A Guest Blog from Küra Samouilhan of kaweb
You can always tell when a video has been made in isolation from the broader digital strategy.
It looks great, the lighting is perfect, and the edit is slick, but then… nothing happens.
No meaningful traffic, no search visibility, and no measurable pipeline impact is generated, and it’s disheartening as anything. Because while the production was strong, the strategy behind it was… well, not strategic.
Video can be really powerful, but only when it’s aligned with your broader digital marketing goals right from the very beginning. Otherwise, it becomes a good-looking asset that no one looks at.
Here’s how to make sure that doesn’t happen.
Before anyone books a shoot, ask: What is this video meant to achieve in your wider digital strategy? Because it’s not enough to say: “We need more video,” “Our competitors are doing them”, or “We want to look more modern.”
Instead, you need to centre specific goals, like:
If you were hoping that video could replace SEO, we’re afraid not - but it enhances it.
When done properly, video becomes an extension of your search strategy, not a separate channel running alongside it. The most effective brands don’t create videos for visibility alone; they use them to reinforce their pillar pages, support long-tail search queries, and deepen the authority of the topics they actually want to rank for.
Think about it this way: a well-optimised pillar page lays the structural foundation, while a strategically placed video directs users to the building and convinces others it’s safe. It increases dwell time, captures conversational search intent, and helps search engines understand the breadth and depth of the topic. It can also support your internal linking structure, giving related content more context and cohesion.
Take a competitive service term, for example. Ranking for it in the SERPs is rarely just about word count or backlinks. If you embed a well-produced explainer or expert interview directly onto that page, something shifts. Visitors stay longer. Engagement signals improve. Complex services become easier to understand. Trust builds faster. And when clarity increases, so does conversion intent.
But (and this is the crucial part), that only works if the video topic has been mapped against real keyword research and genuine search intent before production begins.
Otherwise, you’re left with something polished, insightful, and technically impressive… but strategically invisible.
One of the most common disconnects we see is format mismatch.
Not every video should be a brand film. Not every interview should be posted on YouTube in its full form.
Instead, you should align the format with the funnel stage. Here’s how:
Get your production and marketing teams to collaborate early, so this mapping can be deliberate and intentional. Trust us, you’ll see the payoffs of your attention.
A strong digital marketing plan doesn’t ask, “Where can we post this?” after the edit is signed off on.
That question should have been answered weeks earlier. Since video needs to fit into your overall strategy, it’s distrubution needs to be strategised too - well before the camera is turned on. Because where a video is going to live, and what role it’s meant to play, should shape its production in the first place.
Here are a couple of questions to ask, and angles to take if the answer is yes:
When distribution is clear from the outset, production decisions become intentional rather than reactive. You naturally frame shots with repurposing in mind. You guide contributors towards concise, high-impact soundbites. You structure talking points so they flow logically in both long-form and short-form edits. And you build in clear, purposeful calls to action rather than trying to bolt them on later.
This is where video teams and digital agencies work best together - creating content that performs far beyond the play button.
Engagement metrics feel good - they’re designed to. Views rise, likes roll in, and the comment section starts to get interesting. But engagement alone doesn’t build businesses - authority does. And video is one of the most powerful authority-building tools out there.
It allows real experts to speak in their own voice. It communicates nuance and depth far better than a short paragraph ever could. And it builds trust at speed because audiences can see and hear the confidence behind the message.
To make your video a tool for authority, here’s what to do:
When embedded into optimised service pages and supported by structured content, video reinforces your expertise every time someone lands on that page.
Views are easy to report, and they can look impressive in a slide deck, but they’re rarely the metric that matters most.
If video is aligned with your wider digital marketing goals, its real value shows up in:
These signals are quieter, but far more meaningful than those views you were chasing. When video is strategically integrated into your SEO, CRO and content ecosystem, it contributes to measurable growth. It helps move users along the funnel. It strengthens trust before a sales conversation even begins.
And that’s the difference between creating content that gathers impressions and creating assets that generate impact.
The most effective video strategies aren’t built around single shoots - they’re built around systems. And not just because your poor team doesn’t want to start from scratch every time - a format, a system, makes everything work more efficiently.
A recurring interview format aligned to key service pillars convinces us all of your authority.
A quarterly thought-leadership series targeting defined keyword clusters reminds search engines that your organisation is the one to pay attention to.
Recurring testimonial content supports conversion rate optimisation on landing pages.
When video production is treated as a long-term digital asset strategy rather than just a quick campaign run, ROI compounds.
Video production teams are experts at storytelling, clarity and visual impact, while digital marketers are experts at search intent, conversion pathways and scalable growth.
When those two disciplines collaborate early, rather than operating in silos, the result isn’t just better content; it’s better performance.
Because the most effective video isn’t just well-produced. It’s strategically placed, search-informed and conversion-aware. That’s when video stops being an expense and starts becoming a genuinely useful asset.