Phase 02 · Stages 13–24 · Momentum

Video
Editing.

The highest-ROI skill for visibility right now. Short-form content is exploding — and your design eye from Phase 1 is already an unfair advantage every other editor doesn't have.

12stg
Duration
10+
Videos to edit
2–3
Editing clients
$500+
First retainer
🎬

Design + Video is a rare combination. Most editors can't design. Most designers can't edit. You'll be able to do both — which means fewer competitors and higher rates.

👁️
Your Phase 1 design eye is your secret weapon
You already understand composition, colour grading instincts, hierarchy, and what "looks good." Most video editors learn these skills years into their career — you're starting with them on day one.
Stage by Stage

Twelve stages,
from timeline to clients.

Short-form first, long-form second, clients third. Click any stage to expand the full daily breakdown.

Daily Focus
Mon
Download CapCut (free, web or desktop). Watch one "getting started" tutorial — no more than 30 minutes. Then immediately open it and explore every single panel yourself without following along.
Tue
Record 5 minutes of footage on your phone — anything at all. Import it into CapCut, trim the clips, and arrange them on the timeline. Your first edit doesn't need to be good. It needs to exist.
Wed
Audio fundamentals: import a royalty-free music track from Pixabay or YouTube Audio Library. Adjust volume levels — music should sit at -20dB under any voiceover. Learn what a waveform tells you.
Thu
Frame rates and aspect ratios: 24fps (cinematic), 30fps (standard), 60fps (smooth/sports). Aspect ratios: 16:9 (YouTube), 9:16 (Reels/TikTok), 1:1 (feed). Set up exports for each in CapCut.
Fri
Export your first finished edit — a 30-second clip with music, at least 5 cuts, and correct aspect ratio for Instagram Reels. Watch it back on your phone, not just on your computer. They look different.
✦ Pro Tip

Don't try to make your first edit perfect. The goal this stage is to understand the interface, not to produce good work. Volume and comfort come before quality. You'll edit badly for a few stages — that's how every editor starts.

✓ Deliverable

One 30-second Reels-format edit: 5+ cuts, background music correctly mixed, exported at 1080×1920. Watch it. Note 3 things you'd do differently. That self-critique is Stage 14's starting point.

Daily Focus
Mon
Watch 10 Reels/TikToks analytically — not as a viewer but as an editor. For each one, count the number of cuts per minute and describe the pacing: fast/medium/slow. Notice how the pacing matches the energy of the content.
Tue
Beat syncing: import a track with a clear beat and practice cutting clips exactly on each beat hit. CapCut has a "beat sync" feature — use it first, then do it manually. Manual sync trains your ear in a way automation doesn't.
Wed
Jump cuts and why they work: edit a 3-minute talking-head video down to 90 seconds using only jump cuts. Remove every pause, filler word ("um," "like"), and dead air. The result should feel energetic, not choppy.
Thu
J-cuts and L-cuts: the audio from the next clip starts before the visual cut (J-cut), or the audio continues after the visual cut (L-cut). These make edits feel cinematic and intentional. Practice 5 of each.
Fri
Re-edit your Stage 13 deliverable from scratch using everything you've learned this stage. Compare the two versions side by side. The difference should be immediately visible — and that difference is one stage of focused practice.
✦ Pro Tip

Pacing is emotion. Fast cuts create excitement and urgency. Slow cuts create weight and seriousness. Matching your edit pace to the emotional tone of the content is what separates competent editors from great ones — and it's invisible when done right.

✓ Deliverable

A re-edited version of your Stage 13 clip plus one new 45-second beat-synced edit using any royalty-free track. Both uploaded to a private YouTube or Google Drive folder — start building your archive now.

