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Lower Third Definition

A lower third is a graphic overlay positioned in the bottom portion of the video frame, typically used to identify speakers, display titles, show locations, or present supplementary text information.

Why lower thirds matter

Lower thirds are the most common graphic element in video production. Every news broadcast, documentary, corporate video, conference recording, and interview uses them to identify who is speaking. They answer the viewer's immediate question — "who is this person and why should I listen to them?" — without interrupting the visual flow of the content.

Beyond identification, lower thirds communicate hierarchy and context. A name with a title establishes authority. A location lower third establishes geography. A topic lower third signals content shifts. These subtle text elements guide viewers through content structure, reducing cognitive load and improving comprehension.

For video teams producing content at volume — news organizations, corporate video departments, conference capture teams — lower thirds represent repetitive work that benefits enormously from templates and automation. Creating unique lower thirds for every speaker in a 40-person conference is tedious manual work that templates can reduce to a data-entry task.

Best practices

Design lower thirds that are readable at the smallest likely viewing size. Mobile viewing means your lower third must be legible on a 6-inch screen. Use sufficient text size, high-contrast colors, and avoid thin fonts that disappear at small sizes. Test designs on actual mobile devices, not just desktop monitors.

Keep lower third information concise — name, title or role, and optionally organization. Resist cramming multiple lines of information into a graphic that appears for only 3-5 seconds. Viewers need to read the information before it disappears, and cluttered lower thirds compete with spoken content for attention.

Maintain brand consistency across lower third designs within a project or series. Font, color, animation style, and positioning should be consistent so viewers develop familiarity with the visual system. Inconsistent graphics feel amateurish and distract from content.

How ShotAI relates

ShotAI's indexing captures on-screen text including lower thirds, enabling teams to search for video segments where specific people are identified or specific text information is displayed.

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Written by the ShotAI team. Last updated May 2026.

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