The practical workflow
This is written for real creators, editors, clients, and reviewers who need less confusion, not another theory-heavy production manual.
Write the first brief like a handoff
Include audience, goal, length, tone, references, must-use assets, platform, and deadline before editing starts.
Assign one final reviewer
Collect opinions, but make one person responsible for the decision that moves the project forward.
Use timestamped notes
A comment attached to a specific moment is easier to fix than a paragraph floating in an email.
Group similar changes
Put caption notes, music notes, pacing notes, and visual notes together so the editor can work efficiently.
Protect the revision scope
If a new idea changes the concept, treat it as a new request instead of hiding it inside a revision.
Review against the brief
Ask whether the video meets the agreed goal, not whether every reviewer has a fresh preference.
Common mistakes to avoid
No clear approval owner
Revision rounds multiply when everyone can request changes but no one owns the final call.
Late asset delivery
New logos, scripts, footage, or soundtrack choices after the edit starts usually create avoidable rework.
Feedback without priority
Editors need to know what is required for approval and what is a nice-to-have.
How PithPlay helps
PithPlay helps teams keep the original brief, video notes, editor assignment, and revision feedback connected so every round has a cleaner purpose.
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