The earliest videos made using Whiteboard Animation were published in 2009 on YouTube, used mostly for experimental purposes until developing into a storytelling device, focusing mostly on narratives and educational explanations.
With the introduction of software to create whiteboard animations, the process has many different manifestations of varying quality.
The rest of the process is as follows: The steps listed above are not set in stone, they should be used as a guideline to create a whiteboard animation production.
Whiteboard animation has been used in a few TV spots and on internet video sites such as YouTube and Vimeo.
[3] Starting in 2010, the Royal Society of Arts converted selected speeches and books from its public events program into whiteboard animations.