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Instagram has been promising the Edits app for a long time - it's finally here! If you've been paying for Inshot or Capcut or similar apps, it might time to re-evaluate. Also the YouTube team has some updates, including auto-dubbing, which is great because everyone should be able to watch all videos, regardless of what language they speak.Show Notes:Leave a Review: Apple PodcastsFollow Me on Instagram: @danielhillmediaThe Edits App is here! (Instagram)Meta is ramping up its AI-driven age detection (The Verge)Threads Adds More Ads (The Verge)Meta: Taking the Pulse of Gen-Z (Meta)The Week At YouTube - Auto-dubbing and more! (YouTube)Wednesday Waffle: Artists to check out (and please send me recommendations!)David Morris (Instagram)Connor Price (Instagram)Aine Deane (Instagram) Leave a Review: Apple Podcasts Follow Me on Instagram: @danielhillmedia
In this episode, Jenna Stakias, CEO & Founder of The True Empire, shares her top tools, trends, and strategies to help beauty pros and content creators elevate their social media game—without the overwhelm.Follow/subscribe to be the first to know when new episodes are released. Like what you hear? Leave us a review!KEY TAKEAWAYS:
I'd love to hear from you! Send me a text message here and let me know what you thought about the episode. :)Did you know that LinkedIn video uploads have increased by 34% year over year?! If your nonprofit isn't leveraging video on LinkedIn, you're missing out on a major opportunity to connect with potential donors and advocates. In this episode, I'm sharing a replay of a recent livestream I co-hosted about the power of LinkedIn video with Scott Rising, Senior Content Marketing Manager at LinkedIn. We cover why it's the FASTEST growing content format on the platform and how nonprofits can use it as a catalyst for building relationships. Of course, we get into the nitty gritty of optimal video length, formats, and scripting the most powerful hooks, too.Learn the best video tools like Canva (which is free for nonprofits!) and how to repurpose blog posts, webinars, and newsletters into engaging video stories. I'll also explain why you don't need a professional production team to create impactful LinkedIn videos. Sometimes, all it takes is your phone, a $20 microphone, and a smart content plan to generate over a million impressions!P.S. Want to watch the replay live? Here is the LinkedIn Live video.Resources & LinksConnect with Scott on LinkedIn.Check out these recommended tools for making videos: Canva for Nonprofits, InShot, and CapCut.If you're interested in incorporating text messaging with 99% open rates into your donor engagement strategy, join me and the team at Tatango for a FREE webinar on March 26th at 1:30pm ET. This show is presented by LinkedIn for Nonprofits. We're so grateful for their partnership. Explore their incredible suite of resources and discounts for nonprofit teams here.My book, The Monthly Giving Mastermind, is here! Grab a copy here and learn my framework to build, grow, and sustain subscriptions for good.Let's Connect! Send a DM on Instagram or LinkedIn and let us know what you think of the show! Head to YouTube for digital marketing how-to videos and podcast teasers Want to book Dana as a speaker for your event? Click here!
Hey everyone, Welcome back! Today's Episode is all about verses, a Bible story on Israel's journey to the promise land
Want to know the secret tools we use to streamline, grow, and level up our business? In this episode of The Ambition Coalition Podcast, we're sharing the must-have apps that have been total game-changers for us in network marketing. These tools aren't just about saving time—they're about creating connection, simplifying your workflow, and helping you show up consistently and professionally. Here's what we're covering: ✅ How we use Instagram and Facebook to connect, engage, and grow. ✅ Why Canva is our go-to for creating scroll-stopping graphics. ✅ The magic of Project Broadcast for keeping in touch with customers and team members. ✅ How Marco Polo makes team communication easier and more personal. ✅ The creative power of InShot for creating polished videos on the go. ✅ Why Boards is a lifesaver for organizing scripts, templates, and resources. If you've been looking for ways to work smarter, not harder, this episode will give you the tools you need to simplify your day-to-day while maximizing your impact. The Ambition Coalition Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the.ambition.coalition/ Follow Rebekah on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rebekahfowlkes/ Follow Melissa on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/melissaeickenhorst Podcast Produced by clantoncreative.com
TikTok has been banned in the U.S., leaving users scrambling for alternatives just hours before the expected deadline. Meanwhile, social media giants like Instagram are rolling out major updates, including grid changes, three-minute Reels, and a new editing app. What does this mean for creators, brands, and marketers? Let's break it all down in this episode of the Damn Good Marketing Podcast.
I don't know about you, but my head is spinning from the whirlwind of social media updates from this past weekend. From the roller coaster of TikTok's (brief) ban to Instagram's new grid layout and the introduction of three-minute reels, there's a lot to unpack. I'll also be sharing my favorite editing tips using InShot to make your talk-to-camera reels even more engaging and don't worry, I've got some viral reels to share with you to inspire your content this week!In this episode we'll be covering:All the Instagram updates that happened over the weekend and how to make the most of the changes.Impacts of the new Instagram grid update and how you might be able to adapt, even if it isn't ideal.I'm sharing my go-to tool for editing short form videos for Instagram and TikTok, plus I'll walk you through my favorite features!How I got my start editing video - you may not have heard this story yet!Diversifying content platforms, while you may have a favorite, it's still good to repurpose content to use on others.Other episodes you might have missed:Episode 025: Why You Want to Use the New Instagram FeaturesEpisode 029: Tailoring Successful Reel Techniques to Your NicheEpisode 032: We All Start at Zero: Embrace Storytelling to Connect with Your CommunityLinks to reels in this episode:Reel # 1: ScriptsReel # 2: Bodydoubling Send a message!Sign up for Reels Lab Join the Social Squad Society Love this conversation? Tap the follow button so you never miss an episode. Connect with me over on Instagram!
Are you doing video in your farm marketing? If not... why not?! Video is my go-to content creation method. Perhaps it's because I'm a natural public speaker, but I find it to be the easiest and fastest way to communicate with my leads and customers. It's also the best way to build connection and trust, to grease the wheels and move people towards buying. And yet, for many farmers, video remains an elusive skill. It feels scary and the fear of looking unprofessional is real. In this episode, I'm sharing some of my best practices when it comes to video, including my list of "gear" (it's not very long), and my short list of "must have videos" to film for your brand. I also show you where to get started if you're a little nervous. This podcast was sponsored by Local Line, my preferred e-commerce platform for farmers. Are you looking for a new solution for your farm? I can't recommend it enough. Easy to use inventory management, great customer service, continuous improvement, and a culture dedicated to equipping farmers with marketing expertise, Local Line should definitely be one of the e-commerce solutions you consider as you switch. Local Line is offering a free premium feature for free for one year on top of your paid subscription. Claim your discount by signing up for a Local Line account today and using the coupon code: MDF2024. Head to my special affiliate link to get started: www.mydigitalfarmer.com/localline Some of the resources mentioned in this episode: Join my free email list! I have a great "Crash Course in farm marketing" that will guide you through the marketing jungle over the course of several months. Each week, you'll get a new email with suggestions and tips to make your marketing better. Subscribe at https://www.mydigitalfarmer.com/subscribe Wireless Microphone (Links to Amazon) Goosehead Bed Phone Holder (Links to Amazon) Best Video Editing Software: I don't actually use one, but I do have InShot on my phone! Farm Marketing School - my monthly online marketing school membership just for farmers. Farm Marketing School is an on-demand library of marketing workshops and project plans that will help you build some of the most important marketing elements in your farm business like: building a promotion calendar, setting up your Google Business Profile, auditing your sales funnel, updating your home page of your website, building your first email nurture sequence, acquiring and deploying testimonials, and practicing different types of offers. You get to chose what you want to study and build each month. These projects are designed to be completed in under 30 days, so that you slowly build your marketing system piece by piece. Use the step by step project planner and resource folder to help you jumpstart your work. Take advantage of my new marketing crash course inside or take the onboarding assessment tool to help you identify where your funnel is broken and what project to do first. To see what courses are currently inside of FMS, or to try out Farm Marketing School for a month at mydigitalfarmer.com/fms Start and cancel your membership anytime. Find my marketing Facebook group for CSA farmers! Follow me on Instagram for a daily IG story tip on marketing! @mydigitalfarmer
Varias de las funciones de la herramienta de edición de vídeo CapCut ahora son de pago como los subtítulos automáticos. Artículo completo y alternativas gratis: https://borjagiron.com/mejor-alternativa-capcut-subtitulos-automaticos-gratis/ Club de Emprendedores: https://borjagiron.com/club La gente se ha vuelto loca buscando alternativas a capcut. ¡Paga! 12€. Luego se lo gastan en una copa sin pensar. Yo contraté almacenamiento en la nube por 20€ al año y no me sale la opción aún de pago. Otros tienen un límite. Alternativas: VN Video Editor, InShot o Microsoft Clipchamp para Windows También con los editores de Instagram.Canva Pro Gratis: https://borjagiron.com/canva Aprovecha la oportunidad ante una crisis. He creado un vídeo, un artículo y este episodio. En X con el buscador respondí a cientos de personas que buscaban alternativa y mandé cientos de visitas a mi blog.Conviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/marketing-digital--2659763/support.
Varias de las funciones de la herramienta de edición de vídeo CapCut ahora son de pago como los subtítulos automáticos. Artículo completo y alternativas gratis: https://borjagiron.com/mejor-alternativa-capcut-subtitulos-automaticos-gratis/ Club de Emprendedores: https://borjagiron.com/club La gente se ha vuelto loca buscando alternativas a capcut. ¡Paga! 12€. Luego se lo gastan en una copa sin pensar. Yo contraté almacenamiento en la nube por 20€ al año y no me sale la opción aún de pago. Otros tienen un límite. Alternativas: VN Video Editor, InShot o Microsoft Clipchamp para Windows También con los editores de Instagram.Canva Pro Gratis: https://borjagiron.com/canva Aprovecha la oportunidad ante una crisis. He creado un vídeo, un artículo y este episodio. En X con el buscador respondí a cientos de personas que buscaban alternativa y mandé cientos de visitas a mi blog.Conviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/marketing-digital--2659763/support.
Varias de las funciones de la herramienta de edición de vídeo CapCut ahora son de pago como los subtítulos automáticos.Artículo completo y alternativas gratis: https://borjagiron.com/mejor-alternativa-capcut-subtitulos-automaticos-gratis/Club de Emprendedores: https://borjagiron.com/clubLa gente se ha vuelto loca buscando alternativas a capcut.¡Paga! 12€. Luego se lo gastan en una copa sin pensar.Yo contraté almacenamiento en la nube por 20€ al año y no me sale la opción aún de pago.Otros tienen un límite.Alternativas: VN Video Editor, InShot o Microsoft Clipchamp para WindowsTambién con los editores de Instagram.Canva Pro Gratis: https://borjagiron.com/canvaAprovecha la oportunidad ante una crisis. He creado un vídeo, un artículo y este episodio.En X con el buscador respondí a cientos de personas que buscaban alternativa y mandé cientos de visitas a mi blog.Conviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/productividad-maxima--5279700/support.