Daily Focus
Mon
Colour correction fundamentals: white balance (colour temperature in Kelvin), exposure (brightness), contrast, highlights, shadows, and saturation. These 6 controls handle 90% of all colour work. Practice on 5 different clips.
Tue
Install DaVinci Resolve (free). Watch a 20-minute intro to the colour page. Colour correction in DaVinci is industry-standard — Hollywood films use it. Even if you edit elsewhere, understanding DaVinci's colour tools is a career differentiator.
Wed
LUTs (Look-Up Tables): download 5 free cinematic LUTs from Ground Control or LUTify. Apply them to clips and study what they do to the colour. Understand that LUTs are a starting point, not a finished grade.
Thu
Create 3 consistent "looks" from scratch — no LUTs. One warm/golden, one cold/moody, one clean/neutral. Apply each look to the same clip so you can compare. Save each as a preset you can reuse on future projects.
Fri
Colour matching: take two clips shot in different lighting conditions (or different cameras) and grade them until they look like they were shot in the same scene. This skill alone is worth a premium rate on any project.
✦ Pro Tip

Your Phase 1 colour theory knowledge is directly applicable here. The way you built brand palettes — dominant tone, secondary, accent — is how you build a cinematic grade. You already understand how colours relate emotionally. Most editors never learn this.

✓ Deliverable

Three 15-second clips each graded with a different mood (warm/cold/neutral). Side-by-side comparison exported as a single video. Add to your archive. This becomes a showreel asset later.

Daily Focus
Mon
Auto-captions: enable CapCut's auto-caption feature on a 60-second talking video. Review and correct any errors (always check — AI captions are 85–95% accurate). Style the captions: choose a font, size, colour, and background that matches the brand.
Tue
Animated text presets: explore CapCut's and DaVinci's built-in text animations. Use them selectively — one or two per video max. Over-animating text is one of the most common beginner mistakes. Less motion, more impact.
Wed
Lower thirds: design a branded lower-third in Figma (your Phase 1 skill returning!), export as PNG with transparent background, and import into your video. This is a premium touch that freelance clients specifically request and pay for.
Thu
Kinetic typography: create a 15-second clip where animated text IS the visual — no footage. Choose a quote or fact and animate each word on screen. Study how timing of text reveals drives impact.
Fri
Title card and end card design: create an intro title card and an outro end card for a fictional YouTube channel. Use your Figma skills to design them, then animate them in your video editor. This is your design + video skills working together for the first time.
✦ Pro Tip

Captions are no longer optional — they're expected. 85% of social media video is watched without sound. Styled captions that match the brand (not just white text on a black bar) are a service upgrade you can charge for specifically. Most editors don't bother to style them.

✓ Deliverable

A branded 60-second video with styled auto-captions, one lower-third graphic, an animated title card, and an end card. The title and lower-third should be designed in Figma first. This is your design + video integration piece.

Daily Focus
Mon
Hook anatomy: study 20 viral Reels. For each, write down exactly what happens in the first 2 seconds. You'll find patterns — a bold statement, a surprising visual, a question, a relatable problem. These are the 4 hook types. Know them.
Tue
Retention curve editing: every second a viewer stays is a decision to not leave. Edit a 45-second Reel where something new (visual, audio, text, or movement) happens every 3–4 seconds. Watch it back and count the "dead" moments — those are your cuts.
Wed
Sound design for short-form: whoosh transitions, impact sounds, comedy timing sounds, trending audio. Add sound effects to an edit and notice how much more alive and professional it sounds. Good sound design doubles perceived production value.
Thu
Trending audio strategy: search for trending sounds on TikTok/Reels. Edit a video specifically around a trending audio clip, syncing key visual moments to the audio's emotional peaks. This is how the algorithm rewards content — learn to work with it.
Fri
Edit 3 short-form videos this day — one educational, one entertaining, one inspirational. Each under 60 seconds. Volume builds instinct. Post at least one to your own account and note the retention data if available.
✦ Pro Tip

The hook is not the intro — it's the audition. In the first 2 seconds, a viewer decides whether to stay or scroll. Start with the most interesting, surprising, or provocative moment in the footage. Never start with a logo, a greeting, or context-setting. That comes later, if at all.

✓ Deliverable

Three short-form edits (educational, entertaining, inspirational) — each under 60 seconds with a strong 2-second hook. Export all three at 1080×1920. This is the core of your short-form editing reel.

