15/05/2026
What Nobody Tells You About Being a Videographer
Most people think being a videographer means turning up with a camera, pressing record, and going home.
I wish it was that simple.
Hereās what people donāt always see behind the scenes:
The filming is only part of the job. The edit is where the real hours disappear. Cutting, colour grading, fixing audio, syncing clips, exporting, revisions⦠that ālittle 2-minute videoā can easily take days.
You also become part therapist, part confidence coach. Half the job is making people feel comfortable enough to be themselves on camera.
And if you shoot weddings? You become everything.
A wedding dress repairer with safety pins in your pocket.
The bloke helping guests walk across wet grass in high heels.
The person calming nerves before the ceremony.
The problem solver when timelines collapse.
The fixer when things go wrong.
This industry is also strange because two people can offer what looks like the same service, yet one charges pennies and another charges thousands.
A lot of people think the job is just owning a camera.
The real value is in experience, preparation, and knowing how to handle pressure when things donāt go to plan.
Success in this industry isnāt turning up with one camera and two batteries hoping for the best.
Itās having backup cameras.
Backup audio.
Backup storage.
Backup batteries.
And a backup plan for the backup plan.
Itās knowing what to do when equipment fails during someoneās wedding ceremony, first dance, or once-in-a-lifetime moment ā because sometimes things WILL fail.
Storage and backups become an obsession too. Losing footage is every videographerās nightmare. Back it up. Then back it up again.
Clients also donāt always know how to describe what they actually want. Learning how to ask the right questions before filming saves endless re-edits later.
And when you freelance, youāre not just a videographer. Youāre also the editor, salesperson, accountant, marketer, project manager, customer service rep, tech support, and sometimes unpaid counsellor.
But hereās the biggest thing nobody tells youā¦
Even when the client is absolutely blown away and says itās perfect⦠we still see the flaws.
We still think about the shot we wish we got.
The transition we could improve.
The colour tweak weād change.
The tiny detail nobody else noticed.
And honestly, the day we become completely happy with everything we create is probably the day the passion has gone⦠because caring that much is part of what pushes us to keep improving.
This industry is exhausting, stressful, unpredictable, and sometimes brutal.
But I still wouldnāt swap it for anything.