Key Responsibilities
- Collaborate with the Communications Officer to conceptualize, script, and produce two awareness videos (1.5 minutes each).
- Capture real footage from project activities scheduled between April–May (Video 1) and June–November (Video 2).
- Integrate simple animated elements (icons, overlays, transitions) into real-footage-based storytelling.
- Coordinate and conduct studio interviews with key project speakers, including trainers, experts, and organizational representatives.
- Edit footage into compelling, emotionally resonant, and visually consistent outputs, ensuring alignment with IDRAAC and the National Mental Health Programme’s branding.
- Add subtitles, sign language, and light musical scores and ensure accessibility standards (bilingual subtitling) are met.
- Deliver final videos ready for social media, websites, and public presentations.
Qualifications and Skills
- Bachelor's degree in filmmaking Audiovisual, or similar field
- Proven experience in short video production (storyboarding, filming, editing).
- Strong portfolio of awareness or advocacy video content using real footage.
- Proficiency in video editing software.
- Experience integrating simple animations and subtitles into video projects.
- Strong storytelling skills, especially for social impact campaigns.
- Fluency in Arabic and English (written and spoken); subtitle experience is a must.
- Ability to work independently and meet production deadlines.
- Previous experience working with NGOs or on mental health topics is a plus.
Intervention Sectors
Mental Health
Location
- Lebanon
Application Deadline
Salary Range
1200 to 1500 (USD)
Contract Type
Consultancy
Application Submission Guidelines
Interested candidates are invited to send their CV, a brief cover letter, and a portfolio showcasing similar work to careers@idraac.org. Please include "Video Production" in the subject line.
Requires a Cover Letter?
Yes
Experience Requirements
1 to 2 years
Education Degree
Bachelor Degree
Arabic
Excellent
English
Excellent
French
Basic
Hide guidelines for wrong answers
No