Daily Focus
Mon
The golden rule of transitions: a cut is almost always the best transition. Study why — a clean cut respects the viewer's intelligence and keeps pace high. Fancy transitions draw attention to themselves and away from content. Use them once per video, maximum.
Tue
Speed ramps: slow-motion into normal speed (or the reverse) creates a cinematic feel that elevates any footage. Practice in CapCut — shoot a simple movement (pouring a drink, throwing something) and apply a speed ramp on the most visually interesting frame.
Wed
Zoom transitions: the "punch in" zoom cut is one of the most-used short-form techniques. Create 5 smooth zoom-cut transitions between clips. The secret is matching the zoom direction between shots — zoom in on clip A, zoom in on clip B for a seamless cut.
Thu
Visual consistency: take 3 unrelated clips and edit them into a single cohesive piece by applying the same colour grade, the same caption style, and the same audio treatment. Consistency is what makes a creator's page look professional — not individual clip quality.
Fri
Build your personal "edit template" in CapCut — a starting project file with your preferred caption style, audio settings, colour grade, and export settings already configured. This saves 15–20 minutes per video and is essential for taking on volume client work.
✦ Pro Tip

Transitions are a trap for new editors. The temptation is to use them everywhere because they feel impressive. But every transition you add is a moment where the viewer's brain interrupts watching to notice the technique. The invisible edit is always better. Save fancy transitions for one meaningful moment per video.

✓ Deliverable

One 45-second video using exactly 2 creative transitions (speed ramp + zoom cut), consistent colour grade throughout, styled captions, and your saved edit template file. The template is the most reusable deliverable you'll create this stage.

Daily Focus
Mon
Move to Premiere Pro this stage (or stay in DaVinci). Download a 10-minute talking-head video from YouTube (Creative Commons). Edit it down to 6 minutes by removing tangents, repeated points, and dead air. Keep the best version of every idea.
Tue
B-roll strategy: B-roll is supplementary footage that plays over a speaker's voiceover. Find or shoot 5 relevant B-roll clips for your edited video and cut them in. The rule: 30 seconds of talking head max before you need a visual change.
Wed
YouTube chapters and timestamps: add proper chapter markers to your edited video. Chapters increase watch time because viewers can navigate to the parts they want. Write chapter titles that tease what's coming, not just describe it.
Thu
Podcast editing: find a 5-minute podcast clip (or record one yourself). Remove filler words, long pauses, and background noise using noise reduction. Clean audio is worth more than a perfect visual in podcast content — most viewers have earphones in.
Fri
Multi-camera edit: download a two-camera interview (many are available on YouTube for practice). Sync the clips by their audio waveform and cut between the two cameras to match the emotional rhythm of the conversation. This is the most common paid editing job available.
✦ Pro Tip

Long-form editing clients are the most reliable source of recurring income in video editing. A YouTuber who posts twice a stage needs two edits — every single stage. Build a long-form client base and you have predictable monthly income without constant client acquisition.

✓ Deliverable

One 6-minute edited YouTube video with B-roll, chapter markers, and a clean audio mix. One 5-minute podcast edit with noise reduction applied. Both added to your archive and portfolio folder.

Daily Focus
Mon
Audit your archive: review every edit you've made since Stage 13. Select your 8–10 best clips — 3–5 seconds each. These become your showreel source material. Delete anything you're not proud of.
Tue
Showreel structure: a video editor's showreel should be 60–90 seconds maximum. Open with your strongest 3 seconds. End on a memorable moment. Put your second-best work at the end, not the beginning. Use your own music choice to set the tone.
Wed
Niche selection: specialised editors earn more than general editors. Research 3 potential niches — fitness creators, real estate agents, restaurant/food brands, coaches, podcasters. Pick one primary niche and one secondary. Your portfolio should reflect these.
Thu
Create a niche-specific sample: if you've chosen fitness creators, edit a 60-second "sample workout video" using free stock footage from Pexels. This shows potential clients in your niche exactly what working with you looks like — before they ask.
Fri
Update your Framer portfolio site (from Phase 1) with a new "Video" section. Embed your showreel as the hero video. Add 3 project cards with descriptions: what the brief was, what you did, and what the result was. Video clients make decisions in 30 seconds of watching.
✦ Pro Tip

Niching is the single biggest lever you have on your rate as a video editor. A generalist charges $50/video. A "real estate video specialist" charges $200–$500/video. The work is nearly identical. The positioning is everything. Choose your niche based on where you can produce the strongest sample work, not just personal interest.

