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<channel><title><![CDATA[PAURIC BRENNAN FILMMAKER - Shoot First, Talk Later! Blog]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.bren-enterprises.com/shoot-first-talk-later-blog]]></link><description><![CDATA[Shoot First, Talk Later! Blog]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 16 Feb 2026 03:12:47 -0800</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[January 15th, 2026]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.bren-enterprises.com/shoot-first-talk-later-blog/january-15th-2026]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.bren-enterprises.com/shoot-first-talk-later-blog/january-15th-2026#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 15 Jan 2026 10:40:47 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.bren-enterprises.com/shoot-first-talk-later-blog/january-15th-2026</guid><description><![CDATA[&#8203;How People Actually Use Tech Now &mdash; and What That Means For Your Content  Digital access isn&rsquo;t a luxury anymore. It&rsquo;s a utility. We wake up, grab the phone, and we&rsquo;re already &ldquo;online.&rdquo; In this post I try to break&nbsp;down what&rsquo;s changed in how audiences use technology, why it matters, and the practical moves you can make today. Phones first. Vertical video. And a quick look at where smart glasses and VR will push discoverability next.From &ldquo;g [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2 class="wsite-content-title">&#8203;How People Actually Use Tech Now &mdash; and What That Means For Your Content</h2>  <div class="paragraph">Digital access isn&rsquo;t a luxury anymore. It&rsquo;s a utility. We wake up, grab the phone, and we&rsquo;re already &ldquo;online.&rdquo; In this post I try to break&nbsp;down what&rsquo;s changed in how audiences use technology, why it matters, and the practical moves you can make today. Phones first. Vertical video. And a quick look at where smart glasses and VR will push discoverability next.<br />From &ldquo;go to the internet&rdquo; to &ldquo;live on the internet&rdquo;The internet started as a research network, then the Web made it usable, broadband made it fast, and smartphones put it in our pockets. The big shift: we don&rsquo;t &ldquo;visit&rdquo; the internet. We live on it. That has consequences for how people find you and what they expect when they do.<br />Access keeps growing, but it&rsquo;s not equalMost of the world is online and speeds keep getting better. But millions are still on slow connections or limited data. Design for both ends of that reality.<ul><li>Keep pages light and fast.</li><li>Always include captions.</li><li>Make downloads optional.</li><li>Use CTAs that work even on patchy Wi-Fi.</li></ul> The phone is the main screenNot the only screen. The default screen. Your creative has to feel native in the hand.<ul><li>Plan for vertical from the start.</li><li>Lead with the point in the first three seconds.</li><li>Design text that&rsquo;s readable without pinching.</li><li>Assume sound off. Caption everything.</li></ul> Search still matters, but the &ldquo;front door&rdquo; movedPeople still Google. But younger audiences &ldquo;search&rdquo; inside YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram. They watch first, then decide. Voice and AI chat are creeping into early discovery too.<ul><li>Publish for where people type and where they scroll.</li><li>Structure content so it works as both: an answer and a clip.</li><li>Treat recommendations as a channel. Optimize thumbnails, titles, hooks, and watch-time.</li></ul> Buying online is a habit nowEcommerce pulled forward years of adoption and never snapped back.<ul><li>Favor &ldquo;everyday conversion&rdquo; over &ldquo;one big sales day.&rdquo;</li><li>Use short product videos and social proof where they&rsquo;re already watching.</li><li>Reduce friction. One click to basket. Clear returns.</li></ul> Video is the internet&rsquo;s default languageIf your story works on mute, fits vertical, and delivers value fast, you win more attention.<ul><li>Hook in three seconds. Pay off in 15. Earn the next 30.</li><li>Use chapters and on-screen text for scanning.</li><li>Make the next step obvious: watch the full piece, join the list, grab the demo.</li></ul> Three forces driving behavior right now<ul><li><strong>Time online stays high.