AI Video Ads: Step-by-Step Creation Guide | Bros Academy | Skillshare

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AI Video Ads: Step-by-Step Creation Guide

teacher avatar Bros Academy

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Intro

      1:06

    • 2.

      Module 1 — Prompt Engineering Fundamentals

      6:19

    • 3.

      Module 2 — AI Image Generation & Comparison

      5:35

    • 4.

      Module 3 — From Still to Motion: Creating AI Video with Kling AI

      8:49

    • 5.

      Module 4 — Sound Design with Riffusion AI

      5:53

    • 6.

      Module 5 — Final Editing in CapCut

      18:42

    • 7.

      Module 6 — Product-Accurate Image Generation for Big Brands

      4:22

    • 8.

      Module 7 — From Images to Motion

      6:05

    • 9.

      Module 8 — Final Editing: Assembling the Pepsi Ad in CapCut

      2:17

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About This Class

 Want to create eye-catching product ads without a camera, fancy gear, or editing experience?

In this practical class, you'll learn how to use AI tools to generate powerful, short-form video ads — the kind that grab attention on TikTok, Reels, and YouTube Shorts.

We’ll walk through the full creative process step-by-step — from idea to final export — using tools like ChatGPT for concept writing, Kling AI for visual generation, Riffusion AI for music, and CapCut for final editing.

Meet Your Teacher

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Bros Academy

Teacher

We are Bros Academy, a creative duo combining the worlds of cryptocurrency and AI content creation.

With over 6-8 years of experience in the dynamic world of crypto, we've invested in digital assets, explored Web3 games, and been active members of global crypto communities. Our passion for blockchain technology and decentralized finance (DeFi) has led us to create practical, beginner-friendly courses for those entering the space.

In addition to our crypto background, we are also AI content creators. We craft engaging AI-generated ads, animated shorts, and visual stories using the latest generative tools. From storytelling to marketing, we love experimenting with how artificial intelligence can be used creatively and commercially.

Through our courses, we share hands-... See full profile

Level: All Levels

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Transcripts

1. Intro: World of advertising is changing. Today, you don't need a camera crew, a designer, or a sound studio to make a great ad. You just need an idea and the right AI tools to bring it to life. Who this course is for? This course is for creators, freelancers, small business owners, marketers, anyone who wants to create eye catching short form videos quickly and affordably. What you will learn. You'll learn how to go from a simple idea or image to a complete 15 to 32nd commercial style video. All using AI tools will cover prompt writing, image generation, video creation, music, and editing with real examples like a burger ad and a Coca Cola concept. What tools we will use? The tools we'll be using include chat GPT for prompt writing and image analysis. Mid journey and cling for visuals and motion, refusion AI for music, and cap cut for final editing. This course is hands on. We'll build together step by step. You can follow along using your own product or try the same examples as me. Ready to create your first AI powered reel. Let's get started. 2. Module 1 — Prompt Engineering Fundamentals: Module one, prompt Engineering fundamentals from concept to command, crafting effective prompts for AI visuals. What is a prompt and why it matters? Let's start with the core concept. A prompt is a written instruction that tells an AI what to generate. Think of it as your creative brief, a mix of what you want, how it should look or feel, and what context it fits into, whether you're generating an image, a video, a piece of music, or a text. The prompt is what guides the AI's imagination. It's not just about naming objects. It's about describing the scene, the emotion, the style, the movement. In short, a prompt is your director's note. The more clearly and creatively you express what you want, the more control you have over the final result. The formula I often use, subject plus mood, plus visual details, plus motion or action, plus style reference. For example, instead of saying generate a picture of a burger, you could say a juicy cheese burger on a wooden table. Golden lighting, slow cinematic camera pan, steam rising, cozy rustic atmosphere, food commercial style. Notice how much more specific emotional and visual the second one is. That's the difference between a random result and something that looks like a real ad. Extracting prompts from visuals. Now, let me show you how this works using one of my own projects. An AI powered burger ad I recently created. Let's play the video first and then get back to extracting prompts from pictures. Building up the heat. Feel that funky deed. Everything you need is right here with me. I'm going to feed your soul tonight. Make you feels right. Everything Russia. By the end of this course, you'll be able to create ads just like that on your own. And trust me, it's going to be easier than you probably think. I'll guide you through each step in a simple, fun, and beginner friendly way so you'll feel confident making your own awesome ad content in no time. Alright, let the magic begin. I've prepared a folder with some of the AI generated images I used in the process. You're welcome to use them to follow along. Or if you want to try something different, just pick a reference image from Google that matches your idea. Once you have your image, we'll head straight into hatGPT, upload it, and ask Chat GPT to describe this picture and make a prompt for generating image from it. All right. Let's tell Chat GPT exactly what we're about to create. I'm going to describe my action step by step. First, I'll upload a few pictures and then I'll ask for a prompt to help me generate similar images. It's super simple and you'll see how easy it is to get the AI to understand what you want. Let's dive into the first one together. Take a moment to notice how well Chat GPT understood what's happening in this image. It's not just identifying objects. It's picking up on the vibe, the composition, the mood. That's what makes the description feel so rich and detailed. It's like having a creative partner who gets what you're going for. Now, the prompt it generated. Honestly, it's solid. I'm going to copy it into a Google Doc for easy access later. Just my little habit to stay organized. I'll also make the full prompt file downloadable for you in case you want to revisit any of them or use them as inspiration for your own work. You'll want to repeat this process for every image you're planning to use. I won't lie. It can get a bit tedious, especially when you're working with a big batch. But hey, that's part of the game when you're building something awesome with AI. To keep things flowing, I'm going to speed things up on my end and throw on some music while I finish grabbing prompts for the rest of the images. Feel free to do the same. Whatever keeps you in the zone. M. Pushing past the barriers. They built breaking boundaries that band and till Rolling rebel raw and real, making every moment steal. Iking up the pace now, breaking every low wow. Can slow down No No just a rush of being free Can catch what you'll never see Can stop us now. Grinding through the cards a ton past to keep outside withdrawn. Rapid rides and risky roads breaking every cold they roll field of friction burning fast, making moves that's made to last. Ooh Hold back down No. Move to solas been Can't catch what you'll never see Can't stop us now. Now that we've gathered all the prompts, we're finally ready to move on to the fun part, generating the images. But hold on a second. Before we jump in, let's take a quick pause and reflect on what we've learned so far. You now understand what prompts are and why they're the secret ingredient behind high quality AI generated visuals. You've learned a simple, reliable formula, subject plus mood, plus details, plus action, plus style and how it can instantly upgrade your image results. You saw the difference between a vague prompt and a detailed Adworthy prompt. And you discovered how to extract prompts from images using chat GPT to build your own library of ideas. This might have seemed like a lot at first, but you're already ahead of most people trying to figure this stuff out. In the next module, we're diving into AI image generation and side by side comparisons to see how your prompts really perform. Let's dive in. 3. Module 2 — AI Image Generation & Comparison: Module two, AI image generation in comparison. Now that we know how to write effective prompts, it's time