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Interviews

The Value of Creativity in Regulator Communication

Wednesday 10 December 2025 / 12:00

Exclusive SoloAzar

2 minutos de lectura

Federico Rodríguez Aguiar, with over 35 years of marketing experience in the gaming industry across Latin America and the Caribbean, explores how transparency, creativity, and clear communication can transform public perception of a regulator’s work. For the author, in a world saturated with information, explaining with creativity and clarity makes the difference between merely informing and truly connecting with the public.

The Value of Creativity in Regulator Communication

When Informing Is Not Enough, Explaining Well Makes the Difference

In an era where information moves faster than the public can absorb it, regulatory bodies face a challenge that doesn’t always appear in manuals: making people understand what they do and why their work matters. Oversight, authorizations, and controls are essential, but they remain largely invisible if not communicated clearly. This is where creativity—a word that often seems foreign to the public sector—takes on an unexpected role.

Talking about creativity in a regulatory context does not mean turning the institution into a commercial brand or favoring superficial messaging. Rather, it is about finding smart and human ways to convey what is normally communicated in technical terms. A regulator can publish resolutions or issue warnings, but if the public doesn’t understand them, the message is lost. Creativity acts as a translator: it takes complex concepts and makes them accessible without sacrificing precision.

Furthermore, it provides something often taken for granted: closeness. Most people only think about a regulator when a problem arises; therefore, warm, direct, and well-crafted communication helps show that behind every rule is a clear purpose: protecting users, organizing the market, and ensuring fair play conditions for everyone. When the institution succeeds in conveying this sense, its relationship with the public changes.

Creativity also plays a key role in building identity. Regulators often carry the image of rigid or distant structures. However, a coherent communication strategy—not flashy, but well-defined—can strengthen perceptions of seriousness, professionalism, and transparency. A consistent tone, appropriate visual resources, and messages designed to be memorable help make the institution recognizable without losing formality.

Along the way, it is worth considering approaches already successfully applied by other organizations: campaigns that explain oversight in everyday language; short audiovisual pieces showing control procedures without technical jargon; narratives that connect the institutional mission to real user stories; and increased use of agile formats—simple graphics, short animations, social media content—that bring information closer to audiences who rarely read official documents. These initiatives don’t require large investments, but they do demand a more open approach to public innovation.

Another central aspect is education. Increasingly, regulators need to inform the public about best practices, rights, risks, and benefits. None of these messages work if not presented clearly. A creative campaign can ensure a warning reaches the right people or make a technical concept understandable in seconds. Educating requires capturing attention first, and that’s where creativity makes the difference.

Finally, creativity enhances transparency. Explaining how oversight is conducted, why certain decisions are made, or how resources are allocated often involves complex data. Turning that information into something graphic, simple, and direct is a form of accountability appreciated by the public.

*Federico Rodríguez Aguiar is a marketing analyst with over 35 years of experience in the gaming industry across Latin America and the Caribbean. He has held senior regulatory positions and served as a juror in international industry events. He currently works as an independent columnist, analyzing trends and regulations.

Categories: Analysis

Tags: No Tags

Region: Europa

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