Probably the most technical episode I've ever recorded, but if you want personal recommendations for the exact tools to use to run your creative business, you're in the right place.What you'll hear:How I structure my business (sole proprietorship, LLC etc.) 2:15What I use to host my website: WixWhat I use to deliver my online courses: Teachable I use Crowdcast to host webinars Convert kit, the GOAT of email marketing softwareInstagram, which no one needs a link to. If you want to learn how to use Instagram effectively THIS IS THE ONLY Instagram coaching program you will ever need, viva la Maestro! The Maestro's Instagram Intensive 14:15Audacity for music editing as well as recording solo podcast episodesBeezeteez for merchandise! Tell em I sent ya!Why I'm withholding an official endorsement for Riverside.fm (Zencastr is the other option I know of but I've never used them.)Once more gotta shout out my girl Dr. Shante Cofield, The Movement Maestro, for her dope free resource on how to start a podcast. It is why this podcast exists. If you're thinking about starting one, get your free guide here. 23:00Irfanview for super simple image editing, but honestly just get the pro version of Canva. Do yourself a favor and just use the desktop version.InShot for editing videos on mobileFilmora for editing video on desktopI love using Buzzsprout to host this podcast, it's ridiculously easy to use Sign up here for free contract templates, tech rider templates, and as an added bonus, Woo Corner!Don't go back to sleep.xoRachelSign up here for monthly blasts and functional wooFind me on InstagramSupport this podcast on Patreon
Matt Hughes (known as the King of Video) joins Alice to bring some ease and encouragement for artists who want to get started on YouTube. We talk about gaining confidence, what equipment you may need and Matt shares how a simple strategy can multiply your presence online. Recommended software: InShot, CapCut and repurpose.io Sign up for the Friday workshop Matt offers - at kingofvideo.co.uk Join Matt and a fabulous panel of speakers at TubeFest in Birmingham on Thursday 23rd May 2024 Get Tube Fest tickets HERE Find Alice Sheridan at: www.alicesheridan.com @alicesheridanstudio You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/@AliceSheridanStudio Find more about Louise Fletcher: www.louisefletcherart.com @louisefletcher_art You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCf1EvUAo_iRJedkrbQNEB_A Credits: "Monkeys Spinning Monkeys" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Avant CapCut, Kinemaster, Inshot etc., il y avait Stupeflix, le pionnier des logiciels de montage vidéo destinés au grand public. Juste après la naissance de l'AppStore en 2008, un ingénieur de Centrale, Nicolas Steegmann fonde l'une des premières applications mobiles avec Exalead (spécialisée dans les moteurs de recherche et les solutions logicielles). Stupeflix lance son app mobile, poussée par Apple tant et si bien qu'elle est téléchargée par des millions d'utilisateurs ; ce qui vaut à Nicolas et ses associés de passer des sélections dignes de Koh-Lanta les conduisant jusqu'à la présentation de leur produit sur la scène de la Keynote d'Apple pour le lancement de l'iPad Air en 2013. Nicolas Steegmann la revendra à GoPro en 2016 pour 105 millions et il restera dans la direction du groupe pendant deux ans. En véritable technophile, il se passionne pour tout : les batteries, la vidéo, les pompes à chaleur, la fusion nucléaire, l'IA… Nicolas croise ses connaissances techniques avec une approche philosophique critique pour remettre en question l'impact de la technologie sur notre civilisation. Il s'attaque à présent au domaine de l'éducation avec son nouveau projet (qui n'a pas encore de nom), utilisant l'IA pour donner accès au plus grand nombre à un tuteur sur-mesure. Nous revenons sur : Ses débuts avec Stupeflix (appli mobile pour le montage vidéo amateur) Comment faire propulser son app par Apple quand on a 26 salariés ? Comment réussir une négociation à 105M€ avec GoPro, sans conseil d'avocat ni banquier ? La théorie de la “merdification” des plateformes L'impact de la technologie sur nos vies Le nouveau projet EdTech de Nicolas Un must-listen pour tous les entrepreneurs dans la tech et ceux qui l'utilisent (donc tout le monde quoi). TIMELINE : 00:00:00 - Être le pionnier des applications mobiles avec Stupeflix 00:14:33 - L'état actuel du marché des applications mobiles 00:23:20 - La classe moyenne de la création face aux GAFAM et autres géants 00:32:15 - "Ils vont interdire les smartphones" 00:54:43 - Après GoPro : Business angel, pompes à chaleur, et fusion nucléaire 01:01:20 - Le nouveau projet EdTech de Nicolas : Des tuteurs virtuels pour tous 01:22:05 - Comment Stupeflix a explosé en 2013 01:41:25 - La négociation avec GoPro à 105 millions 01:54:00 - Entreprendre pour agir et créer du lien 01:59:30 - Trouver l'équilibre dans un monde technologique 02:06:55 - Recommandations et questions de fin Avec Nicolas nous avons cité d'anciens épisodes de GDIY : #259 - Thibaud Elzieres - eFounders #327 - Laurent Alexandre - Auteur #28 - Pierre Valade - SUNRISE Avec Nicolas, nous avons parlé de : Stupeflix, aujourd'hui Quik chez GoPro Son projet EdTech, disponible en version immersive sur le Quest Store et en expérience conversationnelle sur Test Flight (iOS) Cory Doctorow et l'enshitification des plateformes Nicolas vous recommande de lire : Mathematica - David Bessis Vous pouvez contacter Nicolas sur Linkedin et Twitter. La musique du générique vous plaît ? C'est à Morgan Prudhomme que je la dois ! Contactez-le sur : https://studio-module.com. Vous souhaitez sponsoriser Génération Do It Yourself ou nous proposer un partenariat ? Contactez mon label Orso Media via ce formulaire. Un immense merci à Albane et Anne et tout la team Club Med pour cet enregistrement en haut des montagnes !
HEY GUYS! In today's show episode, we answer a question regarding what the Holy Spirit is, the difference in the Trinity, and proof of having the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit of truth guides us everyday to do the right thing and to understand God in our lives. It is available too anyone who want to receive it IJN. Teenstabletalk Podcast
Aplicativo InShot (para edição de vídeos, fotos e colagens) O InShot é o aplicativo perfeito pra quem está começando a gravar vídeos para o seu próprio negócio e melhorar o seu Instagram. Ele oferece recursos simples, mas muito úteis para a criação de um conteúdo perfeito Disponível para Android e iOs The post Aplicativo InShot appeared first on Micro Import.
כנסו בשביל לקבל עוד טיפים בשיווק: https://itayverchik.co.il/ עם איזו תוכנת עריכת סרטונים במובייל כדאי להשתמש, גם לאייפון וגם לאנדרויד - InShot !! הצטרפו עכשיו לקהילה של בוני ומקדמי האתרים הטובים בישראל בחינם לגמרי: https://www.facebook.com/groups/israelwp --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/itay-verchik/message
On today's episode, I have special guests Danja Barber, Brooke Juma Ehlers, and Lyndsey Garber, and we're talking all about photography during the holiday season! These professional photographers are with me today to share their tips on capturing authentic moments, creating a relaxed atmosphere, and using editing apps to enhance photos. They also provide advice on outdoor and indoor photography, taking photos in a barn setting, and the importance of printing photos. Ultimately, remember to be present during the holiday season and capture memories with your loved ones! Resources & Links: Unscripted app Adobe Lightroom Tezza app InShot app Mpix Artifact Uprising Chatbooks Danja Barber on Instagram @danjabarberphotography Brooke Juma Ehlers @_brookejumaphotography_ Lyndsey Garber @lyndseygarber Learn more about Cowgirls Over Coffee Membership Community Join the Cowgirls Over Coffee Membership Community waitlist Connect with Thea and the community: Follow on Instagram @thea.does.the.things and @cowgirlsovercoffee Follow on Facebook @cowgirlsovercoffee Make sure to hit subscribe/follow so you never miss a convo!
On this week's episode we have Scott Reeder who is a Prop Master for film and TV. Some of the projects he has worked on have been "Pitch Perfect", "American Crime", "Walker" and many many more. Tune in as he talks about how he comes up with ideas for props that are needed for filming as well as going viral on Tiktok and how he deals with it.Show NotesScott Reeder on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/scottpropandroll/Scott Reeder on IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1048397/Scott Reeder on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@scottpropandrollFree Writing Webinar - https://michaeljamin.com/op/webinar-registration/Michael's Online Screenwriting Course - https://michaeljamin.com/courseFree Screenwriting Lesson - https://michaeljamin.com/freeJoin My Watchlist - https://michaeljamin.com/watchlistAutogenerated TranscriptScott Reeder:Well, part of it, I felt like a little bit of imposter syndrome. Like, well, what? I don't really deserve these accolades because I'm just doing, I'm just not doing anything that great. I didn't think, and I was like, well, how can I keep this up? I'm going to run out of stuff to talk about.Michael Jamin:Yes,Scott Reeder:But I've been able to just, I just keep going. I've always come up with, so you're listening to, what the hell is Michael Jamin talking about? I'll tell you what I'm talking about. I'm talking about creativity. I'm talking about writing, and I'm talking about reinventing yourself through the arts.Michael Jamin:Okay. Hey everyone, it's Michael Jamin. Welcome to the Michael Jamin Jam. Today I'm jamming with Mr. Scott Reeder, and who the hell is he? I'll tell you who he is. This guy is a prop master on a bunch of movies and TV shows, and I don't know him personally, but I've been following him for a very long time, and he's actually also a talker. So Scott, I'm so inspired by what you do, and I'm opening up my podcast. I'm spending the next couple of sessions talking to, I usually talk about screenwriters and I interview TV writers and people like that, but I also want to open up to people who are doing interesting creative things and social media, and you are for sure one of them. So thank you for coming on my show, dude.Scott Reeder:Oh, thanks for having me.Michael Jamin:I'm excited. I'm excited too, because I've worked obviously with a lot of prop masters and you post a lot on social media, and honestly, I don't know, 99% of what you do. I'm like, oh, that's how they do it. I have no idea you guys are magicians, because to be truthful, I'm not supposed to notice what you guys do. That's the whole point. When you bring a prop on set, I'm not supposed to see if it's a gag or a gimmick or anything. It's supposed to look real. So I just said, oh, that must be real, and you expose on your TikTok channel how all this is done. It is absolutely fascinating. Everything you put out,Scott Reeder:Well, it could be a scene in a burger joint with a guy taking one bite out of a burger, and I would've to have like 30 hamburgers. So it's those little things no one thinks about,Michael Jamin:But there's also a crossover a lot of people don't think about is what you do, what set decoration does. There's a whole, okay, for example, if you have a scene and the horse is on set and a horse takes a dump, that set deck, or is that propsScott Reeder:Nowadays? I believe the animal Wrangler would probably do it.Michael Jamin:There's arguing over set over who's going to do that, right?Scott Reeder:Oh, yeah. Oh yeah. There's always, well, I mean, not always arguing, but what I try to do is when I do my breakdown of a script is make contact with everyone involved with every gag or every scene and make sure, okay, am I doing this or you? And that's typically what I say it up to them and say, do you want me to do this? I'm totally cool with doing it, and that's the way I'm not coming off. I'm trying toMichael Jamin:ItScott Reeder:Off. Right,Michael Jamin:Not keep your head, but now, how did you get in? Because you've done, I should run through some of your credits. I'll just go through a you pitch. Perfect. Walker, Texas Ranger, machete, machete, machete. You've some great, the list goes on and on. How did you get into this and why?Scott Reeder:Well, I always wanted to work in media and communications of some sort. Oh, gosh. I'll try to keep it brief. I was going to the University of North Texas in 19 88, 89, and there happened to be a movie filming in town. It was called Daddy's Dying, who's got the will written by a playwright named Dale Shores,Starred Beau Bridges, Beverly DeAngelo, and I found out that there were filming at a hospital. I just showed up. But yeah, I just started picking up trash on set and working as the lowest rung non-paid production assistant. It was 1989, so it was a long time ago, and then I, it's all about networking. It's all about getting your foot in the door. Then I interned at a film at the North Texas Film Commission, which was great because we'd get scripts from producers they wanted, and I got to read 'em early on in the process. I was the guy that would go out and take pictures of, it could be a prison or restaurants, just locations to try to draw producers into our neck of the woods.Michael Jamin:Interesting.Scott Reeder:Yeah, so that's how I kind of got my start.Michael Jamin:So tell me, when you start doing props and you have to make whatever puke or you have come up with all sorts of inventive ways, especially with food, to make something look so it doesn't melt or it doesn't go bad, or you did something with a stick of butter yesterday, you had fake butter, so it doesn't melt onset. How do you come up with this? How do you're like a magician? How do you come up with these, basically you're an inventor. How do you invent all these things to make it look like butter or whatever?Scott Reeder:Well, we break down the script. We come up with, we get with every episode, we will have, as you know, you have directors meeting and typically the writers are involved on that and all the concept, and then I know what they're expecting of me, and I'll go from there and I'll just call around. I've got a lot of connections, a lot of friends that if I haven't jumped that particular hurdle, I have friends that have. So that's just kind of how,Michael Jamin:Really, okay, so it's word of mouth. How do you, that's it. ThenScott Reeder:If I were in LA I would be hiring a food stylist,Michael Jamin:ButScott Reeder:There's not enough. There may, there are some commercial food stylists in Dallas. I'm in Austin. There really aren't many people here for that. So we have to really up our food game as prop master, an assistant prop master and prop assistant.Michael Jamin:Then how do you, because we were talking earlier, you're based out of Austin, and I was like, I just assumed. So all your work is basically local and you get enough work locally?Scott Reeder:I work locally when I can.Michael Jamin:Is that most of the time though, isn'tScott Reeder:It? But occasionally I'll have to travelMichael Jamin:Occasionally, right?Scott Reeder:Yeah. I did Nosferatu for AMC in Rhode Island, and so when things get slow here in town, I'll travel on. I did a movie in Mississippi in 2019.Michael Jamin:And how do you get most of your work? You don't have an agent getting you work, do you?Scott Reeder:No. Word of mouth. It's just relationships I've built with producers and word of mouth.Michael Jamin:So how does that work basically when it's like, how do you know when it's time to, oh, there's nothing going on in Austin. Do you give it a couple of weeks, a couple of months? What do you doScott Reeder:Typically? Hopefully I have a job lined up and we try to play on a few months ahead. If not, it's just wait around. Now what I do, Michael, is I'll fill in as art director on commercials.Michael Jamin:Oh, really? Okay.Scott Reeder:So actually I'm