I talk to real estate agents every week. The number one thing I hear after "I know I should be doing video" is "I just do not know what to make." They picture a listing tour and draw a blank on what comes next. So the camera stays in the pocket, the tripod collects dust, and another week passes with zero video content posted.
Here is the thing: listing tours are one video type out of dozens. The agents who consistently generate leads from video are not filming the same property walkthrough over and over. They are rotating through a mix of content types that attract buyers, build trust with sellers, and position them as the local expert. According to NAR, listings with video receive 403% more inquiries than those without. But the agents winning on social media in 2026 are doing far more than just listing videos.
This guide gives you 25 proven video ideas with difficulty ratings, estimated production time, and practical tips for each. Bookmark it. Come back when you are staring at your phone wondering what to post. You will always find something here.
How to Use This List
Each video idea below includes:
- Difficulty: Easy (phone + 5 minutes), Medium (some planning or editing), Hard (multiple shoots, editing, or coordination)
- Best platform: Where this content performs strongest
- Estimated time: Total production time from start to published post
- Tips: Practical advice to make it actually work
You do not need to do all 25. Pick 5 to 8 that fit your market, your personality, and your schedule. Rotate through them weekly. That alone puts you in the top 5% of agents for video output. For a complete video marketing strategy and posting schedule, check our video marketing strategy guide.
Listing Content Videos (Ideas 1-8)
These are your bread and butter. Listing content directly showcases properties and attracts active buyers. Every agent should have at least three of these in regular rotation.
1. Cinematic Listing Tour
Difficulty: Easy (with AI) / Hard (with videographer)
Best platform: MLS, Zillow, YouTube, Instagram Reels
Estimated time: 2 minutes (AI from photos) / 3-7 days (videographer)
The classic. A polished video walkthrough of the property with music, smooth transitions, and professional pacing. This is the single most important video type for any listing agent because it goes directly on MLS and Zillow where buyers are actively searching.
The old way: hire a videographer ($500 to $1,200), wait 3 to 7 days, get one edit. The 2026 way: upload your listing photos to an AI tool and get four video variants (horizontal + vertical, branded + unbranded) in under two minutes. The AI generates realistic camera motion from still photos, orbits, push-ins, lateral slides, and syncs transitions to the music beat.
Here is what an AI-generated listing tour looks like from standard listing photos:
Tip: Select 12 to 15 of your best photos and order them like a walkthrough: exterior, entry, living areas, kitchen, bedrooms, outdoor space, closing shot. Skip the laundry room and any room where staging is weak. Every photo should make a buyer think "I want to live there."
2. Just Listed Announcement
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok, Facebook
Estimated time: 5 to 10 minutes
A short, punchy video that announces a new listing. This is not a full tour. It is a teaser: 3 to 5 of the best photos or clips with bold text overlay showing the address, price, bed/bath count, and a call to action. Think movie trailer, not documentary.
Tip: Post this the same day the listing goes live. First-day engagement signals to the algorithm that the content is fresh and timely. Use a trending audio track if you are posting on Instagram. Keep it under 15 seconds for maximum completion rate. Add "DM me for details" or "Link in bio for the full tour" as your call to action.
3. Just Sold Celebration
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Reels, Facebook, LinkedIn
Estimated time: 5 to 10 minutes
Social proof in video form. Show the property exterior (or a few interior shots) with text overlay: "JUST SOLD," the sale price, and how quickly it sold. If the seller is comfortable with it, include "Sold in 6 days, $15K over asking" or whatever the headline number is.
Tip: These videos are not really for buyers. They are for future sellers who are scrolling their feed wondering which agent to call. Every "just sold" post is a subtle pitch: "I sell homes. I sell them fast. I sell them for top dollar." Post these consistently and you build an irrefutable track record that sellers can see in 30 seconds of scrolling your profile.
4. Price Drop Alert
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Stories, Reels, Facebook
Estimated time: 3 to 5 minutes
When a listing gets a price reduction, create a quick video with the property exterior, the new price, and "Now $X" text overlay. This re-activates interest from buyers who passed the first time and gets a second round of algorithmic distribution from the platform.
