Financial Commandment #1: Your Money, Your Responsibility
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Just wrapped our first major branded video project – 2 months and $15K investment. Thought I’d share the process, budget breakdown, and key lessons for anyone considering something similar – including the storytelling framework we used to make it powerful powerful.
Here are the biggest takeaways upfront. I’ll get into the details and process below if you want to dig deeper.
We’ve done event trailer videos before. They run $5-10K, give you a decent sizzle reel of the conference, but they’re forgettable and dated within 2 years. Nobody really connects with them emotionally.
I wanted something different. Something that captures what ECF actually stands for – not just business tactics but building ambitious companies that enrich your life instead of consuming it. Something that makes people feel something, because
emotion drives decisions more than logic.
Also? It just sounded fun. Sometimes you should do projects in your business because you’re excited about them and want to see them exist in the world.
This felt like a lot initially, but when I broke it down:
The budget covered:
Month 1: Concept and Scripting
Started by brainstorming scenarios and outlines. Used Claude (my AI copywriter trained on our brand) to draft the initial script.
The biggest storytelling lesson I applied: Start with your ending first, then reverse engineer the beginning.
I knew I wanted to end with a connected, peaceful entrepreneur who had his priorities straight. Once I had that ending, the opening became obvious – show the opposite state. Stressed, isolated, consumed by work.
This framework works because great stories are fundamentally about transformation. When you know where someone ends up, the beginning has to show them in the opposite state. That contrast creates the narrative tension that keeps people engaged.
Spent a few hours with Claude iterating on the script, then met with Mission Ranch to refine it further through multiple rounds of edits and shot lists.
Month 2: Production and Editing
Filmed during ECF Live, with 10 hours of filming total.
Then came 3 rounds of revisions. Here’s where things got interesting.
The initial cut had voiceover and music that made the whole thing feel flat. Weak. I was worried we’d wasted $15K.
We switched the music and I re-did the voiceover myself. The difference was dramatic. Night and day.
The timing of words syncing with the visuals became critical. We spent significant time getting that right – when certain phrases hit, how they matched with what was on-screen.
This was easily the most important post-production element. Don’t underestimate music selection and timing.
I know AI video is getting interesting, but for something like this that needs real emotional resonance and production quality,
I don’t think we’re there yet. We didn’t even consider going the AI route for this project.
Huge thank you to Bryan Walthall for being our protagonist. Bryan is an OG charter member who presented at the very first ECF Live a decade ago!
Also want to extend a big thanks to everyone in our community who volunteered to be part of it. Really appreciate you all.
We’ll be using the video across several channels:
I’ll report back in 6 months on how it performs from an ROI perspective and what we learn about using it in different contexts.
If you’re interested in more video production, storytelling, and video marketing techniques, join me and a thousand other seven and eight-figure store owners in the forums where we geek out about stuff like this regularly.
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