 Hey guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rossell here. For today's video, I'm going to be showing how to split up a big video in Kaden Live into smaller chunks. I'm using again as an example this video interview I shot on Friday with Noga Levcion Nadan, who is a very interesting lady and an impact investor. Our conversation, as you can see from these two clips of my timeline bin, came to about 30 minutes. So when you have a clip like this and you're looking to use it effectively in your video marketing, I think there's really two sort of things that you can consider doing. The first is adding timestamps to your YouTube video. In fact, I'm just going to drag over my short video that I did from last night. The way you do that is pretty straightforward. You find places in your video where you want to add a chapter and you just add the timestamp. This is how I do it anyway. I break out a section in my video description and call it timestamps and then I'll just kind of add the timestamps where I move on to different topics. So if you've got a big, big long 30 minute interview and you know that not everyone's going to watch the whole thing, then one recommendation I'd make is to break that video into chapters. Now, another way that's very effective and that actually can allow you to sort of get a second life out of your content is to split a big video file into smaller chunks and distribute them via, for instance, LinkedIn native video, which as far as you know, has a maximum duration time of 10 minutes, right? So I'm just going to drag a bit of this interview here onto my timeline and show you kind of what I would do. So I'm just going to skimp past the point where I do the interview, where I do the intro, I should say, and I'm just kind of looking at where I begin to ask a question here. So in response to that sort of broad question, where are we with impact investing in Israel? In response to that sort of broad, so I'm going to just kind of start here is what I'm going to do is chop out this bit. And I just did a little intro for this video. But this is what I want to show in this video. I'm going to show how to specifically export a little bit from your timeline. So this is where I'm going to do my fade in to this part of the interview. That's a little bit because you're just kind of, you know, glancing through my timeline, I can see this is where the interview subject is speaking. And then it goes back to me. So I'm just going to pause here in our value squared funds. Okay, and I'm going to add my pause here. Now here's what here's my workflow that I'm showing in this video. There's two keyboard shortcuts for selecting a zone in Caden live. There is I and there is Oh, I will begin a selection zone and Oh will end a selection zone. So what I'm going to do is zoom into my timeline so I can see exactly what I'm doing here. And I'm going to hit the O key. And you can see that the selection has just jumped to this point. Now what I'm going to do is click on render. And I'm going to go into render project. And I'm just going to give this file a dummy name. For instance, we'll just call us test segment. Okay. And what you want to do is make sure that you are rendering the selected zone only. Right. So by default, you're going to be rendering the full project. And you want to move that over to selected zone. And then I'm going to just render this segment. And because we're only rendering a few minutes is going to take just, you know, about three minutes to render. And that's basically the workflow. So what I do is kind of go in to my interview, when this file is rendered, I'll then delete this from my timeline, user move space to put the next segment to the start, and then repeat the process by putting the end of my zone. At the next clip, I want to break out from this interview. So this is a workflow that I found that works for making small clips in Caden live, out of a longer clip, particularly useful, as I've done in the in the context of this example, for breaking up a long interview into smaller topic based clips. And then when you have those smaller clips, of course, as I mentioned, it opens up some possibilities to you that you can export that video on places like Twitter native video that has a time limit, I think of two minutes or LinkedIn that has a 10 minute or Instagram or wherever else you want to distribute your video content. Hope this was helpful. And if you do want to get more videos from me, do feel free to subscribe to this YouTube channel.