Tip: Frame it positively. Not "price reduced because it is not selling" but "New price, incredible value." Use urgency language: "This will not last at $X." These tend to get shared more than original listings because people love feeling like they found a deal.
5. Open House Walkthrough
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok, Facebook
Estimated time: 15 to 20 minutes
Film yourself walking through the property before or during the open house. This is intentionally less polished than a cinematic listing tour. The casual, "let me show you around" energy makes it feel personal and authentic. Start at the front door, walk through the highlights, and end with "Come see it for yourself this Saturday, 1 to 3 PM."
Tip: Film this horizontally for YouTube and vertically for Instagram/TikTok. Or just film vertically and use it everywhere. Talk while you walk. Point out features a buyer would not notice in photos: "Look at these original hardwood floors" or "Notice how much natural light hits this kitchen in the afternoon." The narration adds context that photos and music alone cannot provide.
6. Property Highlight Reel
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok
Estimated time: 5 to 10 minutes
A fast-paced, 15-second video featuring only the 3 to 5 most impressive features of a property. The pool. The chef's kitchen. The view. The walk-in closet. No full tour, just the "wow" moments. Set it to a trending audio track.
Tip: These work extremely well with AI-generated clips from photos. Pick your 3 to 5 strongest photos, generate short motion clips, and stitch them together in CapCut with text labels ("The kitchen," "The view," "The pool"). These short-form videos get the highest share rates of any listing content type because they are easy to watch and forward. For more Reels ideas, see our Instagram Reels guide for real estate agents.
7. Before and After Staging
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube
Estimated time: 15 to 30 minutes (plus waiting for staging to be completed)
Side-by-side or transition-style video showing a room before and after professional staging. The transformation is inherently satisfying to watch and gets high engagement because people love dramatic visual change.
Tip: Film the "before" from the exact same position and angle as the "after." Consistency in camera placement makes the transformation more dramatic. Use a tripod and mark the floor with tape if you need to come back for the "after" shot on a different day. The "reveal" transition (where the screen wipes from before to after) is the most satisfying format for this content.
8. Luxury Property Showcase
Difficulty: Hard
Best platform: YouTube, Instagram Reels
Estimated time: 1 to 3 hours (or hire a videographer)
For your premium listings ($1.5M+), invest in a longer, more cinematic production. Drone footage of the exterior and grounds. Gimbal walkthrough of the interior. Twilight shots. Lifestyle b-roll (pool at sunset, fireplace lit, wine on the terrace). This is the video equivalent of a glossy magazine spread.
Tip: Even for luxury listings, AI-generated video from photos can handle the social media teaser clips while the videographer handles the hero video for YouTube and MLS. Use both. The AI clips can go live the same day photos are delivered, while the professional video follows a few days later. This gives you immediate social media content and a premium deliverable for the MLS, best of both worlds.
Trust and Authority Videos (Ideas 9-14)
These videos are not about properties. They are about you. Building trust, demonstrating expertise, and making people feel like they know you before they ever pick up the phone. This is the category most agents neglect, and the category that separates top producers from everyone else.
9. Client Testimonial
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: Instagram Reels, YouTube, Facebook, your website
Estimated time: 15 to 30 minutes (including asking the client)
A 30-to-60 second video of a past client sharing their experience working with you. This is the single most persuasive video type you can produce. Written reviews are good. Video reviews are 10x more convincing because people can see the genuine emotion and hear the sincerity in someone's voice.
Tip: Ask at closing or the week after, when emotions are highest. Keep it casual. Film on your phone in front of the house they just bought or sold. Give them 2 to 3 simple prompts: "What were you nervous about before the process started?" "What surprised you?" "What would you tell someone thinking about buying/selling?" Do not script it. Authentic, imperfect testimonials convert better than rehearsed ones. Ask permission to use the video on social media and your website.
10. Market Update
Difficulty: Easy to Medium
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube, LinkedIn
Estimated time: 10 to 20 minutes
A weekly or monthly video where you break down what is happening in your local real estate market. Median prices, inventory levels, days on market, interest rate changes, and what it all means for buyers and sellers. This is how you position yourself as the local expert.
