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3 tips for professional live streaming in #highered by Seth Odell (UCLA and Higher Ed Live)

Video and the Web? It’s a match made in heaven.

That’s why YouTube has been so successful and why every organization dreams to create a viral video – even if there is no real recipe to achieve virality.

So, what better way to engage your web visitors? Live video (often called live streaming)!

As you know, there is something exciting about experiencing live events.
But when you cannot be there, a live streaming event is the next best thing.

That’s the reason why I asked Seth Odell who works at UCLA and hosts the Higher Ed Live show to present a webinar about the topic in our upcoming series Professional Photos, Videos and Live Streaming 101 (Jan 18-20, 2011).

I also got to ask him a few questions about live streaming in higher education.

1) How long have you been doing live streaming?
I first began exploring the implementation of live streaming at UCLA in early 2008. At the time, I was looking for an affordable solution that could allow our communications department to live stream events in-house.

2) Why does it make sense to incorporate live streaming in higher ed content?
Live streaming offers colleges and universities the unique opportunity to engage their global audience in real-time. For the cost of labor alone, institutions can dramatically increase the reach of pre-existing campus events. In a time when budgets are tight, it simply doesn’t make sense to produce high-end events that only reach the small portion of our audience that can physically come to campus to participate. Live streaming is an affordable, social and scalable solution for delivering your message to members of your community around the globe.

3) In your opinion, what is the top reason for poor quality when it comes to live streaming
The number one reason for poor quality when it comes to live streaming is the inadequate amount of time many folks put into refining their live stream solution. Setting up a live stream broadcast itself is quite easy, but taking the quality of that stream to the next level takes time and testing. Depending on your camera and live stream platform, folks should be experimenting with Adobe Flash Media Encoder Live and desktop producers, as well as refining the basics of quality video production like camera placement, lighting and audio.

4) You will share many professional tips and tricks during your webinar, but can you give us 2 to 3 don’ts for professional live streams?