Blog Archives

Make the Most of YouTube for your ski resort as featured in NSAA

Posted by on February 12, 2012

This article was just featured in the 50th anniversary edition of NSAA Journal (National Ski Areas Association). Huge thanks goes to Troy Hawks, the editor for including it in, and to NSAA itself. Below is the article itself and a link to the PDF. 

Three Steps to Improving Online Video Engagement

By Milena Regos, Founder, Out&About Marketing

YouTube, the online video giant with more than 800 million unique users each month, recently released a set of changes in an effort to become even more social and try to mirror much of the actions associated with Facebook. Ski resort marketers can take advantage of these changes to further ensure that their resort’s channel maintains its brand properties and is optimized in searches, to increase engagement with skiers and riders, and measure overall social media efforts.

 

Here are three easy steps to implementing YouTube’s new features.

 

Step 1- Customize Your Channel

Squaw Valley YouTube channel

By customizing their channel, ski areas can extend their brand and take full advantage of all the available YouTube features that not only help channels gain notice among viewers, but improves search capabilities and optimizes its ability to drive traffic to other social networks, blogs, and websites.

The first step in customizing your YouTube Channel is to set up a custom background image, like a great ski shot or a custom branded image. See Squaw Valley for example. Many ski areas use the official resort logo in order to make it easy for people to identify the channel.

The next step is to edit your channel details, including the title, description, and tags. These are all simple ways to improve your visibility on YouTube and make your channel look professional.

Next, marketers should select a featured video such as an upcoming special event, a resort highlighted video, or the video that netted the most views. Finally, connect YouTube with your other social networks, blogs, and websites. This is an excellent way to get your video content distributed to other social networks and, if you have a good call to action in your video, drive traffic to your website.

Step 2 – Engagement is Key 

YouTube homescreen is now completely custom

Thanks to the recent homepage redesign, everyone that is signed into YouTube will see their own channel and subscriptions first, making content more relevant to the user. Instead of getting the latest viral video, regardless of who produced it, now YouTubers can see the channels they have actually subscribed to.

Getting more subscribers to your video channel and making sure they interact with your video will boost your channel visibility, ultimately creating a small viral effect. The newly designed homepage is welcomed by users that have so far been diligently producing videos but only to gain a few hundred views. Continue to create videos consistently, even daily if possible, and create a call to action for your followers to get them to interact with the video. It’s also wise to be active yourself on YouTube by taking action on other videos. Every action users take on your channel will boost your video’s overall visibility.

Step 3 – Social Media Measurements or YouTube Analytics

Today’s marketers are now looking for methods to measure their social media efforts beyond the likes, followers, subscribers and views. Enter YouTube Analytics, formerly called Insight. Within YouTube’s new analytics window, users can analyze the overall performance of their video, changes to net subscribers, and what type of engagement the video received (i.e., likes, dislikes, comments, shares, favorites added and favorites removed).

 

Users can also see the geographic area the video was viewed from, the sources that drove traffic to the video, and even whether it was played via the YouTube homepage, an embedded player, or a mobile device.

The playback location helps users determine what websites and blogs are embedding the videos and connecting with them. YouTube’s Audience Retention metric helps determine how engaging the videos are by showing at  what point viewers left the video. With this, necessary edits can be made to the video content and length. Knowing what makes your videos engaging, where are people watching them, how many people take actions and what kind and who’s embedding your videos are all important metrics that will help you improve your video content, increase your engagement and contribute to your overall social media measurements.

With online video boosting brand recall by 50 percent and likability by 26 percent, ski resort marketers will find YouTube, Vimeo and other online video networks a prime location to further connect with skiers and riders.

Milena Regos is the founder of Out&About Marketing, a digital marketing and social media consultancy based in Lake Tahoe with focus on ski resort areas, travel and tourism and health and fitness. Contact her milena@outandaboutmarketing.com

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
YouTube by the Numbers  
• 48 hours of video are uploaded every minute, resulting in nearly 8 years of content uploaded every day
• More than 3 billion videos are viewed daily
• 150 years of YouTube video are watched every day on Facebook
• Every minute more than 500 tweets contain YouTube links
• More video is uploaded to YouTube in one month than the three major U.S. networks have created in 60 years
• YouTube’s demographic is broad: 18-54 years old
• 100 million people take a social action on YouTube (i.e., likes, shares, comments) every week

 Source: YouTube.com

To view the PDF from the article click below.

