The 2026 State of Video Production
- Alex Leblanc
- 2 days ago
- 3 min read
Where the industry is heading—and how the companies that will win are adapting now
In 2026, the companies that will win attention aren’t producing more video—they’re producing differently.
For the past decade, video production has been built around control: large crews, planned shoots, perfect lighting, long timelines, and highly polished output. That model still has a place, but it’s no longer where advantage is created. The companies that will win are optimizing for relevance, speed, trust, and repeatability instead. This isn’t a creative trend; it’s a structural shift in how modern teams create and publish content.
The job is no longer “make a great video.” The job is “publish credible, modern content every week without slowing the business down.”
This shift is exactly why we built Unlock—a distributed, guided creation model designed to help teams publish modern video consistently, without relying on constant onsite production.

The shift most teams didn’t ask for (but will benefit from)
Audiences changed faster than production models did. Buyers now expect content that feels native to their feeds, delivered by real practitioners rather than scripted spokespeople. Short-form, personality-driven video has become the default consumption pattern—even in B2B.
Most teams didn’t wake up asking for UGC, remote capture, or iPhone-based production. But once these approaches prove reliable, scalable, and effective, it becomes difficult to justify doing everything the old way.
What audiences now expect:
Short-form, native video
Real people, not scripts
Expertise over polish
Consistency over big, infrequent drops

What the companies that will win are doing differently
1. They treat production as a system, not an event
The companies that will win don’t rely on a few high-stakes shoots per year to carry their entire content strategy. They build creation into their operating rhythm so content is captured continuously during real work, real conversations, and real moments.
Production becomes infrastructure—not a bottleneck.
2. They activate people, not just cameras
The future of video isn’t about better gear. It’s about participation.
Winning teams empower subject-matter experts, internal leaders, and practitioners to show up on camera in a supported, repeatable way. These voices create trust faster than scripted marketing because they reflect lived experience. Production shifts from control to guidance—standards, coaching, and amplification.
3. They use UGC Onsite as a force multiplier
In-person moments still matter—but the way they’re captured has changed.
UGC Onsite blends professional structure with creator-style capture, allowing teams to generate high-volume, authentic content during real events, studio sessions, and on-location moments. The companies that will win don’t leave a shoot with one deliverable; they leave with weeks or months of usable content.
4. They replace unnecessary onsite production with Unlock-style remote creation
Not every piece of content needs a crew, and the companies that will win understand when remote, guided capture is the better tool.
With the right standards, coaching, and review loops, remote video becomes faster, cheaper, and more frequent—without sacrificing credibility. When done correctly, it doesn’t feel like a compromise. It feels like progress.
5. They prioritize modern-native output
In 2026, credibility isn’t defined by polish alone. It’s shaped by pacing, hooks, tone, and format familiarity. The companies that will win treat “modern” as a requirement, not a preference, and systematize it across their content.
Modern-native output means:
Platform-aware pacing
Clear hooks in the first seconds
Conversational tone
Formats that feel at home in the feed
Why this matters now
This shift isn’t optional—and it isn’t coming later.
Teams that adapt publish more without increasing workload, reduce dependence on high-cost production, build trust faster with buyers, and create content that actually gets used. Teams that don’t ship less frequently, over-invest in polish, and rely on orchestration instead of systems—losing relevance over time, even with strong brands.
The path forward
The companies that will win in 2026 won’t abandon traditional production. They’ll expand their model by combining UGC Onsite for real-world momentum, Unlock for distributed and repeatable creation, experts as the primary signal of credibility, and systems that make content inevitable instead of fragile.
If you want to explore how this works in practice—and how teams are scaling content without scaling chaos—you can learn more here:
