How To Produce The One Video Every Business Needs
Who Do You Help and How Do You Help Them?
St. Louis, MO - September 8, 2022
- This blog post, along with the companion video seeks to help business owners produce the one video every business needs.
Some people will call it the "explainer" video or the company bio video. It is that video that sits in a prominent position on your website explaining who you are and what you do.
It doesn't have to be long or expensively produced. It should tell a simple story that answers two questions.
Question 1: Who do you help?
Question 2: How do you help them?
It doesn't matter if you are a service business or you sell a product. Don't overthink it too much. Tell a simple story that makes it clear who you help and how you help them with your product or service.
You could go about it in so many different ways. You could do a white board animation, a slick looking ad or tell a simple story. As you might imagine, we like the story approach.
You could do it yourself or hire out. The advantage of doing it yourself is you will save some money. The disadvantage is that it could be a lot of work for you to do it well. It can also be a bit awkward for a business owner to interview their own customers and employees on camera.
I found that to be the biggest challenge for me when I worked for the St. Louis Cardinals. I started our "video storytelling" myself in the era of the flip cam (you way back before the iPhone when the dinosaurs roamed the planet). Truth be told, some of the best videos we ever did were those simple stories.
That said, I found myself chickening out on doing a story more often than actually doing it. It was alot of work to do it well. It got easier with the iPhone, but I did all the editing on my device back then because our IT Department wouldn't have allowed me to put some editing software on my computer.
If you decide to do it yourself, I'd recommend a basic workflow of interview people on camera. Use the rule of thirds, light it well and make sure you get great audio. Best to use two sources in case one fails. Your viewer will forgive bad visuals, but won't forgive bad audio.
Once you've captured the video, download the clips and log them. That is fancy way to say watch them and take notes. I'm a big fan of having the video transcribed. I use Temi. It is worth the money.
Once you log your work, you can write the story if you are going to add your own VO. If you are doing it nat sound, then you can jump into editing the project, adding lower thirds, music etc.
If you decide to hire out, you have many options. Most digital agencies and PR companies have a relationship with video production companies. You could go that route or shop around directly with the production companies. Expect to spend a fair amount of money.
Typical production of a such a video will most likely be around $15,000 - $30,000 depending on the market. Make sure you get the raw footage and full rights when you broker the contract.
If you want a turnkey option, check us out. We offer cost-certain, high-quality storytelling that cost a fraction of the typical video production company because our focus is story, not production, and we use highly experienced TV reporters who serve as a one person band.
Anyway, enough about how to get it done.
Let's talk about how to tell the story. You need to answer those two key questions (who you help and how you help them). The best way to do that is to interview some satisfied customers. You essentially tell your story by telling their story.
Don't get too caught up in the length of the story. It should be just long enough to tell the story well and hold the audience attention. Sometimes that is 30 seconds, in other cases it might be 3 minutes. In some rare instances, it could even be 30 minutes.
Does it tell a story you want to watch? Does it answer those two fundamental questions (who do you help and how do you help them)?
When you break those questions down, it is best to show the problem the customer faced before working with you or buying your product. How did engaging your company help them? Paint a picture. Show us. Be sure to show us how they benefited and what new customers might expect.
It is really that simple.
Now full disclosure. We haven't exactly followed our own advice. While you will find a lot of video on our website, we don't actually have a current video that tells our story in the way I just described. The closest we have is nice virtually produced video story that journalist Andy Mohler prepared
when we hired him over a year ago to tell our story. More recently, I did a TV segment on Fox 2 in St. Louis which I'll include below.
At some point, we will again engage one of our reporters of tell our story, answering those two fundamental questions of who do we help and how do we help them.
Maybe that could be you and your business?




