Introduction:
Many businesses invest in a high-quality video and then wonder what’s next? The good news is a single video can be a multi-purpose marketing powerhouse if you leverage it across the right channels. In fact, 93% of video marketers report that video gives them a positive ROI[1]—but that ROI only comes when your content actually gets in front of your audience. Instead of letting your new video gather digital dust, ensure it works hard for you on every platform available. Whether you’re a local Wichita business or a national brand, the key is smart distribution and repurposing. Let’s walk through seven effective ways to squeeze maximum value from your video after production.
Embed Video on Your Website (Boost SEO & Conversions)
Your website is a prime spot to showcase your video. Placing a relevant video on high-traffic pages (like your homepage, product/service pages, or a blog post) can dramatically increase visitor engagement. Videos keep people on your site longer – on average, users spend 88% more time on websites with video content[2]. This longer “dwell time” sends positive signals to search engines that your page is valuable, which can improve SEO rankings[3]. In other words, pages with video often rank higher in search results, drawing more organic traffic[3].
Even more importantly, video can boost conversions. For example, one study found that adding video to a landing page can increase conversion rates by 80% or more[4]. Whether it’s an explainer video demonstrating your product or a testimonial from a happy client, an embedded video can persuade visitors to take the next step. It provides a dynamic explanation or social proof that text alone may not convey.
To maximize impact, embed videos strategically: place them near calls-to-action or where customers might need extra info. Include a descriptive title, transcript or summary text below the video (for accessibility and additional SEO content), and ensure the video player is responsive and doesn’t slow down your site. Also, use an attractive thumbnail to entice clicks. By integrating video into your site experience, you not only enrich the content but also make visitors more likely to stay, engage, and convert[5][6]. It’s an easy win for both user experience and ROI.
Upload to YouTube and Optimize for Discovery
Don’t just stop at hosting the video on your own site – upload it to YouTube (and/or other video platforms like Vimeo). YouTube is the world’s second-largest search engine (after Google), with billions of searches and views every day. Having your video on YouTube opens it up to a massive audience beyond your website’s reach. It’s common for potential customers to search YouTube for product reviews, how-tos, and brand videos. By posting your content there, you increase the odds of being discovered organically.
To leverage YouTube for maximum ROI, optimize your upload: – Title & Description: Craft an SEO-friendly title (using keywords your audience might search) and a detailed description. For example, include your business name, location, and relevant terms (e.g., “How to Use Marketing Videos to Boost Sales | Tips from a Wichita Video Production Company”). A well-optimized description (200+ words) with keywords can help your video rank in both YouTube and Google search results[7][8]. – Tags: Add relevant tags (topics, industry, location) to improve discoverability. – Thumbnail: Use a high-quality, custom thumbnail that grabs attention – faces, bright colors, and readable text (if applicable) tend to get more clicks[8]. – Captions: Upload closed captions or subtitles. Not only do captions make your video accessible, they also provide additional text for YouTube’s algorithm to index (boosting SEO)[9]. – Cards/End Screen: Use YouTube’s interactive cards and end screen elements to direct viewers to your website, a landing page, or another relevant video. This is a chance to drive traffic or encourage viewers down the funnel (e.g., “Watch our case study next” or “Visit our site for a free quote”).
Remember to include a clear call-to-action in the video and description – tell viewers what to do next (visit your site, sign up, contact you, etc.). And don’t forget to share the YouTube link across your other channels as well (YouTube links are very share-friendly). By establishing a presence on YouTube, you benefit from its immense user base and search infrastructure. Plus, you can easily embed the YouTube-hosted video on your own site or blog, killing two birds with one stone (easy hosting and potential SEO boost from Google-owned YouTube). The result: more eyes on your content and a higher chance of ROI from the video.
