"Guess what, when you make Short videos now, you don't even have to take continuous shots yourself.
Let's talk about the most popular way to play now. Many people think that AI is just helping you cut films, but in fact it can do a lot of things. For example, several tools I recently tested for my friends can not only automatically generate scripts, but also find their own pictures. You only need to give a keyword, and it can match a bunch of materials, which is much faster than going through the material library.
However, this thing is not everything. I have seen many novices directly post AI-generated videos intact, only to find that the playback volume is pitifully low. Why? Because scripts written by AI are often illogical. It doesn't understand the tone of your account, let alone what your fans like to watch. So the first step is to teach AI your "taste" first.
How to do it specifically? Let's start by analyzing popular videos. When you go to watch videos with high viewing volume, they all have fixed routines for their beginning, rhythm, and turning points. For example, people must be caught in the first three seconds, there must be a small reversal in the middle, and a hook at the end. Organize these routines into documents and use them to train AI. Many tools now support custom instructions. If you feed it the explosion logic, the scripts it generates will naturally be much more reliable.
Let's talk about picture generation. Nowadays, there are two most mainstream technologies, one is AI painting, and the other is material reorganization. The former is suitable for animation videos. For example, if you ask AI to draw a scene, it can generate more than a dozen pictures in a few minutes. In the latter case, for an account suitable for real people, AI will pick out the clip that best matches your script from the massive amount of material. I tried using coze's workflow, and combining the two works surprisingly well.
But there is a hole here. No matter how good the pictures generated by AI are, they cannot solve the copyright issue. I have seen many accounts whose current is restricted because they use AI materials. There are two solutions now, either use a paid material library, or take some basic materials yourself and let AI optimize them. The latter is actually more cost-effective. If you take dozens of clips, it will last for a long time.
Another point that is easily ignored is the data feedback after release. Many people use AI to make videos and ignore them. In fact, this step is the most important step. You have to see which script plays the most and which pictures are converted well, and then feed the data back to the AI. Nowadays, many tools support A/B testing. You send out different versions to see which data is better, and fix that logic.
Speaking of specific tools, I recently recommended one called "Clipping Enterprise Edition". It has an AI script generator that supports custom instructions and can directly call the material library. My friend used it for a month, and his account number increased by 2,000. The key is that you don't have to learn complex operations, as long as you can type.
Be practical. No matter how good the AI Short videos tool is, it cannot replace your creativity. The most popular way to play now is "human-computer collaboration". For example, you are responsible for thinking ideas and AI is responsible for execution. You propose a theme, and it generates a script; you pick a style, and it finds material. This not only ensures efficiency, but also maintains the originality of the account.
By the way, many tools now also support automatic dubbing. You drop the script in, and it can generate dozens of sounds. However, I suggest that novices don't use this yet. Although real-life dubbing is troublesome, it is easier to establish account recognition. When you have a large number of fans, it's not too late to consider using AI to dub.
Anyway, play AI Short videos and don't use them as a magic wand. It's just an amplifier that turns your thoughts into video faster. So learn the basic logic first, and then find tools to assist, so that you won't take detours. "


