There's a reason
it's called Blindspot.
A creative photo and video studio built for organizations doing work the world needs to hear about.
A dream, a sketch, and a calling.
The name came from a dream.
One night, Billy dreamed about a logo — four dots in a simple grid. Two gray dots on the left, one red dot on the top right, and one gray dot on the bottom right. In the dream, the red dot carried a clear sense of purpose: it represented what people cannot see about themselves. The calling behind it was to help others recognize what they were missing, see more clearly, and move forward.
Billy woke up, grabbed a piece of paper, sketched exactly what he had seen, and put it in a drawer. It sat there for two years.
When the time came to start a production company, Billy needed a name. He remembered the dream. The logo was already drawn. The name was already there.
Most organizations are doing work that matters — but the world doesn't always know it. Donors don't see the impact. Communities don't know the story exists. That gap between the work and the world seeing it — that's the blindspot. We exist to fill the spot.
Billy Altman
Creative Director
Billy has been behind a camera since 2005 — self-taught, learning by doing, finding the shot before he knew what to call it. The turning point came at a Cru missions conference where he was photographing speakers. A professional photographer stopped, looked at his work, and asked him to join the team. That moment clarified something he already knew: this wasn't a hobby. It was a calling.
Photography led to video. Video led to a conviction that the most important stories are usually the ones nobody is telling yet — and that the organizations doing the most meaningful work are often the ones least equipped to show it. That's the work Billy cares about most.
Billy and his wife Rebecca are full-time missionaries with Enspire Global, and that calling shapes everything about how Blindspot Media operates. He doesn't show up with a shot list and a clock. He listens. He asks questions. He cares about the person in front of him — not the deliverable.
The world should know what you're doing.
The work starts with a conversation. Tell us what you're working on.