Tip: Do not just read numbers. Interpret them. "Inventory is up 12% from last month" is data. "Buyers, you now have more options than any time since 2022, and sellers, pricing correctly just became more important than ever" is insight. The interpretation is what makes people trust you. Pull data from your MLS, Altos Research, or Redfin Data Center. Record a 60-second talking-head video once a week. Consistency matters more than production value here.
11. Agent Introduction / About Me
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: Your website, Instagram (pinned), YouTube, LinkedIn
Estimated time: 30 to 60 minutes
A 1-to-2 minute video that tells potential clients who you are, why you are in real estate, what you specialize in, and why someone should work with you. This lives permanently on your website and as a pinned post on your Instagram profile. Every potential client who Googles you should land on this video within 30 seconds.
Tip: Be specific. "I have been helping families find homes for 10 years" is generic. "I specialize in first-time buyers in the $350K to $600K range in North Austin, and I have closed 127 transactions in the last five years" is memorable. Include a personal detail or two. Where you grew up. What you do on weekends. Something that makes you a person, not a business card with legs. Film it in your office, at a favorite local spot, or in front of a recognizable neighborhood landmark.
12. Day in the Life
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok
Estimated time: 20 to 40 minutes (filming throughout the day, 10 min editing)
Film snippets throughout your workday and stitch them together into a 30-to-60 second montage. Morning coffee and MLS review. Driving to a showing. Walking through a new listing. Meeting with a client. Writing an offer. Celebrating a closing. This content humanizes you and satisfies the curiosity people have about what agents actually do all day.
Tip: You do not need to film every day. Pick one busy day per week and capture 5 to 8 short clips (3 to 5 seconds each) throughout the day. Edit them together in CapCut or InShot with a trending audio track. The "day in the life" format consistently performs well on TikTok and Reels because it is inherently interesting and people love watching other people work. Keep it real. The messy desk, the fast food in the car between showings, the 9 PM phone call. Authenticity outperforms perfection.
13. FAQ Answer Video
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube Shorts
Estimated time: 5 to 10 minutes per video
Pick one question you get from clients repeatedly and answer it in 30 to 60 seconds on camera. "How much do I need for a down payment?" "What is earnest money?" "How long does closing take?" "Should I sell before I buy?" Each answer is a standalone video. You have dozens of these in your head right now.
Tip: Start the video with the question as text on screen: "How much do I actually need for a down payment?" Then answer it directly. No fluff, no "great question." Just the answer. These videos build your SEO over time (YouTube and TikTok are search engines now) and position you as a knowledgeable, approachable resource. Create a list of 20 common questions and batch-film them in one sitting. That is 20 videos from one hour of work.
14. "What $X Gets You" in Your Market
Difficulty: Easy to Medium
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube
Estimated time: 10 to 20 minutes
Show 3 to 4 properties at the same price point in your market. "What does $500,000 buy you in Denver?" Use listing photos or video clips of each property, with text overlays showing the specs (beds, baths, sqft, neighborhood). This format is extremely shareable because everyone wants to know what they can afford.
Tip: Use AI-generated video from listing photos for each property to keep the visual quality consistent. Pick price points that match your target buyer demographic. If you work with first-time buyers, do $300K and $400K. If you work in luxury, do $1.5M and $2.5M. These videos get shared among friend groups who are all at similar life stages and budgets, which means organic reach from your exact target audience.
Community and Lifestyle Videos (Ideas 15-19)
These videos sell the lifestyle, not just the house. Buyers are not just purchasing four walls and a roof. They are buying a neighborhood, a commute, a Saturday morning routine. Community content attracts buyers earlier in their journey and keeps you top of mind longer.
15. Neighborhood Guide
Difficulty: Medium to Hard
Best platform: YouTube (long form), Instagram Reels (short clips)
Estimated time: 1 to 3 hours
A 3-to-8 minute video covering everything a potential buyer would want to know about a specific neighborhood. Schools (with ratings). Commute times to major employment centers. Walkability score. Best restaurants and coffee shops. Parks and recreation. Price ranges. Vibe and demographics. This is the single best piece of content for attracting relocating buyers who are researching areas online.
