FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

1. What does a production with JBC actually include?

A JBC production includes planning, creative direction, filming, audio capture, editing, and final delivery for the agreed project. The work starts before the camera comes out. We decide what the piece needs to make clear, then build the production around that.


2. How much should a business expect to invest?

The investment depends on the scope. A simple on-site piece costs less than a multi-location brand film, podcast buildout, or campaign with several deliverables. The right number comes from the job the video needs to do, not from guessing at a runtime.


3. How long does the process take?

Most business projects should be planned in weeks, not days. Small projects can move faster when the message is already clear. Larger productions need time for planning, scheduling, interviews, filming, editing, and review.


4. What kind of video do we need?

That depends on the moment your business is in. Some businesses need a brand film. Some need proof from customers. Some need a podcast, training piece, recruitment video, or a focused set of short clips. JBC helps choose the project that fits the problem.


5. What happens before filming day?

We talk through the purpose, audience, message, locations, people involved, and what the final piece needs to accomplish. This is where the production becomes intentional instead of random.


6. Do we need to know what to say before we hire JBC?

No. You need to know your business. JBC helps pull the right language out of the work you already do, the problems you solve, and the way you think.

 

7. Who will be involved in the shoot?

That depends on the project. Some productions are Justin-led with a small footprint. Others need additional crew for more angles, cleaner logistics, stronger audio, or deeper coverage.


8. What does JBC need from us?

Access, honest answers, schedule coordination, and a willingness to make time for the right people. JBC handles the production, but the best work comes when the business gives the story room to breathe.


9. What changes can we request after the first edit?

Reasonable adjustments are part of the process. Factual fixes, small trims, swaps, and polish are expected. Changing the entire direction after editing has started may require a new scope.


10. What do we receive when the project is finished?

You receive the final edited deliverables outlined in the project agreement, prepared for the intended platforms. Usage, raw footage, and additional versions should be discussed before the project begins so expectations are clear.