to see what AI can actually create with them. In this module, we'll test the same prompt across different image generation platforms and compare how well they interpret our vision. This step is crucial because even the best written prompt can look completely different depending on the tool you use. Tools we will use. We're going to use four popular tools for this comparison, hat GPT image generation, mid journey, SRA I available, cling AI. Each platform has its own strengths. Some are better at realism, others shine at stylization or motion readiness. We'll use the same prompt in all four tools and you can decide on your own which platform you prefer. I am just showing the options. Now comes the fun part. Turning our prompt into actual visuals. We're going to generate images using the prompt we just created with hat GPT. To save us some time, I've already generated the first image using four different AI tools. In a moment, I'll walk you through each result so you can see the differences for yourself. Each tool has its own unique style and strength, so it's up to you to decide which one fits your project best. I've included links to all the tools in the video description. Feel free to explore them after the lesson. Alright, let's take a look at what Mid journey has generated for us. Look at this. So cinematic. It really reminds me of a McDonald style commercial. I personally like it a lot. But let's keep going and check out the other options. Next up, Sora. We got two generated images here. They look quite similar to the result from Chat GPT, and honestly, both are solid choices, especially considering they're free to use. Now the last one Kling AI. This one's my absolute favorite. I use Kling AI 2.0 with the Kohler's model for most of my visuals, and you'll see why. Just look at these images. They're rich, vibrant and full of texture. Seriously, they almost make you hungry. Later in the process, we'll upscale these images to boost the quality even further right before turning them into video. Now I'm going to take all our generated prompts and paste them into the text to image section of Kling AI. If you're using King, make sure to activate the colors 2.0 model and enable high resolution. These settings will give you the best possible results. Here you can also choose how many images you want King to generate from a single prompt. If you want to save credits, selecting two is a good idea, but I usually go with four and it gives me more variety to pick from. King generates images really fast, especially if you're using one of their subscription plans. They offer one free plan and three paid tiers, so you can start with the basic free option and try generating a few images. Then decide if you actually need a paid plan with no pressure. Another cool thing about King is that you can publish your generated images and videos on your public profile. Other users can view your creations and even recreate them using your prompts. Here's the fun part. After a certain number of recreations, you'll earn bonus credits. I plus. Every time you post a short video, like the AI powered ad we're making in this course, you'll get extra credits, too. Honestly, I've created half of my videos almost entirely using these bonus credits. So it's a great system if you're active on the platform. Hey, while you're there, feel free to subscribe to my Kling profile. Now I'm going to go through all the generated images and pick the one I like the most or sometimes even two if I can't decide. Once I've made my choice, I'll upscale the best one to prepare it for the video. All the upscaled images are downloaded into a separate folder just to keep things organized and ready for the next steps. Now, let me show you the final results. These images turned out so good what they're sharp, cinematic. And honestly, they're making me hungry, not gonna lie. My wife and I just ordered a takeaway burger after working on this part. That's a wrap for Module two. We just explored how to turn a prompt into powerful visuals and compared results across four different image generation tools. You've now seen firsthand how much style, quality, and emotion can vary from tool to tool, even when the prompt stays the same. This step is the foundation for everything that comes next because great video starts with great visuals. In the next module, the real magic begins. Think of it as the Hogwarts moment of this course where we take those images and breathe life into them as motion. Get ready to turn still frames into cinematic AI videos. See you in Module three. 4. Module 3 — From Still to Motion: Creating AI Video with Kling AI: Welcome to Module three. So far we've written powerful prompts, generated stunning images and compared them across different platforms. Now it's time to bring those images to life by turning them into videos, using King AIs Video generation tool. This is the moment where your content starts to feel like a real ad. King offers several video generation models, and recently they introduced Kling 2.1, which is the one we'll be using today. I've already tested it on multiple projects and it performs really well, especially for product focused, cinematic content like the ad we're creating now. It delivers smooth motion, great lighting transitions, and much better consistency compared to earlier versions. Now if you're planning to generate more intense scenes like a fast paced car chase or complex dynamic shots, I'd recommend testing Kling 2.1 master. It handles action extremely well with advanced motion tracking and more aggressive camera movement. Next, we can choose the video duration, either five or 10 seconds. For most ad style clips, 5 seconds is more than enough. Since in final editing, we'll likely trim it down to two to three second highlights and one important tip, make sure to turn on professional mode. It significantly improves the quality. You'll get cleaner motion, better detail retention, and overall more polished output. Now, let me show you the exact prompt I used when creating this burger ad real. Back when we were generating images, we focused on writing detailed descriptive prompts because more context usually means better visual output. But here's something interesting I discovered during testing. For video generation, especially when creating short form commercial style clips, you don't always need a super detailed prompt. In fact, in many cases, simple prompts work even better. I've tried both, complex cinematic descriptions and very basic straightforward phrases. For this project, the best results came from using primitive prompts like