Private Equity Websites Are Not Static Publications

Private Equity
Websites
Brand Strategy
Charlie Ittner
Sep 23, 2025
7 mins
Private Equity
Websites
Brand Strategy
Charlie Ittner
September 23, 2025
7 mins

Websites are not static publications

Most private equity firms treat their website like a book: once it is “published,” they only update the obvious things - press releases, portfolio companies, team members, and numbers. But a website is not a static artifact. It is a living representation of the firm, and it should evolve as the firm evolves. Making meaningful edits is a minor investment of time and budget compared to the original build. Yet too many firms fall into the trap of thinking the site is “done” until it is time for a major overhaul.


The website as a central touchpoint

Private equity firms produce a range of materials, but most are audience-specific:

  • Seller-facing decks
  • Intermediary pitch materials
  • Management team onboarding resources
  • Investor updates and reports
  • Recruiting collateral

The website is the one place where all audiences converge. It is the central reference point for the firm’s story. If the website lags behind the actual trajectory of the business, it undermines credibility. Journalists, intermediaries, and prospective hires often pull directly from a firm’s site. If what they see does not match reality, the impression is that the firm is behind the curve.


Annual audits prevent narrative creep

Every year, most firms launch new initiatives: sector expansions, new fund vehicles, ESG commitments, strategic partnerships, philanthropic programs. These changes should be reflected in the firm’s public narrative. Without regular review, “narrative creep” sets in, and the messaging on the site no longer aligns with what the firm is actually doing.

Best practice is to conduct an audit at least once every 12 months (18–24 at the outside). By contrast, most firms wait five to eight years between redesigns, which is far too long. At minimum, firms should revisit:

  • Content and copy: Does the site reflect your current strategy, sector focus, and offerings?
  • Structure: Do you need a new page or section for sustainability, a credit platform, or a new fund line?
  • Metadata: Are you optimized for search engines and LLMs around new priorities?

Small visual changes have outsized impact

A refresh does not mean rebuilding the site from scratch. Small design updates can dramatically change perception. Swapping hero images, updating accent colors, or refreshing photography can make the site feel new without touching architecture or code. Done every 12–24 months, these tweaks signal momentum and vitality.


Make it a program, not a project

Rather than waiting for a full redesign, firms should build an annual review into their calendar - perhaps in the summer when deal flow tends to slow. This is also a chance to gather input internally:

  • Could the deal sourcing team use a downloadable resource?
  • Would a new section help recruiting?
  • Are there low-hanging functional upgrades that could increase value?

Treating the site as a program, with recurring reviews and light updates, keeps messaging aligned, aesthetics fresh, and functionality responsive to internal needs.


Conclusion: capitalizing on momentum

Your website is not just another marketing asset. It is the single most public expression of your firm’s strategy, culture, and evolution. An annual refresh - whether content, design, or functionality - ensures it keeps pace with the reality of the firm. Private equity firms that treat their site as dynamic, rather than static, maintain sharper alignment with their stakeholders and stand out in a crowded capital-raising environment.

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Brand Strategy
Private Equity

More than a logo

When people hear “rebrand,” they often think in consumer terms: a new name, a new logo, a new tagline. In private equity, it is rarely that dramatic. A rebrand is less like changing your identity and more like building a new house. By contrast, a refresh is redecorating the house you already have.

The real question firms wrestle with is: when do we need a new house, and when is a new coat of paint enough?


The five-year rule

As a baseline, private equity firms should expect to rebrand every five years. Time alone is enough to date a brand. A website built in 2018 looks and feels like 2018, even if the design was strong at the time. Typography, imagery, messaging style - these all evolve.

The quality of the original build matters just as much. Many firms launched their first brand around Fund I or Fund II with understandable budget constraints. They often chose inexpensive vendors. The result was a brand that was functional but not durable: inconsistent elements, no real system, limited scalability. As those firms grow, the seams begin to show.

For them, the clock runs faster. A brand built on a shaky foundation simply will not hold up for a decade.


Strategic triggers for a rebrand

Most often, rebrands are driven not just by time but by strategy. When the fundamentals of the firm change, the brand must follow.

Examples include:

  • Leadership transitions. New partners join, senior figures retire, succession reshapes the story.
  • Fund proliferation. A single flagship vehicle grows into a suite of strategies: credit, growth, co-invest, secondaries.
  • Geographic expansion. A firm that once raised solely in North America now brings in capital from Europe, Asia, or the Middle East.
  • Sector evolution. A healthcare investor adds technology, or an industrials fund expands into infrastructure.
  • Investor mix. Firms historically focused on institutional LPs begin targeting wealth managers or retail capital.

That last shift - into wealth and retail - is the most urgent driver today. Brands built for institutional investors are designed to be formal, corporate, even intentionally unapproachable. They signal gravitas. By contrast, wealth managers and retail investors require the opposite: clarity, accessibility, human tone. Concepts must be explained in plain language. Educational resources become essential.

Sometimes this means launching a separate website for retail distribution. But even then, the core brand has to flex to accommodate. A firm cannot present as ivory tower in one channel and approachable in another without creating tension.


Refresh as best practice

If rebrands are the new house, refreshes are the redecorating. They should happen every year.

A refresh is not about reinventing your story - it is about keeping the story sharp and the design current.

A proper refresh includes:

  • Content audit. Review every section of the site for accuracy and alignment with strategy.
  • Visual updates. Rotate photography, add new illustrations or video, update accent colors.
  • Structural tweaks. Add a page for a new strategy, simplify navigation, improve bios.

The payoff is twofold. First, the site feels current to external stakeholders. Small changes - new imagery, fresh graphics, updated layouts - signal vitality. Second, it prevents the painful accumulation of misalignment. Firms that refresh annually never wake up six years later realizing they have three new funds and no coherent way to present them.


The cost of brand drift

When firms skip refreshes and delay rebrands, brand drift sets in. Templates fray. Messaging fragments. Teams invent their own workarounds. The further the brand drifts from the firm, the harder and more expensive it becomes to fix.

There is also a cultural cost. Outdated brands create inertia. They feel stodgy, out of step, unpolished. Employees - especially younger professionals - notice. They hesitate to share the site or materials. By contrast, when firms launch refreshed brands, we consistently see an internal surge of pride. People are energized. They feel their firm looks the part.

That lift matters. Culture is reinforced or undermined by how a firm shows up to the world.

Refresh vs. rebrand: a framework

To simplify the decision:

  • Rebrand when the fundamentals have changed (strategy, structure, investor base, leadership) or when more than five years have passed since the last overhaul.
  • Refresh every year, regardless, to keep the story sharp and the design modern.

The two approaches reinforce one another. Refreshes extend the life of a brand and delay the need for a full rebrand. Rebrands reset the foundation when incremental updates are no longer enough.


Conclusion: keep pace with reality

A private equity firm’s brand is not static. It is a living system, reflecting strategy, culture, and ambition. When firms let that system stand still while everything else evolves, they create misalignment that becomes costly to repair.

The smarter path is rhythm: annual refreshes to stay sharp, paired with rebrands every five years or when strategy demands it. Firms that follow this cadence avoid both the risk of neglect and the expense of overcorrection.

In a market where LP expectations, investor channels, and transaction dynamics are all shifting quickly, brand alignment is not a luxury. It is the foundation for credibility.

Private Equity
Websites
Brand Strategy

A frozen moment in time

Most private equity websites are treated as static projects. Once launched, they are left to age while only the most obvious updates - press releases, portfolio companies, team members - get added. The result is a site that becomes a frozen moment in time. The firm evolves, but the website does not.

The real cost of letting a site grow stale is not always obvious. Outdated design, stale messaging, and misaligned positioning quietly erode credibility. And now, with LLMs reshaping digital visibility, the stakes are higher than ever.

Here are three major risks of letting a website age without meaningful refresh.


