Giveaways & Contests

Video contest best practices

Submission flow, moderation, voting — the operational details that make video contests work.

7 min read Updated April 29, 2026

A video contest is the most demanding form of UGC contest you can run. The entry is heavy, the file handling is non-trivial, and the moderation queue takes longer to clear than a photo contest of the same size. Done well, the output is the highest-value content library a single campaign can produce. Done poorly, you ship a half-empty gallery and a logistics headache.

Start with the brief, not the form

Video contests live or die on the clarity of the brief. Photo contests can survive a vague theme because the entry effort is low; a video contest with a vague theme produces a thin gallery because no one wants to spend an hour shooting and editing without knowing what good looks like.

The brief should answer four questions in plain language: what should the video show, how long should it be, what platforms is it for, and what does a winning entry look like. Concrete examples beat abstractions — link to two or three reference videos (your own or licensed work, never a competitor's) so entrants can calibrate. Photo-contest theme principles apply here too; photo contest ideas and themes covers the underlying logic of theme selection.

Submission flow and file handling

The video submission flow has more failure modes than any other contest format. Files are large, uploads are slow, mobile users drop off mid-upload, and unsupported formats produce silent errors. The submission form needs to be designed defensively.

  • Cap file size and length up front — show the limit before the upload starts. A common spec is sixty to ninety seconds and a few hundred megabytes. Reject larger files at the form level, not after the upload completes.
  • Accept common formats and transcode server-side — MP4 with H.264 covers most modern devices. Quietly transcode to a web-friendly variant for the gallery; preserve the original for awards or republishing.
  • Allow URL submission as an alternative — let entrants submit a YouTube, Vimeo, or social-platform link. Faster for them, lighter for you, and you still capture the metadata you need.
  • Show upload progress and a confirmation — silent uploads produce duplicate submissions when entrants think the first one failed.
  • Capture the rights and release explicitly — the same rights checkbox that any UGC contest needs, but written carefully because video is the highest-value submission type.

For the broader UGC framework, UGC contest collection and display covers the lifecycle that video contests sit inside.

Moderation — slower, heavier, unavoidable

Video moderation is harder than photo moderation. Reviewers cannot scan a gallery of thumbnails the way they can with photos; each entry has to be watched, at least partially. Plan for a moderator to spend roughly the runtime of each entry plus a minute of overhead per submission. A two-hundred-entry contest with sixty-second videos is approximately five hours of moderation work — across the whole contest, not in a single sitting.

Use pre-publish moderation. The cost of a single inappropriate video appearing in your public gallery, even briefly, is higher than the moderation overhead. The rules should disclose what gets a submission removed: off-topic, inappropriate, low quality below a stated bar, copyrighted music or footage the entrant doesn't own.

Music is the most common compliance trap. Entrants frequently submit videos with copyrighted soundtracks they have no rights to use. Disclose in the brief that submissions must use original music, licensed music, or royalty-free music — and that submissions with unlicensed music will be removed.

Voting versus judging — pick one and commit

The voting-versus-judging trade-off is sharper for video than for photos. Public voting works for video, but the time investment to watch each entry means casual voters don't actually watch — they vote based on the thumbnail and the entrant's social network. That makes vote stuffing easier and the result less defensible.

For most video contests, judging produces a better outcome than voting. A panel watches the finalists, scores against published criteria (creativity, brand fit, production quality, story), and picks a winner. Disclose the criteria and weights in the rules. How to pick a giveaway winner covers the documentation any defensible draw or judging needs.

If you want both — public engagement and a quality winner — use voting to narrow to ten finalists, then judge from the finalists. The voting period drives traffic; the judging round produces a winner you can defend.

Prizes that match the effort

Generic gift cards do not work for video contests because the effort-to-reward ratio is upside down. The strongest video-contest prizes are:

  1. Exposure as a meaningful prize component — a feature on your channels, a paid promotion of the winning video, a placement on your homepage. For creators, exposure has measurable value.
  2. High-AOV product bundles or experiences — prizes worth the production effort, niche-fit so the audience self-filters.
  3. Cash plus exposure — a cash prize alongside featured promotion. Cash respects the work; exposure compounds the value.
  4. Equipment prizes — for creator-focused contests, equipment that helps them keep creating is on-theme and high-value.

The prize bar matters more than the prize creativity. Underpaying for video work is a fast way to get a thin gallery.

Turning entries into long-running assets

Every approved video submission is a piece of marketing-ready content you have rights to use. The contest gallery is the first surface; the rest of the value comes from intentional distribution. Top entries should run as paid-social creative, embed on relevant product or category pages, feature in your email newsletter, and sit in a permanent gallery that keeps producing organic traffic. Hashtag-based promotion patterns work especially well for video contests because the format itself encourages sharing — see hashtag contest strategy for the structure.

The asset library outlives the contest by a year or more. Plan for distribution before you launch, not after the winner is announced.

Video contest checklist: brief is concrete with reference videos, submission form caps size and length, transcoding pipeline tested, pre-publish moderation queue staffed for the entry volume, music licensing disclosed in rules, judging criteria written, post-contest distribution plan in place. The contest is a content investment; treat it like one.

Frequently asked

How long should video submissions be?
Sixty to ninety seconds is the sweet spot for most video contests. Long enough to tell a story; short enough that moderators and judges can review the full library. Longer formats (two to three minutes) work for documentary-style or product-demo contests but cut entry volume because the production effort scales with length.
Should I host the videos myself or accept platform links?
Both. Self-hosted with server-side transcoding gives you control and ensures playback works in your gallery. Accepting links to YouTube, Vimeo, or social platforms lowers the entry barrier and captures entrants who already have the content elsewhere. The hybrid is the safest default.
How do I handle copyrighted music in submissions?
Disclose in the brief and rules that submissions must use original, licensed, or royalty-free music. Reject submissions with unlicensed copyrighted music during moderation; you cannot republish or run them as ads safely. Provide a short list of royalty-free music libraries in the brief to make compliance easier for entrants.
What is the right entry-volume expectation for a video contest?
Lower than a photo contest by a factor of three to five for the same audience and prize. Video takes more effort to produce, so the floor is higher and the entry count is lower. Plan promotion, prize, and timeline accordingly. A small gallery of strong videos is usually more useful than a large gallery of weak ones.
Should I use voting or judging to pick a winner?
Judging produces a better outcome for most video contests because casual voters do not actually watch entries — they vote on thumbnails and social networks. If you want public engagement, use voting to narrow to a finalist round, then judge the finalists against published criteria.
How long should a video contest run?
Four to six weeks total. Three to four weeks of submission (video takes longer to produce than a photo), then one to two weeks of judging or voting. Announce the winner soon after judging closes; the announcement moment is a promotional surge you should not skip.