In an earlier post, I mentioned the five temptations of every corporate video filmmaker.
This post will take a brief look at the five temptations from the perspective of a potential corporate video client.
Temptation: To turn your story into stuff.
Your corporate story is no different.
Commit to capturing your corporate video story in a way that will survive the ups and downs of everyday business cycles. Imagine five years from now showing your story; will it will be as fresh and alive as the day you produced it? If not, it's time to re-think your message. (Making it last is what it's all about, right?)
Not always. Sure deadlines are a part of life. But rushing into a project with a false deadline without understanding the complete picture can potentially weaken the power of your story. Providing realistic deadlines will serve your story well in the long run. (And a powerful story is what it's all about, right?)
Thinking you'll save money by having a producer guess your budget is counter-productive to teamwork.
Entering a video project requires an incredibly high level of trust. Guessing games deteriorate that trust.
Engaging in open and honest conversations about budgeting will help a producer capture the best story for you, the best way. (Fiscal responsibility is what it's all about, right?)
If most boring videos can be attributed to a lack of emotions then it seems obvious that capturing emotions will create a more memorable film. Obvious, but rarely done.
For example, emotions can show themselves through:
Capture your audience by capturing emotions. (Your audience is what it's all about, right?)
A good way for your hero or interviewee to freeze up on camera is to show them the questions ahead of time. Resist the temptation! Why?
By showing questions ahead of time, the brain immediately wants to memorize the answers. When it comes time to the actual filming, the hero can't get a sentence out. All the answers they memorized becomes a blur. Not good.
The secret to a perfect interview is to give your interviewee a few ideas about what you want them to share. From their heart. From their gut. (The heart is what it's all about, right?)
Remember...
A video story is exactly that.
A story. In video.
Which is what it's all about.......right? :-)
---Tom