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10+ LinkedIn Post Examples for Videographers (2026)

Updated 5/27/2026

Videographers have unique stories to tell on LinkedIn. Unlike other creative professionals who might share finished work, videographers can offer behind-the-scenes insights into their production process, technical challenges, and client collaboration experiences. Your LinkedIn presence becomes a portfolio of problem-solving skills and creative vision.

The videography industry thrives on relationships and referrals. LinkedIn allows you to showcase not just your final videos, but your professionalism, reliability, and ability to handle complex shoots. Clients and collaborators want to see how you work under pressure, adapt to changing conditions, and deliver results that exceed expectations.

1. Behind-the-Scenes Production Post

Use this when you've just wrapped a challenging or interesting shoot to showcase your problem-solving skills and production expertise.

Just wrapped a 12-hour corporate documentary shoot at [Company Name].

The challenge: Capture authentic employee interviews while maintaining consistent lighting across 8 different office locations.

My approach:
- Portable LED panel setup with battery packs for mobility
- Pre-scouted each location the day before to map natural light patterns
- Used wireless audio to maintain clean sound despite HVAC noise
- Shot B-roll during lunch breaks to maximize interview time

The result: 47 minutes of usable footage with seamless visual consistency.

Sometimes the best shots happen between the planned moments. Today it was capturing the spontaneous team celebration after they hit their quarterly goal.

#VideoProduction #CorporateVideo #Documentary

2. Technical Problem-Solving Post

Share this when you've overcome a significant technical challenge during a shoot or in post-production.

Yesterday's wedding shoot taught me why backup plans need backup plans.

30 minutes before the ceremony: Main camera's image stabilization failed. Backup camera's memory card corrupted. Reception venue's lighting was 2 stops darker than the site visit.

Real-time solutions:
- Switched to manual focus with focus peaking
- Reformatted the backup card and shot in shorter clips
- Pushed ISO to 6400 and embraced the grain as artistic choice
- Used practical lights (candles, string lights) as key lighting

The couple loved the intimate, candid feel that came from these "limitations."

Technical skills matter, but adaptability under pressure is what separates good videographers from great ones.

#WeddingVideo #TechnicalSkills #ProblemSolving

3. Client Success Story Post

Post this after delivering a project that exceeded client expectations or achieved specific business results.

Three months ago, [Client Name] came to me with a problem: Their product demo videos were getting 30% drop-off rates after the first 15 seconds.

The issue wasn't their product - it was their storytelling.

Instead of starting with features, we restructured around customer pain points:
- Opened with relatable problem scenarios
- Showed the product solving real challenges
- Used actual customer testimonials as transitions
- Kept technical specs to the final 20 seconds

Results after the new video series launched:
- 78% completion rate (up from 70% drop-off)
- 45% increase in demo requests
- 23% boost in qualified leads

The best marketing videos don't sell products. They solve problems and tell stories people actually want to watch.

#VideoMarketing #ClientSuccess #Storytelling

4. Equipment Review Post

Share honest insights about gear you've tested extensively in real-world conditions.

6 months with the [Camera Model]: My honest take after 40+ shoots.

What works:
- Battery life consistently hits 4+ hours of active recording
- Low-light performance at ISO 3200 rivals my previous flagship
- Built-in ND filters save time and bag space
- Weather sealing survived 3 rainy outdoor events

What doesn't:
- Menu system still feels clunky for quick adjustments
- Rolling shutter noticeable with fast pans
- File sizes are massive (good for quality, tough on storage)

Bottom line: Excellent for controlled environments and planned shots. I still reach for my [Other Camera] for run-and-gun documentary work.

Gear doesn't make great videos, but the right tools for your specific work style definitely help.

#CameraGear #VideoEquipment #Review

5. Industry Trend Analysis Post

Use this to position yourself as a thought leader by analyzing changes in the videography industry.

The shift to vertical video isn't just about social media anymore.

I'm seeing corporate clients specifically request 9:16 versions for:
- Internal communications (employee phones)
- Trade show displays (portrait monitors)
- Elevator and lobby screens
- Mobile training modules

This changes how we plan shots:
- Tighter framing for talking heads
- Graphics designed for narrow aspect ratios
- B-roll that works in vertical crops
- Audio that carries the story when visuals are limited

I'm now shooting 16:9 with vertical crops in mind from day one. It's not about choosing sides - it's about delivering what clients actually need.

The future of video is format-agnostic storytelling.

#VideoTrends #VerticalVideo #Corporate

6. Creative Process Post

Share your approach to developing concepts and working with clients on creative vision.

"We want something viral" is the brief I hear most often.

Here's how I redirect that conversation:

Instead of chasing trends, I ask:
- What specific action do you want viewers to take?
- What story does your audience need to hear right now?
- What authentic moment from your business could resonate?