NSAA Milena Regos

After 10 years at Diamond Peak I’m moving on!

Posted by on August 4, 2011

Today is a big day for me as I announce my resignation as the Marketing Director at IVGID where I spent the past 10 years of my life skiing, golfing, playing tennis and most of all creating remarkable branding and legendary marketing campaigns together with a bunch of fun loving and genuine people. Surrounded by the beauty of Lake Tahoe, it was my dream job and a dream that came through.

The time has come to close this chapter and open another one which is pursuing my marketing and entrepreneur dreams, and helping other companies in the world achieve similar and bigger successes through clever marketing, smart social media and connecting with customers online – the purpose of Out&About Marketing.

I’m very proud of what Diamond Peak has accomplished in the past 10 years. It took an incredibly strong team to make all of this possible and I’m proud and fortunate to have been a part of it.

  • BrandingYour Tahoe Place for Kids was born and grew to be a perfect match for the ski resort resonating extremely well with our guests. Lila Lapanja, who learned to ski at Diamond Peak at the age of 2, featured for years on our billboards is now a part of the U.S. Ski Team’s Development Team — an honor bestowed on only 10 women in the country. Someone once said: “Marketing is too important to be left to the marketing department alone”. Many, many people were involved in this process from within as well as from the outside, EXL Media and Whistler Creative to mention a couple.
  • Happy Customers – Happy customers is why businesses continue to exist not because of billboards or marketing. Diamond Peak is fortunate to have many happy customers who relate to the branding message and enjoy their time at the resort. The resort has received hundreds and thousands of positive testimonials over the years: “…your employees are the BEST!”, “the view will amaze you”, “great skiing for everyone”, “this place is wonderful”, “five star experience”, “kid friendly”, “This is a fantastic place for new skiers and especially families with kids to come and enjoy the beauty of the Sierras together!”

You can read all of the reviews on Yelp here. Our guests love Diamond Peak and they keep coming back for more. It’s not unusual that we will see 3 generations on the mountain. All these testimonials just confirm what we, the staff at Diamond Peak already know – it’s a special place. I will definitely miss the view from the top of Crystal, loving referred to as the “office view”:


  • Record Breaking Revenues – all that love and positive feedback has resulted in great business for Diamond Peak. Without sharing our numbers, I just have to say we had a fantastic 3-4 years ride during tough economic times in the midst of two bankrupt states.
  • Major Capital Improvements – I saw a few gigantic projects at Diamond Peak, starting with a new high speed lift, a major upgrade to the Base Lodge and a brand new Skier Services Building last year.

Top Station of Crystal Express

Base Lodge Remodeled

New Skier Services Building

  • Multiple Marketing Awards – throughout the years, we enjoyed receiving many marketing awards for creativity, cohesive marketing campaigns and social media from the American Marketing Association, ADDY, Hermes. Again, it took a great team to make this possible!

  • Special Events – we had so much fun creating and executing from wacky (Dummy Downhill), to fun (Poker Run), as well as competitive (Vertical Challenge), early morning races (Uphill Race), cause related (Special Olympics, Race to Beat Cancer, MS races), kids focused (terrain park comps) and of course a ski resort is not a ski resort without some alcohol related special events (Absolut party, restaurant promotions and Last Tracks).

  • Friends for Life – I’ve met amazing people over the years and too many to list them all here.  Just to mention a few from the main crew at Diamond Peak: Ed Youmans, our fearless leader, who’s off to a new challenge in New Jersey, Mike Bandelin, happiest guy on the mountain, a natural born leader whom I admire, Bee Ferrato, the ever smiling, kids loving Kiwi, Jay Abdo, our super sales manager with a dry sense of humor, Barb Archer, whose fate brought her to Diamond Peak and the sport of skiing and she’s mastering marketing and web, PK, Jack, Brian, Tom, Dave, Dennis, Carl, Walter, and many other folks from the entire company. You guys all rock. It was a pleasure to work with such professional and happy people. Keep up the positive attitude and don’t let a couple of bad characters get to you.