1. Design and message trends move on without you

A five-year-old website will look like a five-year-old website. That does not mean it will look terrible - if it was done well, it may still hold up - but design cues age quickly. Typography, layout, and imagery all carry time stamps.

The same is true of messaging. A site crafted in 2017 often reveals its age in tone and emphasis. Older sites tend to read like pitchbooks repurposed for the web, written almost entirely for LP audiences. Today, best practice is different: private equity websites are first impressions for sellers, management teams, and intermediaries just as much as they are for LPs.

Other motifs give websites away instantly. Glossy team photos used as homepage hero images, or worse, stock photos of businesspeople in conference rooms - these were everywhere five years ago. Today, they look dated. More recently, the “management-friendly” positioning surge has begun to feel tired as well. A claim repeated by everyone is not a differentiator; it is white noise.

Firms that fail to update fall behind industry norms, and their sites signal stasis rather than vitality.


2. The firm evolves, the site stands still

Even more costly than design drift is the gap between what the firm has become and what the site still says.

Firms refine sector strategies, launch new funds, expand geographically, and change investor mixes. Operations teams grow, ESG programs take shape, succession brings new leadership forward. Yet the website often remains frozen, updated only at the margins.

The further the site drifts from the firm’s reality, the more damage it does:

  • It creates a credibility gap in the market.
  • It forces a radical, expensive overhaul when the firm finally decides to catch up.
  • It diminishes internal pride, making employees feel their firm is dated or out of touch.

We have seen firsthand how invigorating a new brand can be internally. Younger professionals in particular respond with energy and pride when a refreshed website launches. By contrast, sitting on a seven-year-old brand sends a signal of inertia.


3. Digital visibility now means LLM readiness

For years, “SEO and digital visibility” was the main argument for keeping sites current. But today the challenge has shifted. The question is no longer just whether your site ranks in Google. It is whether your firm surfaces in LLM-driven queries across platforms like ChatGPT.

This is a frontier where most firms are unprepared. Technical optimization for LLMs is still a developing field. But the implications are clear: firms that do not adapt will lose visibility as search shifts away from static engines and toward AI-driven answers.

The good news: some of this can be retrofitted onto an existing site. The better news: firms that are building new sites now have the chance to bake in LLM readiness from the start. That means:

  • Identifying the queries you want to show up in.
  • Creating authoritative content that LLMs can surface as reliable.
  • Structuring metadata and site architecture with this future in mind.

At Darien Group, we have invested in technical expertise specifically for this challenge. It is not just about traditional SEO anymore - it is about being discoverable in the next era of digital search.


The hidden cultural cost

There is also a softer, but very real, cost of letting branding age too long: culture. Stale, stodgy design signals stagnation. It turns off younger recruits. It makes employees less proud to share the firm’s website. By contrast, a refreshed identity can energize teams and remind them that the firm is dynamic, modern, and growing.


Conclusion: Aging quietly is still aging

Letting a private equity website age may feel harmless. After all, if the numbers are current and the team page is up to date, what is the harm? The harm is threefold: design and message trends that make you look behind the times, a growing misalignment between your firm and your site, and a looming challenge around LLM visibility that is already reshaping digital discovery.

The website is not just another marketing tool - it is the most public reflection of who you are. Letting it drift out of sync is more than cosmetic. It is a strategic liability.

Private Equity

A milestone in our history

Darien Group has built many proof points over more than a decade in business. The one we are most proud of - and the one that sits prominently on our homepage - is this: we have worked with 42 of PEI’s Top 300 private equity firms. That is close to 15% of the list.

It is not just the number that matters. Many of the PEI 300 are in geographies where we do not operate (Asia, in particular). Many others skew toward venture capital, which is less aligned with our specialization. Against that backdrop, having worked with more than 40 of the world’s largest private equity managers represents real exposure to the top echelon of the industry. It is a milestone we would not have imagined when we started in 2015.


