WeVideo Glossary | Video Production & Educational Technology Terms

What is Trim? Definition and Example Uses | WeVideo

Written by WeVideo | Jan 1, 1970 12:00:00 AM

What is Trim?

In video editing, trim refers to cutting the beginning or end of a video clip in order to remove unwanted parts while preserving the remaining content. It is a basic video editing method that makes it easy to cut and edit beginning or end parts of a video without having to re-record. Trimming videos makes it easy to:

Remove extra footage at the start
Remove unnecessary footage at the end
Shorten clips without changing the middle content

Trimming helps clean up videos to highlight the most effective content.

Why Trimming Matters

Video trimming helps shape raw footage into a clean, focused, and engaging video by removing unnecessary parts at the beginning or end. This enhances viewer engagement, makes content more professional, and saves time for viewers. Other benefits to video trimming include:

Creating a polished look and feel
Improves storytelling
Supports deeper learning
Improves communication

Trimming improves focus, pacing, and resultantly, the viewing experience.

Example Use Cases for Trim

  • Education: Educators use trim to remove a minute of silence before a recorded math lesson, eliminate awkward pauses in a science presentation, or create smaller topic-based videos from a 30-minute video.

  • Businesses: Businesses use trimming to enhance product videos without unwanted footage, turn a 60-second ad into a 15-second social media highlight, and remove delays or repetitive content.

  • Content Creation: Creators use trim to edit vlog clips, edit full livestreams into key moments, or trim gaming videos so gameplay starts immediately on YouTube.