LeadPlayer sets itself apart from other video players by working with most plugins and offering an effective, unobtrusive way of building contact lists and generating revenue through video.
In this discussion James Schramko and LeadPlayer co-founder Clay Collins discuss some of the secrets behind the software's success.
James Schramko and Clay Collins
Photo credit
Highlights of this episode:
00:30 - Continual upgrades to LeadPlayer
01:51 - A new version of LeadPlayer is released about every 2 weeks
02:08 - Developers take into account multiple devices, browsers and plugins
04:50 - Constant updates are the reason LeadPlayer continues to work
06:49 - YouTube modifications to video all work in LeadPlayer
07:59 - LeadPlayer conveniently builds contact databases and is easy to update
09:01 - Video metadata submission through Schema markup
10:48 - Using LeadPlayer to optimize videos for SEO
13:32 - Levaraging a single video with different descriptions and titles
15:13 - What's next for LeadPlayer
16:17 - Developers aiming to stay ahead of the competitiion
17:00 - The LeadPlayer vision
20:41 - Get LeadPlayer from BuyWithBonus.com for your bonus
Transcription
James: James Schramko here, I’m just having a chat with Clay Collins. I’m about to ask him some questions about a video that I watched last night. He made some great points. Are you there on the line Clay?
Clay: Yup I’m here. How’s it going James?
James: Good. You’ve been very busy since the last time we spoke. It seems that you’re continually making upgrades to LeadPlayer. I watched your video yesterday and you made some really good points that I thought are worth sharing. One of them in particular is that a lot of software suppliers see an opportunity. They go out there and they create a solution but then they don’t support it or it stops working later. So you had some expression, I think you’re talking about how LeadPlayer gets on better with these crazy plugins that people have created. Is this like a frustration of yours?
Clay: Yeah, you know I think one thing that’s happened is that a lot of people see software as sort of this opportunity and they’ll see some need and they’ll kind of find an inexpensive development shop that has a good deal and they think it’s a matter of releasing something one time and then making a bunch of sales, then maybe having a new version of that software created a year later or something like that.
What we found is that’s nothing to be further from the truth in terms of the way the software business works. I mean here at LeadPlayer we are constantly learning from new AB split tests and those results go into the next version of LeadPlayer that we release about every 2 weeks. We’re releasing new features and updates based on the latest of what’s working in marketing in AB split testing but also what a lot of people don’t realize is that when you’re developing for the web, you aren’t just developing for your end user.
You have to accommodate for the fact that people are viewing this on multiple browsers. They’re viewing it on multiple versions of the Android operating system, they’re viewing it on multiple versions of iOS devices and then you’ve got Internet Explorer 5, Internet Explorer 6, Internet Explorer 7 which all render HTML and CSS and Java script in different ways and then the various versions of Chrome and Safari and then adding on top of that is when you develop for the WordPress ecosystem, which we do, you are constantly not just dealing with changes that happen in all these different devices, mobile devices and then also all these different browsers but you’re also playing defence against a whole arsenal of crappy plugins that people could have developed.
The WordPress market place is filled with WordPress plugins that were developed 3 years ago and were since abandoned by some part time developer and it seems like a good idea to download that plugin at the time but meanwhile it wreaks havoc on sort of that WordPress ecosystem. So a bunch of the time that we spend is doing stuff that people don’t even know about. Like adapting to changes in YouTube for LeadPlayer, staying completely on top of the latest things that they add. So if they add a new feature to YouTube, we want to make sure that LeadPlayer users get all of that. We want to make sure that no other plugin can take down someone’s WordPress install just because they installed something else. LeadPlayer’s actually playing defence.
WordPress is kind of like a home and LeadPlayer could be a new refrigerator that you’ve installed and it’s got the best and the latest refrigeration technologies. Its energy efficient and things like that. But if you have a crappy toaster, that sets off the breaker in your home, you could lose power to this refrigerator and it’s not the refrigerator’s fault and what we like to do is make that refrigerator a smart refrigerator that has an energy back up, I don’t even know what the metaphor is but that crappy toaster can’t take down our refrigerator. So there are a lot of things going on behind the scenes like literally on a day to day basis that we’re adding and updating to LeadPlayer and it’s why LeadPlayer still works. It’s still current, it’s still up to date and most of the other WordPress plugins for video that came out around when LeadPlayer came out literally are not working in half or more of the WordPress installations that they’re installing. That’s something that we’re proud of.
James: I love it. I love the fact that you can now squish the video size around to fit the device. That’s a cool feature. And you also have added this new thing that sort of pops out of the video which I thought was pretty handy.
Clay: Yeah, so what we found was that more and more sites were mobile responsive. So if someone designs a version of the website that fits on any size browser no matter how small, people are designing websites where the entire website adapts to that but YouTube videos natively don’t resize and we wanted LeadPlayer videos, even if they were using a YouTube video, we wanted the whole thing to resize and we made the call to action pop out over the video and the reason why we did that was… in one sense it was more disruptive in that it made the player sort of bleed on to the rest of the page but we did it in a way where it’s transparent, it’s translucent, I mean you’ll have to see the video to just kind of see how it works but call to actions are better, the click through rates tend to be higher but also it means that if someone’s doing something that’s fancy with YouTube, like they’re using annotated links or they’ve got closed captioning going on. That literally, anything that you put in that video, or any way that you sort of modify that video with YouTube, it’s all going to work because we’re not touching the video area. So YouTube is free to work in any way that it can.
We’re the only video player that I know of that has calls to action that at once increased the click through rate on calls to action and don’t disrupt anything that’s going on inside the video area. We’re really proud of that.
James: I love it. YouTube must like you guys. From my point of view, a lot of my students have been applying the training from Own the Racecourse which is my news blogging authority platform independent training course. They’re putting out regular videos like I do, they’re putting LeadPlayer on the videos, they’re building their database and I just spent a whole month away travelling overseas with the family but the whole time I was overseas, every single day people are joining my database after watching a video.
I’m earning all these new customers I guess and people who are interested in finding out what I’ve got. So I love the idea or it but even more than that I love that we don’t have to chop and change and make adjustments. We just update the plugin when it says there’s a new update and there’s this whole raft of new stuff and you’ve also got some new SEO stuff going on.
Catch Emails With LeadPlayer
Clay: Yeah, one thing that we added and again we really believe that part of customer service isn’t what most people think of as customer service. Yes, you know, we respond extremely quickly often in less than an hour to customer support request but also part of customer service is making sure that whatever tool you bought continues to stay relevant even as the web changes. And the web changes incredibly fast.
YouTube came out and announced that the #1 way they encourage people to give metadata about video to Google is through something called Schema.org. There’s this Schema.org mark-up. So the old way of doing things used to involve creating a video XML sitemaps. And they still work. We’re not in any way trashing or saying that video XMLs don’t work but the current way to do this sort of what we recommend people do and sort of what is best practice right now is to have a traditional just sort of HTML sitemap, well it’s an XML sitemap but it indexes and lists all of the HTML pages on your site. Those HTML pages have Schema.org mark-up that tell Google the title of the video. The keywords for the video, the description for the video and what it allows you to do essentially is rewrite the information that Google has indexed for that YouTube video.
Let’s say that you have a competitor who is creating videos that are actually kind of useful, they’re educational videos but they don’t know anything about SEO and they don’t know anything about sort of marketing, well you can take that YouTube video and you can use LeadPlayer to play that video and you can use LeadPlayer to sort of capture email addresses using that video so you’re leveraging someone else’s educational content in your market place. You’re capturing email addresses using that video and when you use LeadPlayer,