agate road pictures

Devise | Produce | Promote
Jun 29

The following is from a testimonial after the delivery of the CHAPS film to the Terrence Higgins Trust.

We worked with David and Rowland on a film celebrating the work of the CHAPS partnership – a group of HIV health promoters which our charity, Terrence Higgins Trust, is a member of.

David’s enthusiasm, and his wealth of ideas and experience, really helped us to get the project off the ground.

It was a very specific brief, with a number of competing demands and expectations, but David quickly devised a suitable film concept.

His team conducted a series of interviews during the three-day conference in Manchester and filmed plenty of extra footage which added a great deal of impact to the final film.

They kept us fully informed as the project progressed, welcoming feedback on each edit and adapting the film accordingly.

We were impressed and delighted with the end result – a powerful short film that covered the subject in a logical and engaging way. It greatly exceeded our expectations.

Dominic Edwardes

Marketing Director

Terrence Higgins Trust

Please go to www.youtube.com/theagateroad

Or www.youtube.com/chapsonlineuk for the CHAPS channel to see the film.

 

Jan 31

‘Marc’s Story’ premiered at the Kabbalah Centre on the 24th of January 2011, for a select group of individuals, at the launch of their ‘new building’ initiative for the Kabbalah Centre. The film was well received.

Dec 15

Out with the old and in with the new!  2011 not only promises the usual array of hangovers due to over-indulgence accompanied by hastily made and equally hastily broken new year resolutions, but also major changes in the world of business and the way companies communicate.  In fact by all accounts from those in ‘the know,’ about future trends in business, 2011 heralds the waving goodbye by companies to the traditional currency of the written word, expressed in the form of emails.  Shock horror!  ‘What sacrilege, how can this be?,’ I hear you saying.  Yet economic ‘gurus’ with no fewer credentials than the Economist magazine insist that communication success(or failure, for that matter) will no longer be measured in units of volume of emails but instead in a new currency consisting of images transmitted in video format.  Neither is this an overnight sensation.  For the last three years or so, almost while we slept, video has moved from near insignificance to occupying the enviable position of forming almost half of all Internet traffic.  What’s more, it is predicted that this will be more like three quarters by 2012.

So what lies in store for the stuffy business executives whose personalities are only surpassed in ‘greyness’ by their suits and curt emails?  Well, now it seems like a bit of life is about to be injected into the corporate world, as the success of company bosses will be measured in terms of their ‘performance prowess’ in front of a camera. Yes, there has been a paradigm shift in terms of visibility for company chiefs, who must now demonstrate their ability to market themselves and their companies by showcasing their vision for their organization through the medium of video, which takes no prisoners!

It is believed that this process will become a form of ‘natural selection’ for businesses characterized by successful companies being set apart from their less visually articulate competitors through their ability to present complicated ideas through a more accessible route.

‘Less is more,’ will be the mantra of the future as video demands not only greater structural discipline but also much leaner content in the expression of company strategy.  It will now be like looking through a freshly-cleaned window and any company that falls short of the new success criteria will immediately be exposed…there will no longer be a way of hiding behind a wall of words.

In a nutshell, corporate communication of the future will be nothing short of a call to be an effective storyteller.
How good is your story?