Lessons that are humbling, not formulaic

What we have learned from this body of work is not a neat set of best practices. There are a few reasons why:

  1. The assignments vary widely. For some firms we have executed full rebrands; for others we have delivered targeted investor-relations support.
  2. The work spans a long period. Some projects were seven years ago, and both the firms and the market have changed dramatically since then.
  3. Many engagements were team-specific. Even at firms in the top 10 by AUM, our assignments were often with individual product teams, not always centralized marketing.

Because of that, the lessons are more emotional than semantic. The first is humility. It is humbling to reflect that since founding Darien Group in 2015, we have had the chance to contribute to the efforts of many of private equity’s leaders. The second is diversity. No two firms are alike, even when they appear similar on paper.


Size does not equal sophistication

One of the clearest takeaways is that institutionalization cannot be assumed based on size. We have worked with managers in the top 100 of AUM who are impressively disciplined in how they run projects. We have also seen firms of equal stature that are clumsy, inefficient, and internally misaligned - so much so that you wonder how they execute on the scale they do.

The explanation is often that branding and communications are simply not core to the investing craft. A firm can be extraordinary at sourcing deals and generating returns while being unsophisticated at marketing. We have encountered firms that are woefully understaffed on the communications side, or whose instincts around positioning are outdated and ineffective.

Size, brand recognition, and AUM are not reliable indicators of branding capability.


Public vs. private: different operating models

Another striking difference is between publicly traded firms and their private counterparts. Public firms operate much more like large corporations. Processes are centralized, approvals are layered, and branding projects often happen within product-specific silos rather than at the corporate level.

By contrast, working with a 15-person team that runs a single fund inside a larger manager feels like working with a boutique. There may be brand standards to navigate, but the culture and pace resemble a small firm more than a large institution.


Culture is revealed in the process

Culture is one of private equity’s favorite talking points. Almost every firm describes itself as “management-friendly” or “collaborative.” But the reality shows up less in words and more in process.

The clearest example: when senior leadership deputizes a working group to run a branding project, vows to let them make decisions, then parachutes in at the end to change everything. This is more common than it should be. The result is wasted time, strained relationships, and a worse outcome.

Firms with clean reporting structures and real delegation thrive in branding work. Firms with muddled processes do not. Culture is visible in how projects actually get done.


The rise of the CMO

Over the last decade we have seen a clear shift at the upper end of the market: the introduction of real CMO-level resources. Traditionally, branding and marketing were owned by the most senior investor-relations professional. Increasingly, larger firms are bringing in executives with backgrounds in corporate marketing, digital, or advertising.

This has two effects. First, it reduces the number of opportunities available to agencies like ours. A high-powered CMO may already have trusted design firms and may not need our translation between private equity speak and brand language. Second, it raises the bar for the industry. We welcome that. Professionalizing marketing is good for private equity, even if it narrows our potential client pool.


From rebrand wave to inertia

Between 2017 and 2022, private equity went through a major rebrand cycle. Many of the industry’s largest firms refreshed their identities and digital platforms. Darien Group pitched for most of them and won many. That wave has now subsided.

The reasons are familiar:

  • Higher interest rates and slower monetization have reduced appetite for discretionary projects.
  • Many firms are sitting on brands launched just a few years ago.
  • Industry inertia tends to default to five-year cycles.

But inertia is not without risk. Constituents evolve faster than brand cycles. LPs, sellers, and talent expect fresher communication. Firms that rely on legacy reputations or outdated brands will eventually feel the consequences.


Crawl, walk, run: a framework for maturity

One of the metaphors we often use is “crawl, walk, run.” It applies well to where the industry is today.

  • Crawl: basic materials are in place, numbers are current, team members are updated.
  • Walk: a consistent program exists - annual website audits, updated visuals, refreshed positioning.
  • Run: a true content engine is in motion, feeding multiple channels with thought leadership, digital campaigns, and ongoing visibility.

The leaders in the space are running. Oaktree is known for Howard Marks’ memos. KKR has built a robust thought-leadership platform. In the middle market, Trivest sets the standard in email marketing, while Middle Ground has become prolific in content creation.

