Telling Stories with Motion Graphics

Jan 13, 2021 by Gabriela Pinto

From the beginning of time, we’ve loved diving into stories that aren’t our own, whether they’re true or made up. Someone tells them to us, we read them in a book, hear them in a podcast, watch them on stage, or experience them through a movie, series, short film, or video.

The ways we tell stories keep multiplying, and in today’s digital world, the possibilities feel practically endless.

This time, we’re zooming in on videos built with motion graphics. These tend to be short pieces—rarely longer than 2–3 minutes—that use a whole universe of techniques and transitions to deliver and condense narratives in powerful ways. They can turn stories into something magnetic, visually striking, and genuinely beautiful.

But here’s the one thing we should never lose sight of: technique exists to serve the story, not the other way around.

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Without Storytelling, There's No Story

This is where the real importance of storytelling becomes crystal clear. You can have a technically jaw-dropping video full of stunning graphics and clever compositions, but if it lacks a solid concept and a meaningful script, it will be forgotten in no time. And being forgettable is the last thing we want.

Storytelling is an art worth studying and mastering. Think of it as the backbone of any project: it creates the atmosphere, the magic, the tension. It controls the pacing, builds a genuine connection with the viewer, and stirs real emotions. Let me show you just how powerful that connection can be:

Close your eyes for a second and think of your all-time favorite movie. Now bring to mind your favorite moment in it…

Chances are you remember the dialogue (if there was any) only vaguely. The visuals or specific shots might feel a little fuzzy too. But I bet you can recall—down to the exact detail—how it made you feel. When a piece creates a personal emotional experience, it sticks with you forever.

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The Supporting Character Serving the Story

In Motion Graphics, it’s absolutely crucial to have your script and narrative approach nailed down before you start playing with techniques and visuals. These pieces are so short that you have very little time to let the story unfold and land properly. Only once the story foundation is rock-solid does the magic of moving graphics come in to elevate everything and make the video truly shine.

There are many different ways to approach storytelling, and in Motion Graphics you don’t always need a voice narrating the tale. In fact, you don’t even need a voice at all. You can build the atmosphere and guide the viewer through typography, graphics, or the characters themselves, helping them understand what’s happening and feel the intended emotions.

Every single element in your Motion Graphics piece becomes part of the storytelling toolkit, and the best part is that you get to control them completely: from the gentle drift of clouds or a falling leaf to the subtle body language of a character.

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Steps to Create a Story with Motion Graphics

That’s why every project like this needs to follow this simple “recipe” of steps:

1. Conceptualization

Never skip this one. It lays the foundation for the entire project. Always ask yourself: Who is this for? What emotion do I want to evoke? What am I trying to achieve?

2. Creating the Script or Storytelling

Next, figure out how you’re going to tell the story. What are the key turning points? What’s the rhythm? How will the beginning, middle, and end flow? Who (if anyone) will narrate, and how? What tone will it carry?

3. Storyboard

This step makes everything so much clearer before you start animating. The storyboard gives you a visual plan of the scenes, timing, framing, and camera movements you’ll need.

4. Design and Art Direction for Styleframes

One of the most exciting parts of the process: this is when you start giving graphic form to every element in the video. Everything must sit under a consistent art direction that feels harmonious and true to the original concept.

5. Animating the Piece

Yes! We finally reach the part we all love: bringing everything to life by adding movement and energy to what we’ve built so far.

6. Post-Production and Compositing

If you have 3D animations that need compositing after rendering, or elements that require fine-tuning to nail a specific look and feel tied to the concept, this is when you do it.

7. Sound Design

Every audiovisual piece needs sound to complete the experience. Audios, music, and/or voice work together to build the final atmosphere you want each scene to carry.

animación motion graphics

The truth is, we have to see motion graphics videos as a collection of elements that live together and depend on one another. If any one of them is missing, poorly executed, or out of sequence in the process, the whole piece suffers and won’t feel complete or meaningful.

Gabriela Pinto

Motion Graphic Artist and professor in SHIFTA’s Master’s in Motion Graphics.

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