✓ Deliverable

A 60–90 second showreel hosted on YouTube (unlisted is fine). A niche-specific sample video. Your Framer portfolio updated with a Video section. This is your video sales kit — everything a client needs to decide to hire you.

Daily Focus
Mon
Pricing research: look up 10 video editing profiles on Upwork and Fiverr in your niche. Set your starting rates — short-form Reel from $30–$60, YouTube video (under 10 min) from $80–$150, monthly retainer (8 videos/month) from $400–$800.
Tue
Update your Upwork and Fiverr profiles with your new video services. Write a headline that mentions your niche: "Short-Form Video Editor for Fitness & Wellness Brands" is more compelling than "Professional Video Editor."
Wed
LinkedIn outreach: find 20 content creators or business owners in your chosen niche who post regularly but whose editing quality is average. Send them a short message: "I noticed your content — I think I can make it look [specific thing better]. Here's a sample I made for your niche."
Thu
Design + Video bundle: create a combined service offer — "Brand Identity + 8 Social Videos/Month" as a monthly retainer. Write the offer clearly: what's included, what it costs, what the result looks like. This bundle has very few competitors at any price point.
Fri
Send 10 cold outreach messages to potential video editing clients. Use the same "free audit" approach from Phase 1 — record a 60-second Loom video showing one specific improvement you'd make to their existing content. Nothing converts better.
✦ Pro Tip

The Design + Video bundle is your most powerful offering. "I'll design your brand assets AND edit your videos" is a retainer conversation, not a one-off. A client paying $300/month for design + $400/month for video = $700/month from one relationship. That's the entire Phase 1 income target from a single client.

✓ Deliverable

Updated Upwork/Fiverr profiles with video services. A written Design + Video bundle offer (one page). 10 outreach messages sent with at least 2 personalised Loom video examples. Track all responses in a simple spreadsheet.

Daily Focus
Mon
Onboard your first video client (paid or volunteer). Send a brief questionnaire: preferred music style, caption style (yes/no and how they want them to look), any footage they love as a reference, content goal (entertain/educate/sell), and delivery deadline.
Tue
Receive footage — clients send messy, unorganised files. Create a folder structure: /Raw Footage, /Music, /Graphics, /Exports. Rename every file clearly. Organised projects deliver on time; disorganised ones don't.
Wed
Edit and deliver a draft via Frame.io (free tier available). Frame.io lets clients leave timestamped comments directly on the video — no more "the bit at 0:47" email chains. It immediately makes you look professional.
Thu
Incorporate revisions. Video clients often give vague feedback ("can you make it more energetic?"). Your job is to translate vague into specific: "more energetic = faster cuts, more bass in the music, more motion graphics?" Confirm before re-editing.
Fri
Final delivery: export in all required formats (1080p MP4 minimum, plus 4K if requested). Send via WeTransfer or Google Drive. Invoice immediately on delivery. Follow up in one stage: "Has the video been performing well?" opens the retainer conversation.
✦ Pro Tip

Frame.io changes the client experience entirely. When clients can click on a frame and leave a comment, they feel heard and in control. Revision misunderstandings drop to almost zero. It's free for individual editors and makes you look like a production company, not a freelancer. Use it from your first client.

✓ Deliverable

One completed, delivered, and invoiced video editing project. A written testimonial. The project added to your portfolio with a short case study. Your first proof that you're a working video editor.

