courier-company-video
# Courier Company Video — AI Video Production for Moving & Relocation Companies
The moving industry has a trust problem unlike any other home service. Plumbers, electricians, and carpet cleaners might get a bad review for shoddy work — but movers can literally drive away with everything you own. The horror stories are real and widely publicized: companies quoting $3,000 then demanding $9,000 at delivery with belongings held hostage, "phantom" movers operating under fake names with no insurance, crews showing up drunk or not showing up at all, irreplaceable family heirlooms arriving shattered or never arriving. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) receives thousands of complaints annually, and the BBB consistently ranks moving companies among the most complained-about businesses. This toxic reputation poisons the entire industry — including the majority of movers who are honest, professional, and genuinely care about their customers. Video is the single most powerful tool to break through this trust deficit. When a customer can see your face, your crew, your trucks, your process, and your past customers' genuine relief and gratitude, the fear dissolves. Courier Company Video makes this possible for every mover, at every scale, using AI-powered video production.
## 1. Industry Context
### Market Size & Landscape
- The U.S. moving services industry generates approximately **$20 billion** in annual revenue (IBISWorld, 2025), with steady growth driven by housing market activity and corporate relocations.
- There are approximately **7,000+ FMCSA-registered interstate movers** and an estimated **25,000+ local/intrastate moving companies** operating in the United States.
- Approximately **31 million Americans move each year** (Census Bureau), representing roughly 9.8% of the population — though this figure has declined from historical norms of 12-15%.
- The average cost of a local move (2-3 bedroom house, same city) is **$1,400-$2,600**. The average interstate move costs **$4,800-$7,500**. Cross-country moves average **$6,000-$12,000+**.
- Major national van lines and their agent networks: **United Van Lines** (largest market share, ~6%), **Atlas Van Lines**, **Mayflower Transit**, **Allied Van Lines**, **North American Van Lines**, **Bekins**, **Wheaton World Wide Moving**.
- Franchise operations dominate the local segment: **Two Men and a Truck** (380+ locations, $800M+ system revenue), **College Hunks Hauling Junk & Moving** (200+ franchises), **Bellhops** (25+ markets).
- The corporate relocation segment is a **$25+ billion** market globally, with companies like Cartus, Sirva, and Graebel managing thousands of employee transfers annually.
- Military PCS (Permanent Change of Station) moves represent a **$2.4 billion** annual spend by the Department of Defense, managed through the Global Household Goods Contract (GHC).
- The portable storage/container segment (PODS, 1-800-PACK-RAT, U-Pack) has grown to a **$5+ billion** market, disrupting traditional full-service movers.
- Peak season (May-September) accounts for approximately **70% of all annual moves**, creating severe capacity constraints and price premiums of 20-40%.
### The Trust Crisis — Why Video is Existential for Movers
1. **The most feared home service**: In consumer surveys, hiring movers consistently ranks among the top 5 most stressful life events — alongside divorce, job loss, and death of a loved one. The fear isn't just about money; it's about handing strangers access to everything you own.
2. **Horror stories dominate the narrative**: One viral "mover scam" story on social media reaches millions of potential customers. Every courier company — even the best — is fighting against this collective trauma. Video showing your real team and real operations is the strongest antidote.
3. **Anonymous competitors erode trust for everyone**: The moving industry has a low barrier to entry. Anyone can rent a truck and call themselves a mover. Customers can't tell legitimate companies from fly-by-night operations based on a website alone. Video creates a transparency barrier that illegitimate operators can't easily fake.
4. **Price sensitivity driven by fear**: Customers often choose the cheapest mover because they assume "they're all the same — might as well save money." Video demonstrates WHY a professional mover is worth 2-3x more than a Craigslist crew.
5. **The binding estimate revolution**: Legitimate movers now offer binding estimates (guaranteed price). Video explaining the difference between binding and non-binding estimates — and showing that your company stands behind its price — is a direct conversion tool.
6. **Crew quality is everything**: A courier company's reputation is only as good as its worst crew member on their worst day. "Meet our team" videos humanize the strangers who will be in your home, handling your belongings.
7. **Reviews aren't enough**: Moving companies average 3.2 stars on Google (lower than almost any other service category). Even companies with 4.5+ stars struggle because customers are conditioned to distrust the industry. Video testimonials from real, identifiable customers carry 10x the weight of anonymous text reviews.
8. **Emotional decision, rational justification**: Choosing a mover is ultimately an emotional decision about trust, masked as a rational comparison of prices and services. Video speaks directly to the emotional brain.
### Customer Decision Journey
- **Trigger event**: Job transfer, home purchase, lease expiration, life change (marriage, divorce, retirement, death in family), college, military orders, growing/shrinking family
- **Research phase (2-6 weeks before move)**: Google search → read horror stories → panic → ask friends/family → compare 3-5 companies → request estimates
- **Decision factors**: (1) Trust / gut feeling, (2) Reviews and reputation, (3) Price / transparency of pricing, (4) Licensing and insurance verification, (5) Responsiveness and professionalism during estimate, (6) Recommendations from trusted sources
- **Where video intervenes**: Video transforms an anonymous, scary transaction into a relationship. When customers feel they "know" the owner and crew before they even call, the trust gap closes dramatically. Companies with video content on their Google listing, website, and social media report **40-60% higher booking rates** from estimates.
## 2. Video Categories & Specifications
| Video Type | Duration | Aspect Ratio | Primary Use | Best Platform |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Company Introduction / "Why Trust Us" | 90-120 sec | 16:9 | Core trust-building | Website homepage, YouTube, GBP |
| "Meet Our Crew" Team Spotlight | 60-90 sec | 16:9 / 9:16 | Humanize the company | Website, Facebook, Instagram |
| Full Move Documentation | 2-5 min | 16:9 | Comprehensive trust proof | YouTube, Website |
| Customer Testimonial | 30-90 sec | 16:9 | Social proof | Website, Facebook, YouTube, GBP |
| Packing Tutorial Series | 60-120 sec | 9:16 | Educational / SEO | YouTube, TikTok, Instagram |
| "What to Expect on Moving Day" | 90-120 sec | 16:9 | Pre-booking / post-booking | Website, Email, YouTube |
| Binding vs Non-Binding Estimate Explainer | 60-90 sec | 16:9 | Trust / education | Website, YouTube, Facebook |
| Moving Scam Awareness | 60-120 sec | 16:9 / 9:16 | Authority building | YouTube, TikTok, Facebook |
| Specialty Item Handling | 30-60 sec | 9:16 | Niche service marketing | Instagram, TikTok, YouTube |
| Long-Distance Move Process | 120-180 sec | 16:9 | Interstate customer conversion | Website, YouTube |
| Senior / Downsizing Compassion Piece | 90-120 sec | 16:9 | Senior market | Facebook, YouTube, Website |
| Corporate Relocation Overview | 120-180 sec | 16:9 | B2B sales | LinkedIn, Website, Email |
| Military PCS Move Guide | 90-120 sec | 16:9 | Military market | YouTube, Website, Facebook |
| Fleet & Equipment Showcase | 60-90 sec | 16:9 | Credibility | Website, YouTube |
| Seasonal Promotion | 15-30 sec | 9:16 | Campaign ads | Facebook, Instagram, TikTok |
| Moving Checklist / Timeline | 60-90 sec | 9:16 | Engagement / utility | TikTok, Instagram, YouTube Shorts |
| "Day in the Life of a Mover" | 2-5 min | 9:16 | Behind-the-scenes | TikTok, YouTube, Instagram |
| Claims Process Transparency | 60-90 sec | 16:9 | Trust / objection handling | Website, YouTube |
| Google Business Profile Showcase | 30-45 sec | 16:9 | Local SEO | Google Business Profile |
| Before/After Unpacking Reveal | 30-60 sec | 9:16 | Satisfying content | TikTok, Instagram, Facebook |