Tip: Drive through the neighborhood and film b-roll of the streets, shops, parks, and schools. Record a voice-over narration with specific data points: "Travis Heights has a Walk Score of 82, three parks within half a mile, and a median home price of $875,000 as of February 2026." Upload to YouTube with keywords in the title, description, and tags. These videos rank in Google search results and drive traffic for years. Create one for each of the top 5 neighborhoods you serve, and you have a permanent lead generation engine.
16. Local Business Spotlight
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok, Facebook
Estimated time: 20 to 40 minutes
Feature a local business: a coffee shop, restaurant, gym, boutique, or bookstore. Interview the owner for 30 seconds, show the space, and tell your audience why you love it. This positions you as a community insider and builds goodwill with local business owners who will share the video with their audience.
Tip: This is one of the most underutilized video types in real estate. When you feature a local business, the owner will almost always share your video to their followers, which exposes you to hundreds or thousands of local people who are exactly your target audience. It is free cross-promotion. Do one per week. Within a few months, you will know every business owner in your area, and they will know you. That referral network is worth more than any paid ad campaign.
17. Community Event Coverage
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Stories, Reels, Facebook
Estimated time: 10 to 15 minutes
Attend a local farmers market, festival, charity event, or neighborhood block party. Film 5 to 10 short clips and post them as a Reel or Story montage. Tag the event organizers and use local hashtags. This is not about real estate at all. It is about showing that you are an active, visible member of the community.
Tip: Bring your family if you have one. The combination of "real estate professional" and "regular human who goes to the farmers market with their kids" is powerful personal branding. These videos do not generate direct leads, but they keep you visible and relatable to everyone who follows you. The agents who dominate referral business are the ones people see as community members first and salespeople second.
18. "Top 5 Reasons to Move to [City/Neighborhood]"
Difficulty: Easy to Medium
Best platform: YouTube, Instagram Reels, TikTok
Estimated time: 15 to 30 minutes
A countdown-style video listing the top reasons someone should consider moving to your area. Schools, job market, cost of living compared to other cities, outdoor recreation, food scene, whatever makes your market special. This targets out-of-state buyers and relocators who are Googling "[city] pros and cons."
Tip: Use real numbers. "Austin's job market grew 4.3% last year, more than double the national average" is more persuasive than "Austin has a great job market." Name specific employers, specific school ratings, specific restaurants. The more specific you are, the more credible you sound, and the better the video ranks in search. Make a YouTube version (3 to 5 minutes) and a Reels version (30 to 45 seconds highlighting the top 3) from the same footage.
19. Seasonal Content: Holiday Decorations, Summer Activities, Fall Foliage
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok
Estimated time: 5 to 15 minutes
Film seasonal beauty in your area. Holiday light displays in a popular neighborhood. Cherry blossoms in spring. Autumn colors on a tree-lined street. Summer sunsets from a local overlook. This content gets high engagement because it is visually beautiful and emotionally resonant.
Tip: Tie it back to real estate subtly. "This is what November looks like in Maple Ridge. Homes here range from $425K to $650K. DM me if you want to see what is available." The beauty hooks them. The real estate connection plants a seed. Film this content when the moment strikes. It does not need to be planned. Just have your phone ready.
Educational and Thought Leadership Videos (Ideas 20-25)
Educational content positions you as the expert people turn to when they are ready to buy or sell. These videos do not sell properties directly. They sell your knowledge, which is ultimately what clients are paying for when they hire an agent.
20. Home Buying Process Explained
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: YouTube, Instagram Reels, TikTok
Estimated time: 30 to 45 minutes
Walk through the entire home buying process from pre-approval to closing, step by step. Use graphics, screen recordings, or talking-head format. Break it into a series: "Part 1: Getting Pre-Approved," "Part 2: House Hunting," "Part 3: Making an Offer," and so on. A 5-to-8 part series gives you weeks of content from a single topic.
Tip: First-time buyers are the most active searchers for this content, and they are often in the 25-to-35 age demographic that spends the most time on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. Meeting them where they are with genuinely helpful content is how you win their business before any competitor even knows they exist. Use plain language. Avoid jargon. If you use a term like "contingency" or "escrow," explain it in one sentence.
