a. Cut and assemble video footage, sound effects, graphics, and animations to create a cohesive final product.
b. Review raw material to create a shot decision list based on scenes' value and contribution to continuity.
c. Trim footage segments and create seamless transitions to meet project objectives.
d. Input music, dialogues, graphics, and effects to improve footage.
2. Post-production management:
a. Ensure the video is correctly formatted for various platforms (broadcast, YouTube, social media, etc.).
b. Balance video/audio levels and add sound effects or music as required.
c. Color grading to ensure consistency and visual appeal.
d. Maintain organized file management to easily track and reference projects.
3. Collaboration and communication:
a. Work closely with producers, directors, and clients to ensure the video meets the desired vision and goals.
b. Take and implement creative feedback effectively to make revisions or edits.
c. Stay up to date on trends, techniques, and technology in video editing and production.
4. Creative Input:
a. Contribute fresh, creative ideas to projects to enhance storytelling or visual impact.
b. Help create storyboards and develop visual concepts for new projects.
c. Offer suggestions for pacing, narrative structure, and visual styles based on the project's goals.
4. File management and delivery:
a. Ensure the delivery of the final video product meets specifications for format, resolution, and quality.
b. Export final videos in multiple formats as required by the project.
c. Organize project files and raw footage for archiving and future use.
Skill(s) required
Adobe IllustratorAdobe PhotoshopAdobe Premiere ProFinal Cut ProVideo EditingVideo Making
WIPE is not about empowering women. WIPE is about making the business case for women. Providing unparalleled access to networks and resources that foster women's entrepreneurship.
Radically Yours, as part of the WIPE initiative, interviewed and continues to interview leading women investors and founders across the globe. Our interactions revealed the challenges women entrepreneurs faced. Given the same expertise, a man might rate himself higher for ex 9/10, while a woman will rate herself as 6/10. That aggressiveness helps in pitches and the conservatism, in general, could tend to be counterintuitive when pitching to investors. There is a morbid apprehension to invest in solely woman-founded enterprises. The conservatism also tends to take women on the path of self-doubt. In most cases, women tend to stay silent, or silently accept negative feedback or criticism as legitimate feedback, as against men which are more likely to counter such criticism.