Delivery Format Definition
A delivery format is the complete technical specification — including codec, resolution, frame rate, audio configuration, and container — required for distributing finished video to a specific platform or client.
Why delivery format matters
Every destination for video content has specific technical requirements. YouTube accepts certain codecs and resolutions. Broadcast networks require precise audio loudness levels and color space compliance. Cinema exhibition demands DCP packaging. Social platforms each have optimal formats that maximize quality within their processing pipeline. Delivering in the wrong format results in rejection, re-encoding artifacts, or suboptimal viewer experience.
For video teams, delivery format complexity has multiplied as distribution channels have proliferated. A single piece of content might need delivery in 5-10 different specifications: broadcast master, web streaming master, social media variants (each platform has different optimal specs), cinema DCP, and archival preservation copy. Each has different resolution, codec, audio, and metadata requirements.
Getting delivery format wrong has real consequences. Broadcast rejection requires re-mastering under time pressure. Platform re-encoding of non-optimal uploads degrades quality unnecessarily. Client deliverables in wrong specifications damage professional credibility. Understanding and documenting delivery requirements is a professional necessity.
Best practices
Document delivery specifications at project inception, not at delivery time. When you know the output requirements before production begins, you can make informed decisions about capture format, editing resolution, and color space that align with final delivery. Discovering specifications at the end sometimes reveals incompatibilities that require costly rework.
Maintain a delivery specification library for your common destinations — updated regularly as platforms change their recommendations. YouTube's optimal upload specs differ from Netflix's delivery requirements, which differ from broadcast standards. Having current, verified specs on hand prevents last-minute research under deadline pressure.
Automate delivery encoding through templates and presets. Once you have verified specifications for each destination, encode them as presets in your transcoding system. This ensures consistency across projects and eliminates human error in manually configuring dozens of encoding parameters.
How ShotAI relates
ShotAI helps teams locate final deliverables and their source masters within organized libraries, enabling quick identification of which delivery formats have been produced for any given project.
Related Terms
Video Compression
Video compression is the application of algorithms that reduce video file size by eliminating redundant or perceptually irrelevant data, balancing storage efficiency against visual quality preservation..
Video Codec
A video codec is a software or hardware algorithm that compresses raw video data for storage and transmission (encoding) and decompresses it for playback and editing (decoding), balancing file size against visual quality..
Adaptive Bitrate Streaming
Adaptive bitrate streaming is a technology that dynamically adjusts video quality in real-time based on the viewer's available bandwidth and device capabilities, ensuring smooth playback without buffering..
Written by the ShotAI team. Last updated May 2026.