GEO-first video strategy
I map the questions your buyers ask AI — then plan short, on-camera answers that show up in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews.
Personal profile · About Dane
Digital Accomplice is a San Francisco Bay Area video strategy and production agency, and I help B2B companies grow visibility, trust and pipeline with human-centered video content.


Out in the field

Studio

Between takes
Who I am
I live in Oakland, California, and I'm a father of two daughters. The garage where I launched Digital Accomplice in 2010 is still there.
I'm an entrepreneur, but I came to it the long way — through a thirty-year video career that started in the DC area in 1996 as a broadcast duplication tech at Roland House. From there I edited at Henninger Media Services, cut National Geographic's Explorer documentary series, produced multimedia for USA Today at the dawn of online news, and led video at Future US for PC Gamer, Xbox Magazine, and GamesRadar.com through the YouTube-takeover years. Later I served as Senior Video Producer at Firaxis Games. Every job taught me a different thing about what makes video actually work — and what makes it fail.
Sixteen years ago I started Digital Accomplice from scratch in my Oakland garage — a Bay Area tradition. Across that career I've conducted over 1,000 on-camera interviews and produced thousands of videos, for clients including Google, Adobe, Twitch, HP, Taco Bell, Mt Dew, and Volkswagen. I've watched the medium move from broadcast to web to mobile to social to AI search. Every platform shift killed half the playbooks. The half that survived: tell true human stories, tie them to real outcomes, distribute them where buyers actually pay attention.
That's how I got to the mission I'm on now.
Help B2B companies accomplish their business goals by harnessing AI — without losing trust — by leaning into the power of human-centered video.— The Dane Frederiksen mission, 2026
What I do
I help B2B companies use video to accomplish real business goals. The work spans three pieces — strategy, production, and distribution — and I can enter the project at any of them. Most companies need all three to fix the same problem: they're invisible in AI search, their video doesn't get used by sales, and nothing ties back to pipeline. I fix that.
I map the questions your buyers ask AI — then plan short, on-camera answers that show up in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews.
No slop, no AI avatars. I direct founders on camera so the answer sounds like you, not a template. Then I cut it for YouTube, LinkedIn, and your site.
Every video links out to proof and gets linked back from your site, articles, and social. The machine sees the same story everywhere — and learns to repeat it.
My approach
I prefer to start with strategy. Three questions shape every brief: What revenue motion does this video serve? Who's the buyer? What do they need to believe? Answer those, and we can measure whether the work actually succeeded.
That said, I can jump into a project at any point. Sometimes there's a deadline, an event, or a press cycle — and we shoot first and pull the strategy in as we go. What I won't do is make video for the sake of making video. Without a plan and a business goal, project success can't be measured — and that's bad business.
My experience
I started in 1996 cutting broadcast for Discovery Channel and National Geographic's Explorer. Then USA Today, Future US (PC Gamer, Xbox Magazine, GamesRadar), and Firaxis Games. In 2010 I founded Digital Accomplice from my Oakland garage. Over 1,000 on-camera interviews and thousands of videos shipped end-to-end since.
I've watched the medium move from broadcast → web → mobile → social → AI search. Every shift killed half the playbooks. The half that survived: tell true human stories, tie them to real outcomes, distribute them where buyers actually pay attention. That's the methodology I bring to every engagement.
The problems founders bring me
Who I serve
If you want push-button AI-generated video, faceless explainers, or volume-over-quality content farms — I'm the wrong call. I work with humans who want to be the trusted voice in their category.
Thought leadership
Thirty years inside this industry, and the next decade will look nothing like the last one. I publish about what's working, what's failing, and the vocabulary the field needs to describe it. Two terms I coined have already started showing up in the conversation:
The opposite of repurposing. Instead of cutting up content after the fact, you plan the deliverables before the shoot — so a single production yields every format you need: LinkedIn shorts, GEO answers, sales decks, social clips, the whole stack. Cheaper, faster, and the assets sound like they belong together because they do.
The race to mass-produce AI-generated video at volume. It looks like reach. It feels like productivity. But it doesn't differentiate, and it doesn't build trust the way human-first video does — and AI search engines are already learning to ignore it. The companies leaning into slop at scale will lose the AI-search era.
The receipts
Every link below points to proof — and every one of those pages points back here. That's how you build a footprint AI engines actually understand and repeat. It's also how you control what people see when they're not in the room with you.
Book a 15-minute conversation. I'll show you exactly where you're invisible, what your competitors are doing right, and how video closes the gap.