A decision that may influence the outline of your content and the length of your video may be the style in which you intend to record the video. Are you planning on recording yourself sitting or standing while discussing a topic or key ideas in a particular unit of study? You may decide to record this type of video sitting in your office at home, which could be a fifteen minute video digging into a topic. Or perhaps you decide to record in an outdoor setting while discussing a particular flora or fauna if that is your lecture topic, which may better lend itself to a video that is only a few minutes in length to show a visual example of a concept in real life.
Are you planning on recording yourself or your voice discussing PowerPoint slides? Are you considering annotating your slides during the lecture, or writing out ideas, formulas, or diagrams? In this case, you may choose to sit in a more formal office space, such as AC 221B, to use Panopto with or without a writing tablet to record a narrated and/or annotated PowerPoint. You may decide to use PowerPoint on a tablet in conjunction with another app you have for annotating directly on the screen. The length and style of this type of instructional video may vary by topic and your comfort level with the technology.
Do you want to show the process of solving a mathematical equation or map out a concept as you would on a whiteboard in the classroom? In that case, you may intend to use the Lightboard, such as the one in AC 221A, to record your lecture. Recording on a Lightboard limits the space and ease of transition with which you can display information during your video. Post-editing in a video editing software may be useful for this type of recording, resulting in a different delivery strategy than a "talking head" or narrated PowerPoint video. You can to decide what delivery method suits your content best and plan your content outline accordingly.