Media Ingest Definition
Media ingest is the systematic process of importing raw footage and associated files from cameras, storage cards, and external sources into a production system, including verification, organization, backup, and preparation for editing.
Why media ingest matters for video teams
Ingest is the first touchpoint where raw footage enters your managed environment. Everything that happens here determines how smoothly the rest of production flows. A careless ingest — dragging files from a card to a random folder — creates problems that compound throughout post-production: missing clips, broken file paths, no backups, lost metadata, and footage that nobody can find six months later.
Professional ingest is methodical. It verifies that all files transferred completely and without corruption. It creates immediate backups before source cards are formatted. It applies consistent naming and folder structures. It extracts and preserves camera metadata. It triggers any automated processing (proxy generation, AI indexing, transcoding) that makes footage immediately useful.
The stakes are high because ingest is often irreversible. Once a camera card is formatted and returned to production, the only copy of that footage is what the ingest process captured. Errors here — incomplete transfers, corrupted files, skipped cards — can mean permanent loss of irreplaceable content.
Best practices for media ingest
Use dedicated ingest software that performs checksum verification on every file. A byte-level comparison between source and destination ensures that network glitches, drive errors, or interrupted transfers are caught immediately rather than discovered weeks later during editing. Never rely on drag-and-drop copying for production media.
Create at least two copies before formatting source cards. The 3-2-1 backup rule applies at ingest: three copies on two different media types with one offsite. At minimum, copy to your working storage and a backup drive simultaneously. Only format cards after verification of both copies.
Standardize your folder structure and naming convention before the first day of shooting. Document it so that every team member — DITs, assistants, editors — follows the same pattern. Consistency at ingest prevents the organizational debt that makes footage unfindable later. Include shoot date, camera identifier, and card number as minimum distinguishing information.
How ShotAI relates to media ingest
ShotAI integrates with ingest workflows to begin AI indexing the moment footage arrives, ensuring new material is searchable within minutes of import rather than requiring a separate cataloging step.
Related Terms
Transcoding
Transcoding is the process of converting video from one codec, resolution, or container format to another, typically to optimize footage for a specific stage of production such as editing, delivery, or archival..
Video Asset Management
Video asset management (VAM) refers to the systems, processes, and tools used to organize, store, search, and retrieve video content throughout its lifecycle, from initial capture through archival..
Footage Logging
Footage logging is the process of systematically reviewing, annotating, and documenting raw video content with descriptions, timecodes, ratings, and keywords to make clips findable and useful during editing..
Written by the ShotAI team. Last updated May 2026.