Online
interactions are generally ruled by the left brain, the logical
side of our intellect. We interact in what is primarily a text
based presentation. We read, rather than feel. We assimilate
words, rather than absorb sights and sounds. Any moves to bring
the emotions of the right brain to the web have been feeble at
best. Generally, we interact with most websites the same way we
did in 1996. We read text, we click on links, we glance at the
occasional graphic. For the most part, our right brain is
idling.
Next week’s
OMMA show in Hollywood
will looking forward to the day when our emotions will rule how
we interact online (among other things). It marks an oncoming
convergence that is far more important than the combining of
digital media and the Internet. What will be explored and
debated in the meeting rooms of the Hilton Universal City is a
medium that engages both the right brain and left brain, in
equal measure, at the same time.
Video Search:
The Tip of the Iceberg
Next week, I’ll
be moderating a session on Video Search at OMMA Hollywood. In
assembling the panel, the initial inclination was to bring the
latest in video search optimization techniques to the audience,
highlighting the tactics that could put you on top of the video
search engines. But there was a deeper question here, and one
that I wanted to explore.
I’ve written
before about
interactive video authoring.
MSN is working on the technology, and they’ll be talking about
it in the panel. After the column ran, other companies such as
Vimation
(also joining us),
Videoclix
and Click TV let me know about the work they’ve been doing in
the field.
Defining Online
Engagement
The whole
question of how our brains engage when we act online fascinates
me. How do our emotions kick in to frame the context inside of
which we’ll interact with a site? How is that initial emotional
evaluation (see the
50 Millisecond Judgment)
impact our further, more logical interactions with the site, as
we begin reading the content and assimilating it? Right now, it
appears that in less than the blink of an eye, the right brain
renders an opinion of a site based on its aesthetic appeal, and
that opinion is either reinforced by the content, or continues
to be at odds with it, as the left brain digests that content.
This is the way
we currently interact. One of the questions we’re struggling
with in online marketing is defining engagement. My belief is
that the most powerful medium for engagement is the one that
most fully engages the senses. I believe we’re more fully
engaged when our emotions rule us, when the right brain is in
control. For my money, there is no more powerful medium than a
truly superb movie, seen at a theater. For that reason, it’s
appropriate that we’ll be wrestling with this question in
Hollywood, the home of movies; a stones throw from Universal
Studios.
This is not to
say that words aren’t powerful. Novels can move us to tears.
Words can find a connection through our intellect, allowing us
to render tremendously engaging concepts, made all the more real
because we visualize them internally. But the engagement is more
subtle, and happens over time. A novel can’t assault our senses
the same way a movie can, because the creators of the movie have
hardwired the imagery and emotion directly to our senses,
rendering the story for us (I leave aside the question of which
is the more fulfilling experience). Also, we don’t read online
the way we do a novel. We scan, we pick up snippets of
information, and we don’t allow ourselves to be immersed in the
act of reading. We are multitasking, and there are just too many
other stimuli fighting for our attention.
Emotional…and
Interactive!
As broadband
moves real video online, we suddenly have a platform that
engages our emotions in a way that scanning text online can’t.
We create emotional connections to the content, the same way we
do with movies or television. But what’s really exciting is that
now we can make that content interactive. We can click to access
more information, or to guide ourselves through a story. Linear
narrative can now give way to hyperlinked multiple story
threads. Advertising messages can be delivered with the full
impact of a visual, emotional medium, then transition seamlessly
to a logical information request. Now, we are engaging both our
intellect and our emotions at the same time. That could change
everything about the way we interact online. And, as always,
search will be the connection to that experience. Hope to see
you at the session!