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Internal training without agencies: reduce your video production costs by 80% with AI

You have a training video that needs updating. The protocol changed, the product did too, or the material simply no longer reflects how the team works today. You call the agency, spend two weeks negotiating the budget, wait another four to six for delivery, and when the video finally arrives, you ask for three rounds of corrections. Total: two months and between €5,000 and €15,000 for content that needs another revision in six months.
That's if you have the budget. If you don't, the old material stays there, outdated, and nobody watches it.
This article explains what it really costs to depend on agencies for training video production, what changes when you produce internally with AI, and how to take the first steps without needing a production team.
The price of a professional corporate video in the Spanish and European market ranges between €3,000 and €5,000 per finished minute of content¹. A five-minute training module can cost between €15,000 and €25,000. A ten-minute one, between €30,000 and €50,000.
Those are the direct costs. The indirect ones pile up quietly:
If your company has between five and twenty active training videos and updates them every one or two years, the cumulative cost can exceed €150,000 annually in outsourced production.
A company with 20 active training videos that updates its content every two years can spend more than €150,000 a year on outsourced production, not counting coordination costs or internal team time.
The financial cost is the easiest to see. The hardest to quantify is the cost of dependency: not being able to update content when you need to because doing so requires an external vendor, weeks of waiting, and a specific budget.
This paralysis has a name: Document Inertia. It's what happens when a company's operational knowledge gets trapped in formats that can't be maintained efficiently. PDF SOPs that nobody updates. Onboarding videos featuring employees who no longer work at the company. Compliance modules recorded before the last regulatory change.
The direct consequence is that teams work with outdated information. And that's not just a training quality issue: it's an operational, safety, and compliance risk.
The scale problem makes everything worse. A company with ten locations or with teams distributed across multiple countries can't afford to record a video per protocol, per language, and per update. The outsourced production model doesn't scale.
Document Inertia occurs when operational knowledge gets trapped in formats impossible to maintain. Companies with distributed teams can no longer depend on agencies to produce and update training videos at scale.
According to Training Magazine's 2025 Industry Report, U.S. companies spend an average of $874 per employee per year on training². At those volumes, content production becomes one of the main bottlenecks for L&D teams.
AI video production doesn't require a camera, a studio, or a creative team. The basic workflow is: script, avatar, voice, video. A training manager can create a complete module from their computer in the time it used to take to write the brief for the agency.
The impact on timelines is concrete. According to vidBoard.ai data, a 60-second video that required 13 days with traditional production can be completed in 27 minutes with AI tools³. A five-minute module that might take six to eight weeks with an agency shrinks to a few hours of actual work.
The cost impact is proportional. Industry estimates put the average reduction at 70 to 90% in production costs when moving from outsourced to internal AI production³. Platforms like Vidext document reductions of up to 70% in cost per video, with the added benefit that every future update costs roughly the same as the first version. You can see the full calculation in our analysis of ROI of AI training videos in industry.
The capabilities that matter for corporate training are available without a technical team:
With AI tools, a company can reduce training video production costs by 70% to 90%, and update any module in hours instead of weeks. Operational knowledge stops being a frozen asset.
The table below compares estimated costs for a typical volume of training video production in a mid-size company.
| Scenario | With external agency | With in-house production (AI) | Estimated savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-min video (1 unit) | €15,000–25,000 | €2,500–4,000 | ~80% |
| Annual plan (5 videos) | €75,000–125,000 | €12,500–20,000 | ~83% |
| Update to existing video | €5,000–15,000 | €500–1,500 | ~85% |
| Catalog of 20 videos (2 years) | €150,000–250,000 | €25,000–40,000 | ~83% |
In-house production costs include the platform and team time. They don't include agency review and coordination costs, which on the left column can add 15 to 25% to the total.
The ROI expands when you factor in training's impact on talent retention. According to the Association for Talent Development (ATD), companies that invest in employee development see 46% lower turnover than those that don't⁴. With an average replacement cost per employee ranging between 50% and 200% of their annual salary, keeping training efficient and up to date is a direct lever on HR costs.
You can read more about calculating this impact in our article on how much it costs to keep your teams trained.
This isn't a change you make in a week, but it doesn't require an 18-month digital transformation project either. The process has three concrete phases.
Before changing anything, map what you have. How many training videos exist in the company? What's their creation date and when was the last update? What's the cumulative production and revision cost for each one?
This exercise reveals two things: the total investment already made in outsourced production, and the percentage of content that's outdated or unused. In most companies, between 40% and 60% of the training catalog hasn't been updated in more than two years.
With that information, you have the economic case to justify the change internally. You can see how other HR managers have approached this process in our HR manager's guide to digitizing training with AI.
Most training content exists in PowerPoint or PDF before becoming a video. The fastest transition is to take those documents and convert them directly to video with AI, bypassing the agency entirely.
The L&D team handles editorial review, not technical production. Production time is measured in hours, not weeks. The result isn't a cinematic video — it's a functional, clear, and updatable one that does its training job without a film production budget.
You can see how this workflow plays out in our article on how to cut training content costs without losing quality.
Once existing materials are migrated, the next step is defining the workflow for new content: who writes the script, who validates the technical content, who approves before publishing.
This workflow doesn't require a video team. In most cases, it's managed by the same L&D manager who previously coordinated with the agency — the difference is they now produce too. The full cycle, from script to video published in the LMS, can be done in less than a day's work.
With this in place, every time a process, product, or regulation changes, the corresponding video gets updated the same day, not the same quarter.
In-house AI production doesn't replace everything. There are cases where outsourced professional production is still the right call.
High-visibility institutional communication videos, brand spots for major campaigns, or productions requiring on-location shoots are projects where the investment in professional production is justified. The same applies to employer branding content designed for mass external distribution.
In-house AI production is built for volume: operational training, SOPs, onboarding, compliance, product tutorials, process updates. Content that needs to be accurate, current, and accessible — not necessarily cinematic.
The most efficient combination for many companies is using external production for high-visibility projects and in-house AI production for the 80% of the training catalog that needs speed and scalability.
Depending on an agency to produce training videos was the only available option five years ago. Today it's a choice — and an expensive one.
Companies that have internalized their training video production haven't reduced the quality of their content. They've gained control over their knowledge infrastructure: they can update in hours, produce in any language, and scale without increasing their production budget.
The 80% savings isn't the goal in itself. It's the result of no longer paying for each production cycle what you used to pay for a single one.
If you want to see how the main platforms compare, our guide to AI tools for corporate training in 2026 has an up-to-date comparison.
A five-minute module can be produced in two to four hours of actual work, including script writing, video generation, and revisions. With outsourced production, the same video typically takes four to eight weeks from briefing to final delivery.
The most common in corporate training are onboarding modules, SOP and operational procedure videos, compliance and safety training, tool or product tutorials, and process updates. Any content that requires frequent updates or distribution to distributed teams is a good candidate for internal production.
The onboarding process for platforms like Vidext includes a kick-off session and hands-on training with the team. Most L&D managers without prior video production experience generate their first module within three to five days of use. No technical background required.
For operational training, yes. Videos with AI avatars and generated voices have a presentation quality comparable to a standard corporate video. They don't have the cinematic quality of a high-budget production, but that level of production isn't necessary for a compliance module or product tutorial to be effective.
Yes. Platforms like Vidext generate videos in over 120 languages with standard and professional voices, including regional Spanish dialects (Catalan, Galician, Basque). The same content can be adapted to different markets without re-recording.
@ 2026 Vidext Inc.
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@ 2026 Vidext Inc.