Educational Voice works out of a quiet studio tucked along Henry Place in Belfast, just beyond the steady hum of passing traffic. Inside, there’s a different rhythm—measured, focused, and deliberate. Here, animators move frame by frame through complex topics, transforming tangled subjects into visuals that feel easy to follow and unexpectedly reassuring. What starts as jargon on a page becomes something else entirely: explanations that speak with clarity and feel strangely like a conversation.
The studio was founded by Michelle Connolly, whose experience in education still informs every decision, from the way scripts are paced to how scenes unfold. Rather than chasing spectacle, the team focuses on something much harder to achieve—making complicated ideas accessible without watering them down. It’s a skill that’s proving increasingly essential, especially as schools and businesses alike face the challenge of teaching, training, and communicating in ways that actually stick.
Over the past decade, the studio has produced more than 3,300 educational animations, each designed to support curriculum goals rather than distract from them, a decision that has proven particularly beneficial for teachers who need resources that fit lessons instead of forcing lessons to fit content.
Watching one of their maths animations feels strikingly similar to listening to a patient tutor at the kitchen table, explaining fractions slowly, anticipating confusion, and adjusting pace instinctively, a quality that has made the content extremely reliable for classroom and home learning alike.
The same instincts carry into commercial work, where Educational Voice has delivered training and explainer animations for healthcare providers, financial services firms, technology companies, and councils, often helping organisations reduce lengthy manuals into two-minute visuals that are notably improved in clarity and retention.
In conversations with clients, the studio often hears stories of frustration, businesses quoted eye-watering figures elsewhere, schools priced out of professional animation, and teams left with generic visuals that fail to land, problems Educational Voice has addressed by staying firmly rooted in Belfast.
Operating costs in Northern Ireland remain significantly reduced compared to larger cities, allowing the studio to offer work that is surprisingly affordable without sacrificing craft, a practical advantage that continues to attract SMEs and public bodies balancing quality with accountability.
Their production process is highly efficient yet deliberately paced, beginning with discovery conversations, moving through scriptwriting and storyboarding, then design, animation, and sound, each stage reviewed carefully to avoid misunderstandings that can derail projects later.
Animation scripts here are treated differently, written with visual logic in mind, avoiding dense language and leaning on motion to do the heavy lifting, a method that proves incredibly versatile whether explaining safeguarding policies or onboarding users to new software.
At one point, hearing how often the team reworks scenes after testing them with real learners made me quietly admire their refusal to accept “good enough” as a final answer.
Everything is handled in-house, a choice that has kept communication exceptionally clear and timelines predictable, especially valuable for organisations working under regulatory pressure or tight academic calendars.
For schools, the value lies not only in alignment with UK and Irish curricula but in tone, animations that respect learners, avoiding gimmicks and instead building understanding step by step, a design philosophy that has been remarkably effective in sustaining attention.
Parents, particularly during periods of remote learning, have relied on this content as a steady companion, finding that animated explanations often succeed where worksheets fail, transforming evenings of frustration into moments of quiet progress.
Business clients often describe a similar shift, training sessions becoming significantly faster, onboarding smoother, and staff engagement notably improved once animation replaces dense slides or policy documents.
The studio’s location also places it comfortably between UK and Irish markets, enabling teams to navigate regulatory nuances without lengthy explanations, a practical advantage often overlooked until something goes wrong.
Educational Voice does not chase trends or viral moments, instead focusing on longevity, creating animations designed to remain useful long after launch, a mindset that feels particularly innovative in an industry often driven by novelty.
As organisations increasingly look for communication tools that cut through noise while remaining human, Educational Voice’s steady growth suggests that clarity, when handled with care, remains one of the most persuasive forces available.

