How to find an event videographer (the right one).
Booking the wrong event videographer is a mistake you only see after the footage comes back muddy, late, and missing the moments you wanted. You can't reshoot a gala. The pre-booking checklist, or couple before they wire a deposit: where to look, what to ask, what to read in the contract, and how to spot the pros.
Where to actually look
Three sources, ranked by how reliable they are:
- Venue coordinators. They see every videographer who works the building. If the same name keeps coming up, that's signal. Ask the venue who they'd hire for their own event, best question you can ask.
- Top-5 organic Google results for "event videographer + your city." Not the ads. Ad placements don't correlate with quality. Organic top-5 means Google thinks the business is genuinely relevant.
- Instagram and Vimeo searches with location tags. Look for studios posting full event recaps (not just 15-second highlights). The depth of their feed tells you how active they are.
Avoid Yelp, Thumbtack, "Top 10 wedding videographers in [city]" listicles (those are pay-to-play), and any platform that ranks by who'll work for the lowest price.
How to read a portfolio in 5 minutes
The 60-second highlight reel is marketing. The real test is full-length deliverables. Ask for:
- Three full event recap films from the past 12 months
- One same-day social cut they delivered live
- One photo gallery from a covered event (if photo is part of your ask)
Watch with your eyes closed first, listen for clean audio. Then with sound off, look for sharp focus, intentional framing, no shaky handhelds. Then with both, look for story. A real event film has a beginning, middle, and end. A bad one is a montage of pretty shots with no narrative.
10 questions to ask on the first call
- How many events of my exact type have you covered in the past 12 months?
- What's the crew size for an event my size, solo, two-camera, three+?
- What gear are you bringing for audio? (Wireless lavs, board feed, shotgun on a boom?)
- Will there be a same-day social cut, and how long is it?
- What's the delivery timeline for the full recap and photo gallery?
- Can you produce a certificate of insurance for my venue?
- What's the backup if a camera or audio fails mid-event?
- How many revisions are included?
- What's the deposit, balance schedule, and reschedule/cancellation policy?
- Who owns the footage, me or you, and how is it licensed?
Contract red flags
- "We don't usually do contracts." Walk away.
- No deliverables list. "We'll make a video" is not a deliverable. Specific length, format, delivery method, and timeline should be in writing.
- Vague revision policy. "Unlimited revisions" sounds great until you realize they take six weeks each. Look for "two rounds of revisions within X days each."
- Footage ownership unclear. Some videographers retain ownership and license the final cut to you. That's normal, but it should be explicit. If the contract is silent, ask before signing.
- Cancellation favors only them. Most contracts have a "deposit non-refundable past X date" clause, that's normal. But there should also be a clause for what happens if THEY cancel.
- No mention of insurance. Major venues require COI. Get it in writing before you book.
Timeline that keeps your event covered
- 8+ weeks out: Initial outreach to 3-5 videographers. Get quotes. Sign contract + pay deposit with your top choice.
- 4 weeks out: Send the run-of-show, key moments, and people-you-want-on-camera list.
- 2 weeks out: Walkthrough call. Confirm logistics, parking, COI to venue.
- 48 hours out: Final call sheet exchanged.
- Event day: Crew arrives 60-90 min early.
- + 1-7 days: Same-day social cut, then full recap by day 7-10 depending on package.
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