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Preparing for Your Next Job in the Age of AI

The hottest job in corporate America is “Executive in Charge of AI” according to a recent New York Times headline. That probably sounds right on the money to most readers of these pages. If you happen to be up for an executive position in AI in sales and marketing, the conversation is sure to turn to video. Here are some questions and answers) that might help you prep for that next big interview.

How is AI currently best used in creating marketing videos?

AI is most helpful with speech-to-text, language translation, automated subtitling, and basic editing tasks.

Can AI help generate video ideas and scripts?

Yes and no. AI tools can analyze content performance data and suggest new video topics that align with customer interests. But it doesn’t have a good grasp of how to communicate visually with your customers.

Is AI advanced enough to produce marketing videos?

No. But it can make production more efficient.

Can AI be used for targeted personalized video?

AI is better at identifying and segmenting targets than it is at figuring out what to show or say.

Will AI ever automate the video production process?

No, but would you want to live in a world like that? AI is getting better every day at automating editing tasks. In the right hands, AI cuts costs, improves quality, and speeds production.

Can AI help manage video content libraries?

Absolutely. AI is better at tagging, managing, and searching big archives than humans are. This capability is already widely used in academia and corporate training. You might find lots of content than can be repurposed and shared more widely.

Can AI predict which videos drive the most conversions over time?

Probably, assuming sufficiently large data sets of historical performance.

Will AI potentially displace human jobs in video production?

Maybe a few in low-complexity production tasks. But creative people will almost always be able to do more creative things better.

What regulatory concerns are there with synthetic video?

For starters, protection for original content, watermarking assets, auditing of synthetic media origins. Regulated or not, there are all sorts of privacy, bias, and fairness issues, too.

Which expert perspectives should guide our AI video strategy?

A thorough-going strategy should comprise insights from legal, compliance, creative leadership, technical architects, and customer advocacy, as well as your video experts.

Bruce McKenzie

A writer with a background in public broadcasting and corporate marketing communications, Bruce McKenzie pioneered the “2-Minute Explainer®” brand video for technology businesses in 2004. Customers have included numerous enterprise technology companies (Cisco, IBM, BMC, Brocade/Broadcom, Software AG, CA Technologies, CompuCom) as well as B2B startups. Rebranded “Technology Business Video” in 2017, the company today produces a variety of “tactical” videos to reach buying team members throughout the sales cycle. We take everything marketers want to say and transform it into short videos that communicate stuff buyers want to know. It’s basically what good writers do, made visual. Visit www.techbizvideo.com to learn more or set up a chat about tactical videos with the Technology Business Video professionals.

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