When is compress video the right move?
Use compress video when that is the direct fix for the real problem, rather than a side issue like format or file size.
Compress WebM video in your browser with private local processing and export a smaller sharing copy without uploading.
Drop a file here, upload from your device, or open your library.

Compress video when the file already works technically but is too heavy to send, upload, or store comfortably.
Compress WebM when a browser-friendly source is still too large and you need a lighter copy for sending, reviewing, or publishing.
Start with moderate compression. If the file is still too big, lower resolution before pushing compression harder.
Compression shrinks the file while trying to keep it usable. Resize changes the dimensions. Trim reduces duration.
If compression still is not enough, trim unused duration or lower resolution before trying again.
Use compress video when that is the direct fix for the real problem, rather than a side issue like format or file size.
Usually no. Start with the edit that matches the main problem, then export one test copy before stacking more changes on top.
Yes. vdoflow works best as a sequence of focused steps, so you can trim, crop, resize, convert, or compress in the order the job actually needs.
Convert WebM when MP4 delivery is safer.
Use the general compressor for any video source.
Lower dimensions to reduce size.
Choose a different output format.
Start with one focused workflow and keep the suggested settings ready when the page opens.
Use the same vdoflow tool inside your own docs, product pages, or support articles.
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