Share Snippets on Social Media Platforms
Social media is where your video can really take off in terms of reach and engagement. Rather than posting your full 2-3 minute video everywhere as-is, consider creating platform-friendly snippets. On social media, shorter is often better to hook viewers. Think about cutting your footage into bite-sized clips or teaser trailers: – Facebook: Native video uploads on Facebook (as opposed to just sharing a YouTube link) tend to get better reach in the algorithm. Aim for a clip that highlights the most eye-catching part of your video in, say, 30-60 seconds. Remember that 85% of Facebook users watch videos with the sound off, so include captions or on-screen text for context[10]. Facebook auto-plays videos muted, so a combination of subtitles and compelling visuals is key. (Fun fact: Facebook is still a powerhouse for marketers – it’s rated as having a better ROI than any other social platform by marketers[11].) – Instagram: If your audience is on IG, you can share videos as Reels (up to 90 seconds) or in your feed (up to 60 seconds, or longer via IGTV/Instagram Video). For Instagram, vertical format (9:16) works best[12]. Show engaging, high-energy clips; Instagram’s audience loves behind-the-scenes peeks, quick tips, or anything visually striking. Use relevant hashtags to increase discovery, and consider adding a brief caption that invites engagement (e.g., a question or call-to-action). – LinkedIn: For B2B or professional outreach, LinkedIn is gold. Share your video natively on LinkedIn with a short intro text. Keep the video relatively short (around 1 minute is great for LinkedIn feed). You might share a snippet such as a key insight or testimonial from the video. LinkedIn is fantastic for targeting corporate and industry audiences – 87% of marketers find LinkedIn effective for video content in B2B contexts[10]. As LinkedIn now even has a dedicated video tab on profiles and company pages, you’re likely to get engagement from professionals if the content is informative. Pro tip: Tag any people or companies featured in the video to broaden the reach. – Twitter (X): Short clips (30-45 seconds) can work on Twitter, too. Use a catchy caption and maybe a trending hashtag if applicable. Twitter videos auto-play in feed, so an attention-grabbing first few seconds are crucial. – TikTok and YouTube Shorts: If it fits your brand, a fun or informative snippet can be repackaged as a TikTok or YouTube Short. These platforms favor very short (15-60 sec), vertical, and often light-hearted or snappy content. For instance, you could take a single tip or fact from your longer video and present it as a quick standalone nugget.
The key across all social media is to tailor the video to the platform and audience. One size doesn’t fit all: the same video might need different aspect ratios, lengths, or edits for each channel. But the extra effort pays off in more engagement. Social videos are highly shareable – in fact, social video content generates 1,200% more shares than text and image posts combined[2]. That exponential share rate means your followers might spread your video to their network, vastly expanding its reach at no extra cost.
Also, always include a caption or comment with your video that encourages interaction: ask a question, prompt viewers to “watch the full video on our site” or “tell us your thoughts below.” And use platform analytics (like Facebook Insights, Instagram Insights, etc.) to track views, likes, shares, and comments. This feedback loop will show you which platforms or formats yield the best ROI so you can double down on what works.
Include Video in Email Campaigns & Newsletters
Email marketing and video make a powerful duo. If you have an email list (for prospects, customers, or a newsletter audience), leverage your video to boost email engagement. Research shows that just using the word “video” in an email subject line increases open rates by 19% on average[13]. People are curious when they see “Video:” in their inbox subject – it promises rich content. And once they open the email, a video thumbnail can entice them to click through. In fact, one study found that simply attaching or embedding a video in an email can increase click-through rates by 200-300%[14] – that’s double or triple the typical CTR[15]
How to do it effectively: – Thumbnail + Link: Most email clients won’t play an actual video inline, so the best practice is to insert an image of your video (a nice thumbnail with a “play” button overlay) that hyperlinks to the video on your website or YouTube. Write a sentence like “→ Watch the 2-minute video here” to make it obvious. – Personalization: If appropriate, mention the recipient’s name or relevant info in the email and how the video will help them. For instance: “Hi Jane, in this 2-minute clip we show 3 tips to boost your sales using video.” This sets up why clicking to watch is worth their time. – Keep it Short: In the email body, don’t overload on text. A quick intro and the thumbnail is enough – let the video do the explaining on the landing page. – Mobile-Friendly: Ensure the thumbnail is a good size and the link is easy to tap, since many people check email on phones.
Using video in email isn’t just a gimmick; it can improve real outcomes like lead nurturing and sales. For example, a potential client who’s been sitting on the fence might finally convert after watching your video case study that you emailed out. Or an existing customer might upgrade services after seeing a product demo video in your newsletter. The video provides a more engaging way to deliver your message than a text paragraph would.
Be sure to track the results. Most email platforms (MailChimp, Constant Contact, etc.) will show you the open rate and click rate. You can see how many people clicked the video link. If you tag the URL with UTM parameters (for Google Analytics tracking), you’ll also know what they did after clicking (e.g., did they watch the video and then fill out a contact form?). This helps in calculating the ROI of your video-email combo. Given that 74% of marketers say including video in emails improves overall campaign performance[16], it’s a no-brainer to use your new video as star content in your next email blast.
