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Five Steps for Building Transcoding into Your Workflow

Video producers in the broadcast, film and video production, and web publishing industries are seeking new ways to increase visibility and income from their videos. But each additional revenue opportunity imposes different operational requirements, including new playback software or hardware, delivery platforms, video formats, and other customizations. In some cases, device interoperability will allow the reuse of existing versions of content without transcoding. But with the hundreds of formats and variants in existence today, the majority of video files must be transcoded before submitting them to the chosen recipients.

There are a wide variety of factors to consider when bringing transcoding into your workflow. A video workflow may be as simple as converting a file to the right format and delivering it. Or it may be much more complex, involving automated processes from ingest to asset management, asset management to editing, editing to various distribution points, and so forth.

But whether the transcoding project is simple or complex – the same questions are relevant. Which format should I use at each step in my workflow? Which wrapper? What settings? When should I switch from a high quality format to a low quality one? Let’s examine some of the technical and procedural considerations you should think about while trying to answer these questions:

Getting Started: Five Steps for Creating an Efficient Transcoding Workflow

Once you have answered all of the questions in the previous section, the following five steps will facilitate the development of an effective transcoding workflow:

  1. Test Device Compatibility. Review the devices you plan to use and what formats they support. Test compatibility between devices directly and identify any necessary conversions. If you haven’t chosen devices yet or can’t test them, use the most commonly supported format.
  2. Test Various Transcoding Solutions. You need to evaluate a range of possible transcoding solutions from plug-ins to full enterprise solutions. This will give you a sense of what is available, what functionality the tools provide, and how easy the solutions are to use. It is also essential to test these solutions with your own devices.
  3. Review What Needs to Be Preserved at Each Step. After choosing a transcoding solution, review your workflow to determine what information you need to preserve between each step. Do you need to keep timecode between your camera and your edit bay? Do you need to crop black and perform inverse telecine before delivering? If so, review your content and tools to make sure you can accomplish these tasks as efficiently as possible.
  4. Pick Your Formats and Settings. Finally, choose your formats, tools, and settings. There are a variety of ways to check quality, but the most important thing is to find representative content for quality testing.
  5. Test Early and Often! Once you have deployed your transcoding solution, you need to test the entire ecosystem. Driver changes, version updates on devices or platforms, and any changes to your devices may introduce incompatibilities. Make sure you test early and often to ensure that lack of interoperability does not halt your workflow.

Summary

In an ideal world, transcoding can be as simple as converting the original audio/video format to another audio/video format. In a few rare cases, it is that simple. But for the vast majority of cases, transcoding is much more complicated. With careful planning and a logical, step-wise approach, you can design and implement an optimal transcoding workflow.