bacon slices falling on a grill. Lean, direct and focused on action. This type of prompt helps Kling generate short, punchy, highly usable clips. Feel free to experiment for yourself, but don't underestimate the power of simplicity when it comes to video generation. Now let's generate our videos from the upscaled images. All you need to do is press the Generate video button and make sure the Kling 2.1 model is selected. Next, you'll see the inspiration preset section. This is where you can choose the camera movement style for your video. You have a few great options here, orbiting the camera around the subject, zooming in, zooming out, sliding left or right, and more. These motion presets help bring dynamic energy to otherwise static visuals, and I always recommend mixing different camera movements across your scenes. It adds rhythm and makes your final edit much more engaging. I'll walk you through how I set mine up, and then you can try your own variations to see what works best for your style. All right. Let's start by selecting a camera movement preset. I'll go with one that rotates the camera around the object. It's perfect for giving our shot a smooth, cinematic feel. Now for the prompt, I'll keep it simple and action focused. Something falling burger ingredients on a table in slow motion. This type of prompt works great for product style ads. It's short, clear and gives the AI enough to build a dynamic, visually interesting scene and press generate. The video might take a few minutes to render, but we won't waste any time. Let's move straight to the next scene. This time, we're working with French fries and hot oil. Go ahead and click Generate and again, make sure the Kling 2.1 model is selected. For this shot, I'm going to choose a Zoom out camera movement since we already had a close up scene here. This adds variety and helps create a more dynamic final sequence. As for the prompt, I'll keep it short and focused again, French fries and hot oil. That's all we need. Then hit Generate and let King do its magic. Next up, we've got an image of hands assembling and presenting the burger. Once again, I'm choosing the rotate around the object camera movement. This gives us a smooth, cinematic motion around the center of action and later in the editing phase, I might combine it with a subtle zoom to make the scene feel more dynamic and polished. For the prompt, I'm keeping it direct. Hands close the burger and show it in front of the camera. Short, clear, and easy for the AI to understand. Then just hit generate and we're good. For the bacon on the grill scene, I'm using the Zoom in camera movement. It helps create a feeling of intensity and focus. Like we're getting closer to the sizzle. The prompt is, again, very simple and action based. Fresh bacon slices fall down on a grill. This gives the AI a clear physical action to work with. I'm using the same prompt and the same camera movement for the second bacon slice image as well to keep consistency across shots and speed up the workflow. For the next image, the one with the finished burger, I'm going with a rotating camera movement again. This allows us to reveal a bit of the surrounding environment, giving the scene more depth and atmosphere. Later during post production, I'll also add a Zoom in effect on top of the rotation. It creates a really nice cinematic buildup, and in one of the next modules, I'll show you exactly why I use this combo so often. As for the prompt, I'm using fresh burger with smoke in a kitchen with French fries in the background. This keeps the focus on the burger, but also hints at the full meal setting, which helps make the scene feel more complete. Just three more clips to go. For the falling salad leaves, I'm choosing the Zoom in camera movement to emphasize freshness and motion. The prompt is simple, fresh salad leaves falling on a plate. Next, we've got the cheese shot. I'll go with a rotating camera to follow the motion of the cheese as it falls and use the prompt. Hot cheese falling on a table in slow motion. Let's see what texture and movement Kling gives us here. And finally, the last one falling tomato slices. I'll stick with a Zoom in camera again to keep the focus tight and clean. Prompt is simple and direct tomato slices falling. That's it for the generation phase. Now, let's give King a few minutes to render all the clips and then we'll check out the results. Alright, let's check what we've got. Starting with the first clip. The camera isn't rotating exactly how I imagined, but the falling burger ingredients look fantastic. I'll probably use the first 3 seconds of this shot. That's the sweet spot. Next up, the French fries in hot oil. The camera zooms out just like I wanted, and the visual is spot on. This one's a keeper. Accepted. Now let's take a look at the hands presenting the burger. Again, the rotation effect doesn't feel quite right, but overall, the video looks solid. I'll mark it as accepted for now and later decide in post production whether it needs a second take. Onto the bacon slices. This one's a bit mess. Motion is okay, but nothing spectacular. I'll probably grab 2 seconds from this clip and combine it with the next bacon shot, which looks much better. Especially the end where the slices fall down with a satisfying bounce. That should be enough bacon for one video. Now this, finally, we is the rotation I was aiming for. Smooth, cinematic and full of depth. Looks fantastic. Accepted. The first few seconds of the falling salad leaves clip also work really well. Clean motion. Nice lighting. I'm keeping it. Another win the rotating cheese shot looks great. Especially the last few seconds where the cheese hits the table with soft impact. Cling nailed this one. Now the final clip the falling tomato slices. Honestly, not great. The water splash looks a bit artificial. I might be able to use a quick one to two second fragment, but overall, not happy with it. So I regenerated that video and the second version looks much better, more natural, better lighting and smoother motion. Once you've reviewed all your clips and you're happy with the results, make sure to download them into a separate folder for editing. We're almost done. One of the final steps is adding music to bring everything together. In the next module, we'll use chat GPT to help us write a music prompt and generate a custom soundtrack using refusion AI. See you there. 