## 3. Client Intake Questions
### Company Profile
1. What is your company name, years in business, and service area?
2. Are you a local-only mover, long-distance (interstate), or both? Do you hold a USDOT number and MC number?
3. Are you an independent company or a van line agent? If agent, which van line(s)?
4. Are you a franchise? If so, which brand (Two Men and a Truck, College Hunks, etc.)?
5. How many trucks do you operate? What sizes? (16-ft, 20-ft, 26-ft, tractor-trailer)
6. How many full-time crew members do you employ? Do you ever use day laborers or subcontract?
7. What services do you offer? (local moves, long-distance, packing, unpacking, storage, specialty items, commercial, junk removal)
8. What specialty items can you handle? (pianos, pool tables, gun safes, hot tubs, fine art, antiques)
9. What certifications or memberships do you hold? (AMSA ProMover, BBB accreditation, state certifications)
10. What is your claims ratio? (percentage of moves with damage claims)
### Target Audience
11. Who is your ideal residential customer? (family size, home size, move distance, budget range)
12. Do you target specific demographics? (military families, seniors, corporate transferees, students)
13. What is your average residential move ticket? Local vs. long-distance?
14. What percentage of your revenue is residential vs. commercial?
15. Do you work with real estate agents, property managers, or corporate relocation companies?
16. What geographic markets do you serve? Are there markets you want to enter?
17. What is your peak season vs. off-season booking ratio?
### Marketing & Trust
18. How do you currently generate leads? (Google, Yelp, Angi, referrals, real estate partnerships, corporate contracts)
19. What is your average Google review rating? How many reviews do you have?
20. What do customers most commonly say in positive reviews? In negative reviews?
21. Do you have any existing video content? Professional photos of your crew, trucks, or jobs?
22. What is the most common objection you hear during estimates? (price, trust, timing, damage fear)
23. How do you currently differentiate from competitors? What is your "thing"?
24. What is your current monthly marketing budget?
25. What is your cost per lead by channel?
### Business Goals
26. Are you trying to grow into new services or markets?
27. Do you have recruitment needs? (movers are hard to hire and retain)
28. What is your revenue goal for the next 12 months?
29. Do you want to build a brand or just generate leads?
30. What's your company personality — blue-collar reliable, premium white-glove, fun/young, military-precision, or family-first?
## 4. Script & Content Guidelines
### Courier Company-Specific Writing Rules
**DO:**
- Lead with empathy for the customer's fear: "We know trusting someone with everything you own is terrifying. Here's why you can trust us."
- Show real faces — owner, crew leaders, dispatchers, estimators. The moving industry's trust deficit comes from anonymity. Video destroys anonymity.
- Emphasize licensing and insurance: "DOT-licensed, fully insured, background-checked crews. We can prove it — here are our numbers."
- Demonstrate the process in granular detail: "First, we do a room-by-room walkthrough. Then we wrap every piece of furniture in moving blankets. Electronics get custom-boxed. Fragile items are paper-wrapped and placed in specialty cartons."
- Address the pricing fear directly: "We give you a binding estimate. That means the price we quote is the price you pay — even if your stuff weighs more than estimated."
- Show the "worst case" handling: "What happens if something gets damaged? Here's our claims process — no runaround, no excuses, resolved within 30 days."
- Use specifics: crew tenure ("Our average crew member has been with us 6 years"), number of moves completed ("12,000+ moves and counting"), damage claim rate ("Less than 1% of our moves result in a claim")
- Feature real customers who were initially terrified and ended up relieved: "I was so scared to hire movers after reading horror stories online. But these guys..."
**DON'T:**
- Don't use generic phrases like "we treat your belongings like our own" without showing proof. This is the most overused, meaningless claim in the moving industry.
