• The Who
  • The What
  • The When
  • The Where
  • The Why

60% of a Successful Video Is Finished Before the Camera Turns On

Research and Scripting:

In-depth interviews with key stakeholders reveal what sets a brand apart: its unique history, customer anecdotes, or pivotal moments that define the company’s character. Scripting is not about constraining authenticity but so that genuine moments are identifiable and usable in post-production.

Storyboarding:

A detailed storyboard maps out each shot before filming begins, guiding the team to capture exactly what they need. Without one, valuable shoot time is wasted on making decisions that should have been made weeks earlier, at a significant cost.

A slightly soft image can still look professional. Hollow, echoey audio makes every frame around it feel amateur. Viewers form their impression of the organization from production quality before the speaker finishes the first sentence.

Lighting and Cinema Lenses:

 Proper lighting (three-point setup with key, fill, and backlight) creates an illusion of depth that sets high-end productions apart from low-budget recordings. Cinema lenses excel in controlled environments, but even the best smartphone cameras can’t replicate their performance indoors. A production’s visual language speaks volumes about its competence before the subject utters a word.

Audio Capture and Room Treatment:

Optimal microphone placement and selection are crucial for capturing crisp dialogue. A shotgun mic on a boom pole or a lavalier clipped close to the throat can greatly reduce room reverb. Unfortunately, post-production cannot fully correct hollow sound to make it sound professional. Instead, careful room choice and microphone positioning during filming prevent these issues altogether.

Real Employees on Camera Build Trust That Actors Cannot Replicate

The Unscripted Interview:

Conducting interviews as conversations rather than performances yields raw, unscripted footage that’s refreshingly authentic. Open-ended questions are key: ask about the team’s most technically demanding project, what lies beneath the surface of their work, or what would happen if they skipped a crucial step. The subject responds in their own unique rhythm and vocabulary, making the edit process a careful selection of the clearest, most specific answers.

B-Roll as Evidence:

Verbal claims require visual proof to carry weight with the viewer. When a subject makes an assertion, such as ‘we pressure-test every weld before it leaves the floor,’ supporting footage is essential. B-roll shots can turn assertions into evidence, and slow-motion captures physical processes that would otherwise fly by too quickly at normal speed. For instance, a two-second weld in real time becomes an eight-second event when slowed down to 60 or 120 frames per second, giving the viewer ample time to grasp its technical significance.

Ground Level Shows the Building. Aerial Shows the Operation.

Establishing Scale for Industrial Operations:

A distribution center filmed at ground level looks like a warehouse. From 200 feet, its 40-acre footprint and truck staging operation become visible in a single frame. Construction sites, solar installations, agricultural operations, and commercial developments all communicate scale through altitude that ground-level photography cannot replicate regardless of lens choice.

FAA Part 107 and Airspace Authorization:

Commercial drone operations in the United States require FAA Part 107 remote pilot certification. Operating without it creates liability exposure for both the production company and the client. Philadelphia-specific airspace restrictions near Philadelphia International Airport and Northeast Philadelphia Airport require pre-flight authorization that determines which altitudes and flight paths are available for a given shoot location.

The Script Determines What Gets Shot. The Edit Determines What Gets Watched.

Pacing, Color Grading, and Music Licensing:

Pacing is the timing of cuts relative to music and narrative arc. Two seconds too long on a shot and the viewer disengages. Color grading unifies footage shot across different locations and lighting conditions into a consistent visual language. Music sets the emotional tone before dialogue begins; a mismatched track undermines technically sound footage.

Versioning for Platform and Context:

One three-minute brand film produces multiple assets: a 90-second homepage edit ending on a contact prompt, a 60-second pre-roll cut front-loading the hook before the skip button appears, five 30-second social cuts each featuring a different moment, and a 15-second Reel for feed distribution. One production day, months of content.

A Video Produced and Not Distributed Is & a Production Cost With No Return


How much does a corporate video cost?

A single-camera testimonial runs $1,500 to $3,000. A brand anthem with multiple locations, drone footage, and motion graphics runs $8,000 to $20,000. Scope, shoot days, and post-production hours determine the number. A detailed brief produces an accurate estimate faster than a general inquiry.

How long should a corporate video be?

Homepage brand film: 60 to 90 seconds. Social cuts: 15 to 30 seconds. Case studies or training content: 3 to 10 minutes. The platform and the viewer’s intent determine the appropriate length. A viewer who sought out a detailed case study will watch eight minutes if the content earns that time.

Do real employees work better on camera than actors?

For brand stories and testimonials, yes. Authenticity is the specific quality those formats require, and real people in their actual environment provide it in ways that trained actors cannot replicate. Actors are appropriate for scripted commercials where controlled delivery and specific dialogue matter more than authenticity.

Can existing footage be incorporated into a new production?

If it is 1080p or 4K with adequate lighting and stable framing, often yes. Footage that is technically incompatible with new material degrades the perceived quality of everything around it. The decision is made clip by clip after reviewing the archive, not in advance.

Is a script required for interview-style video?

A full script is not required for interviews. A question list, a narrative arc, and a target runtime are required. Arriving at a shoot without those three produces footage without a story. The story does not emerge in the edit bay if the shoot did not capture it.

How are music rights handled?

Music is licensed from libraries like Artlist or Musicbed, which provide perpetual commercial use rights for a flat annual fee. Unlicensed music, including popular tracks not cleared for commercial use, produces copyright claims and takedowns on YouTube and other platforms. The claim arrives after the video is published, not before.

How long does a full production take from start to finish?

Four to six weeks is standard: one to two weeks pre-production, one to two shoot days, two to three weeks post including revision rounds. Rush timelines compress pre-production, which is where compression produces the most expensive problems.

Can corporate video be used for television broadcast?

Yes, if shot in 4K with broadcast-spec audio. Local broadcast delivery specs for Comcast and regional cable networks are specific file format and audio level requirements provided to post-production before the final export. The footage quality is rarely the constraint. The delivery format specification is.

What is a teleprompter and when should it be used?

A device scrolling script text over the camera lens so the speaker can read while appearing to address the viewer directly. Appropriate for executive addresses and direct-to-camera statements requiring specific scripted language. Wrong for interview-style brand storytelling, where reading produces flat delivery that signals to the viewer that the words are not the speaker’s own.

Who owns the final video and the raw footage?

The client owns all final delivered files in agreed formats. Raw camera footage, which can represent multiple terabytes of data per shoot day, is retained by the production company unless the client requests it at an additional storage and transfer fee. Ownership of the finished edit is standard in any production agreement. Ownership of the raw archive requires a specific negotiated term.