Today I am going to share with you Top tools for recording your webinar.

Recording Your Webinar

Below is a list of our top resources for documenting your webinar:

·         Microphone: Snowball USB Microphone

·         Screen Recorder: Screenflow (for Mac) or Camtasia (for PC)

·         Slides: Keynote (for Mac) or PowerPoint (both Mac and PC) or Google Slides (available with Google Drive account)

·         Video Conversion: to get the file you need for uploading onto your video hosting service you can use Any Video Converter Pro (or just hire someone on Upwork to do this for you)

·         Hosting Your Video: important that you choose a service that will encrypt the video for you, such as AmazonS3, or Wistia  (also, many of the automated tools listed below, can serve your video directly.

Setting Up Your Webinar

Below is a list of our top resources for documenting your webinar:

·         LeadPagesThis will set up a landing page with your webinar. You can Use their built in video embed tool (which is compliant with most of the big embed codes)

·         WebinarJam –  great for evergreen webinars, you can also directly use the video for your webinar.

·         GotoWebinarthe iconic webinar platform that has been around for years.
You might record your webinar live, and then use this method to give it as an evergreen replay.

·         Anymeetinganother fine, inexpensive tool for live webinars.

·         Join.meonce again, an inexpensive alternative for live webinars.

The point about live webinars: the benefit of doing it live is that you can track your contact and answer questions in real time.The negative thing about performing it live is that it's not"evergreen" – unless you record it and make it a constant repetition.What's a reasonable idea to follow?