What happens in a Digital Accomplice Video Strategy sprint?
In a Digital Accomplice Video Strategy Sprint you get a documented, testable video plan in about three weeks for a flat $8,000, built with you across...

Short answer: In a Digital Accomplice Video Strategy Sprint you get a documented, testable video plan in about three weeks for a flat $8,000, built with you across two or three working sessions with almost no prep on your side.
The Short Version
Week 1 intake, Week 2 working sessions on the 15 decisions, Week 3 your written plan plus a crawl-walk-run roadmap. You walk out with a plan you can run, with us or without us.

The short version of the answer.
Why This Matters
This matters because production is expensive when the plan is vague. A team can spend real money and still end up with a library of videos that nobody knows how to use. Strategy is the part that decides the buyer question, the owner, the channel, the measurement plan, and the next action.

The first strategic point behind the answer.
What Most Teams Miss
What most teams miss: Week 1 intake, Week 2 working sessions on the 15 decisions, Week 3 your written plan plus a crawl-walk-run roadmap. The plan is not a formality. It is the filter that prevents a team from producing beautiful assets that never get used.

The non-obvious mistake or leverage point.
How To Apply This
- Decide the audience, buyer question, and business goal first.
- Choose the formats and channels before production starts.
- Assign ownership for distribution, sales usage, and measurement.
- Define what success looks like beyond views.
- Produce only the assets the plan can support.

The practical planning or measurement takeaway.
What To Do Next
See if it is a fit. Book a free 15-minute session.

The bottom-line next step.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do we need a plan before every video?
You need enough plan to know the buyer, the question, the channel, and the measurement.
Is strategy slower?
Usually it saves time because it prevents unnecessary shoots and unused edits.
What should a plan decide?
It should decide goals, audience, formats, channels, roles, quality, measurement, and budget.