Today’s businesses are increasingly using video to share all types of internal and external information. For organizations of virtually all sizes, video is fast becoming the preferred medium for delivering employee training, live corporate events, product demonstrations, executive communications, and financial reports, to name just a few examples.
But as more and more companies are taking advantage of producing videos that support the business, many still don’t have a good system for hosting these videos.
YouTube and Vimeo are often the first video hosting platforms that businesses look to for storing and sharing video content. And there are certainly a few reasons why YouTube or Vimeo could be a reasonable place to start:
- They’re free.
- Employees are already accustomed to going to these sites for video content.
- You don’t have to worry about hosting and streaming videos on your own IT networks.
- They’re perfect for getting your public-facing videos in front of more people.
Free video hosting sites, however, are far from ideal for hosting the vast majority of the video content most businesses are producing. After all, you wouldn’t trust YouTube to keep a video that held your personal credit card information — likewise, it is unwise to upload anything to a public video sharing site which may contain sensitive or proprietary information that you don’t want seeping out to the general public. Employee training videos, for example, probably shouldn’t be stored and shared on YouTube, even privately.
When Hosting Videos On YouTube And Vimeo Isn’t Secure Enough
A quick search of YouTube for “internal meeting” returns a remarkable 883,000 results. Even if we assume that 95% of those are fairly benign, that would still leave some 44,000 videos that likely weren’t intended to be findable. One would hope that nothing confidential from your own company has been shared publicly, but the very real possibility should give every business pause.
Both YouTube and Vimeo have privacy settings that can help minimize the chances of the wrong people gaining access to your internal videos. But for most businesses, hosting internal-facing videos on YouTube or Vimeo privately simply isn’t secure enough.
Using YouTube or Vimeo to host your internal-facing business videos, even privately, opens your company to the potential risk of information getting into the wrong hands.
“Undiscoverable” is all-too discoverable
Let’s say for example, you upload recordings of your daily scrum meetings to Vimeo and make them undiscoverable (so they won’t show up publicly in search). This setting lets you share a link to the video with people within your organization. If that link were to be inadvertently shared with someone outside of your company, though, that sensitive content would be easily accessible. Time and again, “undiscoverable” videos are accidentally shared due to simple oversight — one might be included in a long email chain that sees new recipients added along the way, or mistakenly pasted into a social network post.
Password protection creates new password security problems
You could, alternatively, make your video only visible to certain people by adding their email addresses within the privacy settings on YouTube (or set up password-protected access in Vimeo), but doing so could make that video content difficult to share with others in your company. It also opens up a different version of the same problem: anyone who wants to access private company videos on-demand on YouTube or Vimeo would then need to be given permission to view, and those permissions can just as easily be accidentally shared. Even when well executed, while this strategy is more secure than simply providing an “undiscoverable” link, it still doesn’t scale easily for larger teams or companies.
The terms of use aren’t on your side
Another privacy concern for companies currently or considering using YouTube or Vimeo for hosting business videos is the sites’ Terms of Use.
Both of these free video hosting sites require that you give them royalty-free license and right to copy when you upload your videos. This means that, legally, you do not have complete control over the video content your store on these sites. Generally, videos marked private will remain private, but the terms of service may make your business legally vulnerable or non-compliant with regulations depending on your industry.
You can read the full YouTube terms of service here, and the Vimeo terms of service here.
Other Reasons Not To Use YouTube or Vimeo For Hosting Business Videos
Privacy concerns aside, there are other reasons free video hosting platforms may not be the best solution for your business videos — both public-facing and internal videos.
- YouTube is full of ads. Whether someone is watching a video on YouTube or in an embedded player on one of your sites, they will most likely see a pre-roll ad or other promotional video content through YouTube that can distract from video training, executive communications, and other business videos.
- They both lack options for branding and customization. Both YouTube and Vimeo only give you limited options for branding and customizing your video channels and players. This can impact the viewer’s experience, particularly if they feel like they’ve left your company sites.
- Their video analytics don’t tell you enough. YouTube does offer video analytics, but it lacks user-level data that isn’t anonymous and it doesn’t provide enough data about engagement.
- They lack customer support. Vimeo does offer support with their paid packages, which can be helpful for teams that lack video expertise. Good luck getting a response from anyone at YouTube, though.
So if YouTube and Vimeo aren’t the best video hosting platforms for businesses, what is?
An Enterprise Video Platform: The Secure Alternative To YouTube And Vimeo
Enterprise video platforms (sometimes called “Corporate YouTubes”) were designed to support organizations that want to use video to improve learning, communications, and more, by offering enterprise businesses a business-focused alternative to consumer-facing video platforms like YouTube or Vimeo.
What is a video platform?
A video platform enables businesses to record, manage, stream, and share both internal and external corporate videos. Video platforms include features to help create, edit and caption robust video presentations. They also include a searchable video content management system (video CMS) that makes video content easier for the right people to find and play. A video platform can be hosted securely in the cloud online, or on-premises.
Why is a video platform the better alternative for hosting business videos?
A video platform is often the best solution for hosting business videos for a number of reasons. Of course, not all video platforms have the same abilities. Panopto is one of the industry’s leading video platforms, designed to give your business a better alternative to YouTube or Vimeo. And here’s why Panopto’s video platform, specifically, is ideal for hosting your business video content:
It’s more secure. With a video platform, you are in control of your video content. Make videos public or private, individually or at the folder level for easier management. Private videos in Panopto require a password-protected login, keeping your videos secure and making it easy to manage viewing permissions.
It integrates with your existing business systems. Panopto’s video platform can integrate with single sign-on (SSO) ID management solutions like Google Apps, oAuth, and Active Directory, so your employees can log in to view videos with the same credentials they already use at work. Panopto also makes video learning possible within the systems you currently use for learning and communicating.
It makes video content easier to find. Panopto’s innovative Smart Search technology takes video search to the next level. In Panopto, you can search not only the names of your videos, but also find any word spoken or shown on the screen inside the video.
How much could you save by
making your videos easier to search?
It’s easy to live stream. Panopto’s video platform features one-click webcasting, which means anyone who can record a video can also stream it live, publicly or privately with no limits on viewers. Panopto also records the live stream automatically, making it instantly available for on-demand viewing after the webcast ends.
It has better video analytics. Unlike free video hosting platforms, enterprise video platforms include detailed video analytics and reporting that can tell you who watched what video and even when they stopped watching. Not only can better video analytics show you what content is working and what isn’t, it can help you hold employees, teams, and your entire organization accountable for compliance, self-guided learning, onboarding, and more.
It can match your brand. Brand your video portal and customize your platform’s video players so viewers know every video watched is yours. No matter where they watch, they feel like they never left your company sites. Add your logo, choose your colors and even your fonts. With Panopto, you can create the look you want in 60-seconds or less.
It includes customer support. Panopto gives you 24/7 customer support, connecting you with real engineers who can help you figure out a complex AV setup, consult on the best equipment you’ll need, and assist with just about anything else.
Learn More About When To Use YouTube and When You Shouldn’t
YouTube is one of the most popular video sites online, but it may not be as well suited for your business videos as an enterprise video platform, or the corporate YouTube. In our white paper, The YouTube Channel vs. The Corporate YouTube, we discuss four factors that should help your teams decide where to upload and host business videos.
Download our free white paper to learn more: The YouTube Channel vs. The Corporate YouTube
The post When Not To Use YouTube or Vimeo For Hosting Business Videos appeared first on Panopto Video Platform.