10 Tips For Making Inspiring Climate Tech Marketing Videos

Michael Grossman • October 12, 2023

Cleantech companies typically require a certain amount of scientific sophistication to comprehend, and therein lies the conflict with defining its value for an audience. A well-produced video is one of the best ways to bridge that gap.

 

A Cleantech Company Is More Than Just It’s Science

Ask most cleantech scientists why their idea is destined to scale, and they will likely tell you “because the science works.” Unfortunately, as millions of broke patent holders have discovered over the last couple hundred years, the recipe for success also requires money, timing, necessity, novelty, competitive advantage, and luck . It also needs a compelling story to capture peoples’ imaginations and appeal to their sensibilities.

And there’s no better medium to accomplish that goal than video…if you do it right.

 

Cleantech Marketing Video Tips

Here are some tips on how to make a video for your cleantech company that appeals to the heart and mind.

  1. Video Is About People –No matter how cool your invention, people will be more interested in how it intersects and impacts their lives than they are about your patents or your processes. Forcing people to watch a machine performing a repetitive task is about as exciting as watching paint dry, even if it excites you.
  2. Keep It Short –We’re all familiar with the adage, “if you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.” It shouldn’t take ten minutes to explain a renewable chemical, clean fuel, repurposed material. I recommend to my cleantech clients to keep all videos under two minutes.
  3. Focus On One Topic –One of the mistakes I see most often in the cleantech space are videos crammed with too much information. You want your audience to have one or two (at most) takeaways. Focus on outcomes first, and leave the process on the cutting room floor.
  4. Describe the Competitive Advantage Up FrontStudies on viewing habits have shown 90 percent of the viewers who click the play button on a video will watch it for at least 10 seconds. By the 30-second mark, about one-third of all viewers have moved on to something else, so your video either needs to identify the dilemma or the outcome upfront. If you have to include credentials, patents, and history, place them further back in the auditorium.
  5. Testimonials Are Helpful –Watching the founder of a cleantech company on video extolling the marvels of their water, waste or energy solution is what’s known as a “dog bites man” story. Everyone has seen it, and no one is surprised that an inventor or entrepreneur is excited about their invention. It’s humdrum. Third-party validators, however, give the video more credibility, especially well-known industry figures.
  6. Use More Than One Talking Head –Video gets stale quickly. A good video editor will break up visuals in two to four-second clips. That’s why you need multiple people and multiple settings.
  7. Use More Than One Background –Unless you are Bill Nye, The Science Guy, it’s going to be very difficult to keep the audience’s attention. Do NOT spend the entire video standing in front of your invention or the laboratory or else you will lose your audience even more quickly than usual. Going back to my first point, interacting with people is good.
  8. Have Talking Points In Advance –Some people like to have the crutch of a word for word script, but I believe some spontaneity gives a video more life. Knowing the points to be covered in advance is critical because a narrative structure has to be baked into the cake while filming.
  9. Hire Professionals –Nothing looks more amateurish than homemade video, and yes, it’s obvious you did it yourself on your iPhone because the video shakes, and the sound and lighting quality are non-existent and detract from what you are trying to convey.  If your cleantech company is trying to raise millions of dollars or find a lead customer, your ability to project a professional image is worth the extra money your company has to spend.
  10. Personalize Your Video –If your backstory was instrumental in the company’s foundation or growth, use it to create a bond with your audience. You are humanizing yourself as the narrator of your own story. It allows your audience to get to like you and want to root for you to succeed.

 

As a cleantech company, you have one significant advantage: everyone is on your side. No one is in favor of pollution or climate change. As a fellow human being, your audience is sympathetic. That’s a step businesses in other industries don’t get to take for granted. Bring that goodwill along for the ride, and keep the science, engineering, and financials in a separate place where your prospective audience can go AFTER you’ve pulled on their heartstrings.

Download our Cleantech Founder's Marketing Readiness Assessment
By Michael Grossman May 4, 2026
A practical guide for cleantech founders to test whether their message, website, pitch, and marketing systems are ready to support funding, pilots, and growth.
By Michael Grossman April 30, 2026
Everyone is hiring for “GTM,” but few define it clearly. Here’s what go-to-market actually means in cleantech, where it fits, and why it matters for revenue.
By Michael Grossman April 25, 2026
Scientists and engineers are trained for deep focus. Investors and customers skim screens. Here’s why cleantech founders lose attention—and how to make their technology easier to remember.
S
By Michael Grossman April 22, 2026
Your climate tech pitch is getting interest—but no second meeting. Here’s why investors and pilot partners aren’t moving forward, and how to build a message that makes the business case clear and drives real decisions.
Gilligan's Island was a category-definer for shows that came after it.
By Michael Grossman April 19, 2026
Most cleantech companies compete on performance. The ones that win become the reference point everyone else is compared to. Here’s how category leadership actually works—and why clarity, not specs, determines who gets remembered.
1930's rural America
By Michael Grossman April 16, 2026
Support for renewables is weakening, and data centers face backlash. Here’s why energy projects are getting caught in the crossfire—and what developers must change to win approval.
Wondering why investors and pilot partners aren't returning your calls?
By Michael Grossman April 12, 2026
When your value proposition turns into a list, deals slow down. Learn how one clear promise helps investors and buyers understand, explain, and approve your cleantech solution faster.
Panel discussion at the 2026 American Clean Power Conference
By Michael Grossman April 6, 2026
Why clean energy projects fail permitting in 2026—and what developers must change: early outreach, local messengers, and digital campaigns that define the fight before opposition does.
Rural communities are pushing back against clean energy projects.
By Michael Grossman March 30, 2026
Denmark leads on climate—but even there, utility-scale solar is facing backlash. The community fault lines around clean energy projects worldwide can be overcome.
SHOW MORE