- Don't show chaotic or sloppy loading, even briefly — customers will focus on any red flag
- Don't make time guarantees you can't keep ("guaranteed delivery within 3 days" for a cross-country move is unrealistic)
- Don't ignore the competition — acknowledge that bad movers exist and explain how you're different
- Don't use stock footage of random people carrying boxes. Customers can tell. Show YOUR crew, YOUR trucks, YOUR customers.
- Don't overpromise on pricing: "Starting at $X" without context leads to "bait and switch" complaints
- Don't show crews rushing or being careless, even in "fun" behind-the-scenes content
- Don't minimize the stress of moving — validate it, then show how you make it easier
### Script Structure (90-sec Trust-Building Company Introduction)
1. **Hook (0-8 sec):** Owner to camera: "You're trusting a stranger with everything you own. Let me tell you why you can trust us."
2. **Origin story (8-25 sec):** Why the owner started this company — personal connection to moving, family business, bad experience that drove them to do better. Authenticity is everything.
3. **The crew (25-40 sec):** Introduce 2-3 crew members by name. "This is Marcus — he's been with us 8 years. He's moved over 3,000 families." Show them carefully wrapping furniture, high-fiving a customer.
4. **The process (40-60 sec):** Quick montage — walkthrough estimate, wrapping, loading, driving, unloading. Emphasize: "Every item inventoried, every piece protected, GPS-tracked in transit."
5. **The guarantee (60-75 sec):** "Binding estimate — the price we quote is the price you pay. Full replacement value protection. If anything gets damaged, we handle it within 30 days."
6. **Social proof (75-85 sec):** Quick customer testimonial clip: "I was so nervous... they made it easy. Everything arrived perfect."
7. **CTA (85-90 sec):** "Get your free in-home estimate — call or book online." Branding.
### Content Themes That Perform Best for Moving Companies
- **"Moving horror stories (and how to avoid them)"**: Educational content about scams, red flags, and how to verify a mover. Positions you as the trustworthy alternative. Massive engagement because everyone has a moving horror story.
- **"The big reveal" unpacking videos**: Family walks into new home with everything perfectly placed. Emotional, shareable, satisfying. Parents react, kids find their rooms set up.
- **"Behind the scenes" loading and wrapping**: Satisfying, methodical footage of professional crews wrapping furniture, building wardrobe boxes, loading a truck like a Tetris game. Shows competence without saying a word.
- **Specialty item handling**: Piano going down 3 flights of stairs. Gun safe through a narrow doorway. Pool table disassembly and reassembly. These clips demonstrate expertise and get massive engagement.
- **"Our toughest move ever" stories**: Crew narratives about challenging jobs — 4th floor walkup in NYC, 10,000 sq ft mansion, moving a 1,200-lb safe. Shows capability and pride.
- **Moving tips and hacks**: "5 things to do the week before your move," "How to pack a kitchen in 2 hours," "What NOT to pack in the moving truck." Useful content that drives saves and shares.
- **Seasonal content**: "Spring moving season is here — here's how to lock in the best dates and prices." Time-sensitive content that drives urgency.
- **Military appreciation**: If you serve military families, honor their sacrifice while showcasing your PCS expertise. Highly emotional, shareable content.
## 5. Platform Distribution Strategy
### Google Business Profile (Most Critical Platform for Movers)
- **Why:** "Movers near me" has **1.2 million+ monthly searches** in the U.S. Google's Local Pack is the first thing customers see. Your GBP listing IS your first impression for the majority of potential customers.
- **Video type:** 90-120 sec company introduction with trust messaging, real crew, and customer testimonials. Update quarterly.
- **Key strategy:** GBP listings with video receive **35% more direction requests** (Google) and significantly higher click-through rates than text/photo-only listings.
- **Review response videos:** When you get a great review, create a short "thank you" video response referencing the specific reviewer and their move. Shows you care individually.
