Motion Graphics & Animation

Motion Graphics & Animation — Full Role Breakdown

What This Role Really Means

You transform ideas into movement.
You take static designs, characters, icons, typography, and visuals — and bring them to life through motion, rhythm, pacing, and clean transitions.

You shape how a brand moves, behaves, and tells its story in video form.

Your work is at the intersection of design + storytelling + animation.

If you see the world in frames, timing, and visual rhythm, this role is yours.

What You Should Know (Skills & Know-How)
1. Animation Fundamentals

You must understand the core principles:

  • Timing
  • Spacing
  • Rhythm
  • Easing
  • Squash & stretch
  • Anticipation
  • Visual weight
  • Composition in motion
  • Motion arcs
  • Camera movement
  • Story pacing

These principles separate real animators from basic editors.

2. Motion Design Styles

You should be comfortable with multiple animation styles:

  • 2D motion graphics
  • Typography animation (kinetic type)
  • Logo animations
  • Icon animations
  • Explainer video sequences
  • UI/UX animations
  • Product motion shots
  • Animated transitions
  • Social content animations
  • Lower thirds & graphic overlays

Being versatile makes you extremely valuable.

3. Short-Form Content Animation

You understand how to create for:

  • Reels
  • TikTok
  • YouTube Shorts
  • Story animations
  • Looping animations
  • Fast-paced transitions
  • Text-driven social videos

Your work must be smooth, fast, and attention-grabbing.

4. Storyboarding & Visual Planning

You know how to:

  • Sketch rough frames
  • Build storyboards
  • Define visual beats
  • Plan transitions
  • Align visuals with script or VO
  • Communicate animation flow to the team
  • Break down complex ideas visually

Before movement comes planning.

5. Tools You Must Know

Core Animation Tools

  • Adobe After Effects (the main tool)
  • Adobe Illustrator (for vector assets)
  • Adobe Photoshop
  • Figma (for design prep)

Optional (but highly valuable):

  • Premiere Pro
  • DaVinci Resolve
  • Blender (for 3D motion)
  • Cinema 4D (for advanced 3D)
  • Lottie / Bodymovin (for web animations)
  • CapCut (light social edits)
6. Audio & Rhythm Awareness

Motion designers should have a good sense of:

  • Audio syncing
  • Beat matching
  • Sound design basics
  • Using SFX for transitions
  • Matching motion to tempo

Smooth motion depends heavily on audio awareness.

7. Understanding Output Needs

You must know:

  • Video formats
  • Aspect ratios (9:16, 1:1, 16:9)
  • Export settings & compression
  • Clean alpha exports (for overlays)
  • Working with transparent files
  • Delivering organized project files

Tech workflow matters in real-world agency production.

8. Creative Interpretation

A Motion Designer must be able to:

  • Take a script or idea
  • Visualize it
  • Build a motion plan
  • Choose the right style
  • Animate with clarity and emotion
  • Simplify complex messages using visuals

You turn ideas into stories people enjoy watching.

Daily Responsibilities (Practical Tasks)
  • Creating motion graphics for social videos
  • Animating text sequences
  • Designing transitions for Reels/TikTok content
  • Building short explainer videos
  • Animating icons, UI elements, or product shots
  • Creating campaign motion assets
  • Developing storyboards
  • Adding sound design elements
  • Exporting multiple versions for different platforms
  • Reviewing references for visual inspiration
  • Collaborating with designers and copywriters
  • Supporting the video editor with motion elements
  • Animating titles, intros, and outros

You bring life, energy, and emotion into the visuals.

What Makes a Great Animator in This Role
  • You feel timing and rhythm instinctively
  • You think in frames, not minutes
  • You love clean, modern animation
  • You know how to simplify complex ideas visually
  • You keep your project files organized
  • You appreciate subtle details (easing, arcs, spacing)
  • You constantly study transitions and motion trends
  • You enjoy experimenting
  • You love making things move beautifully

 

Scroll to Top