21. Home Selling Checklist
Difficulty: Easy to Medium
Best platform: Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, TikTok
Estimated time: 10 to 20 minutes
A quick-hit video listing the 7 to 10 things every seller should do before listing their home. Declutter. Deep clean. Fix minor repairs. Stage key rooms. Get a pre-listing inspection. Set realistic pricing expectations. Each item gets 5 to 10 seconds with a visual example.
Tip: Film this in an actual home (with permission) so you can show real examples. Point at the cluttered countertop and then the clean version. Show the scuff mark on the wall and the touch-up paint. Visual before-and-after within the video makes each tip tangible rather than abstract. End with: "Want a custom checklist for your home? Send me a DM."
22. Interest Rate Update / Mortgage Explainer
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok, LinkedIn
Estimated time: 5 to 10 minutes
When rates change, post a quick video explaining what it means in practical terms. "Rates dropped to 6.2% this week. On a $400,000 loan, that saves you $87 per month compared to last month's rate." Buyers want to know the real-world impact on their monthly payment, not the abstract economics.
Tip: Partner with a mortgage lender for these. They provide the data and credibility; you provide the audience. Tag them in the post. They share it. Both of you get exposure. This is one of the easiest collaborations in real estate content creation, and it positions you as someone who understands the financial side, not just the houses.
23. Myth Busting: Real Estate Edition
Difficulty: Easy
Best platform: Instagram Reels, TikTok
Estimated time: 5 to 10 minutes per video
"You need 20% down to buy a house." False. "You should always offer below asking price." Depends. "Spring is the only good time to sell." Not true. Take common real estate misconceptions and debunk them in 30 seconds. This format is inherently engaging because people love finding out they have been wrong about something.
Tip: Start the video with the myth displayed as text on screen. Then cut to you saying "This is wrong, and here is why." The pattern interrupt (showing something that looks like a fact, then revealing it is a myth) grabs attention and increases watch time. Batch-film 10 of these in one session. That is two weeks of daily content from one hour of recording.
24. Investment Property Analysis
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: YouTube, LinkedIn, Instagram Reels
Estimated time: 20 to 40 minutes
Walk through the numbers on a real investment property. Purchase price, estimated rent, property taxes, insurance, maintenance costs, cash-on-cash return, cap rate. Use screen share or a whiteboard. Show the actual math. Investors are data-driven and respect agents who can speak their language.
Tip: You do not need to be a financial advisor to do this well. Use publicly available rental data from Zillow or Rentometer, and real property tax records from the county assessor. Always add a disclaimer that this is for educational purposes and not financial advice. Even if investment properties are only 10% of your business, these videos attract a high-value, repeat-buyer clientele that most agents ignore.
25. Year in Review / Market Prediction
Difficulty: Medium
Best platform: YouTube, LinkedIn, Instagram
Estimated time: 30 to 60 minutes
A year-end or quarter-end video summarizing what happened in your local market and what you expect going forward. Total homes sold, average price changes, inventory trends, and your forecast for the next quarter. This is your opportunity to demonstrate that you track the market closely and have informed opinions about where things are heading.
Tip: Be specific about your predictions and be willing to revisit them. "I predicted in January that prices in 78704 would rise 4% to 6% this year. They rose 5.2%. Here is what that means for 2027." Accountability builds credibility faster than anything else. Publish this on LinkedIn where other professionals (attorneys, lenders, financial advisors) will share it with their networks. That is how you build referral relationships with adjacent professionals.
Building Your Video Content Calendar
Twenty-five ideas is great. But ideas without a system are just intentions. Here is how to turn this list into a consistent publishing habit.
The 4-Video Weekly Schedule
For most agents, 4 videos per week is the right balance between visibility and sustainability. Here is a sample weekly rotation:
| Day | Video Type | Category | Time Investment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | Market Update (#10) | Trust / Authority | 10 to 15 min |
| Wednesday | Listing Tour (#1) or Just Listed (#2) | Listing Content | 5 to 10 min |
| Thursday | FAQ Answer (#13) or Myth Bust (#23) | Educational | 5 to 10 min |
| Saturday | Local Business (#16) or Community Event (#17) | Community | 15 to 20 min |
Total weekly time investment: 35 to 55 minutes. That is less than one hour per week to maintain a consistent, diverse video presence across multiple platforms. The agents who tell me "I do not have time for video" are spending more time than that each week scrolling through other people's video content.