lined up for one starting next week, and I haven't been that fortunate with commercials through the strike because when the actors went on strike, even though companies can still make commercials, they're holding back on their campaigns right now.Michael Jamin:Why is that, do you think?Scott Reeder:I don't know, but there's, there's definitely been a slowdown. Interesting. Now, part of that could be the Texas heat. I don't know, but it's definitely slower than normal. But yes, I would try to line jobs up at a time. I'll call around, let some people know that I'm available, but a lot of people know me will say, oh, Scott shows ending soon. I'll give him a call. That sort of thing. It's a very small community.Michael Jamin:I bet. Do you prefer to work in TV or film?Scott Reeder:My bread and has been television. I like both. If I go through a full season of television and I have enough time between seasons or it's a picture wrap of a show, I like filling in with features.Michael Jamin:What is the difference for you between the two?Scott Reeder:It's a big difference. It doesn't move nearly as fast.Michael Jamin:Yeah,Scott Reeder:BecauseMichael Jamin:You're not doing as many pages a day.Scott Reeder:Correct. You might do two or three pages a day.Michael Jamin:Yeah,Scott Reeder:It's just a whole different animal really. If I'm doing a television show, I'm not on set as much in Perpetual Prep. I'm always working on the next script, and if it's a feature, I will prepped it ahead of time and on set, and I'm more hands-on at camera and whatnot, how many, which I like that part of it.Michael Jamin:People don't realize that when a prop is required on set, you'll have backups and backups for the backups. That's the worst thing that has happened. If something goes wrong, the one gets yelled at.Scott Reeder:Oh, correct. Yes. We always try to have multiples. Now there are those items that are one of a kind, and you just got to cross your fingers, pray and let everyone know, Hey, this is the, oh, don't play with this. Between takes. It's the only one we got, but that's rare. We typically have multiples of everything.Michael Jamin:How many multiples is enough, do you think?Scott Reeder:Yeah, it just depends on the scene. I like to have at least bare minimum two. If it's an item that's involved in a stunt, you'll want to have four. Food scenes are crazy because it's hard to determine, because a lot of times the actor might improvise and eat a lot more than you think.Michael Jamin:SoScott Reeder:I always go overboard on food scenes.Michael Jamin:But they give you a budget. I mean, they also say they don't want you to waste. How do you know they don't want you to come up with too much? Because then they're paying for that.Scott Reeder:Yeah. Well, the first couple, if we're talking about television, the first couple episodes or when you kind of feel it out, you'll buy heavier.Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:Then my assistant will call and say, Hey, you got way too much last time. Dial it back, this particular director. And we get to where we know how the directors work. You'll have one director that'll do six takes another director two, and moving on. So you get to where you understand the personalities of everybody and how they work and how they operate. Well, this particular person, the last food scene they went through a lot. So we'll get a lot.Michael Jamin:Now, do you prefer low budget or high budget, or does that not make a difference to you?Scott Reeder:Well, I prefer a bigger budget,Michael Jamin:Really,Scott Reeder:To be honest. Yeah, it's a lot of times if you're working on a no budget feature or a really ultra basic cable show, I'm not going to name names, but they, they literally give you pennies and you're trying, it's just so much harder when you could just go buy something than have to scrounge it or limit your amount of takes because of the budget or limited amount of props you have for a take.Michael Jamin:Now here in LA there's tons of prop houses. I mean, what do you do when you're shooting in an area that doesn't have houses? Does Austin have any good prop houses?Scott Reeder:What you do is you open up a prop house. That's what I did 20 years ago. I opened up a little prop shop. It's not near the scale of the Los Angeles prop houses,Michael Jamin:ButScott Reeder:I have a little bit of everything. It's kind ofMichael Jamin:The newest art. That's amazing. So it's just a warehouse and you rent out to other prop masters, not just yourself, but to other productions?Scott Reeder:Correct.Michael Jamin:Wow. AndScott Reeder:I actually rent all over the country. I just had a bunch of stuff come back from the Kevin Costner movie that was shooting in Utah.Michael Jamin:There's one prop house that's going out of business in la. They're having a fire sale, and I'm like, go get rid of that. That stuff is important.Scott Reeder:Well, hopefully one of the other, either history for hire or independent studio services or hand prop room will go in and get some of that stuff.Michael Jamin:And so do you specialize your prop specialize in something? No,Scott Reeder:Not really. I have a little bit of everything. I've got occupational props, a little bit of old West, some period stuff. I've got police gear, lots of military. I try to keep things that you can't find at Walmart, basically.Michael Jamin:Right. OrScott Reeder:Else the sub decorator will just go to Walmart, typically. So I specialize in harder to find things.Michael Jamin:Is that something, do most prop or many prop masters have their own prop houses, or is that something just yourScott Reeder:Not really. No. I was just the first to open one here. I think a lot of people will have prop trucks that they'll keep their kit on, and they'll have a general assemblage of props that they'll stock props that they'll bring to every, and they'll leave a portion of their truck empty for the hero props that they'll bring on some. I'm sure some have storage rooms, storage facilities, somewhereMichael Jamin:WhereScott Reeder:They store things.Michael Jamin:Well, this explains to me, it seems like a very entrepreneurial in spirit, which explains to me, or maybe it doesn't, but how you started on this TikTok journey that you've been on, because this is very interesting what you do.Scott Reeder:Well, it's totally accidental. During the early days of the pandemic, my daughter was scrolling on TikTok. She was 17 at the time, and she's laughing at some videos. So I'm like, what you laughing at? That sort of thing. So I downloaded it and I saw some people attempting to tell dad jokes, and I'm thinking, well, I can do that,Michael Jamin:And you can, you're good at it.Scott Reeder:And with some that I'd written or taking really old jokes and adding punchlines to 'em, it was just fun. It was a fun hobby during that time where there was no, where the whole industry was shut down. And I got back on the Amazon show that I was on called Panic, and one of my assistants, I can't remember which one it was, but they said, Hey man, what we do is interesting. What if you work in some prop stuff?Michael Jamin:ItScott Reeder:Might be interesting. So I was very careful because you want to be careful not to interfere with any NDA you may have signed. So I just kept things up in the lockup. I didn't go out on set. I just started, here's a breakaway beer bottle, this is what it's made out of, and this is how we safely break it. Boom.Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:That's how it started, just breaking crap on my head, and it just went from there. Of course, the one that took off was silent props, which was pool balls. And I had, of course, I thought everybody did this, but apparently not.Michael Jamin:No,Scott Reeder:I wasn't aware of that. Prop masters.Michael Jamin:Go on. Yeah.Scott Reeder:Well, they were painted.Michael Jamin:Right. I'll explain just people listening. So when you have a scene on a pool table in the background, you don't want to hear the clinking of the balls, so you don't use pool balls. Instead, you useScott Reeder:Go ahead. Painted racket balls.Michael Jamin:Painted racket balls, and they're about the same size.Scott Reeder:Exactly. Yeah.Michael Jamin:And is this something that all prop Masters know, or did you just figure this out?Scott Reeder:Well, it was accidental back way back on necessary roughness. The original back early nineties football movie, we had a bar scene, and for stunts, we painted racket. We had a football player landing on a pool table. Right. So we had all these painted racket balls, but well, we realized, oh, they don't make noise, so that's helpful too. So that's kind of how it started. It was, yeah, because stump prop,Michael Jamin:People don't realize when you shoot a movie or a TV show, you don't want noise in the background. So you'll later impose put in that noise, the set is quiet, and then you wind up putting in the noise. For some reason, it seems so silly, but that's how it works.Scott Reeder:The sound mixer, Michael, I don't know if you probably know this, but if we're filming in a kitchen,Michael Jamin:OrScott Reeder:Especially in an industrial kitchen in a restaurant, I don't know how the people on the bear do it, because you got to go in and unplug everything. You got to unplug anything that has a compressor,Michael Jamin:Right. It mightScott Reeder:Make noiseMichael Jamin:Or,Scott Reeder:Which has boned me a few times because I have stuff stored in a refrigerator and the sound mixer is like, oh, we got to unplug that. And I'm like, yeah, yeah,Michael Jamin:Right. So now you've got to bring a backup fridge.Scott Reeder:But everything shoes, the sound mixer has what they call mold scan and they'll put it on the bottom of people's shoes. Yeah. What else? There's all kinds of stuff. I spoiled the crew of the show that I've been working on because once they saw my videos, they were like, well, well, do you have silent pinging pong balls? And I'm like, well, I can figure it out.Michael Jamin:Alright, so what's silent ping pong call made out of?Scott Reeder:I just found foam balls on Amazon and painted them,Michael Jamin:But itScott Reeder:Was that simple. I just measured them.Michael Jamin:But the paint has to, it has to have a sheen. It can't just look crappy. It really has to look real.Scott Reeder:Yeah. Well, pinging pong balls are kind of more satin. They're not glossy,Michael Jamin:SoScott Reeder:You just do just a satin gloss on 'em once you put your paint on. And yeah, they turned out pretty good.Michael Jamin:That's amazing.Scott Reeder:But yeah, the first video I did we're talking, it was 2020. I had garnered about a hundred thousand followers on TikTok, strictly on dad jokes.Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:Then I did this one video with the silent pool balls and the silent grocery bags, because grocery bags are a big deal. You know how noisy paper grocery bags are, and I came up with this joke as I was filming and I was like, should I do this joke? It was at the end of it, I took the pool balls and put 'em in the paper sack and said, and now the sound man is not annoyed with my ball sack.Michael Jamin:ThatScott Reeder:Was the joke. And I filmed it and I'm like, should I leave the joke in? I was really torn. I was like, yeah, I'll leave the joke. And I signed off my phone. I got in my car, I had about a 30 minute drive home, and I stopped at a convenience store and looked at my phone and it was already up to, I mean, we're talking in half an hour. It had like 20,000 likes,Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:It was insane. That one went up. That one got over 12 million views.Michael Jamin:That's really a lot. And did it make you nervous when it first happened?Scott Reeder:Oh yes.Michael Jamin:Okay. Let's talk about why.Scott Reeder:Well, the thing is I'm, I've never been social media savvy. I've never been that dialed into it. I did have an Instagram account, but I maybe had a hundred followersMichael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:Somebody at work said, Hey, hey, Scott, when are you going to post on Instagram? I was like, well, I don't know. My hands are full with TikTok. And they were like, well, dude, how did you get so many followers? And I looked at Instagram and it was at like 10,000.Michael Jamin:I wasScott Reeder:Like, oh, geez. So I've been kind of forced into branching out to other platforms when I've already kind of got my hands full because all this, I'd say 75% of my content has been done while I'm also pulling a 12 hour day on a TV show. So it's a lot.Michael Jamin:People don't realize it's a lot because, but there's a lot to talk about here. I'm very interested because first of all, you have something like 1.7, I think million followers on TikTok, which is huge. And this is only how many, two or three years you're doing this?Scott Reeder:May of 2000, may of 2020 is when I started, but I started slowMichael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:Then got into, then I guess it would be, I'd say July of 2020 is where I really started picking up. Yeah,Michael Jamin:But why did it make you nervous when you started going viral?Scott Reeder:Well, part of it, I felt like a little bit of imposter syndrome. Well, I don't really deserve these accolades because I'm just doing justm, not doing anything that great. I didn't think, and I was like, well, how can I keep this up? I'm going to run out of stuff to talk about, but I've been able to just, I just keep going. I always come up with something.Michael Jamin:Right. What's the agreement you made with yourself? How many times a week do you post?Scott Reeder:I try to post at least four times a week.Michael Jamin:Okay.Scott Reeder:I can't knock. I wish I'm one of those I can't get. Early on, I was doing two a day, but it was justMichael Jamin:BurningScott Reeder:Me out, and I'm also trying to do stuff for YouTube and whatnot. So it's justMichael Jamin:Separate different content for YouTube?Scott Reeder:No, it's the same, but I'm trying to get, I'm filtering. I'm trying to work on some long form as well. But yeah, then YouTube. But like I said, I always feel like I get forced into other platforms. I found out in early 2021, there was a YouTube page. They had 90,000 subscribers. It was called the Prop Master. It was my profile picture and 40 of my videos.Michael Jamin:Oh, you're kidding. What'd you do?Scott Reeder:I went and I did copyright claim on every, I stayed up all night, copyright claiming every video. How did youMichael Jamin:Prove it?Scott Reeder:I sent links to my account because for that, they were just taking them off of TikTok, so I sent links to my TikTok. I sent direct links so they could easily see the date it's dated.Michael Jamin:I cut you off. Were you about to say you hired a lawyer?Scott Reeder:I hired a lawyer just in case, but luckily the person ceased and desist. They immediately pulled all the videos down, changed the name of the channel, how Find though Away did, what's that?Michael Jamin:I'm sorry, I cut you off. They walked away with what?Scott Reeder:They walked away with all the subscribers. There's no way to get those subscribers back, which really pissed me off.Michael Jamin:What was the name of the page though? Were they using your name?Scott Reeder:No, they weren't. It was just called the Prop Master, but it was my profile pictureMichael Jamin:Off ofScott Reeder:TikTok and it was all my videos. AndMichael Jamin:How did you find them? Discover them.Scott Reeder:You know something? There's another creator named Garden Marcus. He's a gardener on TikTok, and his manager reached out to me and said, Hey, this person has been made a fake account on YouTube. So they reached out to me to warn me. They said, it looks like this guy's doing your content too.Michael Jamin:Hey, it's Michael Jamin. If you like my content and I know you do because you're listening to me, I will email it to you for free. Just join my watch list. Every Friday I send out my top three videos of the week. These are for writers, actors, creative types, people like you can unsubscribe whenever you want. I'm not going to spam you, and the price is free. You got no excuse to join. Go to michaeljamin.com and now back to, what the hell is Michael Jamin talking about?This happens to me all the time, not on YouTube, but you must have 'em too. You have fake accounts with your profile picture. They spell your name wrong with one letter, and they're just trying to scam people. I guess. I'm not sure what the point is.Scott Reeder:I don't know. But yeah, I bet there's six or eight on TikTok. It happened to me again just about, I found out about it three weeks ago on Facebook. I never have had I've, like I said, I've always had my hands full with Instagram and TikTok and YouTube, and I always keep saying, well, I'm going to eventually branch out. I had made a Facebook, a Scott Prop roll Facebook page and posted some videos back in 2022. I didn't, but I didn't get any views, so I gave up on it and then I found out I looked and this, I just happened upon it. I just did a search to see if there were any fake accounts on Facebook, and sure enough, this person made a Facebook page, said, Scott Prop and Roll spelled exactly the same. They've got 69 now, now 70,000 followers. So I always take that as a challenge. I'm like, okay, well boom, I'm going to start posting my videos. And of course then you get a little let down because they don't get any views then. But it's the same thing as with YouTube. Same exact thing with the algorithm. It's like you post about 20 videos and you got nothing, and a few weeks later, things start kicking in.Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:So I've played massive catch up. I haven't quite caught up with the fake me, but I'm close to the fake Me is at 70,000. I just hit 60,000. But areMichael Jamin:You going to try to take down the fake account on Facebook?Scott Reeder:I did. I reported it, and they came back with, we can't take down fan pages, so I've just got to keep at it.Michael Jamin:But it's not a fan page though.Scott Reeder:No, it's not. It's definitely not. People don't realize how frustrating this is Michael. My mom was following the fake.Michael Jamin:True. Now, people don't realize the amount of work that goes into this. The night before, I've had to post five times a week the night before. I'm like, oh, crap. What am I going to talk about tomorrow? Do you get the same thing? How much thought goes into the night before?Scott Reeder:Well, I just have a list anytime I get an idea, because I'm real bad about not writing stuff down, but I've gotten a lot better, especially with doing content, is I just keep a running list and the night before I'll look at that list and if I haven't already fleshed it out already, and then I'llMichael Jamin:Come up with, the thing is, your content is very family friendly. What you do is very interesting. Like I said, it's like watching a magician, and yet I can't imagine why someone would troll you, and yet I'm certain people troll you because people are jerks or do they not?Scott Reeder:I've been really lucky it hasn't been that bad. Yeah, there've been the occasional, and typically it's like if someone gets mad at me about something, which I really don't give people much reason to be mad atMichael Jamin:Me.Scott Reeder:The first thing that they said is they call me old man, and it's like whatever's like, okay, now what? I'm an old man on TikTok that probably has more followers than you, is what I'm thinking in my head, but I never sayMichael Jamin:It. Right. So you don't respond in any way to these people?Scott Reeder:I do not. I do not. I watched way too many people respond. There are some accounts out there that are more kind of vlog and they eat that up that gives them content.Michael Jamin:It'sScott Reeder:Like if someone says something snarky to 'em, they jump on it and they'll make six different videos about a guy that talked bad to him. That's just not my style.Michael Jamin:Engage with, you must have super fans too. Do you engage with them?Scott Reeder:Yeah, I try to.Michael Jamin:Okay. Yeah. You like a little, so every comment or some comments, because it can be overwhelming. You have a huge following.Scott Reeder:Well, I will keep my eyeballs on the comments on a video for a few days, but yeah, you can't keep up with it.Michael Jamin:Yeah,Scott Reeder:Once it's been posted over a week.Michael Jamin:Okay, but youScott Reeder:Do try toMichael Jamin:Respond. See, that's something I'm troubled with is then I'm spending way too much time on the app. The problem is, and I appreciate all the kind comments, but I'm like, how much time am I going to spend on this thing?Scott Reeder:Now?Michael Jamin:Are you monetizing any of this?Scott Reeder:I've recently been trying with the TikTok beta. Have you done creativity beta?Michael Jamin:So what is that?Scott Reeder:That's been the best thing. It's the most profitable because TikTok, I was on the, since 2020 on the creator was the standard creator plan,Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:It's more like if you do a 61 second or more video, the payoff is almost like a YouTube long form. It's really good.Michael Jamin:So you are actually okay, because I haven't done it yet, and I thought they may actually decrease my reach if they have to pay you. I thought my mind is they might punish you.Scott Reeder:To be honest, my reach went up on the longer videos.Michael Jamin:How long do you usually go?Scott Reeder:What's that?Michael Jamin:When you say longer? Longer than what, like three minutes or four minutes? What do youScott Reeder:No, I do 61 seconds.Michael Jamin:That's long to you is 61 seconds.Scott Reeder:Well, yeah. I mean that's long to them. As you do over 60 seconds,Michael Jamin:It'sScott Reeder:A whole different payment structure. It ranges anywhere from 70 cents per thousand to a dollar, 16 per thousand views. Just that adds up.Michael Jamin:It adds up. Right. So you're not doing this for the money, but it's nice to get the money.Scott Reeder:Correct,Michael Jamin:Yeah.Scott Reeder:Especially during a strike.Michael Jamin:Yeah, for sure. Okay, so it's significant, but now, was there a moment though when you just wanted to stop or quit or?Scott Reeder:Well, there are times where I feel burnout, that's for sure.Michael Jamin:Yeah.Scott Reeder:But I've always just kept grinding.Michael Jamin:What have been some surprising advantages that have come from this that you would not have guessedScott Reeder:Michael? Number one, I want to say you've had the best questions out of any podcasts I've been on.Michael Jamin:Really?Scott Reeder:You really do. You reallyMichael Jamin:EnjoyScott Reeder:This? So really the coolest thing to come out of it is, okay, I hate to do this. I got to go back a little bit. I was worried when I first started doing these videos that other masters in Los Angeles would think, who does this guy think he is telling them how we do our job?Michael Jamin:Yes.Scott Reeder:So I was worried. So I was kind of waiting to see if there was going to be any backlash. Well, I got a call from a prop master named Peter Clark, and he said, Hey man, I just want to let you know I've been watching your videos and I'm learning from your videos, and I really want to tell you I appreciate what you're doing. I kept, thisMichael Jamin:Is a word respected prop master that you looked up to.Scott Reeder:Yes.Michael Jamin:Wow. Go on. Yeah, go on. I cut you off. So I'm sorry.Scott Reeder:I had so many questions, and then I got other calls stating the same thing. Then next thing, I was invited to be a founding member of the Property Master's Guild, which it's similar to, it's not a labor union, it's similar to the Art Director's Guild or the Set Decorators Association, something like that. But there had never been one. And I came in before we opened the doors to the Guild. Here I am a guy in Texas on a founding group of prop masters. And it was,Michael Jamin:Isn't that amazing?Scott Reeder:It was truly a pinnacle of my career, really being just the biggest honor is having other prop masters that I've been idolizing for years. I just went to in July. So because of the rider's strike, all the prop trucks were parked at Independent Studio services, which is the biggest prop house in la. And so I flew out for the, we were going to have a tailgate party, and every prop master, if you were a prop master and you were in la, you were at this party. And we had prop masters coming in from Canada all over the place. And it was the funnest event. It was just absolutely amazing. But I've got to meet the guy that prop mastered Patton was there, all these retired prop masters were there. The guy that was Dennis Parrish, who was also the founder of one of the big prop houses, bill Petrada, who did Starship Troopers. Well, movie's going way back. But yeah,Michael Jamin:You must've been a little bit of a celebrity there must. Everyone recognized you.Scott Reeder:It was a little weird, but I felt I was gotten used.Michael Jamin:Got used to that. And so you were worried at first of being judged. And then of course that's not, I mean, that's just a lesson in and of itself. Everyone's worried about being judged about being an imposter, and now that's not what happened. But to be fair, you were staying in your lane. This is what you know, and you're talking about what you know. And so it is kind of like this unfounded fear. You didn't need to be worried, but tell me about what happens to you because it's a little bit the same thing when I'm walking on strike at the picket line at the writer's strike, I get recognized. Where else else would I get recognized? If not on a picket line on the rider's strike, that's where I would. So it is a little what happens to you when people, but you have a huge following. You must get recognized outside of these circles as well. Maybe at the supermarket, whereverScott Reeder:I have, I haven't gotten used to it. I mean, it doesn't happen all the time, but occasionally.Michael Jamin:And then what's your way of handling this?Scott Reeder:Well, typically they just say, Hey, can I get a selfie? And I'll take a picture with them, and that's it. Thanks for watching my videos right'sMichael Jamin:Funny. It's really crazy. Yeah, it's a trip. Because yeah, you're in their lives every day. They see you every day, and you're somebody special to them, and you are. You're making them laugh in 61 second increments so that you can get your payout. Now, I know when I watch your videos that I will never see one that's 59 seconds becauseScott Reeder:You're true. Not anymore.Michael Jamin:You'll stretch that to 61 to get your payday.Scott Reeder:I will. I went back and I posted an old video that I'd done that I thought, I bet there's probably a lot of my followers that haven't seen it. And it was 59, it was 59 seconds. I went back and I always do my head turn. Now I always do my head turn at the end. I'll say my stupid joke, and then I'll ponder it. So I just slow mode my head turn.Michael Jamin:How much time will you spend on a post? I have a rule that How much time will you spend on a post producing a post?Scott Reeder:I don't time it. And they're all different because some of them, I'm doing commentary because I've done well, kind of dueting videos that I find on Instagram, typically other filmmaking videos, because I branched out a little bit to where if I see that there's no one's doing videos, discussing a poor man's process show, they'll show it, but they won't tell the audience what's going on. So they're limiting their audience, right? Like, oh, well, this is strictly for filmmakers,Michael Jamin:ButScott Reeder:When I started, I'm like, well, what they're doing here is this and this. So the prop man is over here shaking the car, and then the gaffer is spinning a light. And I just say, what all is happening in this shot?Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:Those videos have done well.Michael Jamin:Oh, for sure. Yeah, for sure.Scott Reeder:Same with stunt people. You know what I've had to worry with though, is the dangerous content violation. Because even if you're showing a clipMichael Jamin:OfScott Reeder:A stunt from a, it could be die hard. It actually happened to me on Die HardMichael Jamin:WhenScott Reeder:I was talking about rubber glass, that that's what they walk on. And it got a sensitive content page slapped on top of it, which totally, it just pulls you off the FYP. It's just like you might as well not have even posted it.Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:So I've got to be real careful about, because even in their community guidelines, they have added in there, even fictional violence. Interesting. So if it's a movie clip, yeah.Michael Jamin:See, the problem with what I have to do to go viral, I have to piss people off, which I'm not comfortable doing. You have see something controversial, but you don't really have to worry about, I think you just go viral when something's truly interesting that blows people away. The secrets that you reveal. Well,Scott Reeder:Like I said, I'm doing that because I did a joke, it was mainly a dad joke, but I incorporated, it was about a rubber cinder block where I show that the cinder block is rubber. And I said, we use these to keep the actors from getting hurt. And I threw it at my assistant and it hits him in the head,Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:Then the camera goes to me. I'm just doing it all like this with my hand. And then off camera, he just nails me with it. At the end, after I tell the horrible punchline to the joke, he nails me with it. And I put in this, I folded in, which I like. I love doing, I'm an amateur Foley guy. I love taking the props that I have and trying to make sounds to him. Just loony tune stuff over the top. ButMichael Jamin:In the app, it's actually hard to do that in the app. You're talking about editing sounds in the app? No.Scott Reeder:Yeah. I rarely edit in the app.Michael Jamin:Where do you edit? What do you use?Scott Reeder:I just use in shop. It's an app that I found that way. I'm not dealing with watermarks, and I'll just kind,Michael Jamin:It's called in shop.Scott Reeder:Yeah, I-N-S-H-O-T in shop.Michael Jamin:I'll write this down.Scott Reeder:And I think I pay maybe 99 bucks a year, but it's been worth it. Every penny and its tools are easier for me anyway. So to do, because when you do a vocal, well, it says voiceover, but you record your sound, you can move it around a lot easier.Michael Jamin:Yeah, because a real, and then you add, when you upload it to TikTok, then you add the big captions. Is that how you or you add Well,Scott Reeder:Sometimes off the, I'll put 'em in. The ones in InShot kind of match the ones TikTok has.Michael Jamin:Maybe not,Scott Reeder:But it's worth giving it a shot. How funny. But that's just what I've been comfortable with.Michael Jamin:Interesting. And you don't use because there's cap cup, you, you don't like that?Scott Reeder:I haven't.Michael Jamin:You haven't tried it?Scott Reeder:I haven't really tried it that much.Michael Jamin:See, I'm interested in whatever's the easiest. That's why I've been using shooting and TikTok and then uploading the Instagram only. It's just laziness. It's just like the less I can do, the better. But maybe your way might be better. Might be easier. I might have to look into this.Scott Reeder:It's worth trying. It's a pretty easy to navigate. That's why I did it was because it was easier. It was easier to navigate, I thought, than TikTok. But yeah, I just haven't gotten into cap cut.Michael Jamin:Right. Oh, interesting. So I'm learning something today. And so has this helped you professionally? I mean, it's nice to be recognized by your peers, but is it getting you work?Scott Reeder:Not really, because I've kind of been on the same gig. It's like when the strike's over, I've got a series. I've got a season four ofThe show that I was working on. And so yeah, I mean, it's been, the coolest thing is showing people, and it's really a lot of kids out there. My audience is 18 to 34, probably similar to your audience. I think we probably have a lot of the same age range. It's people learning, oh wow, I didn't know that profession existed. And ooh, this is a possibility for me. Showing them that it's out there and everyone wants to know, well, how do I get in the business? And I know you get that question probably 10 times more than I get it. And you just got to be tenacious and proactive. And if there are no films shooting where you live and you want to be on a film crew, you move to somewhere that makes movies and TV shows. And it doesn't have to be just LA anymore. It could be Atlanta, it could be la Atlanta, Vancouver, North Carolina, new Orleans or New Mexico has a pretty good, you could make a living.Michael Jamin:Now we talked about a little bit about imposter syndrome, but was there a moment, even when, for me, in the beginning it was like, who am I? Isn't this AP just for teenage girls who might evenScott Reeder:Be talking,Michael Jamin:Who cares about me? How did you feel that way? And are you over that?Scott Reeder:Yeah, I think I'm kind of over it. You get to where it really thickens your skin a bit. You get to where, because some people are, like you said, there are those trolls that it doesn't matter who you are, they're going to go after. I did have one scary situation where have you dealt with any kind of stalker situations?Michael Jamin:No. And I hope I never do. What was your story? WhatScott Reeder:Would you do? Well, I'm trying to be vague about it, but there was a guy got ahold of my cell phone number and was just blowing it up and then texting, leaving long messages, and I didn't call back because he didn't sound something wasn't right. And these text messages that I got worried me and I went so far as to go into, luckily with the show I was working on, I was friends with the HR lady and said, Hey, what do you, I was like, Hey, I know you've got to deal with that. Some of the actorsMichael Jamin:HaveScott Reeder:This happen. What do you do?Michael Jamin:What'd she tell you?Scott Reeder:And I just really, it was almost like dealing with a troll in the sense that it got to the point where there were profane messages left because of my not responding.Michael Jamin:Yes.Scott Reeder:But eventually it ended, eventually it ended. It went on for a year, a year and a half.Michael Jamin:Oh my. But you didn't take any, first of all, why didn't you block them?Scott Reeder:I did. And they called back from a different number every time. Every time they called, it was a different number.Michael Jamin:And eventually they just got bored. You're saying?Scott Reeder:I'm hoping.Michael Jamin:Yeah, just a nightmare.Scott Reeder:It really was. It was. I mean, we're talking calls at 11:00 AM 11:00 PM 2:00 AMMichael Jamin:What does your family think about all this?Scott Reeder:Well, that kind of stuff. I tried to not really worry them too much that it was happening. I mean, my wife, I told, but no, the family's great. They, they're loving it.Michael Jamin:They get kick it. Your kids are not embarrassed that dad's doing this. I think it's cool. They thinkScott Reeder:It's cool. No, my son eats it up. He is 12, almost 13. And this is kind of a funny, I accidentally made him a meme. I'll tell you what, three years ago, I didn't know what the word mean meant. So that's how backward I'm, so I did a video again with the rubber cinder block saying I was making a joke that when you're a prop master, you can't p prank your kids anymore because they're desensitized to any impending doom. And so I said, Hey, Watson, my son's going by on a scooter, and it was all staged.Michael Jamin:And IScott Reeder:Had him go by on the scooter. I say, Hey, Watson, cinder block. And I throw the cinder block and he doesn't even flinch. He just keeps moving. It bounces off of him. Right? Well, a year later, someone and the video did okay. It was pretty well received, but I wouldn't say super viral or anything, but someone took that three second snippet of me saying, Hey, Watson cinder block. And they froze it right before the cinder block hits it and it blew up. I mean, right now, if you were to type in, Hey, Watson, it'll probably finish your sentence and say Cinder block, and you'll see hundreds of videos. And then people did like fan videos. I bet there are 15 different animations of it. And there's a game in Roblox called Item Asylum. And one of the most deadly weapons in item asylum is the cinder block.Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:When you throw it, it's my voice saying, Hey, Watson, cinder block. Never got a penny for it. But I think it's funny. That's a trip. My son was very proud.Michael Jamin:Oh, that'sScott Reeder:A trick. Yeah. And then every YouTuber, I'm talking, the top YouTubers were like Wilbur Soot and Jimmy here. And a lot of these big gamer YouTubers were, there was the trend where they were doing the, you laugh, you lose videos. And that meme was in every, you laugh, you lose videoMichael Jamin:OutScott Reeder:There.Michael Jamin:Now you mentioned that you've done a lot of, I guess, podcast interviews. Who's reaching out to you to try to have you on their, and why? What's that about?Scott Reeder:Well, I've done, a lot of times it's other talkers starting podcasts. I did film festival. I did a film festival podcast last week. Prop, the Prop Masters Guild has a podcast. I did that one, but I did, Erin, what's her name? Erin McGough is her name. And she's a documentary filmmaker.Michael Jamin:IScott Reeder:Can't remember the name of her podcast, but she's got one. I don't know. I've done quite a few now. I'm trying to remember 'em all. There have been just general podcasters out there that are just kind of general all purpose. They just go on topical things. I will say this, you know what I avoided was when rust happened, I got a ton of costs.Michael Jamin:I betScott Reeder:I got a ton of costs. And I kind of talked it over with my friend who's a line producer and was like, man, I don't know if I feel comfortable taking these calls. A prop master, not an armor. However, we are the ones a lot of times that hire the armors. And I was like, so basically I turned down every interview because I didn't really want to get defined by that.Michael Jamin:You didn't want to wait, I would think. Okay, so you didn't want to wade into the controversy and you didn't want to, what else? I mean, obviously it was a tragedy.Scott Reeder:Yes. I just didn't want to capitalize on it.Michael Jamin:You didn't want to capitalize on it. Right. That's what it was.Scott Reeder:Plus tie yourself to that. So if you're on CN and every major network talking about it, then you got to get connected to that. And I really didn't want to be connected to it in any way. I did one, I did a TikTok, like a three minute one talking about a couple days after it, because so many of my followers were like, come on, Scott, you got to weigh in. So I weighed in on my TikTok and YouTube and just said, well, look, I waited until the sheriff's department had put out a statement to where we kind knew what they say the events were, because the first couple days they kind of kept it hush hush. And so I read the sheriff's statement and then based what I said on that was what the protocols were, these are what the protocols that we use, and they worked. They're good protocols. That's how we've kept people safe for many years. But they breached every protocol. They broke every ruleMichael Jamin:In the book, myScott Reeder:Personal opinion. And I just said, these are the protocols that we use and this is how they performed their duties. And this is, of course, resulting in,Michael Jamin:Never worked on a show, worked on a show. As far as I know, I've never worked on a show with weapons, with blanks. But we did do a show where we had a dummy gun. It was a rubber gun. And I remember having to talk with the ad saying, no, let's do a safety meeting. I want to make sure people know it's a fake gun and still treat it as if it's a real gun. But I don't want anybody being scared. Let's just talk about it Anyway, I don't know. I'm overly nervousScott Reeder:For sure. We always try to do safety meetings on that, even if we're using an airsoftMichael Jamin:OrScott Reeder:A rubber gun. But I've worked with, that's the whole thing, conventional blade fire. If you're working on a lot of action films, I've been around it for the last 30 years. I don't personally like to armor, to be an armor. I prefer prop master, and I'll always bring an armor on. So no, so I'm not losing focus,Michael Jamin:But it's certainly a different license. You have to have to be an armorerScott Reeder:In LA there,Michael Jamin:ButScott Reeder:There aren't a ton outside of la. It's just, it varies state to state.Michael Jamin:Right. And I canScott Reeder:See, so producers really have to do their due diligence and making sure that they really check the resume and do reference checks on the person they're going to hire. That's so important with that position.Michael Jamin:Well, for sure. But as with the stunt board, anybody like that, anyone where someone can get hurt for sure. And so I can see you actually not wanting to be, I guess, the face of that controversy. Is that what it was?Scott Reeder:Oh, yeah.Michael Jamin:Yeah.Scott Reeder:And I knew that there were other people that could weigh in a lot, be more informative than I could because I'm not a, not an armor room. And there are other people better suited for that. To me, there are several prop houses out of Los Angeles that have wonderful weapons departments. And if you think about it, I think I got it from New York Times. I think the number's this since 1990, I think it's 43 deaths have occurred on film sets in the us. And this isn't because there are a lot of other ones, but if you go worldwide, but the two of them were, well, Brandon Lee was one,Michael Jamin:Helina,Scott Reeder:Hutchins was other. Those are the only two firearms related, I mean, film sets are dangerous, especially if you're on an action show where there's a lot of vehicles. Most of those deaths were equipment related or from falls, people falling off of rigging motorcycle car, but not always stunt men. A lot of them were camera operatorsMichael Jamin:ThatScott Reeder:Got killed because they're mounted on those insert vehicles too. The camera department, they put themselves out there and put themselves in dangerous situations just as much as the stunt guys on occasion. So I have a lot of respect for all of 'em. But because it's firearms and it was a star that it's just, it really put us all prop and armor are folks under the magnifyingMichael Jamin:Lens. Yeah, right. That's interesting.Scott Reeder:So you just hope that it promotes positive change. If something's going to come out of it, that's what it'll be. It's just people more aware and because of that, hopefully it kept the worst accident from happening that would've happened. Right?Michael Jamin:Yeah. People also don't realize, because listen, I'm not on set a lot. I'm usually in the office writing, but when I'm on set, I'm like, oh my God, the crew, they work so hard. They work so hard for so long. And then at the end of the day, if you don't go over, let's say, sometimes you go over and then if you're out in the middle of the nowhere, you have to drive home or wherever you're driving to. And then you go home and you unwind, try to unwind for a second, fall asleep as fast as you can because you got to go back to work the next day. It's exhausting. It's a hard, it's not an easy life. The crew works hard.Scott Reeder:No, but that's where segue into Union standard policies before it was nine hour turnaround, which means from the time they call wrap or no, I think it's from the time that you shut your truck, when you actually physically leave, when you physically leave the base camp or theMichael Jamin:Set,Scott Reeder:And then you're supposed to get nine hours, nine hours isn't much nothing. Especially if you've got a 45 minute or anMichael Jamin:HourScott Reeder:Drive home.Michael Jamin:Right.Scott Reeder:So now I believe it's, I think it's pretty much a 10 hour turnaround across the board.Michael Jamin:But even that, it's like, but people don't understand. So you race home after your exhausted day and then whatever, brush your teeth or whatever, and you hope to fall asleep as fast as you can because you don't have enough. You can't waste time. And you don't know. It could be happening. Your day could end at three in the morning. You don't know what your day ends. You could have, it's true. It mean splits.Scott Reeder:What's rough is working on Robert Rodriguez stuff, troublemakers here in Austin, their studio, and I worked on a show called Planet Terror,Michael Jamin:AndScott Reeder:This was before Machete, but that movie was a hundred percent night shoot.Michael Jamin:I meanScott Reeder:Every bit of it to where I might've turned thatMichael Jamin:Down.Scott Reeder:Three months of working from 7:00 PM to 7:00 AM and a lot of those locations being remote, an hour plus drive.Michael Jamin:And you knew that going in though, and you still wanted to do it.Scott Reeder:Yeah, I'm older and wiser now. Michael,Michael Jamin:You might not have done it now, right? I'm not sure I'd want to take on it. It's a hard job working, being, yeah, the graveyards too.Scott Reeder:And the horror movies. Horror movies are tough.Michael Jamin:That's a good pointScott Reeder:On prop people, because typically they're very proppy. There's going to be a lot of weapons,Michael Jamin:Lot of, and it's going to be dark,Scott Reeder:And it's going to be dark,Michael Jamin:WhichScott Reeder:Is a lot harder to move around and get. It's easier to hide from camera, but that's about it.Michael Jamin:Yeah, that's about it. Wow. Scott, this is such an interesting conversation. I want to thank you so much for joining me today. I learned a lot. I want to tell everybody where they can follow you. So all your social media handles the same. Scott prop andScott Reeder:Roll, Scott prop and roll. Yeah, that's TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Facebook.Michael Jamin:Facebook and YouTube. But you said YouTube. Did you say YouTube and YouTube.Scott Reeder:Oh yeah.Michael Jamin:Okay. Go follow. It's such an interesting behind the scenes peak at, I don't know about the magic that goes and all the practical, which is so interesting. The practical, not the in-camera special effects, but the practical props and stuff. Wonderful. You have such an engaging channel, and thank you so much for putting it all out there. You're a great watch on TikTok and Instagram, so thank you again, Scott. What a pleasureScott Reeder:Having you. Well, I enjoy following you. I enjoy everything you do as well.Michael Jamin:Thank you, man. What a pleasure. Nice talking to you. All right, buddy. Thanks so much.So now we all know what the hell Michael Jamin is talking about. If you're interested in learning more about writing, make sure you register for my free monthly webinars @michaeljamin.com/webinar. And if you found this podcast helpful or entertaining, please share it with a friend and consider leaving us a five star review on iTunes that really, really helps. For more of this, whatever the hell this is, follow Michael Jamin on social media @MichaelJaminwriter. And you can follow Phil Hudson on social media @ PhilaHudson. This podcast was produced by Phil Hudson. It was edited by Dallas Crane and music was composed by Anthony Rizzo. And remember, you can have excuses or you can have a creative life, but you can't have both. See you next week.
