InVideo AI can turn a text prompt into a video draft, but the prompt has to do more than name a topic. A useful prompt tells the system what kind of video to make, where it will be published, who it is for, how it should sound, what visuals should appear, and what action the viewer should take next.
How we tested this
Built for realistic video production, not one-click hype
We wrote these prompts for the way creators and marketers actually use AI video tools: outline the story, generate a draft, inspect the scenes, then repair weak voiceover, captions, and visuals.
InVideo's help center now describes prompt guides for major models and voice systems, which makes prompt clarity even more important. If your prompt is vague, a stronger model can still create a polished but generic video.
InVideo AI workflow table
Start with the closest row, copy the starter prompt, then add your actual product, audience, proof, and CTA.
| Video job | Prompt focus | Starter prompt | Human review |
|---|---|---|---|
| Faceless YouTube video | topic, audience, structure, scene style, voice | Create a 5-minute faceless YouTube explainer about [topic] for [audience]. Use a problem-first hook, 5 sections, calm voiceover, clean stock footage, and a clear final takeaway. | Check stock footage relevance, factual claims, pacing, and repeated visuals. |
| YouTube Shorts or Reels | duration, hook, vertical format, subtitles, CTA | Create a 35-second vertical video for [platform] about [topic]. Start with a 5-word hook, use fast scene changes, add large captions, and end with one practical action. | Make sure the first 3 seconds are clear without audio. |
| Product demo | buyer pain, feature sequence, proof, CTA | Create a 90-second product demo for [product]. Show the problem, the workflow, the result, and one proof point. Use simple visuals and a confident but helpful voiceover. | Replace generic stock footage with product screenshots where possible. |
| Training video | steps, examples, mistakes, recap | Create a 3-minute training video teaching [process]. Use numbered steps, one example per step, a common mistake section, and a final checklist recap. | Confirm each step matches the actual process your team uses. |
| Ad creative | audience, offer, objection, proof, CTA | Create a 30-second ad for [offer]. Audience: [buyer]. Lead with the painful problem, show the promise, include one proof point, and close with [CTA]. | Remove unsupported claims and make the CTA match the landing page. |
Copy prompt pack
Use this as your base prompt when you need a complete video draft instead of a single script.
Create a [duration] [video type] for [platform]. Topic: [topic]. Audience: [who will watch]. Goal: [what the viewer should learn, feel, or do]. Hook: [first 3 seconds]. Structure: [sections or scenes]. Visual style: [stock footage, screen recordings, product shots, animation, talking-head style]. Voiceover: [tone, pace, accent if needed]. Captions: [caption style and density]. CTA: [specific next step]. Source material: [URL, notes, transcript, product copy, or outline].
Core text-to-video prompts
These prompts give InVideo enough information to choose a structure, write the voiceover, suggest scenes, and avoid generic stock-video drift.
Prompt 1
Create a [duration] video for [platform] about [topic]. Audience: [audience]. Goal: [goal]. Use a [tone] voiceover, [visual style] scenes, and end with [CTA].
Prompt 2
Turn this blog post into a [duration] video. Keep the 5 most useful points, remove filler, use clear section titles, and write a voiceover that sounds natural.
Prompt 3
Create a video from this landing page: [URL or copy]. Show the problem, the product, the workflow, the result, and a clear call to action.
Prompt 4
Make a video outline before generating the final video. Include the hook, scene list, voiceover summary, visual direction, and CTA for each section.
Prompt 5
Create a [duration] educational video about [topic] for beginners. Use simple analogies, avoid jargon, and include one example every 30 seconds.
Prompt 6
Rewrite this prompt to be clearer for an AI video generator. Add platform, duration, scene style, voiceover tone, pacing, and CTA.
YouTube and long-form prompts
Longer InVideo outputs need a structure first. Ask for the outline before asking for the final video, especially if facts or teaching flow matter.
Prompt 1
Create a 6-minute YouTube explainer titled [title]. Structure it as: hook, context, 5 lessons, mistakes to avoid, recap, CTA.
Prompt 2
Write a YouTube script for [topic] using a calm expert voice. Keep sentences short, add pattern breaks every 45 seconds, and include 3 visual examples.
Prompt 3
Create 8 YouTube title options and 5 thumbnail text options for this video idea: [idea]. Make each title specific, not clickbait.
Prompt 4
Turn this webinar transcript into a 7-minute recap video. Keep only the strongest lessons and add timestamps for each section.
Prompt 5
Create a faceless YouTube video about [topic]. Use stock footage ideas that match each scene, not generic office clips.
Prompt 6
Create a YouTube intro that explains why [topic] matters now, who the video is for, and what viewers will be able to do after watching.
Short-form video prompts
Short-form prompts should define the first 3 seconds, the visual rhythm, the caption style, and the ending.
Prompt 1
Create a 30-second TikTok about [topic]. First 3 seconds: [hook]. Use fast captions, 5 scenes, and one simple takeaway.
Prompt 2
Create a 45-second Instagram Reel explaining [idea]. Use a problem, mistake, fix structure and make the final line worth saving.
Prompt 3
Create a YouTube Short from this tip: [tip]. Include a punchy opening, 3 quick examples, and a CTA to read the full guide.
Prompt 4
Make this short video less generic. Add specific visual details, sharper captions, a clearer audience, and a stronger final takeaway.
