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YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare YouTube has enjoyed several big leaps in evolution in the last five years. Currently, they are re- designing and re-organizing almost everything about their service (again). What was once just a place for insanely creative college kids to upload their latest creation; YouTube will expanding to launch 100 new professionally produced TV channels (from the likes of Madonna and Ashton Kutcher) for free -- supported by Google’s ad system of course. Before that new expansion takes place (early 2012) there are already 800,000,000 people world-wide who visit YouTube each month. And approximately 120 million of those people live in the US. And here’s the part that blows my mind -- over 3 billion videos are viewed each day! That’s a 50% increase over 2010. I can’t wait to see the final numbers for 2011. And can you imagine what it will be after all these new TV channels get rolling? I’m sure the numbers will be off the charts. You might be asking “Who’s watching all these videos?” YouTube has created a great resource in understand the demographics of their audience. Start here http://www.youtube.com/advertise/demographics.html to see the whole story.

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Page 1: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare

YouTube has enjoyed several big leaps in evolution in the last five years. Currently, they are re-

designing and re-organizing almost everything about their service (again). What was once just a

place for insanely creative college kids to upload their latest creation; YouTube will expanding

to launch 100 new professionally produced TV channels (from the likes of Madonna and

Ashton Kutcher) for free -- supported by Google’s ad system of course.

Before that new expansion takes place (early 2012) there are already 800,000,000 people

world-wide who visit YouTube each month. And approximately 120 million of those people live

in the US. And here’s the part that blows my mind -- over 3 billion videos are viewed each day!

That’s a 50% increase over 2010. I can’t wait to see the final numbers for 2011. And can you

imagine what it will be after all these new TV channels get rolling? I’m sure the numbers will be

off the charts.

You might be asking “Who’s watching all these videos?” YouTube has created a great resource

in understand the demographics of their audience. Start here

http://www.youtube.com/advertise/demographics.html to see the whole story.

Page 2: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

Most business people I know, who upload videos to YouTube, don’t realize the deeper

mechanics they can use to help their videos be found among more than 24 hours of video that

are uploaded every minute! The two most powerful tasks you can do, is to create a correct

closed caption script and to add annotations. Let’s look at these two best kept secrets you can

easily learn to do.

Creating Closed Captioning and an Interactive Transcript This is where I want to rock your video world. Or at least that’s what people tell me I do when I

explain this process to them! I’m going to teach you how to create closed captioning on your

videos, and create an interactive transcript to not only make your videos available to the

hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your videos all in one

process.

Don’t confuse transcriptions with captions. Transcriptions are the text of the words spoken

during a video with a timestamp. Captions (or subtitles) are on-screen text designed for the

hearing-impaired. On a YouTube video you will see the red CC icon if closed captioning is

available for the video.

YouTube automatically tries to create a closed captioning script so that your video can be

enjoyed by the hearing-impaired. If your video has speech, this process happens automatically.

The very cool thing about this free service is if it worked properly you would have closed

captioning on all your uploaded videos automatically. Notice I said “if” it worked properly.

YouTube tries, using Google’s speech recognition technology, but the end result is made for

comedy. YouTube’s auto process is so bad, in fact, that one of YouTube’s classic creators Rhett

and Link create videos that use these auto-generated captions to great comedic effect. It’s

worth the watch. (Click the image.) Or go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23H8IdaS3tk

Page 3: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

If you do not upload the actual words you are saying on your video for the closed captioning

service, YouTube will attempt to transcribe the video for you. Go to any video on YouTube and

look for the red CC icon near the bottom right of the video. When you click that icon, if you see

a box with these words, “Transcribe audio is an experimental service that uses Google’s speech

recognition technologies to provide automated captions.” and you click OK, you need to know

that the closed captioning is auto-generated. You don’t want this to happen to your videos. If

you don’t get the disclaimer box, that means the owner of the video uploaded their own text to

provide the closed captioning.

This is what you want to upload - the correct words you are saying so YouTube can render them

to your video so the resulting closed caption script matches what you are actually saying.

If you already have a lot of videos uploaded to YouTube, you might want to consider

outsourcing this speech transcription task, as it can take awhile to do each video. I have found,

in my experience that it takes about 5+ minutes of work to each 1 minute of video.

Here’s the process to create closed captioning for your videos.

Creating Closed Captioning for your videos

To create a closed caption script, follow these steps:

1. Open Notepad (or any other text file programs) and type the words you are speaking as

you listen to your video. Save the edited Notepad file to your computer.

Page 4: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

2. Log into your account on YouTube. Click the top right dropdown and select My Videos.

3. Click the Edit Info button under the video you are working on. Then select the Captions

and Subtitles Tab. Click the Add New Captions or Transcript button.

