
Online video platform Brightcove is going public. In an SEC filing on Monday, the company set the price range for their public offering: 5 million shares of common stock at a range of $10 to $12 per share.

Online video platform Brightcove is going public. In an SEC filing on Monday, the company set the price range for their public offering: 5 million shares of common stock at a range of $10 to $12 per share.
Launch a social media campaign that will build your brand and deliver results in our online Social Media Marketing Boot Camp starting June 7. Speakers include Abigail Cusick (Bravo Digital), Gregory Galant (Sawhorse Media), Alex Leo (Thomson Reuters Digital), Jim Tobin (Ignite Social Media), and many more. Read the reviews. 
The alternative may be uglier.

It’s a pretty wild question, given the tenor of recent news coverage. Former employees of companies still private, such as Facebook, have been moving to the likes of SecondMarket and SharesPost for some early liquidity. Many CEOs, including Mark Zuckerberg, are said to be showing patience, instead of rushing to ring the opening bell. Yet, this might not be characteristic of the tech sector as a whole. The recent wave of S-1 filings might indicate that something else is amiss.

This week Daisy Whitney, online video consultant, host of the New Media Minute and author of The Mockingbirds, released a new video called ‘The Social Video Effect’ that’s chock-full of interesting tips and statistics about the effect of social media on the online video world.

Brightcove and TubeMogul released their quarterly research report on Online Video & the Media Industry this morning, revealing some very interesting stats from Q4 2010.
Brightcove senior vice president of marketing Jeff Whatcott spoke with Beet.TV about his company receiving authorization from Twitter to embed videos, and opportunities for publishers to share video on Twitter. In the video below, Whatcott adds that publishers’ custom, branded players, along with advertising, show up on Twitter.