Daily Focus
Mon
Premiere Pro orientation: if you haven't fully moved to Premiere yet, do it this stage. Open your previous projects in Premiere. The timeline logic is identical to CapCut — the difference is the professional export options, audio mixing panel, and After Effects integration.
Tue
After Effects intro: watch a 20-minute "AE for complete beginners" tutorial. Create your first composition — an animated text reveal using keyframes. Understand the difference between position, scale, opacity, and rotation keyframes. These 4 control everything.
Wed
Motion graphics template: create an animated lower-third in After Effects. Export it as a .mogrt (Motion Graphics Template) file and import it into Premiere. This is how production companies share branded templates — you can now do the same for your clients.
Thu
Dynamic Link: use Premiere's Dynamic Link feature to send a clip directly to After Effects for effects work, then back to Premiere — without exporting. This is the professional workflow used on every commercial production.
Fri
Build a reusable brand template in Premiere + After Effects: intro animation, lower thirds, caption style, and outro — all using one brand's colours and fonts. Package it so you can apply it to any future project for that client in under 5 minutes.
✦ Pro Tip

After Effects is the skill that most dramatically increases your rate. A video editor charges $50/video. A "video editor who does motion graphics" charges $150–$300/video. The actual time investment is often only 20–30 minutes of AE work per video. The perceived value is disproportionately higher.

✓ Deliverable

One branded video template package in Premiere + AE: animated intro (5sec), lower-third .mogrt, caption preset, and outro (5sec). All using a consistent brand identity. This template can be sold, licensed, or used as a premium add-on service.

Daily Focus
Mon
Portfolio audit: review everything in your video archive. Select your 5 strongest pieces — variety is important here: one short-form, one long-form, one branded/motion graphics, one showreel. Remove anything that lowers the average quality.
Tue
Self-assessment: rate yourself 1–5 on cutting/pacing, colour grading, motion graphics, audio mixing, client communication, and delivery speed. Find your weakest score and spend 90 minutes on it specifically.
Wed
Raise your rates: if you've completed at least one paid project, raise your rates by 20–30% for new clients. Document your current rate sheet. Rates should increase after every 3–5 projects as evidence of your value grows.
Thu
Retainer pitch: identify your best client from Phase 1 or Phase 2. Write a one-page retainer proposal: "Monthly Design + Video retainer — X deliverables per month for $Y/month." One strong retainer client changes your monthly income stability permanently.
Fri
Research Phase 3. Look up what Paid Ads actually are and how they work. Notice how your design skills (ad creative) and video skills (video ads) directly feed into paid advertising — you'll be building the assets that ads managers desperately need.
✦ Pro Tip

By this point you can offer: brand identity design, social media graphics, short-form video editing, long-form YouTube editing, and motion graphics. That is a $2,000–$5,000/month retainer offer for a single mid-sized business — and it's genuinely rare. Phase 3 (Paid Ads) turns that offer into one that no one can refuse.

✓ Deliverable

Updated portfolio with 5 video pieces and a written showreel. One retainer proposal sent. A written self-assessment. Rate sheet updated. You are now a designer and video editor. Begin Phase 3.

Your Stack

Six tools,
one clear order.

Start with CapCut in Stage 13, move to DaVinci for colour in Stage 15, Premiere Pro for professional delivery in Stage 19.

Stages 13–16 · Start Here
CapCut
Free, fast, and built for short-form. Auto-captions, beat sync, and speed ramps are all built in. Learn editing logic here — the concepts transfer to every professional tool. Desktop version is more powerful than mobile.
Free · Your first 4 stages
Stage 15+ · Colour Mastery
DaVinci Resolve
The best free professional editor. Hollywood-grade colour grading on a free licence. The colour page alone is worth learning even if you edit in Premiere. Nothing beats it for grading and it costs nothing.
Free forever · Colour standard
Stage 19+ · Professional Delivery
Premiere Pro
Adobe's industry-standard NLE. Most client workflows use it. After Effects integration, .mogrt template support, and team collaboration make it the professional choice for long-form and branded work.
Paid · Industry standard
Stage 23 · Motion Graphics
After Effects
For animated titles, lower thirds, logo animations, and motion graphics. The skill that most increases your per-video rate. Even basic AE knowledge adds $50–$150 to your project value immediately.
Paid · Biggest rate multiplier
Stage 22+ · Client Delivery
Frame.io
Share videos with timestamped comments. Avoid confusing email feedback. Free tier perfect for freelancers. Look like a pro from your first project. Makes you look like a production company from your first project.
Free tier · Use from client 1
Stage 17+ · Captions
SubMagic
AI-powered animated captions purpose-built for social video. Faster and more style-flexible than CapCut's built-in captions. Clients specifically request styled captions — this tool makes it a 5-minute add-on.
Freemium · Offer as an add-on
Phase Milestones

