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What Makes a Good Explainer Video

What Makes a Good Explainer Video?

Posted in June 9, 2026

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Introduction

Every business, at some point, has had to explain something that text alone could not carry. A product that needs showing. A process that needs walking through. A service that needs justifying. That is exactly where an explainer video steps in.
An explainer video is a short, focused video designed to communicate one idea clearly. It can be animated, live-action, or a mix of both. And when done right, it works. 82% of consumers say watching a video convinced them to buy a product. 96% of video marketers say video has increased brand awareness.
The proof is in the numbers: Dropbox placed a single animated explainer video on their homepage and saw a 10% lift in sign-ups – translating to millions of additional customers. That one video reportedly generated an estimated $48 million in incremental annual revenue based on revenue-per-customer estimates at the time.
But not every explainer video delivers those results. Many get made and forgotten. The difference lies in execution. This post breaks down every element that separates a forgettable explainer from one that actually works.

What is an Explainer Video?

An explainer video is a short video, typically 60 to 90 seconds, that breaks down a product, service, or concept into something a viewer can understand quickly and act on. The goal is not to say everything but to say the one thing that matters most.
They work by pairing a clear script with visuals that reinforce the message. The combination of audio and visual processing means retention jumps from 10% with text alone to 65% with video, according to what researchers call the dual coding effect.

Where Are They Used?

• Company websites and landing pages
• Product and app launch campaigns
• Sales decks and presentations
• Social media ads and YouTube pre-rolls
• Employee onboarding and internal training
• Investor pitches and crowdfunding pages

Benefits of an Explainer Video

Before getting into what makes one good, it helps to understand why businesses invest in them at all.

Benefit

What It Means for Your Business

Boosts engagement Product pages with video see a 47% higher engagement rate vs. those without (HubSpot, 2024)
Increases conversions Landing pages with video convert at rates up to 86% higher than text-only pages (EyeView)
Reduces returns Explainer videos can reduce product returns by 35% by setting accurate expectations upfront
Builds brand awareness 96% of video marketers say video directly increased brand awareness (Wyzowl)
Works across platforms From websites to social ads to email follow-ups, one video can be repurposed across channels

Sources: SellersCommerce, EyeView via HubSpot

Different Kinds of Explainer Videos

There is no single format for an explainer video. The right choice depends on your message, audience, and budget. Here is a comparison of the four most common types:

Type

Best For Limitations

Animated (2D/3D)

Tech, SaaS, startups, abstract concepts

Higher cost for premium quality

Live-action

Brands relying on trust, human connection, or product demos

Production takes longer, harder to update

Whiteboard animation Education, non-profits, B2B services, complex processes

Less brand expression, mostly black and white

Motion graphics Data-heavy, financial, or tech content needing clean visuals

Less storytelling depth without characters

Source: B2W.tv

Animated Explainer Videos

Animated videos use graphic design, illustration, and digital motion to tell a story. They are particularly effective when simplifying a product, explaining a service, or breaking down abstract concepts. Animated videos are more cost-effective than live-action because they can be fully created in a studio, requiring no camera crews, locations, or on-screen talent.

Live-Action Explainer Videos

Live-action videos use real people and real environments. They work well when a brand needs to show an actual product, build personal trust, or communicate through human emotion. The production timeline is typically longer, and updates require reshooting, which raises costs over time.

Whiteboard Animation

Whiteboard animation shows illustrations being drawn in real time against a white background. It became widely popular in the early 2010s and still remains relevant for specific use cases in 2026, especially for educational content, non-profits, and businesses explaining complex processes. It is typically the most affordable animated option.

Motion Graphics

Motion graphics combine text, icons, and animated visuals to explain concepts without characters or narrative scenes. They work well for financial services, technology companies, and any content that relies heavily on data. Motion graphics are budget-friendly because they do not require character creation or detailed animation rigs.

Clarity of Message

The most common reason an explainer video fails is not bad animation or poor audio. It is a muddled message. If you cannot state what your video is about in one sentence, you are not ready to make it.
A good explainer video focuses on one core problem and one solution. Every line of the script should serve that focus. Anything that does not help the viewer understand the single idea needs to be cut.

Expert advice: Don’t start an explainer video by explaining the product—start by explaining the problem.

How to Keep Your Message Clear

• Write the script before touching any visuals
• Avoid technical jargon unless your audience is highly specialized
• Make the problem clear within the first 10 seconds
• Use the word ‘you’ more than ‘we’ to keep the focus on the viewer
• Read the script aloud — if it sounds unnatural, rewrite it
The audience should know what the video is about and why it matters to them within the first 30 seconds. That window is non-negotiable.

Strong Storytelling

A clear message and good storytelling are not the same thing. Clarity is about what you say. Storytelling is about how you say it so people care.
The most reliable structure for an explainer video is: problem — solution — benefit. Open with a situation the viewer recognizes. Present the solution. Show the better outcome. This mirrors how people naturally process information and make decisions.

Story Phase

What It Does

Time Allocation (60-sec video)

Hook / Problem

Creates empathy and captures attention immediately 0-10 seconds

Solution

Introduces the product/service as the answer

10-40 seconds

Benefit / Outcome

Shows life after the solution

40-55 seconds

Call-to-Action Directs the viewer to the next step

55-60 seconds

Source: Educational Voice

Relatable characters matter too. A viewer who sees someone like themselves in the video is more likely to stay engaged. The character does not need to be complex — even a simple illustrated figure dealing with a familiar frustration is enough to build emotional connection.