5. Module 4 — Sound Design with Riffusion AI: Alright. We're almost at the final stage. Just one more piece to prepare before we move into editing. Now it's time to generate music and possibly even some background vocals or light lyrics to match our video. Most importantly, we want to create audio that's copyright free, so we won't run into any issues when publishing are real on platforms like Instagram or YouTube. For that, we'll be using refusion AI, a free AI music generator that's perfect for this kind of task. I'll drop the link in the description. And yes, at the time I'm recording this guide, it's completely free to use. To generate a music prompt for refusion AI, I'm heading back to chat GPT and asking it to help me craft the right description for the soundtrack. For this video, I want something dynamic and modern in a hip hop style with a tempo around 120 to 130 beats per minute. That rhythm works great for fast cuts, food sizzles, and overall high energy pacing. Let's see what kind of prompt it gives us. All right. Here are the prompts generated by hat GPT, honestly, they look pretty solid. If I had written it from scratch, it probably wouldn't sound this structured and polished. You can always generate a few different variations and compare them. Sometimes a slight change in wording can shift the whole vibe of the track. Once you find a prompt that fits your needs, just copy it and let's head over to Refusion AI to start generating the music. Refusion AI is a browser based tool that lets you generate music from simple text prompts, no downloads, no installations, and no complicated setup. It's fast, beginner friendly, and surprisingly powerful. Under the hood, it uses a machine learning model trained to understand musical structure, including rhythm, genre, instrumentation, and even emotional tone. A based on your description. You can guide it by specifying genre, instruments, tempo, vibe, or even referencing a known musical style. As you can probably tell, I use refusion quite a lot. One time I got bored and ended up making a full reggae album, 20 songs in just 30 minutes, but that's a story for another time. Here's where we paced the prompt we got earlier from Chat GPT, simple and effective. And right next to it, there's this little magic button. It lets the AI generate lyrics for your track. We're going to give it a try just for fun. I'll type in a basic prompt like Burger ad commercial. We're not aiming for a Grammy here, just something catchy and light to match our video. Think of it as letting AI do some quick ghost writing. Nothing fancy, good vibes for a background track. Hmm. Let's tweak the lyrics a bit and mention that the burger comes with French fries. It's not a big change, but it adds a nice touch of context, so let's regenerate and see what we get. By the way, refusion allows you to generate two tracks at once, which is super convenient. Once that's done, I usually generate two more. So I have four options to choose from. It's always good to have variety, especially when matching the music to your final edit. All right. Let's listen to what we've got so far and see if any of these tracks hit the right mood. Sitting at my desk trying to concentrate, but my mind keeps wandering till my dinner play. Clock keeps ticking papers pile up high, while thoughts of juicy burgers make me sigh. Every single thought leads back to food or is it by your stomach grows beyond that kitchen door. My mind keeps wandering to my thinner plate. Clock keeps ticking, papers pile up high, while thoughts of juicy burgers make me sigh. Every single thought leads back to food. Got me feeling hungry. Change my mood. Can't resist this burger? Anymore resist this burger? Mustang that crouch beyond that kitchen door. Beyond that kitchen doors, Crispy fuzz waiting for Bento on my dad on play. Every single thought leads back to food. Got me feel it indo Those crispy fuzz of what I'm waiting for. I'm cowentineTill I can grab that meal that's so sublime. Sin at my desk China. Lots of juicy burgers make me sigh. Hungry change my mood. Caller son what I'm waiting for it. I think I'll go with this one. Burger Rush. It has the right energy and fits the vibe of our ad the best. Let's go ahead and download it in MP three format, and that's it for now. Music's ready, and we're all set for the final edit. Great work. You've made it through one of the most creative parts of the process. We've written prompts, generated images, turned them into cinematic video clips, and now added custom royalty free music. At this point, you already have the raw materials for a complete A e powered. In the next module, we'll bring everything together in Capcut where we'll edit the video, sync it with music, add transitions, text, and polish the final result. Whether this is your first AI project or just another tool in your creative arsenal, you're doing amazing. Take a short break if you need one and I'll see you in the next module where the real magic happens. 6. Module 5 — Final Editing in CapCut: Module five, final editing and Capcut. Welcome to the final Module. This is where everything comes together. We're inside Capcut now and we'll build our finished video step by step. I'm using the pro version of Capcut which unlocks a lot of advanced editing features, transitions, effects, and export options. But don't worry. Even with the free version, you still get access to all the core tools you need to edit and finish your video. You can absolutely complete this project without paying for a subscription. I'll leave a link to Capcut in the description so you can download it and start experimenting right away. First, let's create a new project and import all the video clips we generated earlier in Kling plus the music track we got from refusion. I like to keep everything in clearly labeled folders. Makes the process a lot faster. Now let's drag the first video clip onto the timeline. I always recommend starting with a high impact shot, something that catches attention in the first 2 seconds. This is especially important for reels, shorts or TikToks, where you need to hook the viewer immediately. Capcut offers a wide variety of transitions and effects that can really help your video look professionally edited, even if you're doing it all on your own. In this project, we'll try out a few different transitions and visual effects to enhance the flow and match the energy of our footage. If you have time, I highly recommend exploring Capcut's full library. You'll be surprised how much creative control you have, even in the free version. Personally, when I start editing, I rarely know exactly how each transition will look in advance. I like to experiment, try a few different options, and most importantly, I try to sync the movement and cuts with the music to keep the rhythm tight and engaging. Once I've laid out the basic structure, I start trimming each clip down to two to 3 seconds, just enough to show the action and keep things moving to split a clip quickly. Press Command plus B on Mac or Caudal plus B if you're on Windows. Remember, keep it dynamic. No one wants to watch a slow motion Burger ad unless it's for a five star steakhouse with truffle aioli and classical music in the background. All right. I finished trimming all the clips. The flow feels good and the pacing works well. For the soundtrack, I decided to use the last part of the song. It has a nice buildup, and I think the lyrics actually fit the vibe of our ad surprisingly well. Sometimes you don't need to use the entire track, the right moment that connects with your visuals. Now I'm going to jump into the creative part experimenting with transitions, timing, and effects. This part usually takes me around 15 to 20 minutes, depending on the mood and the complexity of the video. If you want, you can skip ahead and check out the final result or stay with me and see exactly how I build the final edit step by step. Who knows? Maybe you'll pick up a few tricks along the way. Cass this poo. This. Here's a simple trick to add more energy to your edit, split your clip into a few pieces and apply different zoom levels to each one. Some parts can be slightly zoomed in, others zoomed out. This subtle variation creates a feeling of motion and makes the scene feel more dynamic, even without any actual camera movement. Another easy way to make your edit more engaging. Play with the speed of your clip. Speeding up or slowing down certain parts can really change the dynamic and help break the rhythm. The video doesn't feel repetitive or boring. Just small changes in timing can make a huge difference in how the whole sequence feels. Another cool feature you can use is keyframing. It lets you create smooth zoom in or zoom out effects over time. Here's how it works. First, set a starting keyframe at the beginning of the clip, then move to the last frame, apply a small zoom in and set the final keyframe. This way, the Zoom feels much more natural and gradual, like a slow camera push. Compare that to just trimming the clip and instantly zooming in. Keyframes give you way more control in finesse. Burger. Anymore. Resist this. Can't resist this burger. Anymore. Resist this. Resist this purge, my stomach. Resist this parte. My stomach. Is this this car? My stomach. Stomach, it crouch stomach, it crowds beyond that it. A stoma, it crowds beyond that. Beyond that kitchen door, ionic. Noseris. Kitchen door, ionic. Kitchen door Kitchen door. Hind on a hind, on the kitchen door. Kitchen door, y on the kitchen door. Ca resist this murder. Anymore. Tis this murder. Tis this Casist this murder. Anymore? Is this murder, my dom, it crowds beyond that kitchen door. Did. Did those those So spy, fry. Poiss this BrdaHt. Resist this burda, my stomach crowd my stomach crouch beyond that kitchen door. Beyond kings ispyFr all pat. Fry. He fries. Hello waiting for. He fries. Hello waiting for. He fries. Waiting for. Hello, wait. He fries on. Hello waiting Jim. Jim I am. I'm lady. Oh, I'm lady. I'm lady. Can't resists crispy fries. Oh, wait. Can't resist this burger anymore. Can't resist this burger anymore. Can't resist this burger. Can't resist this burger. Is this burger more. Burger anymore. Is this burger anymore? Is this burger anymore? Ca is this burger anymore? This burger. A stomach crowd beyond that kitchen door beyond that kitchens crispy fries. Oh, my. Wait. Wait. Can't resist this burger anymore. Alright, we're done with trimming and timing the clips. Now let's add a fade out to the music at the end, so the video finishes smoothly and doesn't feel like it cuts off abruptly. Next, we'll add a few transitions and effects to polish the overall flow and make the ad look more professional and refined. More stomach crowd. Stomach crouch, beyond that kitchen door. Care resist this burger anymore? Resist this burger. My stomach crouch, beyond that Kitchen door on kitchen door crispy fries O. Burger. Anymore? Resist this burger. Resist this burger. Anymore? Is this Burger, Masto it crowds beyond that kitchen door. Resist this urder. Anymore Resist this para? Resist this urder. Anymore? Resist this para. Or anymore. Resist this para. My stomach, route. Anymore resist this Cara. My stomach. Anymore resist this Cara. Mtomch Anymore resist this Parker anymore, resist this Parker. Masco it crouch beyond that kitchen door. Anymore resist this Parker. Murder, anymore. Resist this parka. Musk Murder, Amore, resist this parka Maskam it crouch beyond that kitchen door, on. Fries. Oh, wait. She goes, crispy fries. Oh, wait. Can't resist this Can't resist this burger, ready. Can't resist this burger, ready. This this burger anymore. Can't resist this burger anymore. Can't resist this burger, Resist this burger, more. Can't resist this burger anymore. Can't resist this burger anymore. Resist this burger. Can't resist this burger anymore. Resist this burger. My somach crouch My stomach, it crowd Mtoma it crowds beyond. Beyond that kitchen door. Beyond that kitchen door. Matoma it crowds beyond that kitchen door. By Kitchen door the kitchen. On the kitchens crispy fries. Hello, waiting on the kitchen crispy fries. Oh, hello, waiting Can't resist this burger anymore. Who Can't resist this burger anymore. Who. Can't resist this burger anymore. We're almost there. Just a few final touches left. I think we're done here. Everything's trimmed, sinked, and polished. Let's sit back and watch the final result. Can't resist this burger anymore. This dark atomic grow beyond that kitchen door beyond that kitchen doors Chris right, Lady. Can't resist this burger anymore. Mm. I like it. Looks great, right? What do you think, guys? Was that hard? Not really. Huh. Just a few tools. So creativity, and now you've got a pro looking ad made entirely with AI. Before exporting, let's double check export settings. Format H 0.264. Resolution two K or four K, frame rate 30 FPS and bite rate set to recommended. Give the file a clean name like burger adfinal dot MP four and hit Export. And that's it. Congratulations. You've just finished creating your first complete AI powered commercial from writing prompts and generating visuals to building video, music, editing, and final polish. You did it all. That's no small thing. This was more than just a practice project. You've now learned a full creative workflow that professionals use to create ad content at scale, fast and with zero camera equipment. But now it's time to level up. In the next module, we'll take things a step further. Imagine this. A big brand reaches out to you, let's say, Pepsico, and they want you to create an ad for their signature Pepsi C. This time, we're not generating random food images. You'll need to recreate the actual look of the product, the label, the design, the lighting. Everything has to feel on brand. We'll dive into reference based image generation, advanced prompt control, and how to match your visual to a real product. Think of it as your first real client brief, and you're going to crush it. I'll see you in the next module. 