From my research, you can expect $1000-$400 per video for an online deal
related to just one region (country ie not listing your videos on competitors
sites.)
Mark Shea [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I think the
only company, in my neck of the woods that would have
Hi
I have a hypothetical question the wise heads here may be able to answer.
Lets say you travel around your country, producing short videos at
different locations. Lets say, market research (youtube) show that
your concept is extremely popular.
Lets say a local tv station contact you and want
, but you risk losing the deal.
*sent from handheld
Kfir Pravda
-Original Message-
From: caminofilm [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: videoblogging@yahoogroups.com
Sent: 04-Oct-07 8:34
Subject: [videoblogging] What is online video worth - contract info
Hi
I have a hypothetical question the wise heads
Sent: 04-Oct-07 8:34
Subject: [videoblogging] What is online video worth - contract info
Hi
I have a hypothetical question the wise heads here may be able to answer.
Lets say you travel around your country, producing short videos at
different locations. Lets say, market research (youtube
Subject: RE: [videoblogging] What is online video worth - contract info
thanks kfir for your reply
Hypothetically speaking, they are keen to see me happy, to continue providing
them content. It really is a matter of having some idea of how much money they
envisage making over the year nesting
Are they asking you to get EO (Error and Omission) insurance? What
other costs might you have to deliver your content to them? Be sure
to factor that in — EO costs a lot of $$$. Or better, insist they
cover the EO / liabilities (for things like someone suing 'cause
your video about dating
2 cents:
- have a lawyer review it before you sign
- a year is a very long time in my book; i would start at 3 months at
a time (it protects both parties) especially considering the
exclusivity of this deal
- brand building is nice but it's not food
- straight talk can really tease out ulterior
I have release forms for all interviewees and music used, but yes, things
change, places close. If someone visits a place I recommend, and it is now
closed, this could be an issue, but my hypothetical country isnt the USA, and
(as yet) our legal system hasnt gone liability crazy, but it is
I think the only company, in my neck of the woods that would have been in a
similar position, would be lonely planet (who recently sold to BBC worldwide)
who I know have struck up similar deals with particular websites.
You could have a point about the three months thing. It allows me to pull