Production Visibility OS™ · Authority Builder · Communication Skills

How to Record a 1:1 Video That Actually Lands

A short, practical worksheet on 1:1 videos. Why to record them, how to record them, and how to make them actually land with the buyer.

About this module

Read it once, practice for a week, and it becomes muscle memory.

Read it. Record one video this week. Then we debrief together in our next session.

A 1:1 video built right shortens sales cycles, prevents proposal waste, and stops deals from dying when your quote gets forwarded to a decision-maker you've never met.

Built wrong, it feels awkward, gets skipped, and trains your prospects to ignore your videos forever.

Why this matters beyond closing deals

Before you hit record

Answer 3 questions in your head before you press the button.

  1. Who is this for? Their name, their company, the last conversation. In front of you.
  2. What 2-3 points am I covering? No more than 3. Bullet points, never a full script.
  3. What's the ONE thing I want them to do next? Reply by Friday. Confirm the meeting. Forward to the CFO. Pick one.

Setup checklist

The open (first 10 seconds — this is where it's won or lost)

The smile rule

Say their name first

"Hey Marc..."

The why-watch-this

"In this short 2-minute video, I'm going to walk you through three things: [point 1], [point 2], and [point 3]. Then I'll give you one quick ask at the end."

Now they know what they get and how long it takes. They keep watching.

The body (1-3 minutes)

The close

"What happens next is, you reply with your top question by Thursday, and I'll have the answer ready when we meet Friday at 10."

Don't trail off. End on the action.

The 3 banned phrases

Never say these. They kill authority on the spot.

  1. "I just thought I'd send you this video..." Apologetic. Weak.
  2. "Thank you for your time..." You're not begging.
  3. "Let me know if you have any questions..." Passive. No leadership.

The wrapper (the email around the video)

The video doesn't open itself. The email does. Treat it with the same care.

ElementRule
Subject line[Name], 2-min video on [specific topic]. Include the word "video".
First sentenceOne line: reference last convo + length + what it addresses.
ThumbnailAn animated GIF preview with you holding a whiteboard with their name, or waving. Same mechanism as the website-behind trick, just delivered on the email side. See "How to embed" below.
BodyVideo embed → article/link (use the title as link text, never "click here").
CloseONE ask. Multiple options = no action.

First sentence example:

"After our conversation Tuesday about your proposal stall, here's a 2-minute video that addresses the timing question you raised."

How to embed the video (the part most reps screw up)

This is the difference between a video that gets watched and one that gets ignored

Don't just paste the URL. A flat https://loom.com/share/abc123... looks like every other link in the inbox. People scroll past it.

Use the tool's "share to email" or "embed" feature instead. Loom, Vidyard, and Sendspark all have it. What you should end up with in the email body:

  1. An animated GIF thumbnail, a moving preview that loops the first 2-3 seconds of your video right inside the email. They see your face, your whiteboard, their website as soon as they open the message. The GIF itself is clickable.
  2. A personalized clickable title, replace the default ("Watch this video") with something specific: "[Name], here's the 2-min walkthrough" or "Marc, quick walkthrough on the timing question".

Both the GIF and the title link to the video. They click either, they're watching.

Why this matters:

If you find yourself writing a paragraph of text in the email body, stop. The video is the message. The email is just the wrapper.

The quality gate (watch it back once)

If yes to all, send.

If no, here's the realistic call:

When to use a 1:1 video

StageUse it for
Before first meeting"What to expect" + who you are
Between meetingsAddress a specific concern they raised, by name
Sending a quoteNever send a quote without a video. Especially if it gets forwarded to someone who wasn't in the meeting.
Deal has gone quietRevisit their original concern, reference it directly.

The personalization signal evolves

The "website behind you" trick is powerful, but it's not something you do on every single video forever. The point is to prove once that you actually made this for them. After that, the relationship carries the trust.

StagePersonalization signalWhy
First video (cold or just-connected)Website behind you OR whiteboard with their name in shotThey've never seen one of these from you. Visual proof it's not a template. Loudest signal.
Mid-relationship (between meetings)Personalized thumbnail (whiteboard or wave) + reference their last commentThey already know you do these. Personalization now lives in WHAT you say, not the background.
Quote / proposal videoThumbnail does the work + standard screen-share of the documentYou've earned the trust. Screen-share the proposal like a normal walkthrough. They trust the format now.
Long-form "how we do things"None neededA 1-to-many explainer is fine here. They've already had the personal treatment, so a longer company video lands as helpful, not lazy.

Bottom line: Website-behind-you, whiteboard, wave, name-on-thumbnail. These are the SAME mechanism on different surfaces (in-video background vs. email thumbnail). Pick ONE per video. Use the loudest signal on first contact. Soften it as trust builds. Don't reprove what you've already proved.

Why this works

Most B2B sales teams send hundreds of text emails a month. Almost no one sends video. When you do, especially in machine manufacturing where it's basically unheard of, you stand out instantly. Prospects comment on it. They forward it. They ask how you do it.

It also kills the "I'll need to show this to my partner / CFO / dad" problem. When your quote gets forwarded, the video goes with it. The person who never met you still gets your tone, your reasoning, your face. The deal doesn't die at the handoff.

That's the whole point.

Your move

Go and record your first 1:1 video right now.

Pick one prospect on your list today. Open Loom or Vidyard. Hit record. Run the open / body / close exactly the way it's described above. Send it.

Don't make it perfect. Make it sent.

We'll debrief together in our next session.