Join CRUSH YOUR CONTENT and learn how to exactly how to Make Money from Social Media, and create content that you are obsessed with! Join NOW and START CRUSHING CONTENT TODAYWe're shimmying, shaking, and getting our content game on point. Today, we're all about face-to-camera videos – and trust me, they work wonders. With the stats to back it up, it's not just intuition. So, what's the deal? You're going to take your audience on a journey into your expertise.Start by looking at the camera, and say, "Come [blank] with me." Capture a few snippets, edit, and share them across platforms. It's all about showing, not just telling, and it pays off big time. Sales are booming.Steps:Start the video by saying, "Come [blank] with me" and inviting viewers to join in on your day.After the initial invitation, the host advises grabbing several short video clips of different moments during your day or work. These clips should showcase your skills, and your life, and they don't necessarily require spoken content.Edit the clips directly in the platform you're using (like TikTok) or using dedicated editing apps such as InShot or CapCut.The final step is to post the edited video on various social media platforms, including TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook.Connect with Sam on Instagram or TikTokCheck out all the CONTENT CREATION + SOCIAL MEDIA resources I have at THEGLITTER.ME
On this episode of Camera Ready & Abel the highly engaging Kim Rittberg teaches how to crack the code of creating social video that gets noticed. Because as Kim says, if you're hiding from the camera, you're hiding from clients. Kim's simple strategy is based on her Four Cs: Confidence Concise Consistency Creativity and she gives a big permission to let go of perfection, focus on value and don't get hung up on all the technology. Keep it simple with a ring light and a microphone and easy, user-friendly apps like CapCut and InShot - or outsource! Kim is a digital marketing strategist, social media and video expert, an on-camera media coach and public speaker with a proven track record and 500 million video views. Kim formerly launched and ran the video unit for US Weekly and is now the Founder & Principal at Henry Street Media which helps companies, individuals and publishers of all sizes expand their brand and maximize revenue through unforgettable content and communications. Learn more about Kim and her services and download her Top Ten Tips to Create Awesome Video at www.kimrittberg.com.
Bei den ganzen Tools für Selbstständige, Social Media und Online-Business hast Du den Überblick verloren? Geh mit mir in Tools durch den Tag, denn in dieser Folge teile ich alle Tools über den Tag mit Dir und wir steigen tiefer ein in die 5 Tools, die ich täglich nutze, nicht mehr missen möchte und ich verrate was sie mich kosten. Neugierig? Dann höre rein! Das sind die 10 Tools: (alles unbezahlte Werbung und ehrliche Empfehlungen) Outlook for mac Instagram, Facebook Notion Plann Kamera: Sony alpha 77i Phone: iPhone 14 adobe Lightroom Videos in 4k mit InShot, CapCut Calendly Rode - NT USB (Kondensatormikrophon) Podigee Zoom Loom Canva Pro Elementor, Wordpress sevdesk Headspace Wenn Dir die heutige Folge gefallen hat, teile sie auf Social Media oder mit einer Freundin. Und vergiss nicht den Podcast zu abonnieren, damit Du in Zukunft keine neue Folge mehr verpasst! Business ist so einfach, wie Du es machst. xo Deine Stina Ressourcen und Links: Du suchst das All-in-One-Packet für den Start in Deine Selbstständigkeit? Melde Dich für “[Erfolgreich Selbstständig](https://go.femschool.de/es/)“ an. Du willst ein strategisches Business mit mehreren Einkommensströmen aufbauen? Komme in meine [Mastermind](https://go.femschool.de/esm/) ! [Magnetische Kundenanziehung](https://go.femschool.de/magnetische-kundenanziehung/) - Dein Step-by-Step-Guide wie Du eine eigene Community von Fans erschaffst, die Dich lieben und von Herzen gerne von Dir kaufen. Bleibe motiviert – jeden Tag -> https://go.femschool.de/newsletter/ Folge uns auf Instagram [@FEMschool](https://femschool.de/) [Impressum](https://femschool.de/impressum/)
Every day I get asked in my DMs, "How do I make a vlog of my everyday life?" So today I'm going to share the easiest way to keep vlogging engaging and fun. First I want to start out by telling you you don't have to be doing anything special or attending an event to create a captivating vlog. All you need to do is take lots of short video clips of your day with your smartphone.Using an app like InShot, you can edit the clips into a 30- to 60-second video once you have the short clips. You can then do a voiceover for the video. Adding a voiceover to your content will make it more engaging. You can share the video on Instagram, Facebook, TitTok, and even Pinterest once you've created it.Creating a Volg is easy and I encourage you to try it.Check out all my Free Resources at THEGLITTER.MEConnect with Sam on Instagram or TikTok
As a high school counselor, you know that graduation is a major milestone for your seniors, and you're feeling the pressure to help them successfully cross that finish line. It's a time filled with energy and excitement, and you want to do everything you can to celebrate your seniors and help them launch into the next chapter. But with a massive caseload and limited resources, how can you make a big impact without burning yourself out? The answer lies in one small step: gathering pictures of your seniors showing off their post-secondary plans. I'm going to share 4 simple (and cost-effective) ways that you can repurpose these photos. They'll make a big impact and help your students feel celebrated and supported as they move on to the next chapter of their lives. Let's make this graduation season one to remember! Resources: Sign up for a free counselor account on Everfi Follow Everfi on Instagram VLLO (video editing app) InShot (video editing app) Resource: Senior Bulletin Board Podcast: Episode 67, How to Utilize Free Financial Literacy Resources in Your High School Counseling Program with Lyssa Lyons Podcast: Episode 49, Using a Social Media Strategy to Promote Your High School Counseling Program Leave your review for High School Counseling Conversations on Apple Podcasts Connect with Lauren: Sign up for the free, 3-day prep for High School Counseling Job Interviews Visit my TpT store Send me a DM on Instagram: @counselorclique Follow me on Facebook Send me an email Get on the waitlist for the Clique Collaborative Full show notes on website: https://counselorclique.com/episode68
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What's in this episode:We're told all the time to figure out our precise target market. To understand the patterns of the people buying from us – from daily habits to average incomes to average heights to average ages. But what about how able our audience is? This one's all about inclusion. We're gonna make sure that you're addressing accessibility when you're creating your marketing fodder. That you're addressing usability when you're designing your websites. That you're considering things you might never have noticed before…because it pays to pay attention.Folks + things mentioned in this episode:* microphones, for amplification* how to add captions to your YouTube videos* how to add captions to your Facebook videos* Headliner, for creating videos with captions* the Clips app for Apple users who create videos for Instagram* the InShot app for Droid users who create videos for Instagram* Renderforest, for adding captions to full videos* Guidance on web accessibility and the ADA* The Founding Moms, of courseReviews! We love reviews.A lovely person named Cathy left a new podcast review and we heart her for it.⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐? So grateful. Got Q's? Jill's Got A's.* Wanna get your Q's A'd in a future episode?* Perhaps you wanna sponsor an episode?Talk to me! Text or call (708) 872-7878 so that we can make your dreams come true.Got thoughts, comments, or questions about the episode you just heard? Leave a comment below.See you soon,jill This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jillsalzman.substack.com
In this episode, Communications Director Tara Zimmer interviews Communications Team Members Abigail Robison and Gabryelle Walsh. They take you on a dynamic journey about the importance of social media and how to manage a ministry's social media account effectively. They give many practical and simple ways to get started today to help improve your individual and your ministry's social media presence. Below are links to the resources mentioned throughout this episode. Resources: Capcut: https://www.capcut.com/ inShot: https://inshot.com/ Hootsuite: https://signup.hootsuite.com/paid-search_ss_na_na_en_usd_branded/?&utm_campaign=all-alwayson-none-na-none---pua--en--&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_content=&gclid=Cj0KCQiAq5meBhCyARIsAJrtdr4qFFiicotXz5VahdyF2pwLqq4FEsmIA9oFCD_0yLXaR-9bTC_XFIAaAoCaEALw_wcB Zoho Social: https://www.zoho.com/social/ Sunday Social: https://www.sundaysocial.tv/ ShareFaith: https://www.sharefaith.com/?utm_term=share%20faith&utm_campaign=Search+-+BRD+-+CPC+-+US&utm_source=adwords&utm_medium=ppc&hsa_acc=8702921626&hsa_cam=17507835060&hsa_grp=144629826184&hsa_ad=604534937165&hsa_src=g&hsa_tgt=kwd-1641149606070&hsa_kw=share%20faith&hsa_mt=e&hsa_net=adwords&hsa_ver=3&gclid=Cj0KCQiAq5meBhCyARIsAJrtdr6h2RlPn-J6swIa_OAlKYoSzsqJvtamhbAhKl4ed6eVU9BpXRbwWy4aAuiKEALw_wcB Canva Non-profit Link: Canva Non-Profit Request Instructions[13].docx Contact Gabryelle via Email: Socialmedia@ohioministry.net Synergy Registration: https://www.ohioministry.net/synergy
Mit Falafelteig zu "Die Höhle der Löwen" - Amjad Abu Hamid war genau dort Amjad - Stand up Comedian und Start up Gründer. Unterwegs auf den Bühnen Deutschlands mit seinem aktuellen Soloprogramm "Radikal witzig". Vor kurzem Gast bei Höhle der Löwen mit seinem Unternehmen Amjad Foods und seinem ersten Produkt "Mamas Falafelteig". Dein größter Fehler als Unternehmer?: Investition in fremdes Eigentum bei der Gründung einer Soccerhalle. Deine Lieblings-Internet-Ressource?: Canva, Inshot, Social Media Plattformen Deine beste Buchempfehlung: Buchtitel 1: Buchtitel 2: Kontaktdaten des Interviewpartners: Homepage https://www.amjad-comedy.de/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvq54BEuT32QfFGIdf49o9A Instagram https://www.instagram.com/amjadcomedy/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/amjadcomedy/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@amjadcomedy1 Homepage "Mamas Falafelteig": https://mamasfalafelteig.de/ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Mehr Freiheit, mehr Geld und mehr Spaß mit DEINEM eigenen Podcast. Erfahre jetzt, warum es auch für Dich Sinn macht, Deinen eigenen Podcast zu starten. Jetzt hier zum kostenlosen Podcast-Workshop anmelden: http://Podcastkurs.com +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ So fing alles an. Hier geht´s zur allerersten Episode von TomsTalkTime.com – DER Erfolgspodcast. Und ja, der Qualitätsunterschied sollte zu hören sein. Aber hey, dass war 2012…
Our guest today is Deanna Johnson. She's a new guild member here at Maximum Lawyer. She has been practicing law for five years. She started out doing community property litigation with a small firm of two guys who were experts in this area. After leaving this she went on to experience insurance defense and more. While this built her expertise and confidence as a lawyer for other companies — she always knew she wanted to go out on her own, and start her own practice.She thought it would take a long time to start but after finding the Maximum Lawyer Podcast and the Guild her plans have changed! She shifted gears and planned for all the things she needed to figure out before she quit her job before she went out on her own. Which she did!Join us in this conversation where she shares about starting your own business, quickly and successfully!03:25 The actual moment that it clicked … 04:29 First week on the job and where 90% of the work comes from05:53 Some mindset shifts, before going out on your own06:59 Exceptions vs. reality when going out on your own08:30 How did you pick your practice area? 11:40 What does your day look like? 15:15 Your first hire?17:46 Ideas for getting that revenue up19:15 Niching down your firm's practice21:26 Looking back, is there anything you would've done differently? Jim's Hack: read the book called What's In It for Them? to get into author Joe Polish (co-host of the I Love Marketing Podcast) mindset of how important connections with other people are. Deanna Tip: Build connections by defining your target audience, then go do something you enjoy and have natural conversation with people. Tyson's Tip: Use this easy editing app called InShot for assistance with editing your TikToks
Content creator to Money Maker podcast with Michelle Gifford
In this Marketing Minute, we're going to be talking all about the Pinterest updates. This is going to affect your strategy going forward in 2023 and beyond. I'm also going to talk about how you can repurpose your Reels to 5 different platforms. You need to do this so you are stretching your content and aren't missing out on greater impact. Tools I mentioned in this episode. My Pinterest Course: https://iammichellegifford.com/pinterest-101 Tailwind: Use this link for 50% off https://tailwind.sjv.io/mg2B2y Join Money Makers: https://iammichellegifford.com/money-makers Repurpose.io: https://repurpose.io/?aff=16734 Editing apps: Inshot and Caption Visit here to see the full shownotes and blog post: https://iammichellegifford.com/why-my-pinterest-business-strategy-is-better-than-yours
What happens if there is sudden death in your firm and what happens for planned succession? Steven McClelland joins us today for practical tips and valuable insight on this situation. Not only because Steven has dealt with this first hand in his firm but also because he believes that as attorneys, we have to come to the realization that we are replaceable. With a staggering stat of 72% of attorney's not having an “after death” plan in place, he is on a mission to share how to make this practical and possible.01:05 Where do you start when it comes to getting prepared for: When the owner of your firm passes away? 02:39 Meet Steven and why this is his passion 09:27 A couple practical actions are … 12:00 What about your spouse?15:40 These few documents are helpful …. 18:49 Where do you put your documents for people to access after death? 21:04 What about if the person doesn't actually pass? 23:10 What about your bills? Who pays them? How does this work out?28:10 If you put together ONE document for your firm … The most important document would be is …29:15 How plans for death affect the ways the people you love process through death. Jim's Hack: Deep Questions Podcast by Cal Newport Guest Tip: Create a video of instructions for your team in case you die. Also think of creative ways to support and connect with your family and kids after death as well. Tyson's Tip: Use this easy editing app called InShot for assistance with your Reels etc.
