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Ognjen | Creative Content Founder
755 posts

Ognjen | Creative Content Founder
@EditedByOgnjen
Building a Creative Content Agency. Helping creators & brands turn content into results. 🎬
Katılım Eylül 2023
90 Takip Edilen189 Takipçiler

Another project delivered by our team. 🚀
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@BakiVisuals One simple word can change your whole life
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@moatez_creator Thanks man, what's your favorite animation?
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@BakiVisuals Thank you Baki, what's your favorite thing about this project?
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Another long-form project delivered by our team. 🎬
Every cut, animation, and pacing decision was made with one goal: keep viewers watching and make the message impossible to ignore.
We don't just edit videos—we help creators turn attention into engagement and engagement into results.
Looking for a creative team? My DMs are open. ✉️
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@rajavarman307 Everyone think it's ai, but there is a catch, I'm better then Ai🤫
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@EditedByOgnjen But ur msg doesn't not look organic , it like ai generated caption
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I think minimal UI animation is much harder than people give it credit for. When there's very little happening on screen, every movement has to feel intentional. That's what gives it that premium feel. 👏
Which principle do you prioritize most when designing these animations—clarity, smoothness, or making the product feel more premium?
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I think project showcases are underrated because they reveal more than just editing skills—they show your range, consistency, and creative thinking across different styles. That's usually what gives clients confidence to reach out. 👏
Which project pushed you the furthest outside your comfort zone?
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I like how clear your positioning is. "Make people want your product in under 60 seconds" immediately tells people the outcome you deliver, not just the service you provide. That's much stronger than simply saying you're a motion designer. 👏
Out of curiosity, what's the biggest lesson you've learned from creating all the projects in this showreel?
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Looking back at older intros is always interesting because they show how much you've evolved as an editor. The best part is when an old project still holds up months later—that usually means the creative direction was solid from the start. 👏
If you were recreating this intro today, what's the first thing you'd change?
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I think practice edits are where the biggest breakthroughs happen. That's where you experiment, make mistakes, and discover techniques that eventually become part of your client work. Every polished project starts with someone willing to practice. 👏
Which new technique from this edit do you think you'll keep using in future SaaS projects?
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I think VSLs are one of the toughest formats to edit because every second has a job to do. You're not just making the video look good—you're keeping attention while moving the viewer closer to taking action. That's a very different mindset from editing for entertainment. 👏
Looking back five months later, what's the one thing you'd improve if you edited it again today?
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I think long-form editing is where the real skill shows. It's one thing to make a 30-second clip engaging, but keeping someone invested for 10–20 minutes takes a completely different level of storytelling, pacing, and structure. 👏
Out of curiosity, what was the biggest challenge on this project—keeping the pacing consistent or deciding what to leave out?
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Really solid edit overall. The pacing and visuals keep things engaging, and it's easy to see the effort that went into it. 👏
If I had one small suggestion, I'd dial back the whoosh sound effects a bit. They're great for emphasizing key moments, but using them too often can make the edit feel a little busy. Sometimes less really is more.
Other than that, great work! 🚀
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I think highlight posts are underrated because they let people appreciate the small creative decisions that often go unnoticed in the full edit. Those little details are usually what make a project feel premium. 👏
Which shot in this project took the most iterations before you were happy with it?
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Podcast shorts are a completely different game. You have just a few seconds to convince someone that a 2-hour conversation is worth their attention. Choosing the right moment, pacing it well, and keeping the message clear is what makes people stop scrolling. 👏
Out of curiosity, what was the first thing you looked for when picking the clip from the full podcast?
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