Leverage Video in Sales Outreach and Pitches
A perhaps underrated way to use your video is in one-on-one communications and sales efforts. Sales teams today are not shy about using video to break through to prospects – and it works. A polished marketing video can elevate your sales emails, proposals, or pitches by adding a dynamic, personal touch. Here are a few ideas: – Personalized Video Messages: Tools like Vidyard, Loom, or even just a smartphone make it easy for a sales rep to record a short custom intro and then lead into the main marketing video. For instance, your sales email could say, “Hey John, I wanted to share a quick story of how we helped a client. I’ve included a short video for you to check out.” The rep might even appear on camera for a greeting, followed by the client testimonial video. This kind of personalization shows effort and grabs attention in a crowded inbox. – Follow-Up Tool: After a sales call or meeting, email a “nice to meet you” note that includes your video as a reminder of your product/service value. It reinforces your message and keeps the conversation going. Sales professionals have found that when prospects engage with video content, it can help move deals along – one B2B team noted that seeing prospects watching their videos “pushes the conversation in times where the deal is slower”[17]. It’s a great way to revive quiet leads: “Hi, we noticed you watched our demo video – any questions we can answer?” – Sales Decks & Presentations: If you’re pitching in person or via Zoom, integrate the video into your slide deck. Rather than telling a prospect about your manufacturing process or customer success story, show them via the video. It breaks up the monotony of slides and leaves a stronger impression. For example, a corporate video production showcasing your facilities or a snippet of a client testimonial can drive home points better than bullet lists. People remember visuals and stories – retention of information is up to 95% when delivered in video versus only 10% with text[2]. – Account-Based Marketing (ABM): For high-value target clients, consider creating a version of the video tailored to their industry or even personalized (if feasible). Even if you don’t re-shoot anything, you might simply frame the messaging in an accompanying note like, “This is how our solution can help companies in X industry – see the video for an example.”
Using video in sales outreach adds a human element and credibility. Hearing real customer success stories or seeing the product in action builds trust. In fact, trust is critical in sales – 92% of users say they trust a testimonial video over traditional pitches[18]. So sharing a customer testimonial video with a prospect can be far more convincing than just having your sales rep say “we’re great, trust us.” It’s third-party validation.
Make sure the sales team is aware of all video content at their disposal. They should know when and how to use it. Encourage them to share feedback too – are prospects responding well to the video? Are there common questions coming up after viewing? That intel can help marketing refine future videos or create supporting content. All in all, when sales and video marketing align, you create a compelling one-two punch that can shorten sales cycles and increase close rates (hence, better ROI from that video asset).
Repurpose into Blog Posts, Articles or Infographics
Your video’s content can stretch beyond the screen. A high-impact way to extend its ROI is by repurposing the video into other formats like written articles, blog posts, or infographics. This not only reinforces your message through multiple media, but also captures additional audience segments (like those who prefer reading or need a quick skim). For example, you can transcribe the video and turn it into a keyword-optimized blog post, complete with screenshots or key takeaways in text form[19]. This is fantastic for SEO – search engines can’t watch a video, but they can crawl a transcript or article. By publishing a blog that either summarizes the video or expands on its topic, you create another entry point for people to find you online.
Consider these repurposing tactics: – Full Blog Article: Write an article using the video as the centerpiece. You might embed the video at the top of the post and then provide a full written explanation or commentary below. For example, if your video is “5 Ways to Improve Manufacturing Safety,” write a blog post titled “5 Ways to Improve Manufacturing Safety (Video + Transcript)” where you list and elaborate on those five ways, using the video’s content as a guide. This way, you’re covering both bases: viewers can watch or readers can read (or both). As a bonus, having the text might snag featured snippets on Google or answer “People Also Ask” questions, driving more traffic. – Pull Quotes or Data into Infographics: If your video mentioned compelling statistics or quotes, turn those into a cool infographic or a set of shareable graphics. For instance, a line like “Including video in email can triple your CTR” could be a mini visual post on LinkedIn or Pinterest linking back to your full content. Visual content like infographics can travel far on social media and Pinterest, bringing new eyes to your message. – Podcast or Audio Article: Extract the audio from the video (if it stands alone well) and offer it as an audio snippet or part of a podcast. Some in your audience might prefer to listen on the go. You could even expand on the topic in a podcast episode, using the video’s script as a starting point. – Slides or PDF: Take key frames or points and create a SlideShare or PDF guide. For B2B audiences, a SlideShare on LinkedIn summarizing the video’s core lessons might attract viewers who didn’t see the original video.