Du haut de ses 21 ans, Fabian Cayuela-Ruiz, surtout connu sous le pseudo Fabian Crfx sur les réseaux, cumule plus de 3,8 millions d'abonnés toutes plateformes confondues dont plus de 2,8 millions sur TikTok. Fabian raconte qu'il a grandi dans le sud de la France dans une famille d'artistes. C'est à 15 ans qu'il se découvre une passion pour le maquillage. Il confie que c'est grâce aux vidéos de Richard qu'il apprend que les garçons, aussi, peuvent se maquiller. Il commence alors à publier sur Instagram des photos et des vidéos de ses sessions de maquillage. TikTok arrive, il se alors lance sur la plateforme et c'est un carton ! En 6 mois, il cumule déjà plus de 250.000 abonnés. Depuis ses débuts, il produit tous ses contenus lui-même: le tournage des vidéos, le montage, les produits qu'il utilise, la publication etc… Fabian confie qu'il utilise InShot pour la majorité de ses vidéos. Il se fait accompagner uniquement sur les collaborations avec les marques et sur les miniatures des vidéos qu'il publie sur YouTube. En termes de publication, Fabian raconte qu'il se fixe de publier une vidéo par jour au minimum sur TikTok, 3 par semaine sur Instagram et une toutes les deux semaines sur YouTube. Fabian nous raconte comment il s'est lancé sur les réseaux, comment il a pu vivre de la création de contenus, comment il s'organise pour sa production ou encore comment, avec son frère, il ont fait pour lancer leur propre marque de cosmétique : Fabian Cosmetics. Dans cet épisode, on parle également de creator economy, de make-up, de partage, de communauté sur les réseaux sociaux, d'engagement, des types de contenus à partager sur chaque plateforme, de tips pour l'organisation et la production, de collaboration, et de création de marque.
UGC Creators is a booming topic on TikTok right now. It's trending in a lot of countries, so I wanted to go over what exactly a UGC Creator is and how to get started. You can get your hands on my course, Gram Cam, for FREE when you leave a review for the podcast. Simply take a screenshot of your review and post it on your Instagram Stories (tag me!) or send me a DM and I'll reply with all the details about redeeming your free offer. This course is valued at $299USD and will only be available for the month of September 2022! Find out more details about Gram Cam HERE. In this episode I share about what a UGC Creator is, what UGC looks like compared with traditional marketing content (magazines, billboards etc), and how you can get started and turn it into a career. I discuss a little about my own UGC Creator journey and how it works within my business today, and we finish up with some tips for being successful in the UGC field. ~~~ Thank you so much for listening. If you are enjoying the Dishing Up Digital Podcast, please leave a review on Apple and let me know! Don't forget to connect with me over on Instagram, let me know what you would like to hear in future episodes, and share this episode with anyone you think would benefit from it! Links & Resources: Video & photo editing software mentioned: InShot, CapCut, vsco Work with Ellen Connect with Ellen on Instagram
Episode 79: Kate's Reels Experiment Results Welcome to episode seventy-eight of the Cocktails & Content Creation Podcast! In this episode, we're chatting about Kate's Reels experiment and how it turned out for her. She's giving us all the details including specific numbers on her engagement, the number of followers she gained, and how she kept it up. In our seventy-ninth episode you'll learn: How Kate posted nothing but IG Reels for 20 days Her results from the first 20 days What she learned from posting nothing but reels How she did when she was invited back to the program Resources: https://www.instagram.com/fashionablykateandco/ (@FashionablyKateAndCo on Instagram) https://inshot.com/ (InShot) https://www.vixerapp.com/ (Vixer) https://www.planoly.com/ (Planoly) https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/ (Google Drive) https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62b316f8c133f442c4f68884 (Grab Kate's IG Reels Content Calendar) to keep your Reels organized Thanks for Listening! Join our https://www.facebook.com/groups/1051582601952303 (Facebook Community) for more tips and tricks on how to easily create content and chat with other content creators! And make sure to follow our https://www.instagram.com/cocktailsandcontentcreation/ (Instagram). Until next time, cheers to your next cocktail and happy content creating! http://www.fashionablykateandcompany.com/ (Kate) & http://www.jessiewymanphotography.com/ (Jessie) Hosts of “The Cocktails and Content Creation Podcast”
En este epidosio de mi podcast hablaremos sobre: Las redes sociales que cambiaron mi vida: Comencemos por las redes sociales. Tik Tok Facebook Instagram Youtube Estas son las apps que más me han ayudado Notion https://www.notion.so Boards https://app.boards.com Jotform https://www.jotform.com/ Inshot https://apps.apple.com/us/app/inshot-editor-de-v%C3%ADdeo/id997362197?l=es Adobe Express https://www.adobe.com/es/express/create Streamyard https://streamyard.com/ ReadWise https://readwise.io/ Airr https://www.airr.io/ Liner https://getliner.com/ Audible https://www.audible.com/ DEJA DE SER UNO MÁS DEL MONTÓN... SÉ UN FUERA DE SERIE.
Episode 78: Kate's Reels Experiment Welcome to episode seventy-eight of the Cocktails & Content Creation Podcast! In this episode, we're chatting about Kate's Reels experiment and how she plans on posting nothing but reels for 20 days! In our seventy-eighth episode you'll learn: Instagram has allocated money to creators to create Reels on the platform How to recreate Kate's process to post nothing but Reels on your Instagram Why you don't have to create a bunch of new material How to use what you already have on your phone to create Reels Resources: https://www.instagram.com/fashionablykateandco/ (@FashionablyKateAndCo on Instagram) https://inshot.com/ (InShot) https://www.vixerapp.com/ (Vixer) https://www.planoly.com/ (Planoly) https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/ (Google Drive) https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62b316f8c133f442c4f68884 (Grab Kate's IG Reels Content Calendar) to keep your Reels organized Thanks for Listening! Join our https://www.facebook.com/groups/1051582601952303 (Facebook Community) for more tips and tricks on how to easily create content and chat with other content creators! And make sure to follow our https://www.instagram.com/cocktailsandcontentcreation/ (Instagram). Until next time, cheers to your next cocktail and happy content creating! http://www.fashionablykateandcompany.com/ (Kate) & http://www.jessiewymanphotography.com/ (Jessie) Hosts of “The Cocktails and Content Creation Podcast”
Today we're getting tactical and nitty gritty with Instagram. From how to build authority with a small audience, the ins and outs of reels, Instagram Lives, why you shouldn't freak out over hashtags, and what metrics to track.Does Instagram rank saves, comments, and shares higher than likes? What are the best tools for scheduling social media content?Natasha Samuel is an Instagram Strategist, podcaster, and YouTuber who helps small businesses shine online and her content is so inspirational and intentional. If you've been intimidated by Instagram Reels, keeping up with posting consistently, and engaging intentionally with your audience, there are so many gems in this episode that you're going to love.Episode Partner: This episode is presented by Feathr - Expand your reach, further your mission. Use Feathr's digital marketing tools to increase awareness, boost online donations, promote events, recruit volunteers, and ultimately do more good. Learn More.Resources & LinksConnect with Natasha on her Instagram, @shinewithnatasha, subscribe to her YouTube channel, and tune in to The Shine Online Podcast. You can also grab her FREE 3-minute video lesson, 3 Steps to Repurpose Instagram Content.Check out Natasha's 3 favorite social media scheduling tools: Buffer, Later, and Planoly. She also recommends InShot for video editing and Canva for graphics.Check out my NEW $27 mini course, Visible Reach In A Week. In 30 minutes, you'll learn how to create a $3 a day ad campaign that will drive brand awareness with your supporters.Want to make Missions to Movements even better? Take a screenshot of this episode and share it on Instagram. Be sure to tag @positivequation so I can connect with you.
