Department: Videography
Employment Type: Full Time
Location: Toronto
Compensation: $80,000 - $100,000 / year
The Role
Before we start in earnest, we'd like you to watch a handful of videos Take your time -- the job ad will still be here when you're done.
Back? Good. Now, with that out of the way, here's the pitch: do you want to work with dbrand's Creative and Marketing teams to push the envelope of compelling, immersive video content for our online following of millions? Or would you prefer to continue whittling away at corporate training videos and product b-roll?
Our brand promise is "It's not a product. It's a culture.™" That's a lot more than a catchphrase -- it's core to everything that we do. Whether we're sending our customers boxes full of glitter, roasting them on social media, or filming them getting our logo tattooed on their leg, we're in the business of selling a brand experience first, and (excellent) products second. In return, we receive constant adoration from our devoted, cult-like fanbase. That, and their money. We won't lie: it's a pretty sweet deal.
In order to augment the dbrand experience with the top-shelf video content that our audience deserves, we require a Videographer -- the kind of person who turns up at a studio with a camera, lights a scene, captures footage that holds up on a 65-inch screen, and edits it into a flawless, finished cut. This is a practical production role: hands on the camera, eyes on the monitor, final cut on the timeline. If you like what you're reading, keep scrolling.
The Environment
It's 3:00 PM on a random Tuesday and the Creative Strategist has a concept for the team's next project. You've never done a video like this before. Truthfully, you're pretty sure that nobody has. Your excitement is palpable, your mind racing with ideas to enhance the pitch.
Two days later, you're already immersed in storyboards, shotlists and schedules. You're a few hours removed from crushing through a prop list that contained everything from an oxygen mask to a bag of Cheetos. The location's booked, the gear's been rented, the talent is scheduled. You know this feeling all too well: everything's coming together.
When the day finally arrives, and everybody's en route to the set… you're already there. Load-in, lights, mics, cameras, art direction, backup, storage, strike -- you own all of it, and you know that a successful shoot is 90% prep, 10% execution. It takes a lot of work to get the actors talking about how well-run the set is, but it's worth it every single time.
It's 2:42 PM on a random Tuesday and you've just passed off a rough cut for editing -- after making selects, grading the footage, and mixing the audio, of course. A new email's in your inbox. The Creative Strategist sent you a meeting invite. Time for the team's next project.
No two days at dbrand are ever alike, except that they'll always push you to do your best work for an audience of adoring fans. Sounds like a dream, right? Don't get ahead of yourself, though. Before your perfectly-framed shots can thrill and delight our audience of over a million cultish followers, you'll need to prove yourself. Think you've got what it takes?
Core Responsibilities
In order to make a positive impact as part of our team, your focus in this role will be to:
In addition to your core responsibilities, you may be asked to contribute to overall creative ideation and direction with the video team as a whole. This includes ideating and pitching new video ideas, as well as contributing creatively to tentpole marketing campaigns. This is not a requirement for the role, however we value all voices on the video team and invite you to contribute.
Pre-Production
Pre-production is owned by the Creative Strategist. You're not running it — you're in it with them, picking up the slack on a project-by-project basis. Expect to:
Production
On set, the workflow is yours. Full stop. This includes, but is not limited to:
Post-Production
This is a shooting-and-basic-editorial role. Your lane is clearly drawn:
Cross-Functional
Creative Contribution (Invited, Not Required)
You're not hired to be a button-presser. Beyond your core responsibilities, you may be asked — and are always welcome — to contribute to overall creative ideation and direction with the video team. That includes pitching new video ideas and contributing to tentpole marketing campaigns. It's not a requirement of the role. It is, however, the difference between a videographer and the kind of videographer who ends up running things.
The Qualifications
The job starts between $80,000–$100,000 per year with health, dental, vision, profit-sharing, and GRSP benefits. This new role is hybrid where you'll work on-site at our Creative space in Toronto or remotely from home.
Still think you have what it takes to shoot the best video content?
To be perfectly honest, we doubt it.
You’re welcome to prove us wrong.
Vacancy Disclosure This is a new role.

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