How To Turn Your Blog Posts Into A Video? |
One of the greatest influence in the online word is the power of the
written word. People, especially bloggers mostly make use of writing to
convey their message to their readers. But have you ever thought of
using images, or videos
to do the same? Of course, a lot of people use videos and images on
their blogs or websites. But how about presenting your awesome blog
posts in the form of a video? Maybe not every follower of yours is
following your lengthy blog posts that you share on social media, So why not try something new, and present your blog posts in a whole different way?
Wibbitz
Basically, Wibbitz is a web app that will crawl your website or blog,
and extract the most important information. This will then be converted
into an audio and video presentation. The audio can include narrations
of your latest blog posts, so that your readers can hear those updates
rather than reading them.
This is a relatively unique concept, which you can make use of to better
advertise your website. A video can say a lot about your website, and
will get you more followers as a result of your video marketing.
Create a video for your site
Visit the Wibbitz homepage, and look at the bottom. Fill out the email and site URL fields, and click on Create Your Clip. This might take a few minutes, since it involves a lot of processing. So sit back and relax!
Once finished, you'll get an embed code for your video. In all
likelihood, this is all you need. But if you want to tweak the video a
little, you have the Customize Clip option below. Here, you'll get to
re-size the video, put in a voice over, or put in Loop or Autoplay. You
can also change the Soundtrack from among the six different options.
Once you're done, simply click on Update Clip, and you're done.
This is a pretty good tool, and will create HTML 5 embed code for you,
which will be accessible across multiple devices. The
voice synthesizer is pretty good too, with just a slight hint of
synthesized speech. The biggest hitch though, is that it can't process
special characters such as the apostrophe, and hence speaks out the HTML
codes for them, which sounds pretty awkward.
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