Just got our hands on the latest gear from Glide Gear for $400 and we’re stoked! We’ve got a 4 x 4, a 6 x 6, and an 8 x 8 to diffuse the sun wherever we go.
Being on camera hasn’t always been easy for me.
Confidence doesn’t magically show up just because the camera turns on.
What I’ve been learning is that real confidence starts with trusting your craft. Trusting the time you’ve put in. Trusting that what you make actually has value and then learning how to communicate that clearly on camera.
Because clients don’t just buy the product.
They buy your belief in it.
If you don’t sound confident in your ability to deliver, it’s hard for others to feel confident too even if the work is solid. That’s been an uncomfortable but important realization for me.
So this is me, still learning. Still growing. Still figuring out how to stand behind my work with honesty and conviction.
Confidence communicates competents
Filmed Testimonies with @praxischurchkelowna it’s always been a blessing to work with Praxis to share peoples testimonies and see how God is moving in peoples lives.
Some videos are meant to attract, some are meant to explain, some are meant to build trust, and some are meant to convert. Views are just one kind of value.
Here are a few of the real ways video can bring values to your business. 1. Clarity for the Right People
A website video doesn’t need to “go viral.” Its job is to answer questions for the people already looking for you. It saves time, builds confidence, and turns curiosity into action. 2. Perceived Quality
High-quality video silently communicates high-quality service. Before someone ever meets you, they’ve already decided what “tier” your business lives in. 3. Trust at Scale
Video lets people feel like they know you. Tone, body language, and presence do what text can’t—build relational trust before a single conversation happens. 4. Longevity
A good video keeps working long after it’s posted. It lives on your site, in emails, in proposals—quietly doing the job of a salesperson who never clocks out.
When you look at video this way, it stops being about “getting lucky” and starts being about intention.
The goal isn’t to chase virality—it’s to choose the right tool for the job.