Lights, Camera, Action: Short-Form Videos Are the Future of Employee Content
Imagine you’re expecting a baby and starting to worry about what benefits your company offers.
You have questions like: How much time off will you get? How much pay can you expect during that time off? What will your medical plan cover before and after the baby is born? What kinds of benefits are available to parents to make balancing work and life easier? And so many more.
Life events like this can be challenging and stressful—but feeling confident in your understanding of benefits would be a huge relief.
Yet, often getting answers to those questions can be arduous. Your company’s intranet is full of jargon, confusing policies, and long pages with buried information. Frustrated, you reach out to a person for help.
Now imagine your company proactively sent you short-form, 2-minute videos at just the right time – one with an overview of the policy and time off when you’re thinking about having a baby, one explaining your medical benefits when you’re expecting, another right before the birth with what you’ll need to do when the baby arrives, and one before you return to work to ease your anxiety about the transition – to name a few.
Why are short-form videos a great tool for reaching employees?
Well, the digital landscape is witnessing a significant shift towards short-form video content, driven by platforms like TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts.
While videos are hardly a new medium, the short-form format trend is fueled by:
Digital marketing is the obvious place for videos – but not the only place.
Short-form videos are transforming internal communications at companies by:
We recently partnered with a tech company of over 18,000 employees to pilot a series of short-form videos aimed at clarifying the Benefits topics generating the most employee questions to their help center. After identifying the top five topics to address, we conceptualized the videos, scripted and storyboarded them, and enlisted our colleagues to film segments.
From there, we edited the footage in low-cost tools and produced drafts for the client’s review. Some drafts required complete reworks, while others only needed minor tweaks.
To maximize insights, we intentionally used a variety of formats to test what resonated most effectively.
Our top lesson learned: Making videos isn’t that hard if you take a scrappy approach