Page 5: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

4. Now choose your Notepad file from your computer, select the radio button called

“Transcript file beta” (This is an important step, unless you have created a time-stamped

file using special software), select the language, and click Upload file. Now YouTube will

attempt to put the script together with the speech of your video. It might take awhile

for your file to upload depending on the length of your transcript.

5. Once YouTube says it is done, click the “View on video page” link and review your video

to make sure the words are lining up with the speech on your video. On this video page

look for the Transcription icon, as you see in the image. Click that and enjoy an

interactive transcript, too.

Page 6: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

If, in reviewing the closed captioning and transcript, something is wrong (typos, wrong words,

punctuation etc.) you will need to go back to the Captions and Transcript tab and upload a

corrected Notepad file. Once the new one is uploaded you’ll need to select it as the one for

YouTube to use on your video.

Now, in your video list, the CC icon will be next to the video title, so you’ll know you have

completed this task for that video.

Page 7: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

Adding Annotations to Create Calls to Action Now that you understand what closed captioning looks like on a video, let’s look at

annotations. Annotations are text that is added to the top of a video after it is uploaded. These

annotation layers can be hyperlinked, but only to places inside YouTube itself. You will not be

able to hyperlink them to your website or Facebook Page. You can put the text URL of those

places, but you can’t hyperlink them to go there unfortunately.

Most people think annotations are just speech clouds with funny comments in them, but

annotations can be very sophisticated and it’s extremely important to add them to help viewers

take a next step.

Annotation are generally used to create a call to action, or a next-step link, as you can see in the

image from one of my favorite creators on YouTube, and master of the annotation

MysteryGuitarMan http://www.youtube.com/user/MysteryGuitarMan When you visit his

channel, make sure you click on the playlist called “Animation” to see his brilliant editing skills!

Those four things pointed out in the image above are also annotations. He puts video samples

onto his video before he uploads it to YouTube, then he adds an annotation with a link to that

video already on his channel. This is an advanced use of annotations. I think it’s best to start

with a simple annotation.

Follow these steps to create your own calls to action:

1. Log into your YouTube account and click the dropdown arrow and select My Videos.

2. Click the Edit Info button under the video you want to work on.

Page 8: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

3. Click the Annotations tab.

4. Click the Add Annotations dropdown arrow and select the type you want to add. For this

example, choose Speech Bubble.

5. Type in the text you want to show up in the bubble. Notice there are several things you

can adjust; the size of the font, the background color of the bubble and the length of

time it appears on the video. Drag the edges of the placement in the timeline to adjust

where it shows up and how long it stays on the video.

Page 9: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

6. If you want the bubble hyperlinked, click the Link checkbox and the dropdown to select

which type you want.

7. Once you have everything where you want it, click the blue Publish button.

Now you will have annotation that can help someone click through to the next step, the next

video, or the next Channel.

Page 10: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

You also need to know that YouTube gives users the option to Hide Annotations, but most

people don’t realize they can do this step. If your demographic is under 30 years old, though,

you need to know they might turn off those annotations by clicking a little tiny icon (a red

cloud) at the bottom of your video.

There are some

really good examples of YouTube Channels that understand how to use closed captioning and

annotations to enhance their videos. Here are a few of my favorites:

Vlogbrothers http://www.youtube.com/vlogbrothers

eMarketingVids http://www.youtube.com/emarketingvids

And as a last highly recommended site, there is a company called Revision3 that has over 15

YouTube Channels under its umbrella. http://www.youtube.com/revision3

In Summary Now you know how to do two very important tasks to rock the SEO of your videos; adding

closed captioning and including annotations. I hope you take these extra steps each time you

upload a video to your YouTube Channel. You will see better SEO because you have basically

doubled the keywords Google can now use to find your video.

There are other important tasks that will help SEO, too, like adding your keywords to your video

description, but that’s another article for another time!

If you haven’t jumped into YouTube, yet, I hope this article inspires you to take the leap. When

you do, send me your Channel URL I’d love to take a look!

Page 11: YouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEOYouTube’s Best Kept Secrets for Better SEO by Phyllis Khare ... hearing impaired, but to increase the search engine optimization of your

BIO:

Phyllis is the author of two comprehensive books on social media marketing; Social Media

Marketing eLearning Kit for Dummies (a 4-color book with DVD and online learning

environment) and co-author of Facebook Marketing All-In-One for Dummies - See all her

publications here http://ow.ly/7n6pL Phyllis has been a featured guest on Social Media

Examiner, eMarketingVids and Social Media Manners Twitter Events. Columnist and Social

Media strategist for iPhone Life magazine at http://iphonelife.com., Phyllis is a dynamic speaker

and trainer – memorable and engaging for all social technology events. Contact her directly

[email protected].