Here is the uncomfortable truth about getting crew work in India: most of it is still handed out in WhatsApp groups, over chai, and through the phone of whoever ran the last shoot. As one industry write-up put it, if you are not in someone's contacts, you “effectively don't exist to the industry.” You are not hiring the best, you are hiring the most connected.
The good news is that the system has a gap, and the gap is widening. Producers and line producers are tired of calling twenty people to staff one shoot. OTT and ad timelines have collapsed. The people who hire increasingly want to search, not beg favours. That shift is your way in, if you are findable.
Why “who you know” feels like the only way
The WhatsApp group works for the people already inside it. For everyone else it has no search, no filter, no proof, and a gatekeeper at the door. You cannot be discovered in a place you cannot enter. Worse, the same opacity that locks you out is what lets scams and unpaid “exposure” gigs thrive. Even established names talk about how much harder it is for an outsider to break in. So the move is not to grind harder for an invite to the group. It is to build something a producer can find on their own, at the moment they need you.
Build the page that introduces you
Your reel is scattered across Instagram, a Vimeo link, and a PDF nobody opens. That is not a professional identity, it is a scavenger hunt. One clean page that holds every craft you work in — your work, your credits, your rate, your availability — does the introducing for you, on a link you can put in every bio and every pitch.
That is what a Crew profile is: a vanity URL like crew.in/yourname that a director can open and immediately understand. Multi-craft is the point. If you direct and also write, or shoot and also grade, one page carries both, each with its own work and rate. You can see how working crew set theirs up before you build yours.
Make your credits provable, not just claimed
Anyone can write “worked on a Netflix show” in a bio. Producers know it, so they discount all of it. Worse, the credit system is openly gamed: people mass-add themselves to big films, and IMDb hides its edit history, so a list of credits proves little. The thing that actually moves you up is a credit the other people on the project confirm. On Crew, credits live on a shared project record — the people you made the work with vouch for it, and it shows on both your pages. A reputation you cannot fake is worth more than a reel you can.
Know your rate before you walk in
The fastest way to stay broke is to guess your rate in the dark and guess low. Producers know the number. Agencies know the number. You are the only one kept out of it, and undercharging out of fear becomes a multi-year trap. Before you take the next call, see what your peers actually charge and drop your own rate anonymously into the Fair Pay benchmark. Walking in with a number you can defend is half of getting paid properly. Our rates guide walks through how to set one.
Get found by the people who actually hire
Once your page is real, discovery does the work you used to do by hustling. People who hire search by craft, city, and availability. They shortlist from reels before anyone picks up a phone. The crew who get called are not always the most connected — increasingly they are the most findable, with the clearest proof. Keep your availability current, and you turn up exactly when a shoot needs you.
Protect yourself from the scams that target newcomers
The informal channel is full of traps aimed at people without contacts: fake casting calls, “registration” or “artist card” fees of ₹10,000 to ₹50,000, and advance-fee job scams. Remember one rule: a legitimate job never charges you to apply or audition. If someone asks for money to give you work, it is a scam. A platform that verifies who is hiring and never charges you to apply removes the channel these scams live in.
Why the WhatsApp group can't be the answer
It is worth being precise about why the default channel fails you, because it explains what to do instead. A WhatsApp or Facebook group has no search, so a producer cannot find “an available colourist in Mumbai” without scrolling thousands of messages. It has no filter by craft, city, rate, or availability. It has no record, so a job posted on Tuesday is gone by Thursday and your reply is buried. It has a gatekeeper, so you have to be added by someone who already trusts you, which is the exact barrier you are trying to get past. And because it runs on unverified DMs, it is where the fake-casting and advance-fee scams breed. None of this is fixable from inside the group. The alternative is not a nicer group; it is a structured place where the work is searchable, the people are verified, the credits are real, and nobody is charged to apply. That is the entire reason a product like Crew exists, and why “just join more groups” is not the path out.
What makes a profile that gets you hired
A findable page only works if it answers a producer's questions in five seconds. Build it for the person scanning twenty profiles on a deadline, not for an awards jury:
- Lead with your best three pieces, not everything. A tight, current reel beats a dump of old work. The first thing they see should be the work you want more of.
- A headline that states craft and city. “Editor, Mumbai. Ad films and OTT.” not “Storyteller. Dreamer.” They are searching for a role in a place.
- Every craft you actually work in, each with its own work and rate. If you shoot and grade, show both, so you turn up in both searches.
- Confirmed credits over a wall of logos. One project the crew vouches for is worth more than ten you merely list.
- A rate and current availability. Producers shortlist people they can actually afford and book this week. Hiding your rate gets you skipped, not chased.
No credits yet? Build them.
The cruel loop for newcomers is that you need work to get work. You break it by manufacturing real, creditable pieces rather than waiting for permission:
- Make spec and passion work that shows the work you want to be hired for. A self-initiated ad cut or a short you edited counts as a portfolio piece.
- Collaborate sideways. Other emerging crew need an editor, a DOP, a sound person too. Make work together and credit each other. A graph of peers rising together beats waiting to be picked by someone above you.
- Take the one paid junior gig and credit it properly. Volunteer ADs and assistants are common in India; if you do unpaid or low-paid work, do it on your terms and make sure you walk away with a confirmed credit, not just a free lunch.
- Turn every gig into the next one by recording it: the credit, who you worked with, and a line you can quote. Three credited projects change how a profile reads entirely.
What the people who hire actually search for
Optimise your page for how producers and line producers actually look. On a tight shoot they filter by craft, city, availability, and rate, then judge on the reel and on whether your credits are real. They are not reading your bio for poetry; they are checking three things: can this person do the job, are they available, and can I trust the track record. Make all three obvious and you move from “never found” to “shortlisted.” That is the whole game, and it is winnable without a single contact.
The unglamorous habits that compound
- Credit the crew you work with. Every confirmed credit lifts your standing and theirs. Generosity is a growth strategy here.
- Keep one home, not ten links. Update the page after every project. A stale profile reads as “not working.”
- Say no to “exposure.” Unpaid work for a credit is fine on your terms; unpaid because you were too unsure of your worth to ask is not.
- Get featured. Editorial spots like Pick of the Week put your work in front of people who would never have found your number.
You do not need a godfather. You need to be findable.
The industry will keep running on relationships, and it should — but relationships start with being seen, and being seen no longer requires being born into the right phone. Build the page, prove the work, name your rate, and let the people who hire come to you. Talent that nobody can find loses to talent that is merely good but visible, every single time. Make yourself the second kind, and the contacts will follow the work rather than the other way around.