</strong> Attention is jumpy. Make it snackable and serial.</li><li><strong>Mobile speeds are up.</strong> Richer formats load instantly. Think shoppable video and AR try-ons.</li><li><strong>Mobile users dominate.</strong> Build for the thumb. Buttons big. Forms short. Links friendly to in-app browsers.</li></ul> What&rsquo;s next for discoverability: glasses and VRSmart glasses won&rsquo;t replace the phone overnight. They will change context.<ul><li><strong>Glasses.</strong> Visual search in the world. Live subtitles. Navigation and overlays. Hands-free capture that feeds short video automatically.</li><li><strong>VR and spatial screens.</strong> Not mainstream all day, but perfect for immersive product demos, virtual screenings, and room-scale experiences that click straight to purchase.</li></ul> The rule won&rsquo;t change: be where the eyes are.<br />Five takeaways you can use today<ol><li><strong>Mobile first.</strong> Design for a small screen and a moving hand.</li><li><strong>Vertical video always.</strong> Shoot native vertical. Caption everything.</li><li><strong>Multi-door discovery.</strong> Publish for search and for scroll.</li><li><strong>Respect constraints.</strong> Fast loads. Offline-friendly. Clear CTAs.</li><li><strong>Test the future.</strong> Pilot AR captions, visual search hooks, and &ldquo;made-for-glasses&rdquo; micro shots.</li></ol> If you make content, do this next<ul><li>Take one existing horizontal video and re-edit it as true vertical with a new hook.</li><li>Add on-screen text that lands the value by second three.</li><li>Ship a 30&ndash;45 second product or project explainer that ends with a single, specific CTA.</li><li>Check your site on a slow connection. If it hurts, fix that first.</li></ul> &#8203;Have a look at my video presentation <a href="https://youtu.be/N0BmVMnmR-I" target="_blank"><font color="#2a2a2a">here</font></a>&nbsp;and explore the presentation slides <a href="https://www.slideshare.net/secret/1dytN4roiWqG2C" target="_blank"><font color="#2a2a2a">here</font></a></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Steal Amazon’s 7 Ps, Not Their Budget: An Indie Filmmaker’s Playbook]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.bren-enterprises.com/shoot-first-talk-later-blog/steal-amazons-7-ps-not-their-budget-an-indie-filmmakers-playbook]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.bren-enterprises.com/shoot-first-talk-later-blog/steal-amazons-7-ps-not-their-budget-an-indie-filmmakers-playbook#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Fri, 24 Oct 2025 11:37:26 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.bren-enterprises.com/shoot-first-talk-later-blog/steal-amazons-7-ps-not-their-budget-an-indie-filmmakers-playbook</guid><description><![CDATA[&#8203;Filmmaking is my lane. Selling the film and the filmmaker as a brand is the job we can't ignore. I&rsquo;ve been digging into marketing as part of a course I'm doing, and Amazon is a useful case study. They are elite at the 7 Ps of marketing. We can&rsquo;t copy their spend, but we can certainly copy their system.Below is a practical breakdown of each P with concrete film examples you can implement this week. No fluff. Use it, iterate, repeat. The film referred to is in development.1) Pro [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">&#8203;<br />Filmmaking is my lane. Selling the film and the filmmaker as a brand is the job we can't ignore. I&rsquo;ve been digging into marketing as part of a course I'm doing, and Amazon is a useful case study. They are elite at the 7 Ps of marketing. We can&rsquo;t copy their spend, but we can certainly copy their system.<br />Below is a practical breakdown of each P with concrete film examples you can implement this week. No fluff. Use it, iterate, repeat. The film referred to is in development.<br />1) Product: make the film a product ecosystem, not a file.<br />&nbsp;<strong>How Amazon does it:</strong> constant iteration, versions, bundles, rich product pages.<br /><strong>Your indie play:</strong><ul><li><strong>Core product:</strong> the feature. Treat it like a season, not a one-off.</li><li><strong>Versions:</strong> festival cut, VOD cut with director commentary, airplane cut for language, 4-part YouTube mini-series cut.</li><li><strong>Attachables:</strong> soundtrack EP, poster pack, BTS micro-doc, script PDF, classroom discussion guide, LUTs used in the grade.