Why go through this trouble? Because different platforms and formats reach different people. Someone who misses your video on YouTube might discover the same content via a Google search that leads to your blog. Or a person on your site might not watch a 3-minute video but will scan a quick infographic. It’s about meeting your audience where they are and in the format they like.
This content recycling significantly multiplies the ROI of the original video. You’re basically turning one asset into many without starting from scratch each time. As a plus, repurposing improves consistency of your messaging – your audience sees the same core story in various places, reinforcing their learning and perception of your brand (marketing’s “Rule of 7” – people need to hear something several times to remember it).
At Lundblade House Productions, we often follow this approach for our own content. For example, after producing a video, we might write a case study blog about it, share snippets on social (as discussed), and quote it in our email newsletter. This holistic strategy ensures the video reaches maximum eyeballs and delivers value long after the initial premiere.
Use Video in Paid Ads and Retargeting Campaigns
If you have any budget for advertising, consider deploying your video in paid ad campaigns. A well-placed video ad can exponentially increase the exposure of your content to exactly the audience you want – fast. Platforms like Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and LinkedIn allow you to run video ads targeted by demographic, interest, or behavior, meaning your video can find the people most likely to become customers. Since you’ve already invested in creating the video, putting some ad dollars behind it can amplify its ROI significantly.
A few ways to use video in paid channels: – Social Media Ads: Facebook and Instagram video ads can appear in users’ feeds, stories, or as sponsored posts. You could take a 15-30 second cutdown of your video (or even use the whole thing if it’s short and engaging) and run it as an ad. These platforms have sophisticated targeting – for example, a Wichita-based company can target people within 50 miles of Wichita with interests in your industry. Video ads often outperform static images in terms of engagement; in one poll, nearly 60% of marketers said video ads get more clicks than image ads on Facebook[[20]](https://aspire.marketron.com/how-video-content-boosts-click-throughs/#:~:text=Aspire aspire,). People just tend to notice motion in their feed more. – YouTube Ads: You can use your full video or an edited version as a YouTube TrueView ad. These are the skippable ads that play before or during other YouTube content. The nice thing is you pay only when someone watches 30 seconds or to the end, so you’re paying for engaged viewers. Targeting can be by keywords (show your video ad on videos related to your niche), by topic, or by user demographics/interests. For example, if you produced a tech product demo, you might run it before tech review videos on YouTube. Also consider YouTube retargeting – show the ad to people who have visited your website before (a reminder of your brand). – LinkedIn Sponsored Content: On LinkedIn, you can promote a video post to specific job titles, industries, or companies. A corporate audience might respond well to a concise, informative video in their feed (say, a case study or thought leadership snippet). It’s a more premium CPM (LinkedIn ads can be pricier), but the lead quality for B2B can be high if the content resonates. – Retargeting Ads: If someone visited your site but didn’t take action, you can use retargeting (via Facebook Pixel, Google Ads Remarketing, etc.) to show them ads as they browse other sites or social media. Serving them a video ad that reinforces your value proposition could bring them back. For instance, a visitor looked at your “Video Production Services” page – later, they see a Facebook video ad from you highlighting a success story or special offer. This keeps your company top-of-mind and nudges them closer to conversion.
When using videos in ads, remember to include a strong call-to-action on the ad and/or the video itself. For example, Facebook/Instagram ads can have a CTA button (“Learn More,” “Sign Up,” etc.) – choose one that aligns with your goal (like driving traffic to a landing page or encouraging sign-ups for a demo). On YouTube ads, you can have overlay texts or companion banners urging action, and you should definitely have an end screen in the video that says what to do next (visit site, free quote, etc.).
Keep an eye on the metrics that matter: view rates, click-through rates, and especially conversions (did people who watched the ad end up doing what you wanted, like filling a form?). You might find that your video ad drives a lot of traffic, but if that traffic isn’t converting, you may need to tweak either the video content or the landing page it leads to. Sometimes even small edits like changing the opening 5 seconds of the video (to be more attention-grabbing for ad viewers) can make a difference in performance.
