New Work Wednesday
|January 28, 2026
The Smart Part: Episodic Content
5 Minute Read
Which of the following media formats does your company leverage as part of its content strategy?
Chill. Till The Next Episode.
Many brands and organizations have a familiarity problem. Sure, folks may know you… but do they really KNOW you?
People don’t trust what they don’t recognize and right now most marketing is built around the quick hit or the one-off moments: the big campaign video, annual brand anthem, the “you really need this new product or service” launch. Then nothing. Do it again next year!
That’s a big reason we’re encouraging our clients to think more like a publisher, not an advertiser. What once was accomplished in a company newsletter has transitioned to monthly video… or “episodes.”
Not a cinematic masterpiece. Not a Super Bowl (ahem, Big Game) spot. An episode.
When we say “episode,” we mean short, intentional, recurring video content that highlights your people, your products, your process and your culture. An employee spotlight. A behind-the-scenes look at how something actually gets made. A quick explanation of what makes your approach a bit different. Honest. Human. Repeatable. And funny if you have the chops to pull it off.
The magic (or results) don’t happen by publishing a single video. It’s the cadence that gives it gas.
Monthly episodes create momentum. They give your audience something to recognize and expect. Over time, they build trust, credibility and familiarity. The three things no amount of paid media can fake (we still love paid, btw.) A content series also solves a very practical problem. All of a sudden, you’ve got a steady stream of content for social, your website, emails, sales teams, recruiting and internal morale. That last one is my favorite.
We’ve seen this approach work across industries, especially for companies that feel “hard to explain” like manufacturing or technology. Don’t explain your business… humanize it.
We believe the brands that win aren’t necessarily the loudest. They’re the most consistent. Showing up month after month beats showing off once a year. And honestly? It’s a lot more fun.
In practice, consider this:
A monthly video series only works if you actually plan to do them monthly. This isn’t a “we’ll try it twice and see how it goes” situation. Be honest about whether you’re ready for a long-term cadence, not a one-and-done experiment. Set an annual budget for the project and let it rip
The best episodes feature real people doing real things. Before you call us, think about who inside your organization can show up on camera and whether leadership is comfortable being seen. Pro-tip, the ones that are excited usually work out.
You don’t need some crazy spreadsheet with KPIs galore but you need to gut check your goals. Is this for brand awareness? Recruiting? Sales? Internal culture alignment? Clear goals help shape the scope, format and budget from the jump.
Published is better than perfect. Scripted dialog and Hollywood lighting may not be necessary (or the goal.) Authentic is a must. James Cameron may not be needed. Your answers here will determine production methods, crew size, shoot days and editing time. After all, this stuff costs real money and you need a real budget (so do we.)
Social feeds? Your blog or website? Sales Decks? Internal Communications? The more places these episodes live, the more they preform. Strategic planning around how, where and when you publish is a must if you care about value (we do.)

Daniel Stewart / President, Director of Partnerships
Weird / Smart™
Creativity informs everything we do. Likewise, our artistic efforts are guided by our intellect. Weird / Smart is our unique standard for beauty and brains. It’s what makes our work, work.