Behind the scenes of a commercial video shoot
Editing & Motion Graphics

Behind the Scenes of Commercial Projects

You've seen the polished 30-second commercial — the one that looks effortless. But that effortlessness is an illusion, the same way a great restaurant meal hides a frantic, brilliant kitchen behind the swinging doors. Let's push through those doors and walk through how a commercial actually comes together, from "what if…" to final delivery.

Every commercial moves through three acts. Think of it like building a house: you draw the blueprint, you build the structure, then you do the finish work that makes it a home.

Act One: The Blueprint (Pre-Production)

Commercial pre-production planning with storyboards
Most of a commercial's success is decided here, long before a camera shows up.

This is where the real magic — and most of the work — happens. Before anyone touches a camera, we figure out the strategy: who's this for, what's the single message, what should viewers feel and do? Then comes the creative: concepts, a script, and a storyboard that sketches the video shot by shot.

Behind that sits a mountain of logistics — casting talent, scouting locations, planning wardrobe and props, building a shot list and schedule, and writing the call sheet so everyone knows where to be. A well-planned pre-production is exactly why shoot days feel calm instead of chaotic. (We dig into this in how to prepare for a shoot.)

Act Two: The Build (Production)

Commercial production in full swing with crew and lighting
Shoot day looks busy because every department is solving its piece at once.

Shoot day is the part everyone pictures — and it's a beautifully organized swarm. The director guides the vision and the talent. The camera team handles framing, focus, and movement. The gaffer and grips shape the light. Audio captures clean sound. Someone's watching continuity, someone's styling the product, someone's keeping the schedule on track.

Here's a reality that surprises people: we often spend 30–45 minutes lighting and setting up a shot that lasts three seconds on screen. That obsessive attention is the difference between "fine" and "wow." A commercial shoot isn't about rolling for hours — it's about getting each precise, gorgeous piece exactly right.

Act Three: The Finish Work (Post-Production)

Post-production editing and color grading a commercial
Post is where thousands of pieces become one seamless, emotional 30 seconds.

Now all those carefully captured pieces come together. The editor shapes the story and rhythm, choosing the best takes and cutting to the beat. Then come the layers most people never consciously notice but absolutely feel:

  • Color grading for a consistent, cinematic mood
  • Sound design and music to drive emotion
  • Motion graphics for logos, titles, and any on-screen info
  • Mixing so every element sits perfectly together

There's also a round of revisions with the client to fine-tune everything before the final, platform-ready files are delivered.

The Work You're Not Supposed to Notice

Here's the secret of great commercial work: the better it is, the less you notice the craft. It's the swan gliding serenely across the pond while paddling furiously beneath the surface. Dozens of people made hundreds of intentional decisions so that you could watch 30 seconds and simply feel something — without ever thinking about the lighting diagram or the seventeen takes.

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The Anatomy of a Commercial

  • Pre-production: strategy, script, storyboard, casting, locations, scheduling
  • Production: directing, camera, lighting, audio, styling, continuity
  • Post-production: editing, color, sound design, motion graphics, mix, revisions
  • Delivery: platform-ready files in every needed format

"The goal of all that hidden work is simple: you watch 30 seconds, you feel something, and you never once think about how it was made."

Effortless Takes Effort

Next time a commercial makes you stop and feel something, know that you're seeing the tip of a very deep, very intentional process. That's not overkill — it's exactly what separates content that gets scrolled past from content that moves people and moves business.

Curious what this process could look like for your brand? Let's talk about your project — we love pulling back the curtain.

MediaMarvels
James Cirigliano · Founder, MediaMarvels

James is a creative professional and marketing leader with 20+ years across film, animation, broadcast production, and brand marketing. He founded MediaMarvels to help businesses tell their stories with a filmmaker's eye and a marketer's mindset.

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