Web cameras (or webcams) are little digital cameras that send still or video images out to the Internet, live or recorded. Typical webcams are simple multimedia video cameras made to shoot at close range; clip one on your computer monitor, point it at your face and you’re ready for your (often grainy) closeup. Higher end web cameras, often called network cameras, are more like security cameras capable of taking good resolution images across a room.
Webcam technology use by business is spreading rapidly as prices drop. Cheap models are below $20 and major computer manufacturers now offer web cameras built in to monitors. Webcam opportunities for business include:
1. Talking to clients or staff via videoconferencing, internet phone calls or instant messaging with live webcams equipped with microphones.
2. Promoting your business with live webcams showing what’s going at your shop or restaurant. Promoting yourself with a videoblog recorded on a web camera.
3. Monitoring your business while you’re away through webcams.
4. Giving free webcams as promotional gifts to clients and staff – cheap web cameras come embedded in stuffed animals and other toys and novelty shapes.
Action Steps
The best contacts and resources to help you get it done
Webcam basic gear
The basic webcam setup is a camera you clip to your laptop screen or computer monitor and plug into your computer via a USB cable. A built-in microphone or connected headset captures the audio. Operating software comes with the web camera. Alternatively, get a laptop or monitor with webcam built in.
I recommend: Take a look at the Web sites of two major webcam makers,
Logitech and
Creative Technology, for an idea of the range of features on standalone webcams. If you want to go built-in, check out the
MacBook laptop or a
Dell flat-panel monitor.
Shopping for webcams
Webcams are widely available online and prices are competitive. As you move up the price points for web cameras, you get better lenses (glass vs. plastic) higher image quality (up to high definition video levels), more range of shooting angles for the lens (some have automatic tracking that moves as your face moves) and better microphones.
I recommend: Try
Bizrate,
Nextag or your favorite shopping engine.
Live webcams for communications
Televise yourself with a webcam through instant messaging, internet telephone calls or online videoconferencing.
I recommend: Microsoft sells the
LifeCam web camera that’s optimized for its Windows Live service but your webcam should come with software that gets your video on the major instant messaging services as well as internet telephone service
Skype. Webcam videoconferencing solutions include
HearMe,
camfrogweb and
WebEx.
Network cameras: live webcams for monitoring
If you're looking for a webcam to keep a close eye on your business premises from afar, you start to move into the security camera market with more sophisticated web cameras that may be able to shoot in the dark and respond to commands to pan, tilt and zoom. Check into a network camera - a webcam with a built in computer that can wirelessly send images to a computer network
I recommend: Linksys makes network web cameras for the home market and
Axis Communications is a leader in the field for corporate security.
Toy and promotional webcams
For giveaways to clients or staff, buy novelty webcams embedded in stuffed animals or other fun shapes or branded with your logo.
I recommend: Clique Communications offers a colorful webcam on a bendable stand. Find a stuffed puppy dog with a bellybutton web camera at
Wholesale-Star. Order a webcam printed with your logo at
Promopeddler.com.
Publicizing your business with webcams
Point live webcams at the bar in your restaurant, your showroom floor, your construction site, or any other spot you want to show off on the web.
I recommend: Sites like
EarthCam look for web camera views to feature. Or stream your own webcam video on
UStream.
Tips & Tactics
Helpful advice for making the most of this Guide
- Webcams can't stream full-motion video - sudden motions will make a blur. So keep those excited hand gestures to a minimum.
- Webcam lenses typically are fixed, meaning the lens can't zoom. Webcam software, however, can zoom to one part of the image, showing it in a larger format, though with less picture quality.
The official source of Webcams is the Webcams page at Business.com
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