brand and website. Publishing video content can help prove your brand in essentially the same way as consistently publishing high-quality written content.
Video content can also help you convert more customers. For example, 88% of people say a brand’s video on a product or service has convinced them to buy.
As you can see, there are many ways to leverage video content to boost your SEO. But before you run off to hit “record,” don’t forget that you need a strategy set up before you dive in for the best results.
Best practices to create your video content strategy
1. Set goals
Every good strategy has at least one or two goals behind it that drive the strategy forward. Your video content strategy should be no different.
To make things simpler, the goals you set for your content marketing can be directly related to your video marketing goals. For example, you could aim to increase awareness of your brand by publishing videos on YouTube. Or you could set a goal to increase conversions on your website by embedding product videos on product pages.
Instead of creating video content just to get it out there, consider what you want each video to do. What purpose will it serve, and how will that content help you meet your goals?
Ultimately, staying goal-focused will help your video content strategy go further.
2. Choose your video formats and theme
Don’t try to do it all with video. You might feel tempted to try your hand at all the formats, but that approach is scattershot at best.
Instead, choose three or fewer formats to focus on for video content creation. For instance, you might focus mainly on publishing how-to videos every week with some behind-the-scenes, vlog-style videos thrown in once a month.
Along with your main video formats, choose a theme for your videos. What topics will you focus on? What do you want to become known for?
For example, in 2021 Hootsuite, a SaaS company, launched its YouTube channel called Hootsuite Labs. All of the videos are focused on social media “experiments,” hacks, and tips – and feature the hosts wearing lab coats and goggles like they’re working in a laboratory.
3. Determine where you’ll host your videos
After setting goals, setting a theme, and choosing formats of focus, next decide where you’ll host your videos.
An obvious option is to create a YouTube channel and upload all your videos there. Since YouTube is full of people searching for and watching videos, this option has the added benefit of more exposure and reach. Plus, YouTube videos are easy to share and embed wherever you want them to appear.
However, don’t feel pressured to default to YouTube. Other options will not just host your videos, but also offer creation tools without ads – for a fee, of course.
For example, Vimeo offers these features with a pro plan starting at $7/month. Or, you could go with a premium option like Wistia or Jetpack.
There are pros and cons to any of these services, so weigh your options against what’s best for your brand.
4. Research video topics and keywords
To make sure your videos reach the right people, you should research your video topics and find keywords those people are using to search for video content.
Generally, most video keyword research focuses on YouTube – but that’s because it’s the second-largest search engine, behind Google.
There are quite a few tools specifically for YouTube SEO that will help you find keywords and vet video topics:
- VidIQ
- KeywordTool.io
- KeywordKeg