</li><li><strong>Page-level packaging:</strong> dedicated landing page with logline, trailer, stills, 3 quotes, 3 awards, watch buttons above the fold, one clear CTA.</li></ul> <strong>Example:</strong><br />Release Blackmore, a 15-minute BTS short and a folklore PDF alongside the VOD. Bundle them as a Deluxe Edition at a higher price.<br />2) Price: ladder the value so every fan can say yes.<br /><strong>How Amazon does it:</strong> dynamic pricing, bundles, subscriptions, deals that feel timely.<br /><strong>Your indie play:</strong><ul><li><strong>Price ladder:</strong><ul><li>&euro;3.99 rental, &euro;9.99 purchase</li><li>&euro;19 Deluxe Edition (film + commentary + BTS)</li><li>&euro;39 Collector Bundle (Deluxe + poster + soundtrack)</li><li>&euro;99 Classroom License (film + guide + discussion rights)</li></ul></li><li><strong>Timed incentives:</strong> opening weekend price, payday Friday price, anniversary price.</li><li><strong>Bundles:</strong> &ldquo;Folk Horror Pack&rdquo; that includes your short plus the feature.</li><li><strong>Group deals:</strong> club or classroom licenses with simple terms.</li></ul> <strong>Example:</strong><br />Launch week: rental &euro;2.99, jumps to &euro;3.99 on day 8. Send one &ldquo;last day&rdquo; email. Convert price pressure into action without feeling cheap.<br />3) Place: meet your audience where they already watch<br /><strong>How Amazon does it:</strong> omnichannel, own the shelf, control the checkout.<br /><strong>Your indie play:</strong><ul><li><strong>Owned channel first:</strong> your site checkout or Gumroad. Keep the data.</li><li><strong>Then aggregators and AVOD:</strong> Prime Video via a distributor, Tubi, Plex, Vimeo On Demand, YouTube rentals where viable.</li><li><strong>Physical and community:</strong> club halls, libraries, college film societies, boutique cinemas, pop-up screenings.</li><li><strong>Smart linking:</strong> QR on posters to a single landing page with geo-targeted watch buttons.</li></ul> <strong>Example:</strong><br />Blackmore Pop-up screening at a community hall with a live Q&amp;A, followed by a QR that unlocks a 48-hour rental at a discount for attendees&rsquo; friends.<br />4) Promotion: build tentpoles you own and run a flywheel<br />&#8203;<strong>How Amazon does it:</strong> event-led spikes, always-on content, live shopping, cultural moments.<br /><strong>Your indie play:</strong><ul><li><strong>Create your tentpole:</strong> pick two dates a year and name them. &ldquo;Blackmore Night&rdquo; in March, &ldquo;Forest Watch&rdquo; in October.</li><li><strong>Three-phase cadence:</strong><ul><li>Tease: announce the date, drop key art, share folklore trivia.</li><li>Drop: trailer, premiere, creator collabs, watch party.</li><li>Echo: behind-the-scenes, fan art, pull quotes, blooper reel.</li></ul></li><li><strong>Live video that actually sells:</strong> Instagram Live or YouTube Premiere with a clear CTA in chat, pin the buy link.</li><li><strong>Creator collabs:</strong> micro-creators in horror, Irish folklore, hiking safety, or Irish myths. Give them clips with captions and a revenue share.</li><li><strong>Retail-media mindset:</strong> run small paid on high-intent placements only, retarget site visitors with a watch-now sequence for 7 days.</li></ul> <strong>Example week:</strong><br />Mon teaser, Wed cast clip, Fri live AMA with folklorist, Sat premiere watch party, Sun &ldquo;how we did the sound&rdquo; short. Pin the &ldquo;Watch now&rdquo; link everywhere.<br />5) People: turn cast, crew, and first fans into a street team<strong>How Amazon does it:</strong> customer obsession, reviews, creators, service that builds trust.<br /><strong>Your indie play:</strong><ul><li><strong>Street team:</strong> 20 early supporters get unique tracking links, priority credits, and a private Discord.</li><li><strong>Review engine:</strong> day 1 email asking for a rating on the platform they used and a one-line quote you can reuse.</li><li><strong>Community touchpoints:</strong> behind-the-scenes newsletter, Discord channels for locations, gear, folklore, soundtrack.</li><li><strong>Service standard:</strong> fast replies, refund without friction if someone bought the wrong SKU, thank-you notes to early reviewers.</li></ul> <strong>Example:</strong><br />DM every reviewer who posts within 72 hours, thank them personally, and offer a poster PDF. People remember being seen.