In summary, putting some money behind your video can accelerate its ROI. You’re ensuring all that great content actually reaches a large pool of potential customers, not just your existing followers. Many businesses find that a blend of organic and paid distribution for video yields the best results – organic gives you depth of engagement with your core audience, while paid gives you breadth and scale. By covering all bases (owned, earned, and paid media), your video stands the best chance of delivering tangible returns.
By now it’s clear: creating a video is just the beginning. Maximizing video ROI is about smart, multi-channel usage. From your website and YouTube to social media, emails, and sales decks, you have a wealth of opportunities to put that video to work. The beauty of video content is its versatility – one well-crafted video can educate prospects, excite customers, and empower your sales team all at once. The more places you deploy it, the greater the cumulative impact.
Don’t be afraid to get creative and keep reusing the content in fresh ways. Each time someone watches or interacts with your video in any channel, you’re essentially getting more return on the initial investment. So squeeze every drop of value from it! As a video production company passionate about storytelling, we at Lundblade House Productions believe that a great video should be seen far and wide. With these strategies, you’ll ensure your video finds its audience and drives real results for your business. Now get out there and share your story on every screen possible – and if you need help crafting or strategizing your next video, we’re here to help make sure it earns its keep.
FAQs

Where should I share my marketing videos to get the best ROI?
Share your videos across multiple channels for maximum impact. Key places include your website (embed on your homepage, product pages or blog), your YouTube channel (for search exposure), and on social media platforms like LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok. Don’t forget email campaigns (using video in emails can double or triple click-through rates[14]) and even in one-on-one sales outreach. The more relevant places you publish your video, the more people will see it – which ultimately improves ROI.
Does embedding a video on my website really help with SEO or conversions?
Yes. Videos can significantly boost user engagement on your site, which in turn helps SEO. Pages with video content tend to have visitors stick around longer (viewers spend on average 40-80% more time on pages with video)[5]. This longer dwell time signals Google that your page is valuable[3]. On the conversion side, videos can increase actions like sign-ups or purchases – for example, landing pages with an explainer video have been shown to lift conversion rates substantially (sometimes by 80% or more)[4]. Plus, video can explain or showcase your product better than text, often persuading undecided customers to convert.
Should I upload my videos to YouTube even if they’re on my website?
Definitely consider it. YouTube expands your reach because it’s a huge search platform on its own. Someone searching for topics related to your business might find your video on YouTube even if they haven’t visited your website. Also, YouTube videos are easy to share on social media and can be embedded on other sites. Just be sure to optimize the video on YouTube with a good title, description, and tags so it’s discoverable. One strategy is to upload to YouTube and embed that YouTube video on your site – that way you get the SEO benefits on both platforms. The only caution is to avoid distractions (YouTube might show related videos); you can mitigate that by embedding with the “rel=0” parameter or using a clean embed player.
How can I repurpose one video into other content pieces?
There are many ways to repurpose a single video. You can edit shorter clips from it to share as teasers on social media (e.g. cut a 60-second highlight for Instagram or LinkedIn). You can transcribe the video audio into a text article or blog post[19] – this improves your SEO and caters to readers. Pull out impactful quotes or stats from the video to create quote graphics for Twitter or LinkedIn. If the content suits, turn it into an infographic or slideshow. You might also use the audio to create a mini podcast episode. Essentially, think of your video as a source of raw material: you can slice, dice, and remix that material to fit other mediums. It saves you time (versus creating brand new content from scratch) and ensures a consistent message across channels.
How do I measure the ROI of my video?
Measuring video ROI comes down to tracking the goals that matter to you and seeing if the video moved the needle. Start by defining the key metric for the video’s purpose – is it views, click-throughs, lead generation, or direct sales? Common things to look at include view count and watch time (to gauge reach and engagement), click-through rate if the video links to your site, and conversion metrics like form fills, product purchases, or inquiries that happened after people watched the video. Tools like Google Analytics can show you traffic and conversions from your video landing pages. Platforms (YouTube, social networks) have built-in analytics to report views, engagement, and audience retention (how long people watch). If your video is used in sales, track if deals where the prospect watched the video tend to close faster or at a higher rate. To truly quantify ROI, you’d compare the value generated (e.g. revenue from new customers attributable to the video, or an increase in conversion rate) against the cost of production. Even when that’s hard to calculate exactly, you can get a sense of ROI by looking at before-and-after metrics. For example, if your website’s conversion rate went from 1% to 1.5% after adding the video, that’s a 50% improvement – you can decide if that uplift (in leads or sales) justifies the video’s cost. In surveys, the vast majority of marketers (90%+ in recent research) feel that their videos provide a positive ROI[1], especially as videos continue to generate results over time.
