Scroll-Stopping Aerial Content for Social Media

Short-form aerial content designed to stop scrolling, tell a story, and stay useful long after the post goes live.

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What This Content Looks Like in the Feed

Short, vertical aerial clips designed to stop scrolling and deliver the message in seconds.

These examples show how aerial content can support art, place, business, and memory in very different ways.

Where This Content Actually Gets Used

Not every project needs the same kind of footage. What matters is creating visuals that fit how and where they will be seen, shared, and reused over time.

This kind of aerial content is commonly used for:

  • Social feeds and short-form video
    To stop scrolling and give people a sense of scale, atmosphere, and place.
  • Social feeds and short-form video
    To stop scrolling and give people a sense of scale, atmosphere, and place.
  • Campaigns and promotions
    To support seasonal pushes, announcements, or time-sensitive moments.List item
  • Long-term storytelling
    Building a library of visuals that can be reused across platforms and over multiple years.

What’s Getting in the Way

Creating social content is easy. Creating content that actually works over time means looking beyond the moment and focusing on clarity, context, and long term usefulness rather than quick impressions alone.

Common issues I see before projects come my way:

  • Footage is captured without a clear use in mind
  • Clips look good individually but do not work together as a set
  • Moments are documented, but context and scale are missing
  • Content is posted once and then forgotten
  • Teams end up with files they like but cannot easily reuse

The result is content that feels busy, inconsistent, or underused, even when the visuals themselves are strong.

How I Help It Come Together

I approach social and marketing content with the end use in mind from the start. That means planning for how each piece will be viewed, shared, and reused rather than capturing footage and hoping it fits later.

Here is what that looks like in practice:

  • Capture with intent
    Each shoot is planned around the platforms and formats the content will live on, not just what looks good in the moment.
  • Create cohesive sets, not single clips
    Footage is captured to work together visually so posts feel connected rather than random.
  • Show context and scale clearly
    Aerial perspective is used to add understanding, atmosphere, and place, not just motion.
  • Plan for reuse from the beginning
    Content is delivered in a way that supports future posts, campaigns, and updates without starting from scratch.
  • Leave you with a usable library
    You walk away with visuals that remain useful long after the initial post goes live.

The goal is not more content. It is content that continues to work for you.

It pays to know image makers when you make murals several stories tall. Shout out to Controlled Creations for this incredible drone shot of the Trolley mural
Christian Kanienberg, WISH Unlimited

If you’re thinking about content but unsure where to start, a short conversation usually brings clarity.