Four things to prove
before Phase Three.

Don't start Paid Ads until these are done. Each one is proof — for clients, for your portfolio, and for yourself.

🎬
Edit 10+ Short-Form Videos
Reels, TikToks, YouTube Shorts. Make your own content if you don't have clients yet. Volume builds speed and a trained editing instinct. You can't think your way to a good edit — you have to cut your way there.
💰
Land 2–3 Editing Clients
Offer to edit for a content creator you follow, a local business, or a podcast. Your first rates can be low — you're buying evidence, not income. A testimonial and a portfolio piece are worth more than the fee right now.
🎥
Build Your Video Showreel
60–90 seconds of your best edits, hosted on YouTube. This is what gets you hired for video work. A showreel with strong colour grading and clean motion graphics sells your editing ability in under 2 minutes — which is exactly how long clients will watch.
📦
Offer a Design + Video Bundle
"I'll design your brand assets AND edit your content." Pitch this as a monthly retainer — one invoice, one point of contact, full creative output. This combination has very few competitors at any price point. It's your Phase 2 unlock.
Free Resources

Learn to edit
for free.

Three YouTube channels cover 90% of what you need. Watch, then immediately practice — never binge without editing in between.

YouTube · Stages 13–18
Justin Odisho
Premiere Pro and After Effects tutorials. Fast, practical, focused on effects that real projects actually use. His "effects in 60 seconds" series is perfect for quickly building your effects vocabulary.
Free
YouTube · Stages 15–20
Casey Faris
DaVinci Resolve specialist. His colour grading fundamentals series is the best free resource for learning professional colour work. Watch it entirely before touching the colour page in DaVinci.
Free
YouTube · Stages 19–24
DaVinci Resolve Official
Blackmagic Design's official tutorials. Structured and thorough. Covers the full editing workflow, not just colour. Work through the fundamentals series from start to finish.
Free
Practice Method · Ongoing
Re-edit Music Videos
Download a music video, strip the audio, and re-edit it to the same song from scratch. The best exercise for pacing, rhythm, and timing. You have a reference to compare against, which makes improvement measurable and immediate.
Self-practice
Stock Footage · Ongoing
Pexels & Coverr
Free high-quality stock video for practice projects and client sample work. Always have footage to edit — never use "I don't have anything to film" as an excuse to not practice.
Free
Music Licensing · Ongoing
YouTube Audio Library
Free music and sound effects licensed for YouTube use. Filter by mood, genre, and tempo. Every edit needs music — this library ensures you never get a copyright strike on client deliverables posted to YouTube.
Free
Earnings Reality

Video editing
pays fast.

Short-form editors are in high demand. With Design bundled in, your rates compound significantly at every stage.

Stages 13–16
$200–$800
per month
First edits, learning on the job. Combining with Phase 1 design income.
Stages 17–20
$800–$2k
per month
Design + Video bundle unlocked. Repeat clients and referrals starting.
Stages 21–23
$2k–$4k
per month
First retainer client. AE motion graphics adds to per-project rate.
Post Phase 2
$4k–$8k
per month
Design + Video + Ads retainer packages. You're a full creative partner.
← Phase 01
Graphic Design
Stages 1–12 · Your foundation. The skills that feed directly into everything you just learned.