Visual Design

Visuals are not decoration. They carry half the message. In an explainer video, the visual track should reinforce and extend the script, not just illustrate it word-for-word.

What Strong Visual Design Looks Like

• A consistent color palette that matches your brand identity
• Clean, uncluttered scenes that draw the eye to what matters
• Icons and illustrations that simplify abstract ideas
• Smooth transitions that maintain pacing without distracting the viewer
• Text on screen used sparingly, only to reinforce key points

One principle worth noting: 65% of people are visual learners, and 90% of successfully processed information is visual. This is not an argument for making videos prettier. It is an argument for taking visuals as seriously as the script.
Brand consistency also matters practically. If the visual style of your explainer video looks completely different from your website or marketing materials, it creates confusion rather than trust.

Concise Length

More content is not more helpful. A longer explainer video does not explain more effectively — it just asks the viewer to stay longer. Most viewers will not.
The ideal length for an explainer video is 60 to 90 seconds. This is the window where engagement holds and the message can still be delivered with impact. After the 2-minute mark, viewer retention drops significantly.

Video Length

Ideal Use Case
15-30 seconds

Social media ads, teasers, brand awareness campaigns

60-90 seconds

Website homepage, product pages, landing pages
90 seconds – 2 minutes

B2B services, SaaS, complex technical products

2+ minutes

Detailed onboarding, investor explainers, educational content

Source: Yansmedia

If your video is running long, the answer is almost never to keep cutting details. It usually means the message is not focused enough. Go back to the script.

Clear Call-to-Action

An explainer video without a clear CTA is a brochure. Informative, maybe. Actionable, no.
The CTA should be specific, direct, and easy to act on immediately. Vague endings like ‘learn more about us’ leave viewers with no clear next step. Strong CTAs name the action and make it simple.

Examples of High-Converting CTAs

• ‘Sign up free, no credit card required’
• ‘Book your free consultation today’
• ‘Get started in under 5 minutes’
• ‘Watch a full demo on our website’
The CTA should appear both in the voiceover and on screen at the same time. Visual reinforcement matters here. Repeat the CTA at minimum once, and make sure the final frame of the video is the CTA frame, not a fade to black.

Professional Audio

Poor audio kills a good explainer video faster than almost any other flaw. Viewers will tolerate average visuals, but tinny, muffled, or distorted audio causes immediate disengagement.

Three Audio Elements That Cannot Be Compromised

Voiceover: The voice should match the tone of the brand — friendly and confident for consumer products, authoritative but approachable for B2B. Script delivery should feel conversational, not read.
Background music: Music sets the emotional tone of the video. It should support the message without competing with the voiceover. The track should duck slightly under the voice and not overpower key moments.
Audio quality: No background noise, no inconsistent volume levels, no echo. Clean audio signals professionalism and builds trust before the viewer has even processed the message.
A good rule of thumb: if you would not listen to the voiceover on its own without wincing, redo it.

Examples and Best Practices

Real examples are more useful than abstract rules. Here are three well-known explainer videos and what made them work:

Brand

What They Did Right

Result

Dropbox

A 120-second animated explainer on their homepage that focused entirely on one problem: file access across devices 10% increase in sign-ups, contributing to millions of additional customers
Slack Used warm character-based animation with a clear problem-solution arc targeting teams overwhelmed by email

Widely cited as a key driver of early adoption and rapid growth

Airbnb Kept the video under 2 minutes, used real host-and-guest scenarios to build emotional trust

Helped establish credibility during their early growth phase

Source: Dropbox case study via BusinessCollective.

Practical Best Practices

• Write the script first – visuals come from words, not the other way around
• Keep the first sentence of the script as the hook. If it does not grab attention, rewrite it
• Test the video with someone outside your team before publishing
• Optimize the video thumbnail for platforms where autoplay is off
• Add captions – a significant portion of social video is watched without sound

How to Make an Explainer Video

Here is the production process broken into seven clear steps:

Step

Action Key Output

1

Define Purpose

Target audience, core message, one goal the video must achieve
2 Write Script

A voiceover script built around the problem-solution-benefit structure

3 Choose Style

Animated, live-action, whiteboard, or motion graphics based on budget and audience

4

Design Visuals Storyboard, character design, color palette, scene layout

5

Record Audio

Professional voiceover recording and music selection

6 Animate and Edit

Animation, transitions, timing, audio sync

7 Publish and Promote

Upload to website, social channels, ads, email campaigns

Source: TechSmith

Each step feeds the next. Rushing step one (defining purpose) means everything after it solves the wrong problem. Rushing step two (the script) means every subsequent cost — animation, audio, and editing — is spent producing the wrong message.

Conclusion

A good explainer video is not about having the best animation software or the most impressive visual effects. It is about one clear message, delivered in the right amount of time, with a story that makes the viewer care and a CTA that tells them what to do next.

To recap the key elements:
• One focused message, no jargon
• A problem-solution-benefit story structure
• Clean visuals aligned with brand identity
• 60 to 90 seconds maximum
• A specific, visible call-to-action
• Professional audio that builds trust

If you are planning a corporate video, product explainer, or digital ad for your business, Dive Media & Entertainment produces explainer and corporate videos for brands across Pune and Mumbai. Every project starts with strategy, not a camera.