OTHER MONEY-MAKING VIDEO SERVICES VIDEO YEARBOOKS
These are growing in popularity. They usually consist of short scenes
of
important high school events, such as sports, clubs, candid "people
scenes,"
still photo montages, and other memorable items for the students.
A welledited
hour-long video should be able to be sold for $15 to $30, depending
upon the editing complexity of the video and the size of the school.
The larger the school, the more you can expect to sell. You should
first
contact the school administration with this idea. Put together a good
presentation for them, explaining your services and how your video
yearbook
will work with the regular yearbook as an added remembrance. A good
idea
is to offer to donate a portion, $2 for example, per tape sold to a
school
fund or student-supported charity. After the administration, you will
probably need to speak to the school board, principals, and school
yearbook
sponsors. This work will be worth it, though.
Try to include in your tape, from time to time, current events or subjects
which will remind the viewers about what was going on at the time they
were
in school. One caution, though. Be careful about including copyrighted
items, such as popular songs, in your tape. You will need to get permission
from the copyright holders or risk legal action.
The best way to sell your tape is to obtain permission to distribute
a flyer to the
students in the school at the same time as the regular yearbook information
is distributed.
Then, follow up later in the year, giving those who haven't ordered
yet another opportunity. Finally, give another chance at the end of
the school year.
From time to time, go to the school and shoot material. Get sporting
events,
clubs, quiz bowl tournaments, science fairs, special events, pep rallies,
ordinary day-to-day video, and, of course, graduation. If you're ambitious,
do a video yearbook for each class! That way, students can end their
high
school years with a four-video set, documenting that time of their
lives from
start to finish!
DUBBING AND DUPLICATING
Here's an easy service to offer. With a film-to-video transfer device,
commonly available for under $100, and a movie projector, you can put
customer's old home movies on video tape. There are a few different
types
of transfer devices available. The best place to check would be your
local
quality camera shop.
You should be able to charge around $20 per hour of film for this service.
A good idea is to add background music to the home movies. Copyright
free
music is widely available on CD. Check advertising and marketing magazines
such as Advertising Age for ads.
You can also offer a duplicating service for customer's home videos,
so
they can give relatives (or America's Funniest Home Videos) a copy.
You
can usually charge a flat fee for this service, depending upon the
length of
the tape. Editing together still photos is also a good service to offer,
particularly to people who travel frequently.
There are many other areas just starting to be tapped _ video resumes,
video postcards, even video wills. If you come up with a good original
idea,
research the market for it. If you find a reasonable amount of people
will
be interested in your new service, you may just have a winner on your
hands!