7. Module 6 — Product-Accurate Image Generation for Big Brands: Welcome to Module six, and now we're entering the world of client level commercial work. Imagine a brand like Pepsi reaches out to you. They want a short catchy ad that showcases their product, the iconic Pepsi C, with all its signature colors, shape, and branding. In this module, we'll go beyond creative freedom and focus on accuracy. You'll learn how to use reference images to guide AI generation, maintain brand consistency in visuals, write prompts that balance creativity with control, prepare visual assets for client review or animation. Before we jump into creating, let me show you a Coca Cola ad I recently made using the same workflow. It'll give you a quick idea of the style and structure we're aiming for. In this module, we'll create something similar, but this time, featuring the iconic Pepsi can. YomaFsyTiking me on bubbles in the air. Dancing without care. YomaFs Everything is. Cool. Now let's head back to Chat GPT and start shaping our new idea. An AI generated Pepsi ad designed specifically for reels and Tik Tok. To make the result as accurate as possible, I've downloaded two reference images of a Pepsi can from Google. We'll use them to guide the visuals. When choosing your reference pictures, make sure the product is isolated from other objects. Ideally, on a clean background. This helps the AI better understand the focus of the image and avoids mixing in unwanted elements during generation. The clearer the reference, the more accurate and brand consistent your result will be. First, I'll ask Chat GPT to analyze the Pepsi can based on the reference image and turn that into a detailed prompt for image generation. Then I'll ask it to generate five short dynamic scene ideas that we can use for our video, all centered around that same Pepsi can, keeping the brand look consistent throughout. All right. Chat GPT did a great job. It understood what's on the reference image and gave us a very detailed description of the Pepsi can. Exactly what we needed for our prompt. And the scene ideas, not bad at all. Ice, fire and ice. Even some fireworks. That could actually look pretty cool in motion. Looks like we've got a solid base to start building the ad. Next, we're going to ask hatGPT to generate prompts based on the scenes it suggested so we can use them later for image generation. The prompts already look pretty solid, well structured and descriptive, and to make the results even more accurate, we'll also add our Pepsi can images as referenced during generation. This combo, strong text prompt plus clear visual reference should give us exactly what we need. Now we're heading over to Kling AI's Image generation section. First, make sure you select the Kohler's 2.0 model. It usually delivers the best texture and lighting for commercial style visuals. Then paste in the prompt we got from Chat GPT. After that, click on the Deep Seek button. Kling will automatically enhance the prompt and show you an optimized version. You can compare both and decide which one works better for your case. In this experiment, I'm going to try the Deep Seek enhanced prompt just to see how it performs. Of course, don't forget to upload our Pepsi Can reference image. It will help guide the AI to generate something more accurate and brand align. Since we're creating this for reels or Tik Tok, we want a vertical image. Let's set the aspect ratio to 916. I usually go with four image outputs. It gives me more variety to choose from. But if you want to save credits, selecting two outputs is totally fine and don't forget to double check that high resolution mode is enabled. It makes a noticeable difference in quality. Once everything's set, just click Generate and let the AI do its thing. Repeat this process for each of the prompts. Upload the reference image, choose your settings and generate. We want a full set of visuals to cover all the scenes we planned, take your time and go through them one by one. Great job. We've now generated a full set of visuals for our Pepsiad using prompts, references and AI magic. Take a few minutes to grab a coffee or stretch your legs. You've earned it. In the next module, we'll go through all the images, choose the best ones, upscale them for high quality output, and then use them to create a dynamic AI powered video. We're getting closer to the final result. See you in the next module. 8. Module 7 — From Images to Motion: Welcome to Module seven, where things really start to come to life. We've generated all the scenes for our Pepsi ad. Now it's time to turn them into motion. In this module, we'll go through the images, pick the best and most visually striking ones, upscale them for quality, and use King AI's video generation tools to animate them into short professional looking clips. First, take a few minutes to review all the images generated from your prompts. We're looking for clean compositions, strong lighting, and a clear view of the Pepsi can, since it's the visual centerpiece of the ad. You don't need to use every image. Just pick the ones or two that look the most convincing and eye catching and upscale them. This will improve sharpness, resolution, and give us a cleaner base for animation. Take a look at this image. It's almost perfect. But do you see that text in some Asian language near the can? Yeah, we definitely don't need that in a Pepsi ad. Luckily, it's an easy fix. Just click the paint button in King, highlight the section you want to clean up and let the AI do the rest. While King is working on that, let's take a look at the other images we generated. To be honest, I'm not loving the ones with fire. They feel off brand, maybe a bit too dramatic. I'm not even going to bother regenerating them. I think the ice based scenes will give us more than enough great material to work with. Take a look at the painted image. It looks great. The unwanted text is gone and it only took a few clicks to fix. By the way, I accidentally