<br />6) Process: make discovery and checkout idiot-proof<br /><strong>How Amazon does it:</strong> one-click, clear delivery, tight post-purchase flow.<br /><strong>Your indie play:</strong><ul><li><strong>Landing page flow:</strong> watch button, three watch options, no dead links, short trailer, social proof, FAQ at the bottom.</li><li><strong>Friction audit:</strong> remove extra clicks, avoid sending people to a generic Linktree.</li><li><strong>Automation:</strong> post-purchase email with bonus clip, request for review on day 3, refer-a-friend code on day 7.</li><li><strong>Data:</strong> GA4 events for trailer plays, clicks by platform, purchase completion. Weekly review, adjust creative, repeat.</li></ul> <strong>Example:</strong><br />Set a goal: 60 percent of landing-page visitors should reach a platform page, 5 to 10 percent should purchase or rent. If not, fix copy, thumbnails, or pricing.<br />7) Physical Evidence: show receipts that you are the real deal<br />&#8203;<strong>How Amazon does it:</strong> A+ pages, images, ratings, unboxing, consistent visual system.<br /><strong>Your indie play:</strong><ul><li><strong>One-sheet that sells:</strong> logline, 3 hooks, laurels, 2 quotes, hero still, watch buttons.</li><li><strong>Poster system:</strong> title lockup, font, color palette across all assets.</li><li><strong>Press kit:</strong> 12 stills, 2 trailers, 100-word synopsis, 300-word synopsis, bios, tech specs, clear contact.</li><li><strong>Social proof wall:</strong> festival laurels, audience screenshots, BTS photos, signed props.</li><li><strong>Local credibility:</strong> venues, councils, clubs that hosted you, partners who vouched.</li></ul> <strong>Example:</strong><br />Pin a &ldquo;Start here&rdquo; post on every platform with the hero still, 15-second trailer, three pull quotes, and the link. Make it easy for new eyeballs to trust you fast.<br />Quick builds you can finish this week<ul><li><strong>Price ladder:</strong> set four SKUs and publish the Deluxe and Classroom versions.</li><li><strong>Landing page:</strong> hero still, 60&ndash;90 second trailer, three quotes, &ldquo;Watch now&rdquo; buttons, FAQ.</li><li><strong>Street team:</strong> recruit 20, give them unique links and a content pack.</li><li><strong>Two tentpole dates:</strong> add to your calendar and tease the first one immediately.</li><li><strong>Automation:</strong> post-purchase email, day 3 review request, day 7 refer-a-friend.</li></ul> Metrics that matter<ul><li><strong>Visitor to platform click-through:</strong> target 60 percent.</li><li><strong>Trailer play-through to purchase:</strong> target 5 to 10 percent on hot weeks.</li><li><strong>Email open rate on buyers:</strong> 55 percent plus.</li><li><strong>Review rate:</strong> 10 percent of purchasers within 14 days.</li><li><strong>Returning buyers:</strong> measure how many buy the Deluxe or gift codes later.</li></ul> A 30-day promo calendar you can copy<strong>Week 1, Awareness:</strong><br />Mon key art, Tue logline clip, Wed folklore fact, Thu crew intro, Fri trailer, Sat creator duet, Sun email with behind-the-scenes stills.<br /><strong>Week 2, Consideration:</strong><br />Mon cast quote cards, Tue soundtrack teaser, Wed review screenshot carousel, Thu Q&amp;A Live, Fri scene breakdown, Sat location reel, Sun press kit drop to bloggers.<br /><strong>Week 3, Conversion:</strong><br />Mon 48-hour rental discount, Tue testimonials, Wed creator watch-along, Thu classroom license pitch, Fri Deluxe Edition tease, Sat premiere watch party, Sun &ldquo;last day&rdquo; pricing post.<br /><strong>Week 4, Retention:</strong><br />Mon BTS short, Tue fan art feature, Wed deleted scene, Thu refer-a-friend offer, Fri director commentary clip, Sat newsletter roundup, Sun date drop for next tentpole.<br />Bottom lineAmazon wins because it controls the stage, the audience, and the checkout. You can mirror that on a micro scale. Own your page, build your tentpoles, ship multiple versions, price with intent, recruit a street team, and make the path to &ldquo;watch now&rdquo; short and obvious. Repeat the loop until it becomes habit for your audience.</div>  <div><div style="height:20px;overflow:hidden"></div> <div id='124376739570050255-slideshow'></div> <div style="height:20px;overflow:hidden"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>