Apps para crear reels y tres actualizaciones de Inshot. Regístrate en la membresía Potencia tu contenido. Sígueme en Instagram. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ver363nica-gonz341lez/support
Today we welcome brand photographer Catherine Berry to the podcast to talk to us about why it's so important to show ourselves in our marketing and how we can take better photos.Key TakeawaysShow your face to make a better connection in your marketingOur brains process 11 million pieces of information every second but only 40 are likely to be consciousThree main triggers that will draw our attention - Food, sex, faces. We link to faces in an emotional senseBe more confident to bring those emotions to your visual content. Anything we can do to make a better connectionWhere is the personality? Where is the emotional link?This is our shop window. What is making people want to come in to your shop?Selfies are a quick and easy way to connect with your audienceVirtual photoshoots are a great way to batch up content if you don't have time for a full brand shootCatherine's Top Tips for Taking Better PhotosGet a selfie stick that can turn into a tripod and has a remote triggerPlan your outfit, introduce props, move about, take full body shots, make different expressions and take a batch of photos which you can edit and you will have a lot of visual contentDon't go too crazy with filters. You don't want to hide behind themTurn your photos into videos with Inshot. Algorithms love videoQuoteThere needs to be a point of difference and we the people are that difference. So stand out. Be more you.Mentioned in this EpisodePhotoshop ExpressInshotSnapseedCatherine's Selfies MasterclassCreate a Brand and Website That Stand Out with Liz Rochester ShaddockConnect with Catherine BerryWebsiteInstagramConnect with Victoria BennionBook your free podcast guesting strategy session today.To learn more about working with us visit www.victoriabennion.com
Today we are diving into the trending topic of video, which is something that our audience often asks us for support on. If you're curious about how to show up with video, we've brought the amazing Natasha Samuel, social media manager turned Instagram educator, speaker, podcaster, mentor, and coach, on to share her best tips, strategies and advice for using video on Instagram to truly shine! Natasha is a wealth of knowledge, and if you'd like to get even more from her, we'd encourage you to get Natasha's free 3-minute video lesson, 3 Steps to Repurpose Instagram Content and check out her podcast, YouTube Channel and other resources. We'd love to hear what you got from this episode, so please share your feedback with us on Instagram, tagging @pursuingherpurpose and @shinewithnatasha! We have a big pivot coming! The next Pursuing HER Purpose course is in the works, and you can expect there to be a podcasting course hopefully by this summer. We know you have important messages to share with the world, and we want this course to be a cost-effective way for you to get your podcast off the ground and to your audience. In this course you'll learn the strategies for growing your downloads, monetizing your show, and so much more, right from the start! We get asked from our community daily about how to start a podcast, which is why we're so excited to be bringing this to you. If you're interested in joining, you can sign up for the waitlist now at https://view.flodesk.com/pages/615b95bff88d548e68f5c1f2!MEET Natasha: https://www.instagram.com/shinewithnatasha/ Links & Resources:Grab Natasha's Free 3-Minute Video Lesson, 3 Steps to Repurpose Instagram Content Her Podcast & YouTube Channel Sign Up for the Waitlist for Natasha's Mastermind, The Instagram Authority MastermindPlanoly, Later, Buffer, InShot & Canva @jera.bean on InstagramGet on the Waitlist for Our Upcoming Podcasting Course! Let's connect!Purposeful Week Planner: https://www.pursuingherpurpose.com/shopOur WEBSITE: https://www.pursuingherpurpose.comINSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/pursuingherpurpose/MEET AMY: http://instagram.com/ameskiefer/MEET KAT: https://www.instagram.com/kat.herro/ MEET ABBY: http://instagram.com/abbyrosegreen/
Harry Jowsey, best known for his time on Season one of Netflix's Too Hot to Handle, drops by the pod to show another side of himself and help our listeners to identify fuckboys IRL. Harry and Sydney talk: -what he learned about love and dating on reality tv -how he is approaching dating in the public eye now -the differences between Too Hot to Handle and the Bachelor -bts of Too Hot to Handle -Sydney asks her top listener questions on navigating dating and red flags -how to slide into dms well -how to hook a guy according to Harry -what Harry has learned in his 3 years since reality tv Thank you to our sponsors! Go to zocdoc.com/SYDNEY and download the Zocdoc app to sign up for FREE to book a top rated doctor! Reach out! Host: @sydneylotuaco @somethingtosharepodcast Guest: Follow Harry on IG here! More on Harry here! Apps Sydney Mentioned: Lensbuddy , Canva , Tezza , Facetune , Inshot , Adobe Premiere , Setty Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Brian gives a review for the InShot App, which he uses for these daily videos every night. Transcription InShot App Review for video podcast editing. Hi I’m Brian Pombo, welcome back to Brian J. Pombo Live. Let’s talk about the InShot App. Okay, this is an app that I’ve been using for well over a […] The post InShot App Review: For Video Podcast Editing
Does anyone actually understand how the cloud works?Join us this week as we share our list of our current favorite apps and why we love them. All items are listed below in order. Apps mentioned:1. Spotify | 2. Libby | 3. Genius Sign + Genius Scan | 4. Every Dollar | 5. Do! | 6. Evernote | 7. Rakuten | 8. RetailMeNot | 9. Lightroom | 10. Huji | 11. Retouch | 12. InShot | 13. LensBuddy | 14. Dropbox | 15. FreePrints | 16. Amazon Fire Stick Remote | 17. Hatch Baby | 18. Glow | 19. Pampers Club | 20. Guva | 21. Renpho | 22. TooBee | 23. Sanity & Self | 24. Downdog | 25. Fender TuneHonorable mention: Nordstrom appBe sure to follow us on Instagram at @onehundredpercentpodcast and Twitter at @OHPpodcast! Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/onehundredpercentpodcast)
Welcome Chloe Tascoff, video marketing expert to Saturday Soundbites! Chloe has used her talents and entrepreneurial mindset to grow a phenomenal video marketing business in the "teachers helping teachers" space, and is highly sought after, Chloe, a former teacher, saw a need, found a solution, and grew a business. She shares her expertise, suggestions and tip on how to incorporate video marketing into your visibility strategy. Be sure to tune in and take notes. Class is in session!For more information on the "InShot" app click here.To find out how I can help you improve your own visibility strategy you can find me at https://www.veronicavsopher.com .
Episode 35: How to be a Productive Entrepreneur Welcome to the thirty-fifth episode of the Cocktails & Content Creation Podcast! September is the beginning of the final quarter of the year and back-to-school time for many. A lot of people take this time to refine their process so they can be as productive as possible after a summer of fun in the sun. That's why we're talking about our favorite productivity tips and trips, as well as apps and programs. In our thirty-fifth episode you'll learn many of our productivity hacks including: How we keep our content creation organized How we schedule our Instagram Posts How to measure your productivity How we automate our correspondence How to schedule your time so entrepreneur life works for you Easy ways to cross tasks off your list Some of our favorite productivity apps and programs Resources & Links: https://www.google.com/drive/ (Google Drive) http://share.plano.ly/3sWwBV (Planoly) https://www.thecontentplanner.com/ (The Content Planner) https://home.kartra.com/plans?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=remarketing_usa_kartra_rlsa_7day (Kartra) https://royalhorizonmedia.com/ (Royal Horizon Media) https://www.plannthat.com/create/ (Plann) https://inshot.com/ (InShot) https://www.canva.com/join/dare-defense-master (Canva) https://toggl.com/ (Toggl) http://share.honeybook.com/jessie83572 (Honeybook) - click the link to get 20% off! https://amzn.to/3nzTkv7 (Jessie's to-do list notebook) Thanks for Listening! Join our https://www.facebook.com/groups/1051582601952303 (Facebook Community) for more tips and tricks on how to easily create content and chat with other content creators! And make sure to follow our https://www.instagram.com/cocktailsandcontentcreation/ (Instagram). Until next time, cheers to your next cocktail and happy content creating! http://www.fashionablykateandcompany.com/ (Kate) & http://www.jessiewymanphotography.com/ (Jessie) Hosts of “The Cocktails and Content Creation Podcast”
2020 Software & Apps I use (Free & Paid) Free Clickup (http://clickup.com/) OBS https://obsproject.com/ Gmail (https://www.gmail.com) Google Photos (https://photos.google.com) Recurpost (https://recurpost.com/) Goodreads (https://www.goodreads.com/) Social Media Sites (TikTok, Pinterest, Linkedin) Veed-podcast video (www.veed.io) What I pay For (Monthly) Zoom-$15 (https://www.zoom.us/) Dubsado-$25 (https://www.dubsado.com/) Use Affiliate Code for Discount https://www.dubsado.com/?c=twincitiescollective Canva-$10 (https://www.canva.com/) Squarespace-$18 (https://www.squarespace.com/) Kartra-$99 (https://home.kartra.com/home) Photoshop/Lightroom-$10 (https://lightroom.adobe.com/) Tezza-$2 (https://www.shoptezza.com/pages/tezza-app) Google Drive -$5 (https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/) Otter-$10 (https://otter.ai/) Libsyn-$15 (www.libsyn.com) Flodesk-$20 (www.flodesk.com) Get Flodesk Email Marketing for 50% off https://flodesk.com/c/TWINCITIESCOLLECTIVE One Time Fees Final Cut Pro X-One time fee (https://www.apple.com/final-cut-pro/) Continual (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/continual-for-instagram/id1162149611) InShot-video editor (http://www.inshot.com/) Jenna Redfield is the founder of LeadJenna, a social media marketing education business, focusing on video classes & 1:1 coaching to share the latest social media strategy & advice. She is also the founder of Twin Cities Collective, the largest resource in the Twin Cities for bloggers, small businesses, entrepreneurs & creatives. YouTube Channel www.youtube.com/jennaredfield Free Lead Generation Masterclass https://www.leadjenna.com/masterclass Gram Mastery Instagram Marketing Online Course https://www.masterthegram.com Join the Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/twincitiescollective Coaching https://www.leadjenna.com/intensive Find the podcast on all platforms https://www.collectivemarketingpodcast.com Follow us on Social https://www.instagram.com/twincitiescollective https://www.instagram.com/jennaredfield
Hi everyone, hope you are doing well this week! I'm really excited to share some of the tools I use to keep me going on all the social platforms. Ok, let's face it. Apps make it easier. I use an app for about everything, and getting my social media in gear is definitely one of them. Whether I use them or my VA's do, I love apps as they can be easy to work with and also keep your branding on point. Here are a few apps and systems to share to keep your team running smoothly and more productive. By the way, did you know you can now work with me ONE on ONE? I'm not sure how long I will be offering this service but I only work with ONE client each Monday. That means only generally FOUR spaces a month. So if you want to work with me, click the link in the podcast notes or go to lindseyholder.com and book a small business coaching session with me and I cannot WAIT to help you with your small business! Show Highlights: APPS FOR SOCIAL MEDIA Jilly Harris presets: Enjoy this Secret code JUST for you listeners!! It is valid now for 10% off the presets and can be used one time per customer. LindseyHolder10XO I am SO thankful for these presets! I have admired Jillian Harris's Instagram feed for years and always tried to perfect her bright,crisp white lighting in all my pictures but could never QUITE get it! Then her presets came! I probably was the first one to buy them as I jumped all over them when they came out! This makes it SOO much easier to pop in a pic, click on the filter that looks good and be done with it. I am NOT a professional photographer, so I NEED a preset. Period. After my preset looks good, I download the edited image to my phone and then use AFTERLIGHT to crop my images to fit that Square frame for Instagram. After that I put a white frame around them, I like a 25 border measurement around my image. Spacie : This little app makes it so much easier to edit those annoying line breaks in Instagram. There are other apps out there that help with the content breaking up into easy to read, simple lines but so far this one has been working great. I like to type out my content since it's faster. I will type out the content in Evernote on my computer, then copy the Evernote info.fFrom my phone, pop it into Spacie, hit Convert then paste it into Instagram. Whew! No wonder I only post 1-2 times a week. It can be so much work! Well, at least this app is helpful. Planoly : I have used planoly for over two years now to plan out my content grid. I like to be able to preview what the feed is going to look like and have been satisfied with it. Also, you can toggle between accounts which is a plus. They have both paid and non paid options to use in Planoly. Kira Kira: If you need to SPARKLE up your stories, try Kira Kira. I particularly like using it when showing my skincare to give it that dreamy, glowy, sparkly effect. They have different types of sparkle effects and you can control how much or little you would like. You can do both a still image or a video. I use these for my Instagram stories, but you could also use them for your posts as well. Her Creative Studio for Styled stock images. Using original images is great and I often do that, but having stocked images is essential for businesses pumping out a lot of content. So the graphic used for this podcast episode was a styled stock image. They also have different subscription options to choose from. Styled Stock Society-this is another great resource for styled photography. New Images are downloaded constantly and you have a different vibe from the other. I used their image on my back acne podcast, which fit the topic perfectly. Unfold . It's hard to beat the simplicity and ease of the Unfold app. Pop a picture in one of their templates and it gives it a clean, modern vibe in seconds. You can also use it for videos as well. They have both free and paid versions and the possibilities are endless. I like to have a lot of white in my stories, so if there are other colors that are not in line with my aesthetic, I will select a white frame to put around the image and it brightens up the story. Now for videos, Inshot is my go to . I use this all the time. It's great for both stories and posts. I even use it for facebook ads. An insider tip is using it to brighten up your videos. They have a great filter option inside the app and it is easy to brighten up a dull, dark video that otherwise isn't' very flattering or brand friendly. If you need to add music, they have some options you can use or you can easily download a song as well after you purchase it. There are really so many things you can do to the video, including speeding up the video, slowing it down when you need it, cutting pieces out and duplicating the video if desired. Music, check out AudioJungle. I found the music for this Podcast on AudioJungle and they have a ton to choose from. Any music you can think of, they have it. You can also decide how much you want to spend on the music as well so whatever your budget is it can work for you. Headliner app for making easy audiograms for podcasts to share on social platforms. Creative Market.com for fonts for my blog, etc and also upload these purchased fonts into Canva. Sooo many things here: Photos, Product Mockups, vector graphics, shopify themes, instagram templates, web themes, you name it The last one I am saving and sharing in my VIP Lindsey Holder Small Biz & Beauty Facebook group. If you want into that group, just DM me on Insta @lindseyrholder or head to the link in the show notes that will direct you right to it OR simply just search for Lindsey Holder Small Biz & Beauty on facebook. You must have a valid small business and be woman owned. We would love to have you! Want EXCLUSIVE behind the scenes beauty insider info? Head to my women's VIP Small Biz and Beauty Group and for access to all the tips and tricks! Connect on Instagram at @lindseyrholder Want to know what Lindsey uses? Head to her SPA SHOP to shop her glowy must haves she recommends from her spa. Learn the latest in small biz and beauty through her blog at lindseyholder.com Need help in your small business? Book a Small Business coaching session with Lindsey and let's watch your business SOAR.