Planet Nutshell, Inc.
visit site- $10,000+
- 2 - 9 employees
- Cambridge, MA
Planet Nutshell, Inc. is a full-service animation studio based in Boston, Mass. Founded in 2008, this company has five employees. Planet Nutshell, Inc. offers video production services for businesses of all sizes from startups to global brands.
Client Insights
Industry Expertise
30%
30%
30%
10%
Client Size Distribution
Small Business (<$10M) 40%
Midmarket ($10M - $1B) 50%
Enterprise (>$1B) 10%
Common Project Size
$10K-$49K 8 projects
$50K-$199K 1 project
Clients
Highlights from Recent Projects
Planet Nutshell, Inc. completed a video production project for Wiki Education, a knowledge sharing company. The main objective was to raise awareness among medical professionals and institutions about the opportunity to educate the world through Wiki Education's programs. Planet Nutshell was selected due to their budget-friendly pricing, great culture fit, and alignment with company values. The team developed a script, created storyboards, and designed animations for two separate 1-minute videos targeting different audiences. The videos were used to recruit participants into a grant-funded project and were created as fully open-source videos.
Planet Nutshell, Inc. was hired by Boston's local PBS station to create a series of educational videos as part of a new engineering program designed to engage Latinx youth. Planet Nutshell was chosen for their understanding of the project, creativity, and enthusiasm. The process included creating mood boards, storyboards, a rough cut, and a final cut of the animation. The project manager was the main point of contact and the feedback process was described as easy, with clear dates, timelines, and receptiveness to feedback.
Koppelman & Associates, a film and video production company, hired Planet Nutshell, Inc. to create an animation sequence for a music video. Planet Nutshell was selected for their budget-friendly pricing, great culture fit, and a referral. The team was tasked with creating two sequences of approximately 25 and 45 seconds each, showcasing underwater sea life and beach scenes. The sequences were designed to highlight the issue of ocean pollution.