Business Strategy Video Examples

Business strategy videos on TikTok and Instagram break down real company decisions, frameworks, and market moves into short, digestible lessons. From supply chain deep dives to acquisition analysis, business strategy content ideas span everything from corporate case studies to personal wealth-building playbooks.

The dominant format here is the case study breakdown, and for good reason. It gives creators a built-in narrative structure: here is a company, here is what they did, here is why it worked or why it matters to you. @douggrindstaff uses this well, walking through Dick's Sporting Goods absorbing Foot Locker with enough context to make a corporate real estate play feel genuinely interesting. @amandasabreah takes it a step further by applying the case study frame to a music career, using Kehlani's decade of slow-build success to extract three business lessons that hold up on their own. That kind of lateral move, pulling strategy insights from outside the usual tech-startup orbit, tends to stand out because it catches viewers who are tired of the same Silicon Valley examples.

Greenscreen talking head is the workhorse format in this topic, and it makes sense. Creators can pull up supply chain tools, company logos, charts, or product images behind them without losing the conversational energy of a direct address. @landforce_ uses ImportYeti data as his greenscreen backdrop to trace Peter Millar's manufacturing back to TAL Apparel, then immediately pivots to the insight that factory access is not the same as brand equity. That closing reframe is what makes the video a strategy lesson rather than just a sourcing tip. @shwinnabegobrand applies the same format to a rumored Audemars Piguet and Swatch collaboration, using the Omega and Swatch precedent to build a credible argument for why the deal makes sense strategically.

The playbook format shows up in a different register entirely. Where case study videos tend to be analytical, playbook videos are prescriptive and often personal. @frankfellersfreedom delivers his wealth-building framework as a direct monologue, using his own financial position as the credibility anchor before laying out the steps. @hormozi does something similar but tighter, using a whiteboard to map a four-step sales script with the kind of sequential clarity that makes frameworks easy to remember and share. Both are essentially teaching, but the whiteboard signals rigor while the monologue signals authenticity. Neither is better; they just attract different audiences.

One of the more interesting strategic moves in this topic is trendjacking through a business lens. @rony hooks with a news event in Brazilian football, then immediately reframes it as a leadership and business analysis. @jayhoovy opens on a beach with a prop to dramatize the concept of a beachhead strategy before cutting to examples from Amazon, Tesla, and Facebook. These entry points work because they lower the perceived barrier to a topic that could easily feel dry. Business strategy content that starts with a familiar reference and earns its way into the framework tends to hold attention longer than content that leads with the framework itself.

141 videos in the database use this topic.

Top Business Strategy video examples

Popular creators

Business brokers and operators tend to outperform pure 'thought leaders' here because they have skin in the game. @douggrindstaff works this angle directly, walking through the actual financials of businesses most people would never think to buy, from car washes to funeral homes, and treating the viewer like a business partner doing due diligence. @hormozi operates differently, pulling from real coaching conversations to deliver frameworks with unusual bluntness. @rony approaches the same territory through narrative, profiling founders from Brazil and extracting transferable lessons on growth and leadership rather than giving abstract advice.

Trending hooks

Two structural mechanisms drive the hooks in this space. The first is the false premise reveal: 'Barnes and Noble just found out how to win retail, and it has nothing to do with books' works because it sets up an assumption the viewer already holds and then immediately undercuts it, making the resolution feel earned. The second is conviction signaling: 'This is why I'm going all in on amateur sports' leads with a personal bet, which forces the viewer to ask what the speaker knows that they don't. Both strategies create a gap between the opening line and the answer, and that gap is what holds attention.

Top videos

The pattern in top-performing business strategy videos is that the best ones make an argument, not just an observation. A video that says 'here is how supply chains work' competes with a textbook. A video that says 'Brazil controls what the world needs' takes a position and forces the viewer to either agree or push back. The Carousel and Greenscreen Talking Head formats both support this because they give the creator room to build a case across multiple beats. The videos that land are built around a claim that is specific enough to be wrong, which is exactly what makes them worth watching.

Related topics

Business Strategy bleeds into Entrepreneurship because most people watching these videos are not corporate strategists; they are people building something and looking for a framework that fits their scale. The overlap with Marketing runs deeper than it looks: many strategy breakdowns are really distribution and positioning arguments in disguise. Economics shows up because the most durable business strategy content, the kind people save and share, tends to explain why a market works the way it does, not just how one company navigated it.