These efforts did not appear overnight. They required years of steady investment


New directions in communication

What is most encouraging is the shift toward more frequent, targeted, and creative communication. Firms are recognizing that:

  • Press releases and legacy media are not enough.
  • Constituents want regular visibility, not just episodic updates.
  • New platforms - from LinkedIn to podcasts - are where mindshare is being built.

We now see prominent leaders from prominent firms appearing on both large and niche podcasts. We see firms experimenting with promoted content and digital campaigns. The industry is beginning to acknowledge that awareness and persuasion look very different in 2025 than they did even five years ago.


The bigger picture: transformation ahead

All of this is happening against the backdrop of industry change:

  • The concentration of AUM at the largest firms.
  • The democratization of private investment.
  • Evolving expectations from LPs and other stakeholders.

We believe the next five years will bring more transformation to private equity branding and communications than the last 25. It is both a moment of uncertainty and a moment of opportunity.


Our takeaway from 42 firms

What does it mean to have worked with 42 of private equity’s leading managers? Two things stand out:

  1. No two firms are the same. Size, reputation, and AUM tell you very little about culture, process, or sophistication.
  2. The landscape is shifting rapidly. Professionalization, content marketing, and digital visibility are reshaping what branding looks like in private equity.

For Darien Group, the milestone is not just a proof point. It is a perspective. We have seen how differently firms operate, how quickly the environment is changing, and how urgent it is for managers of all sizes to adapt.

The next stage of private equity branding will not be defined by one-time rebrands or static websites. It will be defined by ongoing visibility: thought leadership, digital campaigns, content engines, and new channels where constituents are paying attention. The firms that succeed will be the ones that start building those muscles now.

The best time to invest in that kind of program was two years ago. The second-best time is today.

Private Equity
Websites

Competing firms take a different path

Many agencies that market themselves as private equity branding specialists actually focus on portfolio company work. Some do it exclusively, some balance it alongside GP/LP communications, and others dip into it occasionally. Their model is to support rebrands of acquired businesses - often 10 to 15 companies over the life of a fund. It is a different business model, and while there is nothing inherently wrong with it, it is not ours.


Our focus is the investment manager

At Darien Group, our expertise lies in the investment management space itself: the branding, messaging, and digital platforms that connect general partners with limited partners and other transaction audiences. We believe branding is industry specific, and that powerful branding depends on deep understanding of a sector’s stakeholders.

This is where we add the most value. We already know the private equity audience set inside and out - investors, sellers, management teams, intermediaries, and recruits. Because we know them, we can move straight to the nuances, differentiators, and storylines that will resonate. That accumulated expertise is the return on more than a decade of exclusive focus.


Why we say no to portfolio company work

It is not that we have never been asked. Occasionally, a client has approached us to support a portfolio company rebrand or a niche identity project. And when the request is something light and design-oriented, we have obliged. But the reality is that rebranding a SaaS provider, a manufacturing business, or a marine parts distributor requires different knowledge and skill sets.

At one point, a client invited us to build an e-commerce site for a portfolio company selling commercial boat components. Our response was candid: “This is not what we do, and you do not want us learning on your dime.” That project needed an agency that specializes in e-commerce and industrial products. Our value is not in moonlighting as generalists but in sticking to our knitting.


Where we do choose to innovate

The areas where we will learn, experiment, and push forward are the ones that converge with our core sector. As private equity firms lean into Google Ads, promoted LinkedIn content, and LLM optimization, we are combining our sector mastery with new technical capabilities. The difference is that these evolutions are still directly tied to investment manager communications, where we can apply our foundation of experience.

We will not become tourists in the industries in which our clients invest. Just as there are agencies that specialize in healthcare, technology, and industrials, we exist for private equity. That exclusivity is what enables us to serve our clients with precision and conviction.


Conclusion: specialization as a differentiator

By declining portfolio company work, we reinforce our focus where it matters most: GP/LP communications and the broader private equity ecosystem. This specialization is not a limitation; it is a differentiator. It ensures that every engagement leverages years of sector knowledge and delivers immediate value, rather than starting from scratch. For firms seeking an agency partner who already understands the nuances of their world, that distinction makes all the difference.

