Published May 3, 2026 | By A. Nadine Hagood, Local Government Reporter
Editor’s Disclosure
HERESpartanburg.com is published by HERECity Network, an independent local news organization. Firetower Media, the subject of this spotlight, has a business relationship with HERECity Network as a video production partner. This spotlight was reported, written, and edited by a HERESpartanburg editor to HERECity Network’s editorial standards. Firetower Media reviewed the article for factual accuracy regarding its own business operations only; editorial judgment and final publication decisions rest with HERECity Network. See our Editorial Standards.
Spartanburg’s industrial backbone — BMW, Michelin, Milliken, the supplier networks that orbit them, and the smaller manufacturers seeded across the Upstate — runs on a workforce that is harder to recruit, harder to train, and harder to retain than it was a decade ago. The video that walks a recruit through a plant floor, the training reel that gets a new hire productive in week two instead of week six, and the customer-facing reel that turns a complicated industrial process into a 90-second story are no longer optional. They are the table stakes of an industrial company that wants to grow.
Firetower Media, a Charlotte-based video production company that has built its practice on the Charlotte–Rock Hill corridor and across the Carolinas, was founded in 2014 specifically around Sell. Educate. Recruit. — corporate video work for blue-collar and industrial businesses that historically have been underserved by agency video. Its work covers commercials, corporate promos, training videos, corporate events, and live broadcast, and is delivered to clients with full usage rights and ownership of the finished assets.
Built for Industrial Clients, Not Lifestyle Brands
The agency video market is crowded with shops that produce wedding-quality films for boutique-quality budgets. What it has historically been short on is crews comfortable on a shop floor — crews that understand safety walkdowns, that can light a forging press without throwing glare, that know how to cut a 35-minute training session into a 4-minute reel without losing the steps that matter. Firetower Media’s positioning is deliberately on that less-glamorous side of the market: blue-collar, industrial, and operationally-grounded.
That focus shows up in the client mix. The firm’s portfolio runs heavy on manufacturing, construction, logistics, and skilled-trade companies — the businesses that anchor an Upstate or Charlotte regional economy and that need video to recruit welders, electricians, machinists, and line operators against a national labor shortage. The same focus carries into Firetower Media’s training and recruitment work, where the deliverable is judged on whether it actually moves a hiring or onboarding number, not on whether it wins a film festival.
The Numbers Behind the Demand for Industrial Video
Those three datapoints — that nine in ten companies are now using video to train, that the Upstate’s anchor industry is staring at a 2.1-million-worker shortfall by the end of the decade, and that recruiting video lifts applications by a third — explain why a Charlotte-region production company that specializes in industrial work has had no trouble keeping a calendar full. The cost of not having recruitment, training, and customer video in 2026 is no longer abstract; it is measured in unfilled requisitions and slow ramp times.
How a Firetower Media Project Actually Runs
Step 1: Discovery and intake. The engagement starts with a working conversation about what the video has to accomplish — a hiring goal, a training outcome, a sales asset, a recruiting reel for a specific job family. Scope is defined in business terms, not creative terms, before a camera is touched.
Step 2: Production scaled to the brief. Firetower Media handles the full production stack — pre-production planning, on-site shoot days, lighting and audio, drone work where useful, post-production editing, motion graphics, and licensed music. The crew size, day count, and gear list are sized to the deliverable rather than to a one-size-fits-all package. For larger jobs and live broadcast work, the firm draws on an experienced production team with West Coast crew capacity for clients with national footprint.
Step 3: Delivery with full ownership. Finished assets are delivered with full usage rights to the client. The video belongs to the business — to repost, recut, hand to a recruiter, embed on a careers page, or run as paid social — without recurring licensing fees or per-use restrictions. That ownership model matters most to the recruiting and training side of the work, where a single asset may run on a careers page for two or three years.
What Firetower Media Actually Does
The firm’s service line covers the five categories of corporate video that an industrial business actually buys:
- Sell. Educate. Recruit. corporate promos. The firm’s signature framework — a single brief broken into the three jobs corporate video has to do for a manufacturer or service business: tell customers what you do, train the workforce that does it, and recruit the next class of hires.
- Commercial production. Television and digital commercials cut for broadcast, OTT, YouTube pre-roll, and paid social — produced to a brief and a buy, not to a vanity reel.
- Training videos. Onboarding, safety, equipment operation, and standard-operating-procedure video for plant floors, distribution centers, and field-service operations. Built to be reused as workforces turn over.
- Corporate events. Multi-camera coverage of leadership meetings, sales kickoffs, customer summits, and industry conferences, with same-week edited highlight reels for internal and external use.
- Live broadcast. Streamed events, livestreamed product launches, and multi-camera live productions handled in-house, including the technical control and switching that most regional production companies sub out.
Serving the Carolinas From the Charlotte–Rock Hill Corridor
Firetower Media is headquartered on the North Carolina–South Carolina border between Charlotte and Rock Hill, which puts the Spartanburg–Greer–BMW corridor inside a comfortable single-day shoot radius. The firm covers the Carolinas as its primary market and takes on national work with the help of an experienced production team and West Coast crew partnerships when projects require it. For Upstate industrial clients — particularly the BMW supplier base spread between Greer, Spartanburg, and Greenville — the practical effect is local-market responsiveness on shoot days without the agency-rate premium that comes with a downtown Charlotte address.
How to Reach Firetower Media
Spartanburg and Upstate businesses can reach Firetower Media at (803) 608-5339 or by email at [email protected]. Project inquiries, portfolio samples, and capability deck requests are handled through firetower.media. The firm typically scopes a project on a single discovery call and returns a written estimate before any production work begins.