1Cast: Video News & Commentary

Posts Tagged ‘Micro-Cast’

The Work We Do.

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Call it what you want – content delivery, video aggregation, audience segmentation, brand networks, blah, blah, blah.  Tons of people have given it a go, but ask any of them about what they do and if it’s working, and only a handful are able to give you a clearly defined answer.

I came across an interview of Andrew Robertson, CEO at global branding agency BBDO, where he consistently refers to what they do as “The Work” and I think it’s a fantastic concept.  By defining your efforts simply and clearly stating your focus, you will help your audience understand who you are, what you do and the value you bring.

At 1CAST our “Work” is all about making digital more personal.  We define this as a user-driven, professionally delivered video news service, built around discovery – where the content follows the user rather than waiting to be found.  We call it micro-casting.

We believe that moving from search to discoverability is a natural process and one that is more closely aligned with our needs in this increasingly time constrained world.  Yet this begs the obvious question, “is there value or worth in what we do?”  And I would argue an astounding YES!

Time is a precious commodity and it can be argued that it has a higher intrinsic value than money.  For 1CAST, one of the best measures of the “worth” of our “work” is looking at how users are willing to pay with their time to access their own personalized news through our platform.

Not surprisingly, our user engagement numbers at 1CAST are off the charts for our desktop experience, our recent iTV initiatives on Boxee and especially on our mobile applications for iPhone and Android.  We believe this points to something very special about what we’ve accomplished with our micro-casting concept.  Some have called it a paradigm shift; others have called it cracking the code.

We just call it doing our “Work”.

Anthony Bontrager

A special thanks from 1CAST

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Hi Everyone,

After nearly a year, 1CAST has successfully emerged from beta, bringing with it a completely re-designed user interface, new content and distribution partnerships, a bit of relief from our extremely talented development team, and heightened sense of purpose towards driving the most engaging video news experience across the three screen environment to our viewers.

Since our launch yesterday we’ve seen all of our metrics – from visits to unique viewers to streams per visit increase; but most important of all is the time spent viewing content, which continues to grow.  Already 1CAST has one of the most engaged audiences across the web and mobile spaces.  This trend continues and demonstrates the value of our micro-casting environment as a means for viewers to control what, how, when and where they get their video news.

Rest assured we are by no means finished.  Our team is already working on the next platform update, integrating our next set of content partners and a host of other initiatives that are sure to bring more value to our viewers and business partners alike.

So stay tuned!

On behalf of the 1CAST team, I want to extend a big THANK YOU to our content partners, distribution partners, advertisers, investors and most importantly our viewers.  Each of you has contributed to 1CAST’s ongoing success for which we are very grateful.

Now time to get back to work.

Anthony

Why content owners see Fair Use as simply “FU”.

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

This week the blogosphere was abuzz about announcements by The Associated Press and The Wall Street Journal regarding sites that aggregate their news content without any distribution or syndication agreements. At 1Cast we won’t distribute one second of video that we don’t have full permission to use. But we compete in a market where millions of hours of unlicensed video are viewed daily, so we’re well-tuned to the issue at hand.

A lot of the aggregation sites defend their services with the Fair Use doctrine, an important aspect of the US copyright system that makes possible everything from book reports to Google’s massive web crawler and caching system. Fair Use is a great thing, but it does not entitle a person to financially benefit from the copyrighted work of another, and that’s important.

A TV show uploaded to YouTube is not Fair Use. A Ustream channel dedicated to showing out of market sports programming is not Fair Use. A set top box that siphons content from a broadcaster even when the broadcaster says no is not Fair Use.

It’s fun to root for small companies who are taking on big businesses and trying to provide new services and unique ways to consume content – it’s what makes the Internet great.  But it’s simply wrong for the media and the public to ignore the fact that the legal owner of this content has paid in some cases millions of dollars to produce it. Haven’t these content creators earned the right to control who uses it and how?

There are start-up entrepreneurs out there who respect this. We play by the rules everyday, making partnerships to legally license and distribute content.

I think it’s unfortunate that the media has chosen to lambaste the Associated Press and the Wall Street Journal for their plans to simply enforce the rules. The Internet may have changed distribution, but it shouldn’t change the rules that let content creators make brilliant work and profit from distributing it.

I applaud content owners who have the courage to stand up and say the rules matter and we’re going to enforce them. It’s time the media and more of the Internet public did the same.

Anthony Bontrager

What kind of week has it been?

Friday, December 5th, 2008

Two weeks ago, 1Cast announced the launch of its private beta, bringing to consumers the world’s first personalized broadcast delivery news service.  The launch was met with much acclaim and the usage numbers for our service, including downloads of our iPhone application are already well on target with our expectations even at this early stage.

An inevitable part of any beta test is being confused with or compared to other companies in or around your target space.  1Cast has experienced much of this over the past two weeks and I thought it would be a good idea to clarify a few points about what 1Cast aspires to be.

Simply put, 1Cast is a service offering that allows everyday news consumers to build personalized news playlists (micro-casts) and have them delivered in near real-time to their desktop or smartphone device.  We believe that consumers do not want to hunt and peck for individual video clips of relevant content, but prefer that it be delivered in an easily consumable, lean-back format. 

1Cast also allows for a more of a lean-forward experience, allowing users to navigate within a micro-cast and watch individual clips, share their micro-casts or clips with friends, or even embed them in their blog or favorite social networking site through the use of our widget.  Ease of use, and timeliness of information delivered wherever and whenever you are is the focus of 1Cast.

We believe that targeting the broader market with a true service offering, rather than offering a toolset to specific niche markets, is the best possible strategy for web video consumption.  It allows us greater flexibility in the distribution channels we select, offers users an intuitive manner in which to view video news content from multiple sources, and provides our content and advertising partners a compelling distribution channel.  So far, our user feedback has affirmed this belief.

I would like to give a big THANK YOU to the 1Cast team for all their hard work and dedication these past few years.  Small teams with big dreams have led the web video explosion and we’re thankful to be a part of this evolving industry.

I would also like to thank all of our users, the blogging community, as well as our content and other strategic partners for their feedback and support during the launch of our beta.  We’re truly grateful and look forward to providing continued enhancements to our product to meet the needs of our growing user base.

In the meantime…. Enjoy!

 

Anthony Bontrager

1Cast launches private beta.

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

1Cast is pleased to announce today that we have launched a private beta version of the world’s first on-demand personalized broadcast delivery news service!  Today’s launch marks the culmination of nearly two years of behind the scenes work with the goal of building an online platform that brings multiple news broadcasters together into one complete user experience. Anyone can now access professional broadcast news whenever and wherever they want, only minutes after original broadcast.  

1Cast and our personalized news service, which we call Micro-Casting, allows users to discover a wealth of atomized video news content by keyword or phrase, then sit back and watch or engage with the news that matters to them.

Users of 1Cast can also share this content across the Web, finally giving social networking and blogging sites a legitimate source of embeddable, professionally produced video content from national and international news sources.

 
We’ll be extending only a limited number of invitations to the private beta, and access is provided on a first come, first serve basis.  Anyone can sign-up now for beta access at www.1cast.com.

Anthony Bontrager