Enter Camtasia's Batch Production facility. To export your movies to any Camtasia compatible format is a 2 step process:
- Create a preset. This includes all the settings you want to apply in the export process (e.g. JPG compression, screen resolution etc).
- Select your files and apply the preset to them.

On the next screen use the Add Files/Projects button to select the files you want to export.

Click Next. On the next screen click on the Preset Manager button (unless you are going to use an existing preset). This is where we will create a preset comprising all the settings used in the export process.

On the Manage Production Presets screen click New.

Give your preset a name and a description. Make the name meaningful, and add a description that summarises what exactly the preset is doing (see my example name and description below).

From here, specify your export settings as normal. If this is all gobbledy gook to you, check out my post on Specifying Camtasia Export Settings. I can't link to it as I haven't written it yet! Having created your preset, select it and ensure that 'Use one production preset for all files/projects' is selected.

Click Next. Select a location on your hard drive where you want the exported movies to go. I like to check 'Organise produced files into sub folders' so that Camtasia keeps the bits for each movie separate. I'm also not too bothered about reviewing the movies immediately after they have been rendered because invariably I'm in bed when that happens - so I uncheck 'Show production results'.

At this point click Finish and go and do something that takes lots of time. I think Camtasia is pretty nifty when it comes to the movie rendering phase, but if you're rendering multiple FLVs, it's going to take a fair amount of time. I generally set Camtasia off just before going to bed.
Don't make the mistake I made the first time I did this, and check the 'Show production results' box. When I did this I was awoken in the early hours of the morning to the sound of my own voice blaring out from the spare bedroom where my pc lives (I was exporting a tutorial I'd created earlier in the day). A chilling experience.
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