Mavericks Adds Financial Industry Samples to the Slide Generation Feature of its Video Generation AI "NoLang": Automatically Generating Explanatory Materials and Training Videos from Product Pamphlets and PDF Contracts to Strengthen Regulatory Compliance and Customer-Centric Explanations

Mavericks has added financial industry sample slides to its video generation AI "NoLang". It automatically generates explanatory slides and narrated videos from PDF documents like product pamphlets and contracts, significantly reducing the workload for financial institutions.
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📋 Article Processing Timeline

  • 📰 Published: April 11, 2026 at 03:01
  • 🔍 Collected: April 11, 2026 at 00:20
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 20, 2026 at 06:05 (221h 45m after Collected)
Mavericks Inc. (Head Office: Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo; Representative Director and President: Shota Okuno), provider of the video generation AI "NoLang" originating from Japan, has recently added sample slides tailored for the financial industry to NoLang's slide generation feature. Simply by inputting materials such as product pamphlet PDFs, contracts, and regulatory documents, it can automatically generate slides with organized key points and narrated videos. These can be immediately utilized for tasks that frequently occur on the front lines of banks, securities firms, insurance companies, and credit unions, such as product explanations, internal training, and regulatory summaries. This reduces the production burden on headquarters planning departments and training personnel while simultaneously achieving both speedy regulatory compliance and the strengthening of customer-centric explanation systems.

■ Financial frontlines overwhelmed with overlapping regulatory revisions, training, and product explanations. The ever-expanding burden of document creation
In the financial industry, including banks, securities firms, insurance companies, and credit unions, tasks involving document creation—such as responding to regulatory revisions, explaining new products, conducting compliance training, and explaining products to customers—occur continuously and highly frequently. On the other hand, the personnel resources supporting these tasks are becoming increasingly constrained year by year, and the reality is that the structure to keep creating materials on the front lines cannot keep up.

First is the frequency of tasks and the magnitude of the burden. Revisions to the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act have been ongoing almost every year recently, with the Reiwa 5 revision (promulgated in November 2023) and the Reiwa 6 revision (promulgated in May 2024). Each time, the headquarters planning department must reorganize product explanation documents and customer delivery documents for the branch offices (*1). Investments in compliance training are also large, with related expenditures in the banking and financial industry globally estimated to exceed 50 billion dollars annually, making the high cost of in-person training an issue (*2). Furthermore, in a survey on actual work conditions in the sales field (2021, targeting 400 sales and sales planning professionals), "document creation" was cited as the most time-consuming task by the largest percentage (30.5%), reporting that 619 hours per person annually—equivalent to roughly 1.67 million yen in personnel costs—are spent on document creation (*3).

The personnel resources that must absorb these burdens are becoming increasingly strained each year. According to statistics from the Shinkin Central Bank, the total number of full-time executives and employees across all credit unions at the end of FY2024 stood at 96,137, marking the 14th consecutive year of decline (*4). Furthermore, according to the IPA "DX Trends 2024," the percentage of companies responding that there is a "significant shortage" of DX promotion personnel reached 62.1%, exceeding a majority for the first time since the survey began (*5). Financial institutions are no exception; while managing a wide variety of document creation and training operations with limited personnel, they must also establish easy-to-understand explanation systems required by the Financial Services Agency's "Principles for Customer-Oriented Business Conduct."

To address this issue, NoLang has newly added sample slides aimed at the financial industry to its slide generation feature.

*1 Financial Services Agency, "Challenges and Directions of Financial Administration (Materials for Current Affairs Discussion by FSA Commissioner Hideki Ito)" (December 4, 2024)
*2 V-CUBE, etc.