Last week's "viral" brief became a 90-second employee spotlight that:
- Showcased company culture authentically
- Highlighted a unique problem-solving approach
- Connected emotionally without being manipulative

It got 3x their average engagement and generated 12 qualified job applications.

Viral is a byproduct of relevance, not a strategy.

#CreativeProcess #VideoStrategy #Storytelling

7. Collaboration Highlight Post

Showcase successful partnerships with other creatives or departments.

Best collaboration this month: Working with [Designer Name] on [Client]'s product launch video.

The challenge: Explain a complex SaaS platform in under 2 minutes.

Our process:
- Designer created animated UI mockups showing user flow
- I shot real customers using the platform in their offices
- We interwove animation with live action for seamless explanation
- Designer's motion graphics elevated my practical footage

The result: Technical explanation that feels human and accessible.

Solo work has its place, but the best projects happen when specialists combine their strengths.

Looking for more opportunities to collaborate with motion designers and UX professionals.

#Collaboration #MotionGraphics #ProductVideo

8. Location Scouting Insights Post

Share interesting challenges or discoveries from location scouting for shoots.

Scouted 12 locations for next week's documentary series. Here's what I learned:

The "perfect" conference room had:
- Great natural light from north-facing windows
- Terrible echo from glass walls
- HVAC system that cycled every 8 minutes
- Beautiful view that would backlight subjects

The "backup" location had:
- Controlled artificial lighting
- Carpet and fabric panels for clean audio
- Flexible furniture arrangement
- Boring but consistent background

Guess which one we're using?

Sometimes the most photogenic location isn't the most practical for video production. Audio quality and lighting control trump aesthetics every time.

#LocationScouting #VideoProduction #PreProduction

9. Post-Production Workflow Post

Share efficiency tips or creative solutions from your editing process.

Cutting editing time in half: My new proxy workflow.

Previous process:
- Import 4K files directly
- Wait 3-5 seconds for every scrub
- Render previews overnight
- Export took 6+ hours

New approach:
- Generate 1080p proxies on import
- Edit with instant playback
- Conform to original 4K for final export
- Total time saved: 40% per project

The game-changer: [Software Name]'s automatic proxy generation. Set it up once, forget about it.

Also discovered: Color grading in proxy mode gives more accurate results than squinting at stuttering 4K previews.

Efficiency isn't about rushing - it's about removing friction from the creative process.

#PostProduction #Workflow #Editing

10. Client Education Post

Help potential clients understand the video production process and set realistic expectations.

"Can we add just one more interview?" 

This question usually comes up during final edits. Here's why timing matters:

Pre-production: Adding interviews means:
- Rescheduling location bookings
- Adjusting lighting setups
- Extending shoot timeline
- Additional travel/crew costs

Post-production: Adding interviews means:
- Re-opening locked picture edit
- Rebalancing existing interview segments
- Potential audio level inconsistencies
- Extended delivery timeline

I always plan for 20% more content than the final cut needs. But major additions after production starts impact budget, timeline, and sometimes story coherence.

The best videos come from clear vision upfront, not endless additions afterward.

#ClientEducation #VideoProduction #ProjectManagement

11. Industry Challenge Post

Address common misconceptions or challenges facing videographers.

"We'll fix it in post" is the most expensive phrase in video production.

What sounds like a simple fix:
- "Remove that person walking in the background" = 3 hours of rotoscoping
- "Make the audio clearer" = Can't recover what wasn't captured properly
- "Change the lighting mood" = Limited by original exposure and color temperature

What actually saves time and budget:
- Extra takes during the shoot
- Proper audio monitoring and backup recording
- Lighting tests before rolling
- Clear communication about expectations

I spend 70% of my time on pre-production and shooting, 30% on post. Clients who understand this get better videos for less money.

Post-production enhances great footage. It can't rescue poor planning.

#VideoProduction #ClientEducation #BestPractices

Best Practices for Videographer LinkedIn Posts

  • Share specific technical details and problem-solving approaches - your expertise shows in the specifics, not generalities
  • Include before/after scenarios or results when possible to demonstrate impact and value
  • Mix behind-the-scenes content with finished work to show both process and results
  • Address common client misconceptions to position yourself as an educator and trusted advisor
  • Collaborate with other creatives and tag them to expand your network within the industry
  • Use plain language when explaining technical concepts - your audience includes clients who aren't video professionals

Building your professional presence on LinkedIn takes consistent effort, but the right content strategy can significantly expand your network and client base. Tools like Writio can help you maintain regular posting while focusing on what you do best - creating compelling video content.

Ready to elevate your LinkedIn presence? Try Writio to streamline your content creation and grow your professional network more effectively.

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