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How Do I Repurpose My Webinar Recording

Congratulations! You just run your very first webinar. And congratulations again because you've also recorded that webinar and now you have a video; you can do lots of interesting things with it such as converting it to audio, converting it to different types of video, and even converting it to text.

How can you change a video-based webinar, a live web seminar into audio form? Most video editing tools such as Camtasia allow you to save just the audio portion of your video. This means if you have one big long webinar recording, you can save it as a WAV file and do whatever you want with it. If you have the webinar recording cut up into small videos, you can even batch process all these videos into small mp3 files. Now that it's in mp3 format, it's taking up a very small amount of space which means you can stream up from a blog or a webpage or even offer it for download. You can also drag and drop these audio files into any CD burning software and now you have your very own CD which you can burn and distribute copies which you can use to Kunaki, and get it fulfilled automatically which you can even put onto CD Baby and get it on ITunes.

But that might be a little crazy. Let's say you have a video webinar and you want to put it into another video format. Luckily, most video editing software today has built-in presets for different ways you can save your video recording. For example, you can save your video into a DVD-ready format then use a program such as Sony DVD Architect and burn it into a DVD disc that anybody can put into their DVD player and play it.

Guess what? It doesn't stop there. Camtasia even allows you to save your video into iPod format so that if somebody has an iPhone, iPod or iPod Touch, they can transfer the files onto that device and watch the webinar from the gym, from the car, while they're on a walk, while they're in bed—any place they can take that small device. Video editing software allows you to save into WMV or Windows Media Player format and provide an easy download or offer it in MPG4 so that people can watch it from their browser.

And finally, even ignoring the audio and video opportunities, you can get your webinar discussion transcribed. If someone else watches your webinar, you can take their notes, expand on them, and now you have your very own report and all you have to do was speak, gather the notes, and edit.

I hope I've opened your eyes to some new ways to repurpose your webinar recording by saving the audio, saving the video, or saving the notes. Go ahead right now and get all the tools and step-by-step systems you need to record your very own webinar at www.webinarcrusher.com

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23. Jun, 2010
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