Private Equity
Websites
Brand Strategy

Websites are not static publications

Most private equity firms treat their website like a book: once it is “published,” they only update the obvious things - press releases, portfolio companies, team members, and numbers. But a website is not a static artifact. It is a living representation of the firm, and it should evolve as the firm evolves. Making meaningful edits is a minor investment of time and budget compared to the original build. Yet too many firms fall into the trap of thinking the site is “done” until it is time for a major overhaul.


The website as a central touchpoint

Private equity firms produce a range of materials, but most are audience-specific:

  • Seller-facing decks
  • Intermediary pitch materials
  • Management team onboarding resources
  • Investor updates and reports
  • Recruiting collateral

The website is the one place where all audiences converge. It is the central reference point for the firm’s story. If the website lags behind the actual trajectory of the business, it undermines credibility. Journalists, intermediaries, and prospective hires often pull directly from a firm’s site. If what they see does not match reality, the impression is that the firm is behind the curve.


Annual audits prevent narrative creep

Every year, most firms launch new initiatives: sector expansions, new fund vehicles, ESG commitments, strategic partnerships, philanthropic programs. These changes should be reflected in the firm’s public narrative. Without regular review, “narrative creep” sets in, and the messaging on the site no longer aligns with what the firm is actually doing.

Best practice is to conduct an audit at least once every 12 months (18–24 at the outside). By contrast, most firms wait five to eight years between redesigns, which is far too long. At minimum, firms should revisit:

  • Content and copy: Does the site reflect your current strategy, sector focus, and offerings?
  • Structure: Do you need a new page or section for sustainability, a credit platform, or a new fund line?
  • Metadata: Are you optimized for search engines and LLMs around new priorities?

Small visual changes have outsized impact

A refresh does not mean rebuilding the site from scratch. Small design updates can dramatically change perception. Swapping hero images, updating accent colors, or refreshing photography can make the site feel new without touching architecture or code. Done every 12–24 months, these tweaks signal momentum and vitality.


Make it a program, not a project

Rather than waiting for a full redesign, firms should build an annual review into their calendar - perhaps in the summer when deal flow tends to slow. This is also a chance to gather input internally:

  • Could the deal sourcing team use a downloadable resource?
  • Would a new section help recruiting?
  • Are there low-hanging functional upgrades that could increase value?

Treating the site as a program, with recurring reviews and light updates, keeps messaging aligned, aesthetics fresh, and functionality responsive to internal needs.


Conclusion: capitalizing on momentum

Your website is not just another marketing asset. It is the single most public expression of your firm’s strategy, culture, and evolution. An annual refresh - whether content, design, or functionality - ensures it keeps pace with the reality of the firm. Private equity firms that treat their site as dynamic, rather than static, maintain sharper alignment with their stakeholders and stand out in a crowded capital-raising environment.

Private Equity
Content Marketing

Video in private equity still sits in a weird place. Everyone knows it’s powerful. Everyone knows it’s increasingly expected. But most firms still don’t know exactly how to use it—or how not to. As a result, a lot of GPs end up investing in video without a clear strategy, or avoiding it altogether because the bar feels too high.

But the firms that get it right are doing something simple: they stop trying to make it about themselves. The most effective video content in private equity is built around third-party validation. Founders. Sellers. Management teams. Portfolio executives. The message isn’t “we’re great.” It’s “look at what we did together.”

Below, we’ve outlined what works, what doesn’t, and how to actually think about video as part of a broader brand system—not just a one-time asset.


What works: video types that actually deliver

Founder and seller interviews

There is nothing more effective than hearing directly from a founder who sold their company and had a good experience. That’s the audience most GPs care about convincing, and that’s the voice that carries the most weight. You’re not telling people you’re founder-friendly. You’re showing it.

These videos also serve a secondary purpose. They reduce anxiety. They help humanize what can feel like a cold, transactional process. When someone is evaluating whether to sell their business to a PE firm, seeing a peer speak candidly about the experience builds a level of comfort that no pitchbook can offer.

