Trust is hard to fake in a slide deck
A slide deck lists your numbers. It can't show the people behind them. Investors, buyers, and recruits decide with their gut, and nothing moves the gut like seeing your team, your work, and your conviction on screen.
A corporate video does what a deck can't:
- Put a face and a voice to your leadership.
- Show the work and the people, not just claims about them.
- Carry one story to a boardroom, a sales call, or a careers page.
From investor films to culture and recruiting videos
Part of what makes video worth it is how far one shoot can travel. The same crew, filming on the same day, can produce an investor film, a culture piece, or a recruiting video, and what changes most is who you're trying to reach and what you want them to feel by the end.
For a company heading to the public markets, that might be an investor roadshow film that carries the story from the S-1 to the opening bell. For a growing team, it might be a recruiting series that helps the right candidates picture themselves working with you. Either way, it's the same craft pointed at a different room.
Most companies start with the overview, though, the video that answers the question every buyer and recruit is really asking: what does this company actually do? The two examples below were built for exactly that. We made Mistbox's to introduce an energy-saving device to a market that had heard plenty of big claims before, and Solugen's to put real faces and real science behind sustainable chemistry most people never get to see.
Corporate Overview Video for Mistbox
Solugen Corporate Overview Video
The people, the place, and the message
1.
The people
Your leaders carry the story, so we make them comfortable on camera. We script the beats, then let the conversation breathe, so it reads as candid, not staged.
- Interview coaching that calms nerves.
- Real workplace moments, not actors.
- The handful of lines that actually land.
2.
The place
Your office doesn't need to be spotless. We light it, frame it, and shoot it so it looks like the company you want clients to see. When the story calls for scale, our FAA Part 107 drone pilots cover it from the air.
- Lighting and staging that flatter the space.
- Facility and site coverage, indoors and out.
- Drone footage for plants, yards, and landmarks.
3.
The message
A video can't say everything, so we pick the one thing it must say. We build three to five talking points around a single goal, open with a hook, and close with a clear next step.
- One primary objective.
- Three to five points that support it.
- A strong open and a memorable close.
A Houston crew, on your site or wherever you operate
Based in Houston, ready to travel
We're a small Houston video production crew that packs light and moves fast. We film across Texas and anywhere your story lives, from a site in the field to a head office across the country.
A small crew, on purpose
Fewer people on site means less disruption to your team and your floor. You work directly with the producer and camera operator making your video, from first call to final cut.
Companies that trusted us with their story
Tell the story behind your company
Every company has a story worth telling on camera. Ours is making yours land, whether the audience is an investor, a buyer, or your next great hire.
Tell us what you're working toward and we'll build the shoot around it. Schedule a consultation and let's get your story on screen.
Common questions about corporate video production
It introduces the company as a whole: who you are, what you do, and why it matters. Most run two to three minutes and blend executive interviews, real workplace footage, and one clear through-line. It's the video you send when someone asks what your company actually does.
Less than you'd expect. We send a short prep guide, help you choose who goes on camera, and scout locations with you ahead of time. On shoot day your job is to show up and be yourself. We handle lighting, sound, direction, and the questions.
An overview video is about your company. An explainer video is about one product or idea. Overviews use real people and footage to build trust, while explainers use animation to make something complex click. Plenty of companies use both. See our explainer video production.