Short-form ad staging

AI Video Ad Prompt Generator

Turn one product, offer, or UGC concept into hook options, short-form scene beats, camera direction, on-screen text ideas, continuity notes, and a model-ready ad prompt handoff.

Built for product demos, UGC scripts, founder stories, and launch offersHooks, scene beats, camera notes, and CTA structure in one outputText-first and deterministic for fast ad prompt iteration

Input

Stage a product idea into short-form ad prompts

Text-first ad planner

Quick examples

Start from one product or offer, then turn it into hooks, short scene beats, camera direction, on-screen text, and continuity notes.

Show the product solving one visible problem.

Bias toward polished short-form product beats.

Clean commercial polish with restrained visuals.

More polish and atmosphere.

Use Tool B first for long scripts. Use Tool D when one offer needs a short-form ad structure with hooks, scene beats, camera, and CTA.

Output

Short-form ad prompt pack

Describe one ad concept and generate a staged prompt pack.

Tool D builds hooks, scene prompts, camera notes, on-screen text ideas, and continuity guardrails from one product or offer.

Implementation notes

Built as a commercial prompt planner, not as an ad platform.

Tool D keeps the scope narrow: one product or offer in, one structured short-form ad prompt pack out. The goal is to stage the creative logic before you move into model-specific video generation.

What Tool D is optimized for

Use it when one product, service, or offer needs a short-form ad structure with a hook, scene plan, product continuity, camera notes, and a CTA.

Why it stays text-first

The first version is a deterministic planning layer. It does not need uploads, accounts, paid inference, or ad-platform integrations to produce useful prompt-ready structure.

How it differs from Script to Shot

Script to Shot works from longer scripts. Tool D works from one commercial concept and adds ad-specific hooks, proof beats, on-screen text, and offer framing.

How it connects to Tool C

After the ad scene plan exists, use Image to Video Prompt Generator when a specific still, product frame, or first-frame continuation needs motion wording.

Fast evaluation

Use the built-in examples to judge whether the ad plan is doing real work.

A useful ad prompt pack separates the hook, product action, proof beat, and CTA clearly enough that each scene can be revised without rewriting the entire concept.

Product launch

Input shape: A sparkling citrus drink needs a 30-second vertical launch ad for commuters who want a lighter afternoon reset.

Expected output shape: Three hook options, a four-scene product plan, camera notes for the cooler reveal and first sip, continuity anchors for the can, and a final offer CTA.

UGC proof angle

Input shape: A focus timer app needs a TikTok-native creator ad that feels casual but still shows the product clearly.

Expected output shape: A native hook, personal context beat, visible use moment, result beat, soft CTA, and screen-readability notes for the phone interface.

Founder story

Input shape: A desk lamp brand wants a founder-led Shorts ad about calmer late-night writing sessions.

Expected output shape: Origin problem, founder insight, product action, proof beat, invitation, and continuity around the lamp finish, light warmth, and desk setup.

Next paths

Use Tool D when the bottleneck is the ad concept, then branch into scene or image motion tools only when needed.

PromptStage works better when each tool keeps a clear job. Tool D owns the commercial structure; Tool B owns longer scene plans; Tool C owns one-frame motion.

Starting from a product page?

Use Product Page to Video Ad Prompts when the source of truth is a public product URL or pasted product page copy.

Open product-page ad prompts

Need scene planning from a longer script?

Use Script to Shot Prompts when the input is already a multi-scene script or treatment rather than one product ad concept.

Open Script to Shot Prompts

Need one frame turned into motion?

Use Image to Video Prompt Generator after the ad scene plan produces a stable product still, first frame, or reference image.

Open Image to Video Prompt Generator

Need ad workflow context?

Read the shared Tool D workflow guide for the recipe behind turning one product, offer, or UGC concept into hooks, scene beats, camera notes, on-screen text, and a handoff prompt.

Read the ad workflow guide

Need prompt examples?

Use the UGC examples guide when you want to compare weak ad requests with Tool D-ready product, creator, founder, and offer-launch inputs.

View UGC prompt examples

Need Kling-specific handoffs?

Use the Kling ad branch after the shared ad plan is stable and each product, UGC, or offer scene needs more direct Kling-ready wording.

Open Kling ad prompts

Need Veo-style ad sequencing?

Use the Veo ad branch after the shared ad plan is stable and each scene needs continuous natural-language sequencing, cleaner transitions, and selective carry-through.

Open Veo ad prompts

Need Seedance-style short-form rhythm?

Use the Seedance ad branch after the shared ad plan is stable and each scene needs readable beat timing, supportive camera rhythm, and compact continuity guardrails.

Open Seedance ad prompts

Need shot-list examples?

Use the shot-list examples guide when you want to compare ad scenes with broader AI video scene-prompt examples.

View shot-list examples

FAQ

Tool D scope and usage

Is this for finished scripts or rough ad ideas?

It is best for rough product, offer, UGC, or founder-story concepts. If you already have a longer script, use Script to Shot Prompts first.

Does it create final ad copy?

It creates prompt-ready hooks, scene beats, camera notes, on-screen text ideas, and handoff prompts. Treat the output as a structured ad prompt plan, not final legal or brand-approved copy.

Can I use the output with Kling, Veo, or Seedance?

Yes. The shared ad plan is model-agnostic. Use the output as the commercial structure, then adapt individual product frames through the image-to-video branches when needed.

Does it upload product images?

No. The first version is text-first. Describe the product and visual context, then use the generated scenes as a prompt handoff.