Portfolio company spotlights

These work for every audience. They show what you do post-close. They demonstrate progress. They help LPs visualize impact. They give management teams something to be proud of.

In real estate, the use case is obvious—think before and after transformation, time-lapse, or walkthrough footage. But in any sector, there’s value in putting a camera on the work itself. It’s a simple way to say: “Here’s what your capital helped us do.”

AGM and investor-facing content

This is where video has already found traction. A lot of larger firms already do it. And for good reason. AGMs can be heavy on slides and light on energy. A short video segment—whether it’s a site visit, a team feature, or a company update—can make the experience feel much more grounded.

Fund strategy explainers (in select cases)

Most firms don’t need these. If you’re doing middle-market buyouts or core-plus multifamily, your audience probably knows the model. But if you’re introducing a truly new asset class or an unfamiliar strategy—like Ranchland Capital Partners did—a strategy video can be a smart tool for educating both institutional and HNW investors.

Recruiting or internal culture videos

These are optional. If it’s authentic to the firm and there’s a real use case, great. But not every team needs to be making day-in-the-life content. It’s a nice-to-have, not a core deliverable.


What doesn’t work: the usual mistakes

“About the firm” reels

These often miss the mark. The messaging is self-promotional. The production is too long. And the content becomes outdated the moment someone on-camera leaves the firm.

Unless it’s executed with serious editorial talent, this type of video tends to feel like a corporate history project, and not in a good way.

Trying to be slick without the budget

High production value is a good thing. But if you’re trying to look like McKinsey and you’re spending $8,000, the gap will be obvious. That hurts more than it helps.

In our experience, there’s a sweet spot for two-day shoots:

  • $50–75K all-in for high-quality production, editing, and light travel
  • Under $10K is too little
  • Over $200K is too much for most firms
  • Most of the cost is per-day shooting and post-production

If you want to do it right, plan accordingly.

Making it about the firm instead of the audience

This is the classic mistake. The video starts and ends with “we’re great” and never once addresses what the viewer actually cares about. Whether you’re talking to investors or founders, the point is to show what it’s like to work with you—not to recite your firm’s values.

Poor integration with your other materials

If a video looks four years newer than your website—or worse, four years older—it’s going to stand out in the wrong way. It doesn’t need to match your pitchbook visuals, but it should speak the same language. Consistency matters.

Bad production quality

Same rules as your website, your pitchbook, or your branding. If it’s not top quartile, it’s a liability. Berkshire Hathaway can get away with a bare-bones website. You can’t.


Scripted or unscripted? It depends.

We’ve done both. I’ve done both. The videos on Darien Group’s site are fully scripted—I wrote the copy, practiced it, and shot it myself. It works because I knew how to make it sound like I was speaking, not reading. But that’s not something most clients are comfortable with or good at.

On the flip side, we’ve run plenty of unscripted shoots where we gave interview questions ahead of time, and some people absolutely nailed it. Others froze.

Scripting tends to be cleaner, but risks sounding stiff. Unscripted footage can be more authentic, but takes more editing and has less control. In the end, performance is what drives everything. The right approach depends on the speaker.


How video should fit into the brand system

Historically, firms have treated video like a “hero asset.” One polished clip. For the homepage. Evergreen. Left untouched for four years.

The better approach is to treat it as an ongoing program. One that feeds your website, your AGM, your LinkedIn strategy, and your pitch materials. It doesn’t have to be constant. But it should be annual. You shoot two or three pieces each year. You build a library. You refresh and retire content over time.

That’s the long-term advantage. Video isn’t a fix. It’s a competency.
Just like branding itself, the goal is to develop the muscle. Not to bolt something on when it feels like a problem. You don’t go to the gym because you’re injured. You go because fitness compounds over time.

The firms that understand that—the ones who treat brand and content and video as strategic levers, not repair jobs—are the ones who will look differentiated two years from now. Everyone else will be playing catch-up.

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