Batching for Efficiency
The most time-efficient approach is to batch-create content. One morning per week, film 4 to 6 talking-head videos (FAQ answers, myth busts, market updates). Then schedule them throughout the week using a tool like Later, Buffer, or Meta Business Suite. Listing content can be created the same day photos arrive, since AI tools like Reel-E generate video from photos in under two minutes.
Community and lifestyle content is the exception. That needs to be captured in the moment: the farmers market happens when it happens, the fall foliage is gorgeous for two weeks only. Keep your phone ready for these and post them the same day for freshness.
Repurposing: One Video, Five Platforms
Every video you create should be posted to at least three platforms. Here is the repurposing workflow:
- Create the source video (any format)
- Post vertical version to Instagram Reels, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts
- Post horizontal version to YouTube (if 2+ minutes), Facebook, and LinkedIn
- Extract a still frame for an Instagram carousel or Facebook photo post
- Pull a quote or stat from the video for a text-based tweet or LinkedIn post
One piece of content becomes 5 to 8 posts across different platforms. Tools that automatically generate both horizontal and vertical formats (like Reel-E's four-variant system) eliminate the reformatting step. For a deep dive on adapting content for every platform, check our social media video guide.
Production Tips That Apply to Every Video Type
Regardless of which video ideas you choose, these production principles will improve your output across the board.
Lighting
Natural light is your friend. Film talking-head content facing a window. For listing content, open all blinds and turn on all lights. If you are filming indoors and the lighting is uneven, a $25 ring light makes a massive difference. The single biggest visual quality improvement most agents can make is better lighting. It costs almost nothing and is immediately noticeable.
Audio
Bad audio kills videos faster than bad video. The built-in microphone on your phone picks up room echo, HVAC noise, and traffic. A $20 clip-on lavalier microphone eliminates 90% of audio problems. For listing tour videos with music only (no narration), use royalty-free or licensed music, never rip a song from Spotify. Copyright strikes can get your account suspended. Tools like Reel-E include pre-licensed music libraries specifically for this reason.
The First 3 Seconds
Social media users decide whether to keep watching within the first 3 seconds. Start with your most compelling visual or statement. Not a logo animation. Not "Hey guys, welcome back." Start with the kitchen reveal shot. Start with "This house sold for $50,000 over asking in 4 days. Here is how." The hook determines whether anyone sees the rest of your content.
Vertical First, Always
In 2026, over 78% of social media video consumption happens on mobile in vertical format (Statista, 2025). If you can only film one format, film vertical (9:16). You can always crop to horizontal later for YouTube and MLS, but going from horizontal to vertical cuts off the sides and often ruins the composition. For listing tours from photos, tools that generate both formats automatically solve this problem entirely. See our best real estate reel makers guide for tool comparisons.
Consistency Over Perfection
I have said this before and I will say it again: posting an imperfect video today is worth more than planning a perfect video you never create. The algorithm rewards consistency. Your audience builds familiarity through repeated exposure. The agents who win with video are not the ones with the fanciest equipment or the best editing skills. They are the ones who show up every week, without fail, and press "post." Start with 3 videos per week. Increase to 5 when it becomes a habit. Never go below 2.
Getting Started Right Now
You just read about 25 video ideas. Pick one. Not the hardest one. Pick the easiest one that you can create today. If you have a current listing, create a cinematic listing tour from your existing photos. Upload them to Reel-E, choose a track, add your branding, and you will have four video variants in two minutes. Post the vertical one to Instagram Reels before you go to bed tonight.
If you do not have a current listing, film a 30-second market update. Pull up your MLS stats, point the camera at yourself, and say "Here is what happened in [your market] this month." It does not need to be perfect. It needs to exist.
The agents generating consistent leads from video did not start with a $5,000 camera and a production crew. They started with a phone, an idea, and the willingness to press record. You have the phone. You now have 25 ideas. The only thing left is pressing record.
For a complete video marketing strategy with monthly calendars and ROI tracking, read our video marketing guide. And for platform-specific formatting and specs, see our social media video guide.