- **Q&A section:** Use video to answer the most common questions asked in GBP Q&A: "How much does a 3-bedroom move cost?" "Do you move pianos?" "Are you licensed?"
### Facebook (Primary Lead Generation Channel)
- **Why:** Moving companies that run Facebook video ads consistently report **$20-$50 CPL** (cost per lead), significantly outperforming text/image ads. The emotional nature of moving + video = high engagement and conversions.
- **Organic content:** Moving tips, behind-the-scenes crew content, customer testimonials, seasonal promotions. Post 3-5x per week.
- **Facebook Ads strategy:** Target by life events (recently engaged, recently had a baby, new job), home ownership status, age (25-65), and zip code. Life event targeting is the killer feature — Facebook knows when people are about to move before they do.
- **Retargeting:** Show testimonial videos to people who visited your website but didn't request an estimate. Trust-building retargeting converts skeptics.
- **Community groups:** Share helpful moving tips (not promotions) in local community groups. "I'm a local mover — here are 5 tips to make your next move easier." Value-first approach builds reputation.
### YouTube (Long-Form Authority Building)
- **Why:** Moving-related searches get **2+ million monthly searches** on YouTube. Educational content ranks for years and generates passive leads.
- **Content types:**
- Full move documentaries (5-15 min): Follow a family's move from estimate to unpacking. The ultimate trust-building content.
- Packing tutorial series: "How to pack dishes," "How to pack a TV," "How to pack books" — each 2-5 min. Evergreen content that ranks for specific searches.
- "Moving scam" awareness: "5 Red Flags That Your Mover is a Scam" — consistently high-performing content.
- Moving vlogs: "A Day in the Life of a Mover" — humanizing, behind-the-scenes content.
- Equipment and truck tours: Appeals to people evaluating mover professionalism.
- **YouTube Shorts:** Repurpose satisfying loading clips, quick packing tips, and customer reaction moments.
- **SEO targets:** "How to choose a courier company," "Moving tips [city]," "Long distance moving cost," "How to pack for a move"
### TikTok & Instagram Reels
- **Why:** Moving content performs surprisingly well in short-form video — satisfying loading clips, packing hacks, and emotional customer reactions all have viral potential.
- **Content strategy:** 50% satisfying/behind-the-scenes (truck loading Tetris, wrapping demos), 25% tips and hacks, 15% customer reactions and testimonials, 10% funny/relatable moving humor
- **Top-performing formats:**
- "Truck loading time-lapse": Showing a full house being loaded into a truck in 30 seconds. Satisfying and demonstrates competence.
- "The hardest thing we've ever moved": Pianos down stairs, safes through doorways, hot tubs over fences.
- "Moving day check": "What moving day actually looks like vs. what you think." Relatable humor.
- "Customer reaction reveals": Family walking into their new home with everything unpacked and set up.
- **Hashtags:** #movers #movingday #movingcompany #packingtips #movingtips #movingvlog #satisfying #loadingtruck #professionalmover
### LinkedIn (Corporate Relocation & B2B)
- **Why:** Corporate relocation managers, HR directors, and real estate professionals are on LinkedIn. This is the platform for your B2B moving services.
- **Content types:** Corporate relocation case studies, employee transition program overviews, commercial move documentation, industry thought leadership
- **Ad strategy:** Target HR decision-makers, facilities managers, and corporate real estate professionals. Account-based marketing for enterprise clients.
- **Company page:** Monthly updates with completed corporate moves, certifications, and industry involvement.
### Website
- **Homepage:** Auto-playing (muted) compilation: owner intro + crew faces + loading + happy customer. The homepage video should answer one question: "Can I trust these people?"
- **"About Us" page:** Full company story video — origin, values, crew, why you're different. This page gets 3-5x more views per visit than any other page on a courier company website.
