Most strategy rollouts don’t fail at the strategy. They fail at the format. Guardian Group, one of the Caribbean’s largest insurance and financial services groups, was preparing to launch a transformed HR strategy and a new employee evaluation system across multiple markets – with the entire rollout still sitting inside roughly 20 pages of dense policy documentation.
Why dense documents rarely land across a workforce
A strategy isn’t a list of points. It’s a system – values that shape behavior, behaviors that shape processes, processes that shape decisions. When that system is communicated as policy text, employees receive the pieces but rarely the connections between them. Managers translate it in their own words. New hires inherit fragments. The same strategy ends up in slightly different shapes across teams and markets, slowing adoption and quietly diluting the rollout.
How we designed the communication
The work began in learning design, not production. We filtered 20 pages of source material down to what would actually shape behavior, then condensed it into a tight two-page script. Three decisions shaped the videos: the strategy was visualized as a connected system rather than a list; characters and environments reflected the actual Caribbean workforce — multiple skin tones, ethnicities, and contexts; and the principles were anchored in situations employees would recognize, not abstract policy framing.
“Your team’s ability to transform tons of data into a coherent and meaningful script stands out as one of the strongest features of this production.” — Mrs. Hamlet, Guardian Group

6 minutes that replaced 20 pages
Two short videos, around six minutes total, replaced roughly twenty pages of documentation. The bigger outcome wasn’t the time saved. It was workforce alignment. Managers, new hires, and existing employees walked away with the same picture of the strategy, removing the silent cost of inconsistent rollouts: extra clarification meetings, uneven manager interpretations, and months of catch-up explanation in the markets after launch.

Why F.Learning for internal strategy and change communication
Most studios approach internal communication as a production problem. We treat it as an understanding problem first. Internal strategy and change communication has a specific demand: the workforce has to walk away with the same picture of the strategy – across departments, markets, and cultural contexts. That isn’t a visuals problem. It’s a learning design problem that happens to be delivered through video. Most studios make content easier to watch. We make complex organizational knowledge clear enough for the workforce to actually act on.
If your organization is preparing a strategy rollout, evaluation system change, or transformation program and the materials still live inside dense documents, we’ll review them and show you what changes once the strategy is built to land at workforce scale.
→ Book a working session with F.Learning
Read more: