How to Get Engineers to Actually Use Videolink
If engineers aren’t using Videolink, it’s not a tooling problem.
It’s a trust and usefulness problem.
Engineers adopt tools that:
- save time
- reduce noise
- make their work easier
If your videos don’t do that, they’ll ignore them.
Here’s how to fix it.
1. Start by solving their problem (not yours)
Don’t introduce Videolink as:
“Let’s start using video for communication”
That sounds like extra work.
Instead, tie it to something engineers already hate:
- unclear PR descriptions
- vague bug reports
- endless “can you clarify?” comments
Position it like this:
“This will reduce back-and-forth on your PRs”
Now it’s relevant.
2. Keep videos under 60 seconds
Long videos feel like meetings.
Short videos feel like messages.
If an engineer sees a 3-minute video, they’ll postpone it.
If they see a 30-second one, they’ll watch it immediately.
Rule:
One idea = one short video.
3. Show real context (don’t explain abstractly)
Engineers don’t need more descriptions.
They need to see what’s happening.
Don’t say:
“The dropdown behaves incorrectly”
Show:
- the screen
- the interaction
- the exact moment it breaks
This removes guesswork and saves time.
4. Always ask a clear question
Most videos fail because there’s no clear outcome.
If there’s no question, there’s no action.
End your video with something like:
- “Is this the right fix?”
- “Should we handle this case?”
- “Is this expected behavior?”
This gives engineers a clear next step.
5. Don’t replace everything with video
If you push Videolink for everything, engineers will resist it.
Use it only when it adds value:
- UI bugs
- product feedback
- explaining changes
Skip it for:
- quick yes/no questions
- simple updates
This keeps it useful instead of annoying.
6. Make it easier than writing
Engineers won’t adopt something that feels slower than typing.
So your videos should:
- be faster to record than writing a long message
- remove the need for follow-ups
- save time overall
If it feels like extra effort, adoption dies.
Simple format that works every time
Use this structure:
- Show context (where you are)
- Show the issue (what’s happening)
- Ask a question (what you need)
Keep it short. Keep it clear.
Why engineers actually start using it
Engineers don’t adopt tools because they’re “cool”.
They adopt them because:
- they reduce friction
- they save time
- they remove ambiguity
If your use of Videolink does that, they’ll start using it too.
If not, they’ll ignore it. That’s the difference.