As for me, it’s time to move on to what I have always aspired to do in my life and run my own business. I’m going full speed ahead with Out&About Marketing and pursuing my other passions in life of being in the outdoors, staying healthy and fit and enjoying life to the fullest.

Chao for now.

It’s 2010. Is Your Business Social – Social Media Workshop

Posted by on October 7, 2010

It's 2010. Is Your Business Social?

Today, I had the incredible opportunity to speak to 35+ executives today in Incline Village at the Parasol Tahoe Community Foundation. The audience consisted of many non-profits and small to medium businesses from the area. Some of them have national and international operations. The workshop was 3 hours long and after a hard core group exercise at the end everyone walked out with a social media strategy in hand or at least armed with information and resources to get going in the right direction. We all worked hard in these 3 hours yet we managed to have a lot of fun.

Below are the slides from the presentation. Enjoy and please, use responsibly. If you happen to be in the room, you will notice that I have deleted some of the confidential data slides.

A couple testimonials from the event:

“THANK YOU MILENA!!! You facilitated an amazing workshop! We really appreciate it!” Wendy Losee, Event Organizer

“Thank you for a great workshop today at the Parasol Foundation. I appreciate all of your wisdom and insights into the world of social media.” Robin G., Participant

Thank you guys for being a great audience. Special thanks to Parasol for organizing the event. What did you think about it? What did you learn? Please, leave a comment below.

Lessons from SMG Technology and Marketing workshop

Posted by on March 18, 2010

I had the pleasure to present to the Strategic Marketing Group in South Lake Tahoe yesterday. Here’s a short recap of the sessions I attended and a copy of my presentation.

  1. I enjoyed David LaPlante’s presentation.His passion for technology, social sharing, video, content and skiing is addictive and make a big impact on everyone who’s ever seen him speak. On the forefront of technology, geek by heart and skier for life, David talked about the past, present and future of technology. A lot of change is coming to us and it’s happening fast. Stay with the trends or be left out in the cold when it comes to how you do business online.
  2. Jim Scripps gave a great overview of blogging – what it is, how to do it and best practices. It’s quick to set it up and businesses can use to engage online, deal with a PR crisis, help improve their search engine rankings, provide timely updates, use it as a hub for all of their social media efforts and engagement with bloggers.
  3. Michael Kelly from ClickMail Marketing gave an extensive overview on how to best utilize email marketing for organizations with a ton of statistics and best practices. Knowing that the average value of an email address is $120 puts a different light to the email database list of any size.
  4. Jake Fields, from Treeline Interactive spoke passionately about mobile marketing: iPhone apps, mobile advertising, text messages and various applications. Mobile holds a lot of opportunities for the future. As companies enter this new field with many unknowns it’s good to partner with someone that understands it and does it on a daily basis. Treeline Interactive seem to be completely at ease when it comes to speaking mobile advertising.
  5. Finally, here’s the presentation I gave on Facebook and Twitter for business. Someone asked about social media ROI. Here’s a good video touching on the ROI question.
Facebook and Twitter for Business

View more presentations from Milena Regos.
How about you?What did you learn at the SMG conference? What else would you have liked to see there?

10 reasons why I started Out&About Marketing

Posted by on February 7, 2010

  1. Because I’m passionate about honest marketing and social media and believe that if done right it really works.
  2. Because I’m tired of shitty marketing and bad customer service.
  3. Because the social web is changing the world and businesses will adapt or die. Some businesses need to die. It’s OK.
  4. Because people need great products and services and amazing companies want to sell their products and services.
  5. Because I believe the biggest marketing channel is Word of Mouth. Word of Mouth Works. Social Media facilitates Word of Mouth.
  6. Because companies can save a lot of money with the right web tools and technology. In this economy, saving money on your marketing is crucial to the success of your company. Don’t save money to just save money. Market the right way. Be aggressive. Now is the time to stand out.
  7. Because the tools exist but the people who know how to use them really well are not there or are very expensive.
  8. Because it takes a lot of time to learn what I already know.
  9. Because not everyone can afford a big agency and not everyone needs it.
  10. Because I want to create brilliant, remarkable, outstanding marketing campaigns for talkable brands.

So staying up late at night and working on weekends doesn’t bother me. I’m doing what I love and what I’m passionate about. I consider myself lucky. Very lucky. How about you? What are you passionate about?