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By Shannon K. Murphy

Former Senior Content Manager at Brightcove

How to Use Enterprise Video for Employee Knowledge Sharing

Marketing

Don’t keep the expertise of your teams locked away. We all have an innate need to share, learn, and connect with others. Recognize that in today’s high-efficiency, lean-staffed workplaces, every employee is a subject matter expert. Video empowers us to share our expertise between offices and teams. In an increasingly digital world are you ready to empower your teams’ communications through video?

Benefits of Using Video for Knowledge Sharing

  • Improved learning. Video created and shared by employees, for employees, is corporate education gold. Video can supplement trainings while adding variety and improving the audience’s ability to retain the information.

  • Reduced costs. Large enterprises save immensely by shifting a portion of training to on-demand video.

  • Controlled internal messaging. Leveraging video for internal knowledge sharing provides consistent learning experiences, ensuring everyone receives that critical information the same way, utilizing the same definitions and terms.

  • Empowered independent learning. Shifting from a "push" model that requires trainers to present before a live audience to a "pull" model enables employees to search for what they need when they need it.

Video Hub for Internal Employee Product Education A video portal created by product marketing for sales instructing how to demo our Audience integrations

Effective Video Types for Knowledge Sharing

Now that you’ve decided you’d like to give knowledge sharing through video a try, which kinds of videos should you create? Opportunities are all around you.

  • Product updates and training. Record product information and demonstration videos to help develop a knowledgeable team. Try showing a product in action, out in the field, or stream demos from engineers and product managers.

  • Sales training. Communicate corporate sales strategy, including tips for establishing relationships, demo-ing products, and closing deals.

  • Sales enablement. Arm sales reps with best practices and up-to-date information by recording your sales strategy discussions and presentations. Consider filming a different sales leader each quarter Perhaps she could outline a challenging sale and what was done to overcome objections and win the account.

  • On-demand conference learnings. Record presentations, meetings, and other activities from conferences that will accelerate knowledge sharing. By doing this you can send a few attendees but share information collectively across a larger group. Consider having employees present to others back at the office—they’ll retain the information through teaching it while spreading lessons far and wide.

  • Coaching and professional development. Train new managers and give them full exposure to the knowledge of the organization’s management team training via on-demand video training programs.

Video Portal for Internal Communications and Sales Training
All “Office Hours” are recorded allowing sales to access training on product updates anytime, anywhere. Our marketers keep things fresh by inviting special guests to contribute their knowledge.

5 Tips for Creating a Better Video Knowledge Sharing Portal

You’ve unlocked knowledge by recording it, now you have to make sure it’s easily accessible to your employees and that your new corporate video gets buy-in across the organization.

  • 1. Create a library. Store institutional knowledge in a branded, business video portal with secure access. After uploading the video, tag videos with appropriate keywords and add text that describes each. This will make searching for resources easier.

  • 2. Add transcripts and captions. Beyond accessibility requirements which some companies may be subject to, adding a text-based companion to your video adds to learning. Reading while listening lifts retention but adding searchable, interactive transcripts, allows employees to search videos to find the information they want fast access to.

  • 3. Reward participation. Award incentives for those who regularly contribute to video knowledge sharing initiatives. Consider creating internal contests.

  • 4. Gamify with interactive elements. Introduce game mechanics into learning videos. For example, a compliance video might be made to “spot the problems.” Include interactive video elements like quizzes, polls, or hot spots.

  • 5. Provide a rating system. Give employees the ability to review and/or rate the content.

Video has become an invaluable way to improve knowledge sharing across the enterprise. Instead of relying on just a few employees to deliver 100% of the training, now all employees can share their knowledge, enhancing your total workforce.

If you’re ready to get started with an internal video program, consider the first themes or channels of content you’ll develop.

Think like a publisher or media producer and ask yourself, "How will I continue to deliver more videos in this genre/theme?" Answering this will help you to generate ideas for additional video content and internal knowledge experts. Plot a six-month production and release calendar to keep ahead of video consumption and then give your employees what they crave: lessons from professionals they know and admire.


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