Forty years.
No camera.

You spent two years telling the world you want to be artisans of sound. Most of the proof is still a paragraph. Here is the gap, set side by side, so it is impossible to unsee.

The same engineer, two formats

One of these makes a buyer feel something.

What ships today · a written Q&A
Customer story · 6 min read

Chris Butterworth on mixing Fontaines D.C.

Q. What's your approach to the line array on a room like this?

A. I'll set my coverage from the rig, walk the room, and trust the system to …

What it could be · a frame from the film
Close detail of an engineer's hands on the console faders, lit by warm gold light — the craft a text profile cannot show.

The hands on the left are described. The hands on the right are watched. The first asks the reader to imagine the craft. The second shows it — the worn skin, the wedding band, the one finger mid-adjust. That is the whole difference, and it is the one your audience of engineers feels instantly.

The diagnosis, in five lines

Where the human story keeps getting buried.

01 · The character

Your best subject is a blog post

The FOH engineer is the person you most want to influence, told in the one format that cannot show craft. The Women in Pro Audio features are text. The tour profiles are text. Hands at a console at six in the morning do not survive as a paragraph.

02 · The proximity

You proved you want cinema, then sent it abroad

The Art of Sound is your best content, and it came from a UK studio on transatlantic overhead. You have a California office thirty minutes from the densest pool of credentialed engineers on earth, and no West Coast production partner on record.

03 · The point of view

Every story is told from the product, never the person

Each case study answers what was deployed. None answers who, and what it is like to be them at the moment the room comes alive. Your own ambition — to infuse sound's story with life — describes a portrait you have never shot.

04 · The system

Content runs on a spike, not a pipeline

One big keynote film a year, then clips. Eight trade moments want localized cutdowns and nothing feeds them. The hero work has no operational tail, so it ages out the moment the next show starts.

There is a fifth: the website itself performs as a catalog, built for the technical buyer browsing nineteen application types. The experience-first copy sits on a product-first architecture. A visitor who came for the human story has nowhere to land. The concept you are reading is that landing place.

The intent is real and funded. You hired a Global Director of Creative Engagement. The pictures just haven't caught up to the words.

So here is the series
The gap is the offer

We already fixed it. Look.