VIDEO
Best Practices
General Best Practices
- Whether you’re filming people in an office or socializing at an event, your footage should be both deliberate and cinematic.
- Determine the purpose of the video. Is it designed to build brand awareness, draw traffic to your website, create
conversions or something else? - Be clear and concise. With average attention spans now down to 8 seconds, it’s best to keep the overall length of videos as short as possible. A good ceiling to stay under is 3 minutes with an optimal length of between 90 seconds to 2 1/2 minutes.
- Curate your location and consider the background.
- Avoid too much clutter in the background.
- Use shallow depth of field.
- Consider the rule of thirds when framing.
- Use backgrounds to highlight the environment in which the story is taking place
- When shooting indoors, the subject should be well lit.
- Keep camera at subjects’ eye line or slightly below.
- Keep people within frame, never crop their heads.
- Avoid using jaunty angles, jarring cuts, or filter effects.
- No artificial lens flare effects.
B-Roll
- Focus on clean, well-balanced compositions.
- Take advantage of the available natural light.
- Get close, medium, and wide shots of the same subject.
- Hold your shots for 8–10 seconds.
- If you have to move the camera, do it deliberately and slowly.
- Don’t pan or tilt aimlessly. Pick a subject, and land on it.
- If you are using a dolly, gimbal, or drone, keep it simple.
- Commit to your framing even if you’re not sure it’s the best. If your camera is hunting around, your footage will be useless.
- Don’t film people looking miserable, sleepy or on their
devices instead of interacting with each other.
Wardrobe
- Wardrobe should be bold, solid colors.
- Formality of clothing should match the mood and tone of the
piece.
- Avoid clothing that is overly revealing.
- Avoid showing corporate logos on clothing, accessories and
devices.
Interview Language / Dialogue
City National Bank: Dialogue should refer to “City National” or “City National Bank.” Never use “CNB.”
Partner: Never include the word “partner” in scripts when speaking about the bank’s relationship to clients or prospects. “Partner” is permissible if a non-colleague interviewee uses it spontaneously to describe their relationship with City National. In scripting, substitute “team,” “advisor,” etc.
Products/Services: Do not mention by name any of the bank’s products and/or services (i.e., mortgage, loan, deposit, investment) unless the video is specifically about that product or service. If products and/or services are mentioned, be aware that additional disclosures will be required in the video.
Superlatives: Avoid “puffery,” which is defined as words or phrases that overpromise (i.e., “prevent” “protect” “free” “guarantee”). Use qualifiers, such as “help protect” or “reduce your risk.”