Sources
- Goldcast Blog – “How To Repurpose Video Content In 2024: Tips & Strategies” (April 24, 2024)[21][22] – Provided insights on repurposing videos across channels and noted 92% of marketers see ROI from video content.
- Final Cut Multimedia – “Grow Your Business with Impactful Video Content” (2024)[5][7] – Shared stats on how video boosts engagement (e.g. 40% longer time on site with video, pages with video rank higher in Google) and increases conversions (landing pages with video convert more).
- Beehiiv Email Marketing Stats – “49 Statistics Showing Why Videos Boost Email Marketing” (May 29, 2024)[13][14] – Highlighted email-related video benefits, like “video” in subject line lifting opens ~19% and videos in email increasing click-through rates by 200-300%.
- DemandSage Report – “93 Video Marketing Statistics 2025”[2][23] – Compiled data such as 88% more time spent on websites with video, and that social videos get 1200% more shares than text/image posts, underscoring video’s impact on engagement and traffic.
- HubSpot Marketing Statistics – “2025 Marketing Statistics, Trends & Data”[1][11] – Noted that 93% of video marketers report positive ROI (Wyzowl, 2024) and that marketers rank Facebook as the top social platform for ROI, useful for emphasizing multi-channel video use.
- Goldcast (Coffee Corner Event) via Sarah Connell – referenced in Goldcast blog[24][25] – Emphasized how prevalent video is across platforms and the need to repurpose instead of reinventing content for each medium (important context for ROI mindset).
- Quantum QV Media – “Maximize Your Content ROI: How to Repurpose One Video into a Month of Marketing” (July 16, 2025)[19][26] – Gave practical examples of turning one video into 25+ pieces of content (e.g. blog posts, short clips, quote graphics), reinforcing tips on content repurposing for extended ROI.
- Final Cut Multimedia – “Platforms for Distributing Video Content” (2024)[10][27] – Advised on optimizing videos per platform (e.g. 85% watch Facebook videos muted, LinkedIn effective for B2B video), which supports our social media distribution recommendations.
- Beehiiv/Biteable – via DemandSage stats[28] – Reported that videos help users retain 95% of a message vs 10% via text, used to illustrate video’s effectiveness in sales communication and messaging retention.
- Aspire Marketron blog – “How Video Content Boosts Click-Throughs in Ads” (2023)[[20]](https://aspire.marketron.com/how-video-content-boosts-click-throughs/#:~:text=Aspire aspire,) – Cited a poll where ~59% of marketers said video ads drive more clicks than image ads on Facebook, backing our point that video improves ad performance in paid campaigns.
[1] [11] 2025 Marketing Statistics, Trends & Data
https://www.hubspot.com/marketing-statistics
[2] [23] [28] 93 Video Marketing Statistics 2025 [Latest Data & Trends]
https://www.demandsage.com/video-marketing-statistics/
[3] Web Design Statistics, Trends & Predictions [2025’s Update]
https://review42.com/resources/web-design-statistics/
[4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [12] [18] [27] Grow Your Business with Impactful Video Content
https://finalcutmultimedia.com/grow-your-business-with-impactful-video-content/
[13] [14] [15] 50 Statistics Showing Why Videos Boost Email Marketing
https://blog.beehiiv.com/p/video-email-marketing-statistics
[16] Video Email Marketing Statistics for 2025 – Zebracat
https://www.zebracat.ai/post/video-email-marketing-statistics
[17] [21] [22] [24] [25] How To Repurpose Video Content In 2024: Tips & Strategies
https://www.goldcast.io/blog-post/how-to-repurpose-video-content
[19] [26] Maximize Your Content ROI: How to Repurpose One Video into a Month of Marketing – Quantum Quill Ventures
[[20]](https://aspire.marketron.com/how-video-content-boosts-click-throughs/#:~:text=Aspire aspire,) How Video Content Boosts Click-Throughs in Ads – Aspire
https://aspire.marketron.com/how-video-content-boosts-click-throughs/