Mavericks Inc. Releases Sample Slides for SaaS and Product Companies in Video Generation AI "NoLang"'s Slide Generation Feature, Streamlining Document Creation for Sales, Marketing, and IR
Mavericks Inc. has released sample slides for SaaS and product companies within the slide generation feature of its video generation AI "NoLang." This aims to streamline document creation for sales, marketing, and IR departments, contributing to efficient content dissemination with limited resources.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: April 9, 2026 at 03:03
- 🔍 Collected: April 8, 2026 at 18:30
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 20, 2026 at 12:49 (282h 19m after Collected)
Mavericks Inc. (Headquarters: Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo; Representative: Founder CEO Shota Okuno), a Japan-based provider of the video generation AI "NoLang," has newly released sample slides for SaaS and in-house product companies within NoLang's slide generation feature. Five use cases, such as service explanations, sales decks, feature update announcements, and IR materials, which frequently occur in the operations of SaaS companies, have been templated. By simply inputting release notes or existing proposals, key points are organized, and slides and videos are automatically generated. This reduces the burden of document creation in sales, marketing, and IR departments and contributes to the efficient dissemination of content with limited resources.
## ■Document Creation Accounts for 30% of Business Hours: The Reality of a Common Burden for SaaS Companies
SaaS and IT companies continuously need to create a wide variety of documents, including sales materials, marketing materials, and update announcements. Many companies face the burden of this document and video creation, which is a major factor in overwhelming on-site operations.
First, the burden of document creation in sales is severe. According to a survey on sales operations (2021, targeting 400 sales and sales planning professionals), "document creation" was the most time-consuming task at 30.5%, more than 10 percentage points higher than "travel" (19.3%) in second place (*1*). Furthermore, more than half of sales professionals responded that they spend "more than 50% of their total working hours on document creation," with an average of 619 hours per person annually, equivalent to approximately 1.67 million yen in labor costs (*1*). HubSpot's "Japan Sales Awareness and Reality Survey 2024" also showed that 33.09% of working hours are spent on preparing for and following up on business negotiations (document creation, analysis, etc.), and sales representatives responded that they "want to increase customer interaction time by 25 minutes per day" (*2*). The reality is that resources that should be allocated to customer-facing time are continuously diverted to back-office tasks like document creation.
Next, the lack of resources for content production in marketing departments is also a significant barrier. In a survey targeting 101 content marketing managers at B2B companies (2023), "lack of in-house skills related to content creation" accounted for 55.4% and "lack of in-house resources" for 28.7% as challenges in content operation (*3*). In SaaS companies, marketing managers often juggle multiple roles such as advertising operations, article writing, and webinar planning, making it difficult to allocate time for creating sales decks and white papers.
While facing this labor shortage, the format of content that companies should disseminate is shifting to video. According to a CyberAgent survey, the domestic video advertising market in 2024 is expected to reach 724.9 billion yen, a 115.9% increase from the previous year, and is projected to reach 1.1471 trillion yen by 2028 (*4*). A Wyzowl survey (2023) found that 91% of overseas companies use video as a marketing strategy, and 87% reported that video has a positive impact on sales (*5*). Furthermore, Plux's "B2B Video Production Reality Survey 2024" shows that while high expectations are placed on video production for "awareness acquisition" (66.5%) and "understanding promotion" (54.3%), approximately 70% of production involves external outsourcing, incurring costs and man-hours at each stage of planning, shooting, and editing (*6*). As expectations for video content grow, the difficulty of in-house production with limited personnel becomes more apparent.
## ■Document Creation Accounts for 30% of Business Hours: The Reality of a Common Burden for SaaS Companies
SaaS and IT companies continuously need to create a wide variety of documents, including sales materials, marketing materials, and update announcements. Many companies face the burden of this document and video creation, which is a major factor in overwhelming on-site operations.
First, the burden of document creation in sales is severe. According to a survey on sales operations (2021, targeting 400 sales and sales planning professionals), "document creation" was the most time-consuming task at 30.5%, more than 10 percentage points higher than "travel" (19.3%) in second place (*1*). Furthermore, more than half of sales professionals responded that they spend "more than 50% of their total working hours on document creation," with an average of 619 hours per person annually, equivalent to approximately 1.67 million yen in labor costs (*1*). HubSpot's "Japan Sales Awareness and Reality Survey 2024" also showed that 33.09% of working hours are spent on preparing for and following up on business negotiations (document creation, analysis, etc.), and sales representatives responded that they "want to increase customer interaction time by 25 minutes per day" (*2*). The reality is that resources that should be allocated to customer-facing time are continuously diverted to back-office tasks like document creation.
Next, the lack of resources for content production in marketing departments is also a significant barrier. In a survey targeting 101 content marketing managers at B2B companies (2023), "lack of in-house skills related to content creation" accounted for 55.4% and "lack of in-house resources" for 28.7% as challenges in content operation (*3*). In SaaS companies, marketing managers often juggle multiple roles such as advertising operations, article writing, and webinar planning, making it difficult to allocate time for creating sales decks and white papers.
While facing this labor shortage, the format of content that companies should disseminate is shifting to video. According to a CyberAgent survey, the domestic video advertising market in 2024 is expected to reach 724.9 billion yen, a 115.9% increase from the previous year, and is projected to reach 1.1471 trillion yen by 2028 (*4*). A Wyzowl survey (2023) found that 91% of overseas companies use video as a marketing strategy, and 87% reported that video has a positive impact on sales (*5*). Furthermore, Plux's "B2B Video Production Reality Survey 2024" shows that while high expectations are placed on video production for "awareness acquisition" (66.5%) and "understanding promotion" (54.3%), approximately 70% of production involves external outsourcing, incurring costs and man-hours at each stage of planning, shooting, and editing (*6*). As expectations for video content grow, the difficulty of in-house production with limited personnel becomes more apparent.