Prompt 5
Create 10 hook options for a short video about [topic]. Each hook must be under 8 words and understandable without audio.
Prompt 6
Turn this long script into 5 short-video concepts. Each concept needs a hook, scene idea, voiceover angle, and CTA.
Marketing and sales prompts
For ads and product videos, prompt around buyer pain, proof, and a single action. Do not ask the AI to invent claims.
Prompt 1
Create a 30-second product ad for [product]. Target buyer: [buyer]. Problem: [problem]. Proof: [proof]. CTA: [CTA]. Keep it practical.
Prompt 2
Create a product demo video from these features: [features]. Show the workflow in order and explain the outcome after each step.
Prompt 3
Create a testimonial-style video script from this customer quote: [quote]. Keep the claim accurate and avoid adding numbers not in the quote.
Prompt 4
Create a LinkedIn video for B2B buyers explaining [offer]. Use a calm tone, one business problem, one framework, and one next step.
Prompt 5
Create 5 ad concepts for [offer]. Each concept should use a different angle: pain, speed, cost, proof, and comparison.
Prompt 6
Rewrite this video CTA so it sounds helpful and specific. Offer: [offer]. Landing page action: [action].
Scene and voiceover repair prompts
The first generation is rarely final. Use repair prompts to tighten scenes, captions, voiceover, and stock choices without regenerating everything blindly.
Prompt 1
Scene [number] does not match the voiceover. Replace it with a more specific visual: [describe visual]. Keep the same pacing and caption style.
Prompt 2
Rewrite this voiceover line to sound less robotic. Keep the meaning, use natural speech, and make it fit within [seconds] seconds.
Prompt 3
Make the captions easier to read on mobile. Use shorter lines, stronger verbs, and no more than 7 words per caption.
Prompt 4
The video feels too generic. Add concrete visuals for [industry], [audience], and [use case] in each scene.
Prompt 5
Create a shot list for this video so I can replace stock footage with my own clips later.
Prompt 6
Audit this video script for unsupported claims, weak transitions, vague phrases, and scenes that need better visual direction.
What to check before exporting an InVideo AI draft
Claim accuracy
Check every number, date, pricing claim, product feature, legal phrase, and comparison before publishing or running ads.
Visual fit
Replace stock clips that look generic, unrelated, culturally wrong, or too polished for the message.
Mobile readability
Captions need to be short, high contrast, and readable on a phone without covering the main visual.
FAQ
What should I include in an InVideo AI prompt?
Include the video type, platform, duration, topic, audience, tone, visual style, voiceover style, source material, and CTA. InVideo can generate a lot from a short prompt, but better results come from a brief that sounds like creative direction. The more specific you are about audience and scenes, the less generic the output feels.
Can InVideo AI make a full video from one prompt?
Yes, InVideo AI is built for generating videos from text prompts, including script, scenes, voiceover, captions, and media choices. For serious work, use one prompt to create the outline first, then refine scenes and voiceover before export. One-shot generation is useful for drafts, not usually for final brand content.
What is the best InVideo prompt for YouTube Shorts?
The best prompt for Shorts starts with duration, vertical format, hook, number of scenes, caption style, and CTA. A strong version is: create a 35-second vertical Short about [topic], hook viewers in 3 seconds, use 5 fast scenes, add bold captions, and end with one practical tip.
How do I stop InVideo AI from using generic stock footage?
Give the prompt exact visual direction. Instead of saying business footage, specify the scene: founder reviewing a dashboard, close-up of a mobile checkout flow, warehouse worker scanning inventory, or teacher marking a lesson plan. You can also ask for a shot list so you can replace stock footage manually.
Can InVideo AI use Sora, Veo, Kling, or other models?
InVideo's help center says its prompt guides can be configured for major models it uses, including Nano Banana, Veo, Sora, Kling, and ElevenLabs Voice Design. Availability can vary by plan, rollout, and account. Treat model names as a capability to verify inside your own InVideo workspace before promising a client deliverable.
Are InVideo prompts good for ads?
Yes, if you write them like a performance creative brief. Include buyer, pain point, offer, proof, objection, CTA, and platform. Do not ask the AI to invent results. If you need a claim like saves 10 hours per week, provide the source in the prompt and verify it before publishing.
Can I turn a blog post into a video with InVideo AI?
Yes. Paste the article, URL, or summary and ask InVideo to keep only the best points. The strongest workflow is to request a video outline first, approve the sections, then generate the full video. This prevents the AI from treating every paragraph as equally important.
How long should an InVideo AI prompt be?
Most useful prompts are 4 to 10 sentences. Shorter prompts are fine for tests, but production prompts need enough detail to control pacing, scene type, audience, voiceover, and CTA. If the prompt becomes too long, split it into outline, generation, and repair prompts.
What should I fact-check in InVideo AI videos?
Fact-check dates, statistics, product claims, pricing, names, legal or medical claims, and any comparison statement. AI video tools can create convincing narration from weak information. If the video is for a brand, client, or paid ad, verify the script before export.
What is the main mistake beginners make with InVideo AI?
The main mistake is prompting for a topic instead of a finished video brief. A topic like AI tools for creators is too broad. A better prompt defines platform, length, viewer, hook, scene rhythm, voiceover tone, example style, and CTA. Specific prompts reduce generic stock footage and vague narration.