2/ I have not come across any YouTube podcasts on the MC website. I would recommend two types. Firstly a 5 or 10 min enthusiastic tour of all features, a whiz bang, "look what I can do" show.
The second type I would recommend is a bunch of shorter ones which deal with specific things, like ripping, burning, tagging, setting up server and client, etc etc...
I would agree with this point. Having a YouTube presence can be big for some segments of potential customers. Having a complete set of useful MC tutorials is certainly too large a task to be possible, but selecting the right subsection of features to put tutorials out serves two purposes: first to help people figure out how to use the program, second as a marketing tool to show some of what MC can do (that the competition can't).
See a few of the FLStudio Guru videos here:
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=fl+studio+guru&page=&utm_source=opensearch for what I perceive to be a successful example of this sort of thing in action. The company, Imageline, also has more in depth tutorial series, but the Guru videos work better as marketing. One more small thing that this series does is give more familiarity with the person doing the videos. He is also very present on their user forum, which is quite similar to the JRiver forum here. Some people can be quite charmed by feeling like they know the person behind the forum posts a little more.
Coming back to Jim's original post, is there something that JRiver could do to encourage users to create some of this type of content? It might just be that having a small set of JRiver produced videos could help set the tone and scope for what MC video tutorials can/should be. I'm trying to think here on the spot of what sort of tutorial I might make if I tried to...it's a bit overwhelming.
One other thing to think about in terms of marketing, is what new users see once they're in the door for a test drive. MC can obviously have a huge learning curve attached to it.
Tutorial videos could obviously help get over some of the initial hurdles.
This forum can likewise help.
One thing missing (that's been discussed here numerous times) is a good and reasonably up-to-date help file. I don't really want to open up a help-file pros/cons discussion, I just wanted to give a reminder that it's another thing that affects marketing and the perception of JRiver to potential new users.
Maybe incorporating something like HiFiTubes "Assists" points idea with the wiki pages could help out with the lack of documentation situation. Earning song downloads could be a decent motivator for some (
no idea if song dl's are a feasible thing here...)
One other general reminder that I read someplace recently:
Focus the marketing on what MC can do for customers, rather than on what MC is and what it does. If you look at the MC homepage, I'd say it's 50/50 in this regard. Playing the devil's advocate - "Sure, I can connect all my toys...then what?" I guess my thought is that while this forum is a rather robust resource the main webpage doesn't do much. That's how I felt when I was first checking MC out too. I wouldn't have bothered downloading the trial if I hadn't poked around the forums some.
I think I've rambled on without enough concrete points to warrant going further...