- **Service pages:** Specific videos for local moves, long-distance moves, packing services, specialty items, commercial moves, storage. Each page should have relevant video content.
- **"Moving Day Guide" page:** "What to Expect" walkthrough video sent with booking confirmation. Reduces no-shows and day-of anxiety.
- **Estimate page:** Short video of the estimate process: "Here's what happens when you request an estimate." Increases estimate request conversion by 25-40%.
- **Blog:** Embed tutorial and tip videos in blog posts for SEO. "How to Pack Fragile Items for a Move" with video + written guide.
- **Testimonial page:** Video testimonials organized by move type (local, long-distance, senior, military, commercial).
### Email & SMS Marketing
- **Estimate follow-up (within 1 hour):** "Thanks for requesting an estimate! Here's a quick video about what happens next." Keeps you top-of-mind while the customer compares 3-5 companies.
- **Booking confirmation:** "Your move is scheduled! Watch this 2-minute video to prepare for moving day." Reduces pre-move anxiety and day-of complications.
- **Week-before reminder:** "Your move is 7 days away — here's your moving day checklist video." Practical value that reinforces trust.
- **Post-move follow-up:** "You're all settled in! Here's a quick survey + we'd love a review." Link to Google review page.
- **Annual reminder:** "It's been a year since your move! Know anyone moving soon? Refer a friend and you both save $100." Referral program with video.
- **Seasonal campaign:** "Summer is moving season — book now and save 15% before dates fill up." Video showing peak season truck loading.
### Nextdoor & Local Platforms
- **Why:** Moving is an inherently local service. Nextdoor is where homeowners ask neighbors for mover recommendations.
- **Strategy:** Maintain a business profile with video content. Respond to "Who's a good mover?" posts with helpful advice (not self-promotion). Let your reputation speak.
- **Content:** Share moving tips relevant to the local area — "Moving to [City]? Here's what you need to know about parking permits for moving trucks."
### Yelp, Angi, Thumbtack, HireAHelper
- **Why:** Many consumers still discover movers through these platforms. Video differentiates your listing.
- **Strategy:** Upload your best 30-60 sec video to every platform profile. Ensure consistent branding and messaging across all profiles.
- **Yelp special:** Yelp reviews carry enormous weight for movers. Use video testimonials from Yelp reviewers (with their written review as text overlay) on your other platforms.
## 6. Compliance & Safety
### Federal Regulations (Interstate Movers)
- **FMCSA registration:** Interstate movers must hold a valid USDOT number and MC (Motor Carrier) number. Video content should display or reference these numbers when discussing licensing. Verify at FMCSA's SAFER system.
- **Required documents:** Interstate movers must provide: (1) "Your Rights and Responsibilities When You Move" booklet (or link), (2) Written estimate (binding or non-binding), (3) Order for Service, (4) Bill of Lading, (5) Inventory sheet. Video explaining these documents builds trust AND compliance.
- **Binding estimates:** Under FMCSA rules, a binding estimate means the customer pays no more than the quoted price, even if actual weight/services exceed the estimate. Video content explaining this must be accurate — don't misrepresent binding estimate terms.
- **Non-binding estimates:** Must clearly explain that non-binding estimates are approximations and the final cost may be higher. Under FMCSA rules, the mover can require payment of up to 110% of the non-binding estimate at delivery, with the balance due within 30 days.
- **Hostage loads:** Federal law prohibits movers from holding shipments hostage for charges exceeding the estimate by more than 10%. Video content addressing this fear should reference the specific FMCSA consumer protection.
- **Arbitration:** Interstate movers must offer neutral arbitration for disputes. Mention this in claims process videos.
- **Hours of Service (HOS):** Commercial truck drivers are subject to HOS regulations. Don't imply delivery timelines that would require drivers to violate HOS rules.
### State Regulations (Intrastate Movers)
- **Licensing varies by state:** Some states heavily regulate movers (California, Florida, Texas, New York, Illinois, New Jersey). Others have minimal regulation. Video content about licensing should be accurate for your operating state(s).