generated four outputs. Probably didn't need that many. For inpainting, one or two versions are usually more than enough. I also want to regenerate the images with fireworks. I really like the atmosphere and the energy they bring, but I think we can get something a bit more polished. Let's give it another try and see if we can get images that better match the overall quality of the ad. I also realized I'm missing one important scene. I want to create one more image, something more lifestyle focused. I'm thinking of a beautiful Latina girl drinking Pepsi on a sunset beach just to bring a more human emotional element into the ad. I'll add variety and help the brand feel more relatable. And here we go when the new set of images for the fireworks scene just came in. This looks much better. The overall vibe is cleaner, more dynamic and definitely fits the energy of the ad. I especially like the last one. I'm going to upscale it and keep it for the final cut. And the scene with the beautiful girl drinking Pepsi is ready. Take a look at the last image. It looks incredibly realistic. The lighting, the expression, the background, everything just works. I'll go ahead and paint the details on the Pepsi can to make it look even cleaner than upscale the image and definitely keep it for the final video. All right, let's give it a few minutes for all the images to finish generating. Once they're ready, we'll move on to the next step. Turning these visuals into dynamic video clips. Let's start generating our upscaled images into video clips. We'll begin with the scene of the girl drinking Pepsi on the beach. For this one, I'm using a Zoom in camera effect to slowly bring focus onto the can. The prompt is simple and direct. Young woman drinking Pepsi Cola from a blue can. We'll go with a five second clip. Select the Kling 2.1 model and hit Generate. Next up, the fireworks scene. I think a camera rotation around the can will work perfectly here to bring energy and a bit of celebration feel. Prompt for this one. Smoke coming from an open can of Pepsi. Fireworks in the background. Simple but effective. And now the third scene the Pepsi can falling into water. I'm keeping the rotation camera mode again for dramatic effect. Here's the prompt. Pepsi Cola Blue, can falling into water in slow motion with water splashes. This should give us a bold, refreshing shot. Let's generate and see how it turns out. For the next scene, I'll go with a Zoom in camera effect and simply copy paste the existing prompt. Sometimes there's no need to overthink it. Let's see what result we get with the same wording. Now, for the second Pepsi can falling into water scene, I'll again choose the camera rotation effect and it adds nice depth and energy to the motion. The prompt I'm using is a blue Pepsi can falling into water in slow motion with the water splashes. Very straightforward and it should work well for this action based shot. For the last two images, I'll keep it simple, just like we did earlier. I'll reuse the original prompts, but this time, I'll apply two different camera styles, one with a Zoom in effect and the other with a camera rotation. Let's generate them all and see which versions turn out best. All right, let's check out the videos we just generated. First up, the girl drinking Pepsi with the Zoom in effect. That one turned out great. Clean movement, solid framing. I'm keeping it. Next, the fireworks scene. Didn't expect the can to rotate like that. Might be able to salvage a few seconds from it, or I'll just regenerate it later if needed. The following clip looks good overall. I'll keep it. I might even add a reverse effect in post just to give it a bit more flare. We'll see. This one, I'm on the fence. Not sure what to do with it yet. Maybe I'll reverse it too or just use a quick two second segment. Now, this one, that's dope, especially the first 3 seconds, perfect pacing and mood excepted. And this one has something a bit unusual, kind of a magical vibe going on. It's different, but I like it. Accepted. And what is that? Ha ha. I'm not even sure, but you know what? Let's keep it and see what we can make of it in editing. All right, I'm downloading all the clips now so we can get ready for the final assembly. That wraps up the creative part of this module. We've selected, upscaled, and animated all our best images. Now we're ready for the final step editing our Pepsiad. In the next and last module, we'll bring everything together inside Cap cut. This is where it all comes together. See you in the final module. 9. Module 8 — Final Editing: Assembling the Pepsi Ad in CapCut: Module eight, final editing, assembling the Pepsi ad in Cap Cut. Welcome to the final module of this course. Time to turn all our hard work into a finished ad. We've written prompts, generated visuals, animated scenes, added music, and now we'll bring it all together in Capcut. By the end of this session, you'll have a fully edited vertical video ad that looks like it came from a professional studio, but was made entirely with AI and a bit of creativity. Now it's time to generate music for our final video. As usual, we'll start by going to Chat GPT to help us craft a solid music prompt. Let's be a bit more specific this time. I'm aiming for a 130 beats per minute hip hop style track that feels dynamic and modern. Alright, this one looks great. The description hits the right tone and rhythm. Let's copy the prompt and head over to Refusion AI to generate our soundtrack. All right. Let's jump into Capcut and upload everything, our music file and all the video clips we've just generated. For editing, I'll be using the same techniques we practiced in the previous project, trimming clips, sinking to music, and adding light transitions. To save us some time, I'll speed up the process a bit. And that's it. Here's our finished a e powered Pepsi ad. We went all the way from idea to prompt writing, to generating visuals, animating scenes, composing music, and editing the final cut. You've now created two complete ads using only AI tools, one for a juicy burger and one for a world famous brand. You didn't need a camera, a production crew, or editing experience, the right tools, some creativity, and this workflow. Hope this course gave you a fresh perspective on what's possible with AI and showed that you can use it to create real commercial quality content, whether for yourself, your brand or your future clients. Thanks so much for learning with me. If you build something with this process, I'd love to see it. Until next time, keep creating, keep experimenting and see you in the next project.