The Comeback of the Long Documentary: Why 20 Minute Films Are 2026’s Best Marketing Asset
I know what you are thinking.
Nobody watches long videos anymore. Attention spans are shot. TikTok ruined everything. If it is longer than 60 seconds, you might as well set your budget on fire.
I get it. I think that sometimes too. Then I look at the data.
Short video is for reach. Long video is for trust. And if you are a nonprofit trying to land major donations or a B2B company trying to close big contracts, trust matters more than reach.
Who actually watches long videos
The answer might surprise you.
The people who watch 20 minute documentaries are not casual scrollers. They are people who have a reason to pay attention. A potential major donor who wants to understand your work before writing a check. A grant committee reviewing your application. A corporate partner deciding whether to invest in your mission. A B2B client evaluating whether you are the right vendor for a six figure contract.
These people do not have TikTok attention spans when they are doing their jobs. They read long reports. They sit through presentations. They watch videos that help them make decisions.
A 20 minute documentary is not competing with cat videos. It is competing with a board packet or a grant proposal. And a good documentary is way more compelling than a stack of paper.
The parent asset strategy
Here is something smart production companies figured out years ago.
You do not have to choose between long and short. You make a long documentary and then you pull short pieces out of it.
We call this the parent asset. One long film that feeds six months of content.
A 20 minute documentary becomes ten Instagram Reels. It becomes five LinkedIn posts. It becomes quotes for your annual report. It becomes clips for your fundraising emails. It becomes a sizzle reel for your website.
The math works in your favor. One shoot. One edit. One story. And you have content for every channel.
How to make a long video people actually watch
Here is the hard part. Long videos can be boring. Most of them are. You have sat through them. I have sat through them. We have both wished for the sweet release of the end screen.
It does not have to be that way.
A good long documentary is structured like a cinematic research paper. It has a thesis. It has evidence. It has characters who bring the story to life. It has momentum. It builds toward something.
The secret is treating your audience like smart people who want to learn. Do not repeat the same point ten times. Do not stretch five minutes of content into twenty. Give them new information in every scene. Move the story forward constantly.
We learned this making documentaries for CBC and TVO. Broadcast slots are fixed. You have exactly 22 minutes or 44 minutes. You cannot afford to waste a second. Every frame has to earn its place.
That discipline carries over to everything we make for clients. Whether it is a fundraising video for a Toronto charity or a brand documentary for a commercial client, we treat every minute like someone is paying attention.
What long video does for nonprofits
For nonprofits, long video is a fundraising tool disguised as storytelling.
When a major donor sits down to watch your 20 minute documentary, they are not just learning about your work. They are deciding whether they believe in you enough to write a check. They are looking for signs that you are competent, that you understand the problem, that you respect the people you serve.
A good documentary answers all those questions without ever saying “give us money.” It shows the work. It shows the impact. It shows the people whose lives changed. By the end, the ask feels like the natural next step.
We have seen this work firsthand with partners like Best Buddies Canada. The video does not beg. It just shows what happens when people show up for each other. Donors watch it and want to be part of that.
What long video does for B2B brands
For B2B companies, long video is credibility on demand.
When a potential client finds your website, they have questions. Can you deliver? Do you understand our industry? Have you done this before? What is it like to work with you?
A 20 minute brand documentary answers all of that in a way an About Us page never can. It shows your team. It shows your process. It shows past clients vouching for you. It shows the care you put into your work.
By the time someone finishes watching, they are not wondering if you are legit. They know.
How to get started
If this sounds like something your organization needs, here is how to think about it.
Start with the story you want to tell. Not the video. The story. Who are the characters? What is the conflict? What changes by the end? A documentary is not a brochure. It needs a narrative arc.
Then think about who needs to see it. Major donors? Grant makers? Corporate partners? B2B clients? Knowing your audience shapes every decision about tone and length and distribution.
Then find a partner who knows how to do this work. A partner who has made documentaries before. A partner who understands that real stories take time and care. A partner who will treat your people with dignity.
That partner might be Skyrex. It might be someone else. But do not hire a corporate video team and ask them to fake a documentary. It will not work. Hire people who have done it.
Let us talk
We have been making documentaries for years. Broadcast work. Nonprofit work. Commercial work. We know how to tell long stories that hold attention and drive action.
If you are thinking about a long format project, reach out. We would love to hear what you are working on and share some ideas.
No pressure. Just a conversation.
