
Who doesn't love a good Top Ten list? The answer is nobody! Why else would Letterman still be doing it after all these years? I decided it was due time I compiled my own. So, here is my Top Ten List of Top Ten Lists:
#10 - Letterman’s Top 10 - the mother of all top 10 lists
#9 - Top 10 Cat Videos - woo hoo (ironically, I'm allergic... but not to video)
#8 - Top 10 Best Tracking Shots Ever - a personal favorite
#7 - Top 10 Inventions That Changed the World - did the bread slicer make the list?
#6 - Top 10 Sports Cliches -
#5 - Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs - yeah, thanks for narrowing it down guys. It does have a Top 10 though.
#4 - Top 10 Burgers in the U.S. - according to Playboy (the obvious source)
#3 - Top 10-est Rap Albums of All Time - according to Steady Bloggin'
#2 - Top 10 Video Share Websites - from Top Ten Reviews
And... drum roll please... my #1 pick for best Top 10 lists is...
#1 - Wayne's World - the duo revised the famous bit a couple of years ago.
My point is not the Top Ten lists, but rather, that these lists (and in some cases the corresponding content) have been around for as long as we can remember. Essentially it’s like a radio DJ of old, someone making choices for you and putting the selected material into neat little buckets to presumably be more easily consumed.
For brands the time has come that we start talking about making a clear distinction when it comes to web video (and content), and all brand messaging online for that matter - the distinction between content vs. intent.
Cats doing wacky stuff is merely content for content sake, there’s no intent to make it spread or sell anything. It’s just…cats? However, what if you do in fact to want to speak to the cat people. What then? How do you ‘meow’ to the feline masses? You want to connect with, collect and ultimately sell to the cat people.
Now we have intent.
This is crucial as the era of services like Peter Gabriel’s TheFilter.com reach the marketplace and begin to filter content for us. Forget search. Imagine all the portals claiming to be the source for the most effective filtering, aggregating only the content that’s right for you.
The media landscape is already fragmented to such a degree it’s difficult for anyone, even the most literate and tech savvy, to follow. Which means now it’s even more important that brands are intentional when creating content to reach their preferred consumer.
Can you just throw a banner ad on some zany video of Al Bundy dancing to the latest Major Lazer jam? Sure, that still works…Google’s banking on it. But you’re not speaking directly to anyone.
Instead, go find people. Your people. Seek them out where they are, and speak to them in their language so you connect in a way that’s engaging, authentic, and real. Intent.
Now take that idea and run with it. That’s what the Internet is for.
(Image Credit: Number 10 by yoppy)