Animation for marketing matters now more than ever.
A goldfish can focus for about nine seconds. Humans average 8.25.¹ Holding attention is harder than ever, which is why animated videos are such an effective tool.
Why animation wins attention
Video dominates internet usage. In 2024, the video category accounted for roughly 39% of fixed-network downstream and 35% of mobile downstream traffic globally.² On mobile specifically, video now makes up about 60% of total data traffic, reflecting how people consume on-the-go.³
These aren’t forecasts, but observed realities, which is why brands investing in animated storytelling are outpacing those that rely on static formats.
Beyond attention, marketers report concrete returns. Today, 93% of video marketers say video delivers good ROI, and 95% consider video important to their marketing strategy.⁴ LinkedIn is now the most widely used distribution channel among video marketers, signalling the rise of B2B visual storytelling at scale.⁴
From tactics to marketing strategy: the business case for animation
Animation does more than add polish. It helps brands reach people, explain ideas clearly, and drive results. Here’s how:
- ROI and performance – Motion leads the feed. Engaging video content drives view-through, shares and clicks, and gives you more first-party engagement data to optimise future creative.⁴
- Complex made simple – Animation is unmatched at simplifying complex concepts. Think product demos, service explainers, or abstract benefits that live-action can’t visualise cost-effectively.
- Distinctive brand codes – A codified animation system becomes a signature asset: palette, motion behaviours, animated characters, typography in motion, all reinforcing brand identity across digital platforms.
- Emotional connection at scale – When animated, character-led brand storytelling helps people remember a message and feel closer to a brand in ways that static images can’t.
Brand's story examples using animation strategically
Spotify Wrapped
A yearly campaign that shows users their listening habits. The results are shared widely online, turning it into a regular event people look forward to.⁵
Starbucks “Drink In, Breathe Out”
Starbucks marked the 2024 holidays with a film built from stop-motion, 3D sets, and 2D animation. The handmade style gave it a slower pace and a calmer mood, exactly the tone the brand wanted at the end of a hectic year.⁷
Duolingo “Death of Duo” saga
A 2025 stunt centred on the brand’s owl mascot. By playfully “killing off” and reviving Duo, the campaign filled social feeds around the world and sparked a clear rise in app engagement.⁸
h2o case study 1: Mastercard Travel Pass
Mastercard wanted to promote its Travel Pass mobile app to audiences in Spain who were less familiar with digital travel tools. h2o produced an animation with a simple holiday theme and added music to support the relaxed tone. The film was made in Spanish and English to reach more people. Check out the case study.
h2o Case study 2: Essentra Components product videos
For Essentra, h2o produced product videos that mixed live action with simple animation. The animated elements highlighted key details and made the technical information easier to follow. The result was clear, straightforward communication of Essentra’s message. Learn more in our case study.
Platforms and formats for animated videos
Animation can be used in many places. In 2025, LinkedIn was the main channel for video marketing, with Instagram close behind.³ Short clips work best on social platforms, while longer explainers are better for websites, sales teams, and events.Short-form animated stories thrive on social media; deeper animated explainers support websites, sales enablement, and events.
Emerging formats like interactive and shoppable video offer opportunities to combine visual storytelling with conversion mechanics.²
Anchor to brand strategy
Start with your positioning, audience truth and business objective. Define the role for animated videos: demand creation, education, conversion or loyalty. Codify motion rules that express your brand identity: speed, easing, transitions, framing.
Build a distinctive animation system
Create a reusable toolkit: character library, iconography, motion behaviours, transitions, sound design. This evolves into ownable visual storytelling codes that compound recognition.
Tell tighter stories for each target audience
Map jobs-to-be-done, pain points and context. Then use animated storytelling formats that match intent: 6-15s cut-downs for discovery, 30-60s explainers for consideration, modular feature loops for conversion landing pages.
Design for platforms and signals
Plan by channel. For LinkedIn, B2B narrative cuts that earn comment-level engagement. For YouTube, longer narratives with clear chapters. For retail PDPs, silent, loopable product explainers. Use UTMs and naming conventions to track which story beats drive action.
Measure what matters
Tie creative variants to outcomes, not vanity metrics. Pair engagement and attention with assisted conversions, demo requests, qualified site actions and brand lift. Feed learnings back into creative sprints.
Advanced creative plays that separate leaders from the pack
- Narrative IP – Develop recurring animated characters that embody your value proposition and can headline seasonal activations.
- Data-driven personalisation – Swap lines, scenes and CTAs based on segment, lifecycle or product interest to create an immersive experience that still feels on-brand.
- Systematic explainer design – For complex offerings, create a scene grammar that maps each benefit to a repeatable motion metaphor. This is a scalable way to keep engaging video content clear and consistent.
- Accessibility by design – Design for silent autoplay, high contrast and caption-first storytelling so meaning survives every context.
Together, these approaches show how animated storytelling can move beyond one-off content and become a long-term brand asset.
Video marketing trends to plan for now
- Interactive animated content – Shoppable motion, scroll-linked micro-interactions and story branches are collapsing the gap between watch and act.
- Craft-led storytelling – Stop-motion, illustration, and mixed-media techniques are seeing a resurgence as brands look for ways to stand out and deliver an immersive experience that feels distinctive.
- Personalisation in video marketing – Dynamic scenes and CTAs that reflect audience intent, with guardrails to preserve craft and brand consistency.
How h2o creative helps
You bring the commercial objective - we bring the creative system. Our team designs distinctive visual storytelling codes, then deploys them across campaigns and touchpoints to deliver measurable impact.
- Animation services - from strategy and scripting to design, 2D/3D production, character development, motion systems, and localisation.
- Case studies - see how brands have used animation to simplify complex messages, boost engagement, and increase conversion.
- Related reading: motion graphics in marketing, creative storytelling for brands.
At h2o creative we specialise in turning complex messages into simple, powerful stories through animation for marketing.
Let’s talk
If you need an animated campaign that’s beautiful and measurable, one that aligns with your marketing strategy and makes complex ideas simple, let’s build it. Talk to h2o creative about crafting distinctive animation for marketing that drives brand performance. Look over our case studies and services. Then get in touch.
Sources
Golden Steps ABA – Average Human Attention Span (Statistics)
AppLogic Networks (formerly Sandvine) – Global Internet Phenomena Report 2024
Ericsson Mobility Report – Streaming video – from megabits to gigabytes
Wyzowl – Video Marketing Statistics 2025
Spotify Newsroom – 2024 Wrapped: User Experience
Creative Review – New McDonald’s campaign celebrates its place in anime culture
Starbucks Stories EMEA – The stop-motion magic behind “Drink In, Breathe Out”