I think I get what you mean, but at the same time, crossing the streams. I 
think we actually do a lot of that already, but it depends on what you are 
talking about, showreels, customer testimonials or an actual demo with either 
Mark, Sidd, Nabe or myself physically showing the software. All three of those 
things are very different, with different approaches and aimed at the intended 
audience in a different way.

One thing I would say based on the amount of demos I've done and the studios 
I've been to (bare in mind I've been to a lot), is that when it comes to 
attracting new people to Softimage, they often tend to pick up on 2-3 things - 
whose using it and what recent jobs/projects are there, the way in which the 
product is demoed with workflows/assets they can relate to, and how it can 
integrate into their existing pipeline.

G


From: softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com 
[mailto:softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com] On Behalf Of Matt Lind
Sent: 13 September 2012 23:26
To: softimage@listproc.autodesk.com
Subject: RE: In case you missed it..

I agree.

I don't know about anybody else, but I could care less about demo reels.  The 
only time I see them is when I'm at a user group or waiting for a product 
demonstration to begin, and since there are no more user groups and product 
demos are basically web downloads, where do I see demos today?  Mostly as 
screen savers at siggraph when the demo guy is taking a lunch break.  I don't 
hang around those booths because I visit booths to talk to people and ask 
questions.

Demo reels are important for students and people new to the industry as a 
whole, but I think they're irrelevant for people who have been in the industry 
a while because they become jaded like me from having seen it all before.  We 
need something more that currently isn't being delivered.

As a more experienced and mature demographic, what I want is information.  I 
want to see benefit in black and white.  I want to determine if I can truly 
work smarter, not harder, compared to what I'm doing now.  I think this aspect 
of Softimage marketing has been absent for the past 10 years.  The exception 
being the debut of ICE with v7.0.  Prior to that the last time I saw something 
informative that made me pay attention was the animation mixer and perhaps 
GATOR.  However, even in those cases the demos weren't very informative, they 
were more eye candy pieces.

What I seek is a short synopsis like a movie trailer (length) that is 
information driven.  If it catches my interest, let me watch something more 
in-depth to get the answers to my questions.  These don't have to be high-tech 
demonstrations, just clearly *informative and comprehensive* relative to what's 
being marketed.  Stay way from glossy buzz words and trendy catch phrases.  
Focus more on the information's value to educate the target audience.

I used to demo Softimage in my locale when Softimage didn't have the budget to 
send somebody out from Montreal.  I am information driven, and was always told 
by attendees that they felt my demos were the most helpful to make decisions.  
I don't know if sales improved or not as I didn't have access to that 
information, but the feedback I received from all demos were pretty consistent. 
 I think people are starved for facts as they don't want to have to wade 
through all the BS to get the info they seek, and in many cases, some people 
are making decisions to expand a company or switch a pipeline and aren't fully 
informed themselves what they are looking for because perhaps they're striving 
for something a bit outside of their comfort zone or level of experience.  
Informative demos help them, and a good informative demo will entice a customer 
to follow up.


Matt





From: softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com 
[mailto:softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com] On Behalf Of Sam Cuttriss
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2012 2:50 PM
To: softimage@listproc.autodesk.com
Subject: Re: In case you missed it..

Stop thinking of advertising/ demonstration/ documentation and education as 
isolated entities.
in doing so you can make the money you spend massively more productive.

look at the success of stephen blairs blog: http://xsisupport.com/
( Its criminally insane you fired him by the way )
its a go to site for anyone using ice.

With a little work something like that could be dressed up as a showcase of 
softimage work and a technical reference of production techniques.
An inspiration to students, and something to pique the curiosity of 
professionals using other softwares.

_sam




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