Video Is Changing How East Texas Businesses Reach Customers — Here’s What’s Working

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Something has shifted in how people in our region discover, evaluate, and choose businesses.

They’re watching.

Not reading. Not scrolling through photo galleries. Watching. Short videos on Facebook. Reels on Instagram. Clips on YouTube. Before they pick up the phone, before they walk through the door, they’re watching to see who you are, what you do, and whether you feel like the right fit.

Video isn’t new. But its dominance is. And the businesses in East Texas that are using it well have a significant advantage over those that aren’t.

What’s working locally

The video content that performs best for local businesses isn’t what most people expect. It’s not polished commercials with dramatic music. It’s real.

A contractor walking through a job site and explaining what they’re doing and why. A restaurant owner showing the morning prep for a weekend special. A team member answering the question customers ask most often. A 60-second tip that demonstrates expertise without asking for anything in return.

This kind of content works because it does something a photo or a text post can’t — it lets people see you. Your face, your voice, your personality, your work environment. In a relationship-driven market like East Texas, that visibility is enormously powerful. People don’t just want to know what you do. They want to know who they’d be doing business with.

The good news is you don’t need a production crew for this. Your smartphone, decent lighting, and something worth saying — that’s enough to create content that builds trust and keeps your business visible.

The basics that make a difference

There’s a gap between “I shot a video on my phone” and “this looks and sounds good enough to represent my business.” That gap is smaller than most people think, and it’s closed by a few simple habits.

Face the light. Natural light from a window is your best option. Step outside on an overcast day and the light is even and flattering. Shoot with a window behind you and you’re a silhouette. This is the single most common mistake in DIY video and the easiest to fix.

Prioritize audio. People will watch a video that doesn’t look perfect. They won’t watch a video they can’t hear clearly. Wind noise, echo in an empty room, background chatter — all of these kill a video faster than shaky footage. A $20 clip-on microphone solves the problem instantly.

Keep it short. Thirty to ninety seconds for social media. If you can’t say it in that window, break it into a series. Attention spans are shorter than you think, and the algorithm rewards videos that get watched all the way through.

Have a point. Before you hit record, know the one thing you want to communicate. Not three things. One. A tip. A story. An answer. A behind-the-scenes moment. One clear idea, delivered simply, is worth more than a rambling three-minute monologue.

Where the phone isn’t enough

Everything above works beautifully for social media — the ongoing, casual, keep-your-business-visible type of content.

But there are moments in a business’s life when the stakes are higher than an Instagram Reel.

Your website homepage video. This is the first impression for everyone who finds you online. It sets the tone for your entire brand. A shaky phone video with inconsistent audio might be charming on your Facebook feed, but on your homepage, it signals that you’re not quite ready for primetime.

A brand story. The video that tells your origin story, your mission, your values. This isn’t a social post — it’s an asset you’ll use for years. In pitch meetings, on your about page, at events. It needs professional scripting, professional interviews, quality b-roll, and editing that matches the weight of the story.

Client testimonials for your website or sales process. The casual phone testimonial works for social proof on social media. The testimonial that lives on your service page and gets sent to prospects needs to look and sound like the professional operation you are.

Commercials or ad campaigns. If you’re paying to put a video in front of people who’ve never heard of you, the production quality is your first impression. And people judge the quality of your business by the quality of your content. That’s not fair, but it’s real.

The opportunity

Most businesses in East Texas aren’t using video at all. Or they tried it once, felt uncomfortable, and stopped.

That’s an opportunity for every business owner willing to show up on camera — even imperfectly, even briefly — and let their community see who they are. Video builds familiarity faster than any other medium. And familiarity, in this market, is everything.

Start simple. One video a week. Sixty seconds. Something useful or something real. Do it for a month and watch what happens.

Lee Allen Miller is the founder of MSGPR Ltd Co, a full-service creative agency in Lufkin, Texas, and author of Entrepreneurship God’s Way. For more insights on marketing and business growth, visit msgpr.com.

Lee Allen Miller
Lee Allen Millerhttps://msgresources.com
Lee Miller is a veteran of the broadcast media industry and CEO of MSG Resources LLC, where he consults on media strategy, broadcast best practices, and distribution technologies. He began his career in Lufkin in the early 80s and has since held leadership roles in both for-profit and nonprofit broadcasting. Lee serves as Executive Director of the Advanced Television Broadcasting Alliance and is a member of the Texas Association of Broadcasters Golden Mic Club. He lives near Lufkin on his family s tree farm, serves on the board of the Salvation Army, and plays keyboard in the worship band at Harmony Hill Baptist Church. He and his wife Kenla have two grown children, Joshua and Morgan.

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