
TL;DR — Corporate video production in Aberdeen typically costs between £1,000 and £10,000+. The range is wide because scope, strategy, and objective vary enormously. Simple single-purpose videos sit at the lower end. Strategic films built to influence buying decisions sit higher. Tightly scoped formats with a fixed objective can deliver real strategic value from £1,800. The biggest pricing variable isn't filming hours — it's how clearly the objective is defined before production begins.
If you're researching corporate video production cost in Aberdeen, you'll find prices ranging from £1,000 to £10,000+.
That range is accurate. But on its own, it's not very useful.
It doesn't explain why one business invests £1,800 and another spends £8,000 — and both describe what they bought as “a corporate video.”
The difference isn't equipment. It's scope, objective, and whether anyone thought strategically before picking up a camera.
Here's what actually drives those numbers — and how to figure out what makes sense for your situation.
Corporate video production in Aberdeen typically costs between £1,000 and £10,000+. Simple, single-purpose videos — basic testimonials, talking-head interviews, internal communications — sit at the lower end. Strategic films built to influence buying decisions, support bids, or build credibility in competitive B2B markets sit between £3,000 and £10,000. Tightly scoped formats with a fixed objective, like a company overview or client proof film, can deliver strategic value from £1,800.
Most projects fall into three broad tiers.
This range covers straightforward, single-purpose work:
You'd typically get one filming day, a small crew or solo operator, a clean edit, and one deliverable. If your objective is simple and your message is already clear, this works well.
This is where most flagship website videos, sales-support films, and positioning pieces sit.
The investment reflects what's involved beyond the camera:
These aren't just videos. They're built around a specific commercial objective — shortening the sales cycle, building credibility, or supporting a bid.
This range covers productions involving multiple filming days, several locations, larger crews, and heavier post-production — usually for high-stakes bids, multi-department communication strategies, or long-term campaigns.
TierTypical InvestmentWhat's IncludedBest ForSimple / Focused£1,000–£3,000One filming day, solo or small crew, single deliverableTestimonials, internal comms, lightweight promosFixed-Scope Strategic£1,800–£2,400Pre-defined narrative structure, half-day shoot, controlled deliverablesCompany overview (Foundation Film), client proof film (Success Story), FAQ video library (Video Vault)Strategic Production£3,000–£6,000Pre-production strategy, multiple interviews or locations, defined deployment planFlagship website films, positioning pieces, sales-support assetsComplex / Multi-Video£6,000–£10,000+Multiple filming days, larger crew, heavier post-production, campaign strategyHigh-stakes bids, multi-department comms, long-term campaigns
Investment reflects scope and strategic complexity, not filming hours alone.
Yes — when the scope is tightly defined from the start. A clearly structured company overview or focused customer story can sit at £1,800 when the objective is singular, the filming is focused, and the narrative structure is agreed before anyone picks up a camera.
This is the thinking behind our Foundation Film (a company overview built around your core story) and Success Story (a client proof film built around a single transformation). Both use a controlled-scope format — which is what allows a fixed price without cutting corners on quality.
The moment objectives expand beyond a single defined outcome, scope increases. And so does the investment.
This is the stage most people undervalue — and the one that most determines whether a video actually performs commercially.
Pre-production means defining the business objective, clarifying the audience, structuring the narrative, and aligning stakeholders before a single frame is shot. Skip it, and you're gambling with your production budget.
This is why responsible video companies start with a discovery or clarity session before quoting. If a company sends you a price without asking what you're trying to achieve, treat that as a warning sign — and see our guide to choosing an Aberdeen corporate video production company for what to look for instead.
Costs increase with multiple locations, restricted environments, travel, larger contributor lists, and scheduling constraints. A half-day single-location shoot is a very different proposition from a multi-site production.
Aberdeen's energy sector brings specific filming considerations — industrial environments, HSE requirements, and the logistical reality of getting the right people on camera when they're rotating between shifts or working offshore. That complexity has a cost.
Higher production standards mean dedicated sound, professional lighting, producer oversight, and specialist equipment. In Aberdeen's B2B market, where reputation is often the deciding factor, production quality directly affects how credible your business appears on screen.
That said, quality amplifies clarity. It doesn't replace it. A beautifully shot film built around the wrong message is still the wrong message.
Editing often represents the largest time investment in the whole project. Narrative complexity, motion graphics, subtitles, multiple versions, and revision rounds all add significantly to post-production workload.
One master video costs considerably less than one master plus five derivative edits. That's worth knowing when you're planning scope.
How many assets you need from a shoot affects cost — but not always in the way people expect.
Producing a homepage cut, a sales-support version, LinkedIn edits, and recruitment snippets from the same shoot adds editing time. But capturing multiple assets in a single day is often the most cost-effective approach available — significantly cheaper than commissioning separate shoots later.
One well-planned day of filming can produce a year's worth of content — which is exactly how our Video Vault is structured. The per-asset cost drops considerably when everything is captured together.
The question worth asking upfront isn't “how many videos do I need right now?” It's “what do I need this content to do over the next 12 months?” A clear answer to that shapes how a shoot is structured — and often means one day's filming goes much further than expected.
Where costs genuinely increase is when objectives aren't defined early, and additional shoots are needed later to fill gaps that could have been captured the first time around.
Before pricing your project responsibly, a video company should ask:
If those questions aren't part of the conversation, the quote you receive is based on filming time — not on whether the video will do what you need it to do.
In Aberdeen's B2B market, corporate video pays its way when it shortens sales cycles, reduces objections, improves conversion on key pages, supports contract bids, or strengthens recruitment.
The honest question isn't whether video is “worth it” in the abstract. It's whether the specific video you're considering is matched to a specific outcome you actually care about.
If one contract is influenced — one bid that tips in your favour, one prospect who arrives already convinced — the return typically outweighs the production cost significantly.
The key is starting with the outcome, not the format.
Because “corporate video” covers everything from a single talking-head interview to a multi-location strategic campaign. The price reflects scope, strategic complexity, and how much pre-production work happens before filming. A focused one-day shoot with a single deliverable costs very differently from a project involving multiple stakeholders, locations, and a defined deployment strategy.
The most cost-effective approach is to tightly define your objective before approaching any video company. A single, clear outcome — one message, one audience, one purpose — keeps scope controlled and cost predictable. Our Foundation Film is designed exactly for this: a professionally produced company overview at a fixed investment of £1,800 + VAT.
Yes — significantly. Capturing several assets in a single shoot is almost always more cost-effective than commissioning separate productions. One well-planned filming day can produce a company overview, a client proof clip, and social media cuts simultaneously. The per-asset cost drops considerably, and you avoid the logistical overhead of repeated shoots.
Energy sector productions in Aberdeen often sit at the higher end of the £3,000–£10,000 range due to specific filming considerations — industrial or offshore environments, HSE requirements, and the logistical complexity of scheduling contributors across shift rotations. Strategic positioning is also typically more important in this sector, where credibility and trust carry significant commercial weight.
Strategy has more impact on commercial outcome; production quality affects credibility. Both matter, but in sequence — clarity of objective and narrative structure should come before decisions about crew size or equipment. A high-quality film built around the wrong message still underperforms. The most cost-effective productions define strategy first, then match production standards to the objective.
We'd recommend against it. A quote without a discovery conversation is based on filming time, not on your actual objective. The result is either a price that doesn't reflect what you need, or a video that doesn't solve the problem you have. A short Clarity Call — 30 minutes — lets us scope the project accurately and give you a proposal tied to an outcome, not just a deliverable.
Timelines vary by scope. A tightly defined project like a Foundation Film or Success Story typically takes 3–4 weeks from start to finish, including pre-production, filming, and editing. More complex productions involving multiple locations or contributors usually run 6–8 weeks. We provide a clear timeline after the initial Clarity Call once scope is confirmed.
A corporate video is a broad term covering any professionally produced business video — testimonials, explainers, internal communications, recruitment content. A brand film is specifically designed to communicate who a business is, what it stands for, and why it exists — building emotional connection and trust rather than just conveying information. Brand films typically sit at the higher end of the investment range because they require deeper strategic and narrative development.
The biggest pricing variable in corporate video production isn't filming hours — it's how clearly the objective is defined before production begins. Get that right, and the investment at any tier is a decision you can make with confidence.
If you're unsure what level of investment makes sense for your situation, the right first step isn't requesting a generic quote. It's a 30-minute Clarity Call to get clear on the outcome first — so any proposal you receive is tied to a result, not just a deliverable.
Whatever challenge brought you to this article, the starting point is the same: getting clear on the real problem before committing to a solution.
Book a Clarity Call and we'll spend 30 minutes figuring out exactly that — and whether strategic video storytelling is the right answer for your situation.