
The redoubtable Beth Kanter has tagged me in the ongoing meme begun by Jeremiah Owyang in which he asks
The New York Times published an article by Brian Stelter on Saturday about the growing trend of workers watching short videos online during their lunch breaks, either on YouTube, CNN.com, or elsewhere.
"The trend — part of a broader phenomenon known as video snacking — is turning into a growth business for news and media companies, which are feeding the lunch crowd more fresh content."
True story! There are thousands of young, mobile, professional internet users out there who are looking for fresh video content every day. In his article, Stelter mentions that there is a wide variety of tastes, too, citing workers who enjoy watching archives clips from Comedy Central's The Daily Show, daily political commentary podcasts, and wire stories from CNN.
Stelter also mentions some of the benefits the viewers see in using a little lunch-at-the-desk time to enjoy some fresh, brief bursts of entertainment:
How can cultural organizations use this information?
If your organization is a performing arts group, and you are already in the habit of recording some or all of your performances, why not consider creating brief (3- to 5-minutes) clips of those performances for lunchtime broadcast?
Here are ten tips for cultural organizations (theaters, opera companies, symphonies, chorales, author readings, museums) thinking about trying to reach lunchtime media snackers:
What would you add? Is there an organization you know that is doing this well?
The redoubtable Beth Kanter has tagged me in the ongoing meme begun by Jeremiah Owyang in which he asks
There's a passage in The Great Gatsby that I want to talk to you about.