1. Why is my corporate brand films not converting even though the production quality is good?
Production quality is a baseline, not a differentiator. If your corporate brand films is not converting, the issue typically lies in three areas: the narrative is centred on the company rather than the audience, there is no defined call to action, or the film is being deployed without a strategic distribution plan. All three are brief-stage problems, not production problems.
2. How long should a converting corporate brand film be?
Length should be determined by placement and purpose, not by how much you want to say. A LinkedIn outreach version performs best at 60 to 90 seconds. A website homepage film can extend to 2 to 3 minutes. An investor relations film or a conference documentary can run 4 to 6 minutes. In every case, the film should be exactly as long as it needs to be to move the viewer to the intended next action, and no longer.
3. What makes a corporate brand film feel authentic rather than scripted?
The most authentic brand films are built on structured conversations, not approved scripts. When subjects are briefed on the themes they will discuss, rather than handed lines to deliver, and the camera catches conviction rather than performance. Production teams with a corporate background understand how to create conditions for this. A team without that experience will default to the teleprompter approach, which produces technically clean footage that no one believes.
4. How many versions of a brand film should we produce for different platforms?
At minimum, plan for three versions from a single production: a long-form master cut for website and investor use, a mid-length version for sales and outreach contexts, and a short-form version for social media. If the film involves complex narratives or multiple audience segments – for example, a film that speaks to both clients and prospective hires do consider additional edits that prioritise the most relevant narrative for each audience.
5. What should a corporate brand film brief include to maximise conversion?
A converting brief should specify the single action the film is designed to drive, the specific audience it is built for, the platform and context where each version will be deployed, and the emotional response you want the viewer to have after watching. Without this clarity, your production agency will make assumptions, and those assumptions are often the reason your corporate brand films is not converting.