- **State-specific requirements:** Some states require specific insurance minimums, tariff filings, or consumer protection disclosures. Consult your state's PUC/DOT for requirements.
- **Intrastate advertising rules:** Some states regulate how movers can advertise prices. Ensure promotional video content complies with state-specific advertising regulations.
### Insurance & Liability
- **Valuation coverage explanation:** Moving companies must offer two levels of liability: (1) Released Value (free, but only $0.60/lb per item) and (2) Full (Replacement) Value Protection (customer pays additional, but items are repaired/replaced at full value). Video explaining these options must be accurate and not misleading.
- **Third-party insurance:** Recommend (but don't sell) third-party moving insurance for high-value shipments. Don't imply that your company's valuation coverage is "insurance" — it's carrier liability, which is legally distinct.
- **Cargo insurance:** If claiming "fully insured," specify that you carry cargo insurance, general liability, auto liability, and workers' compensation. Don't conflate different types of coverage.
- **Exclusion items:** Be clear in video content about items movers typically won't cover: hazardous materials, perishable items, plants, pets, personal documents, jewelry, firearms (though many movers will move these with special arrangements and waivers).
- **High-value inventory:** If your process includes a high-value inventory form, show this in videos to demonstrate thoroughness and accountability.
### Consumer Protection & Advertising
- **Pricing transparency:** The #1 consumer complaint about movers is bait-and-switch pricing. All promotional video content must accurately represent your pricing model. "3-bedroom move starting at $X" must define what's included and what's additional.
- **Review authenticity:** All testimonial videos must feature genuine customers giving voluntary, unscripted reviews. Compensated testimonials must be disclosed (FTC requirement).
- **"Licensed and insured" claims:** Only claim FMCSA/DOT registration if current. Display USDOT and MC numbers. Customers can and do verify these.
- **"No hidden fees" claims:** If using this language, ensure your contract and process truly have no fees not disclosed at estimate time.
- **Comparison advertising:** If comparing your services to competitors (or to DIY/U-Haul), ensure claims are factually accurate and not disparaging.
- **BBB rating:** If displaying BBB accreditation or rating in video, ensure it's current. BBB ratings change — verify before publishing.
### Privacy & Property
- **Customer homes:** Never show identifiable customer homes (visible address, distinctive architectural features, neighborhood landmarks) in marketing video without written consent.
- **Interior footage:** Moving videos inherently capture home interiors. Be extremely careful about visible personal items, family photos, mail with addresses, security systems, valuables, or anything that could compromise a customer's privacy or security.
- **Children:** If filming moves involving families with children, get explicit parental consent for any footage featuring minors.
- **Crew consent:** All crew members appearing in marketing content must consent. Employment contracts should include a marketing footage clause.
- **Commercial properties:** Corporate moves require client company approval for any marketing use of footage or brand mentions.
- **Inventory visibility:** Moving inventories contain personal information about a customer's belongings. Don't show detailed inventory sheets in video content.
### Safety Content Considerations
- **Lifting techniques:** Any training or behind-the-scenes video showing lifting should demonstrate proper ergonomic technique. Don't show crews using improper form, even in casual content — it raises liability concerns and looks unprofessional.
- **Vehicle safety:** Truck driving footage should show safe driving practices: seatbelts, proper mirrors, safe following distance. No phone use, no reckless driving, even in time-lapse content.
- **Protective equipment:** Show crews wearing appropriate PPE — gloves, back braces if used, steel-toed boots. Professional appearance = trust.
- **Weather operations:** If showing moves in rain, snow, or extreme heat, demonstrate appropriate safety precautions (floor runners, extra padding, hydration breaks).
- **Stairway safety:** Stair moves are dangerous. Video showing stair moves should demonstrate proper technique: furniture sliders, stair dollies, team communication, controlled movement.
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