Reads your context
01A policy, a runbook, a recording, or a prompt.
Velo turns your policies, runbooks, and recordings into security awareness, IT onboarding, and tool-rollout videos - accurate to your environment, in any language.
Tools change weekly and threats change faster. Awareness training is a slide deck people click through, runbooks sit in a wiki no one opens, and IT answers the same setup question a hundred times. The knowledge exists - in policies, runbooks, and SOPs - but turning it into clear video is still manual work.
The manual stack
With Velo
Context becomes clear video, in four steps.
A policy, a runbook, a recording, or a prompt.
Structures the explanation and writes the script.
Narrated in your voice, on brand.
An LMS or intranet embed, a link, and a written runbook.
watchable, not clicked-through.
answer the top setup questions once.
drive adoption of new tools.
turn process into clear video.
kept in sync.
Deflect repeat setup tickets with clear video.
Awareness and policy training that lands.
Roll out tools with adoption that sticks.
We cut training-video creation time dramatically, with strong results on the first pass.
Security awareness and compliance training, IT onboarding and setup videos, software rollout and adoption videos, and runbooks - each with a written runbook.
Velo reads your context (a policy, runbook, recording, or prompt), writes the script, renders the video in your voice, and gives you an LMS/intranet embed plus a written runbook.
Yes. Upload the document and Velo builds a clear, narrated video and a matching written runbook.
Yes. Velo turns your policy into watchable, multilingual awareness training instead of a slide deck.
Yes. Velo's masking covers credentials, systems, and data before you share.
Edit the script and Velo re-renders the video; the runbook updates with it.
Yes. Embed anywhere or share a branded link.
A deck is static and a recorder captures one take. Velo turns your policies and runbooks into clear video, re-renders on change, and keeps a written runbook - one system, not a stack.