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Microsoft Youtube Technology

YouTubers Are Making a Living on Videos About Microsoft Software (cnbc.com) 32

An anonymous reader shares a report: When Microsoft updated its Teams communication app with a more sophisticated way to give PowerPoint presentations in January, the company published a 500-word blog post on the feature. People could read the blog post and try to figure out how to use it, or they could consult YouTube. On the video service owned by arch-rival Google, a former Microsoft employee named Kevin Stratvert published a video on Presenter Mode to his more than 800,000 subscribers, garnering more than 180,000 views and hundreds of comments. Microsoft itself had not published a video on the topic. "I've built a Microsoft audience," Stratvert said in an interview with CNBC. "Microsoft content drives a lot more viewership than non-Microsoft content. I've done Gmail and a few others, but they haven't done quite as well."

[...] Historically, developing and maintaining products has been the core of Microsoft. Today nearly 50% of employees work in engineering. Marketing is a considerably smaller part of the business, and employees work on ads, materials for Microsoft's website, events and other methods of promotion. In the past few years, a group inside Microsoft began focusing more on YouTube. "On YouTube specifically, we're starting to explore the concept of what it looks like to do something native to YouTube," Sonia Atchison, a market research lead who worked on the Microsoft Creators Program, said on a podcast last year. People often turn to YouTube when they want to get a better understanding of Microsoft software, and while Microsoft has plenty of its own videos available on YouTube, they don't always come up at the top of the site's search results, Atchison said. Videos from outsiders can receive higher rankings. Sometimes a video from a Microsoft employee might be there. The company does have employees with large audiences, including Mike Tholfsen, a 26-year company veteran whose videos show how teachers and students can use Teams and other applications.

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YouTubers Are Making a Living on Videos About Microsoft Software

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  • Ah but just think if they took notes [slashdot.org] they'd retain everything better.

    • Fun fact: I literally can not take notes and form memories at the same time.
      When I note some input down, it's a pipeline from e.g. my ears through my brain to my hands, not ever coming anywhere close to my memory or pondering any of it in a eqy that would resemple actual understanding required for more than blind bulemic memorization.
      I can only choose to pipe it to my pondering neurons, take my time to think it through, and resume taking in input, ... OR blindly pipe it through.

      I suspect that that is normal

      • I can't learn while I transcribe notes exactly from another source. That's a waste of time; please send me the power point or the textbook reference.

        The only notes that are worth a crap are things I learned while listening and then wrote down after processing it.

    • Intra Haryana [bharatyojna.in] the e-Salary system is an online facility that publishes and processes the Salary of employees based on their departments which have now reduced the manual effort by the accounts team, and this system has benefited the Haryana Government to account for the disburse of salaries and distribute them without any manual intervention.
  • Especially all those “Windows never released” videos. Windows 11’s announcement has caused a new gold rush for Windowstube.
  • 953K subscribers . says enough

  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @12:02PM (#61578545) Journal
    the company published a 500-word blog post on the feature.

    Guaranteed there was not a single sentence on how to use this "feature". Instead, it was "how great" it is, how it "streamlines" meetings, how "easy" it is to use.

    Companies today are worthless and useless when it comes to telling people how to use their products. It's all about selling an image but providing nothing useful to the end user.

    People like to reminisce about the good 'ol days when you bought a game and it had a physcial manual with it, something you could review again and again to learn how to play the game. That is what is needed today. Companies should be forced to include useful documentation with every piece of software they sell, either in physical form (books/manuals), semi-digital form (CDs/DVDs) or fully digital (online). If you're paying for this crap it would be nice to know how to use it.

    I was going to post an article from Entrepreneur about Steve Jobs' ability to make things simple, but apparently the incompetent "web master" at the site can't even keep the article up because the link provides a 404. In short, Steve was shown a demonstration of video editing software. The programmers and engineers spent large amounts of time developing the software with a multitude of features, all with a menu driven system, pretty colors and so on. After they demoed the product, Steve went to the blackboard and drew a rectangle. He then drew an arrow pointing into the rectangle and said, "People drag the file into the software which opens it." (or words to that effect). While the programmers and engineers spent all that time and effort to make a complex piece of software with all the bells and whistles, Steve distilled the process into a simple six second statement.

    If you have to have a 500 word posting to describe how great something is and what you can do with it, but fail to provide any documentation on how to use the product, why should I be bothered to use your product? I don't want to spend my time poking around the nooks and crannies of your craptacular software, I want to use it to get something done.
  • Someone is making money off of their tutorial videos, which feature some Windows products. That's so insane - almost unheard of.

    What's next? People making money off of videos that are reviewing non-google related hardware? Wow that would be insane right???

    I wonder if the submitter is genuinely surprised, and if this is genuinely news to them.

    • Wow I bet posting tutorials about the most common OS on the most common video site might be a good idea?
    • Someone is making money off of their tutorial videos,

      Maybe it's somehow Microsoft itself making the money. There's a great idea for a legal scam:

      1. Make crappy software that people are compelled to use because they are locked into your tool-set.

      2. Make videos on how to work around the myriad idiosyncrasies of your crappy products.

      3. Attribute to videos to random people made up by AI face bots.

      4. Collect YouTube royalties.

      5. Profit!

  • by TheCowSaysMoo ( 4915561 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @01:22PM (#61578871)

    Most software companies are terrible at providing support for learning their software. Just think of a widely-used software and type that into YouTube search and you'll find plenty of videos with hundreds of thousands (or millions) of views. There's a video titled "How to Install Google Chrome on Windows 10" that has 1.3 million views and it's only a year old. Adobe software is another great example of this. A video titled "Learn Premiere Pro in 20 Minutes!" has 7.5 million views.

    Lynda Weinman was an earlier version of this story. She made how-to videos for design-oriented software (Flash, Photoshop, etc.) on Lynda.com in the mid to late 90s. The company continued to grow over the years and was eventually purchased by LinkedIn for $1.5 Billion in 2015 and helped launch what became LinkedIn Learning. And, a year later in 2016, Microsoft purchased LinkedIn for $26.2 Billion.

  • Wait till the authors find out that YouTubers make a living reviewing things such as cars, headphones, playing games, etc.!

    And then wait till they find out women make a living selling showing off their body on Twitch to dumb simps!

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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