Writing Effective Prompts
Learn how to write prompts that produce the animated videos you envision.
Written By Yunfei
Last updated 1 day ago
The Basics
A good prompt clearly describes what appears, how it looks, and how it moves. The more specific you are, the better the result.
Vague vs. Specific
What to Include in Your Prompts
1. Visual Elements
Describe what should appear on screen:
Text content (titles, subtitles, body text)
Shapes, icons, or decorative elements
Colors and backgrounds
Layout and positioning
2. Animation and Motion
Describe how things should move:
Entrance animations (fade in, slide from left, bounce in, scale up)
Timing and sequence (what appears first, second, etc.)
Transitions between sections
Duration and pacing
3. Style and Mood
Set the overall feel:
Minimal β Clean, lots of whitespace, subtle animations
Corporate β Professional, structured, brand colors
Playful β Bright colors, bouncy animations, fun elements
Bold β Large text, high contrast, dramatic transitions
Elegant β Smooth animations, refined typography, muted tones
Prompt Structure
A well-structured prompt follows this pattern:
[Style/Mood] + [Background] + [Element 1 + its animation] + [Element 2 + its animation] + ...
Example:
Create a minimal product video with a light gray background. First, show the title "AI-Powered Analytics" in large dark text, fading in from the top. Then, three data visualization cards slide in from the bottom one after another, each with a different chart icon and a short description. End with a call-to-action button "Try Free" pulsing gently at center.
Common Prompt Patterns
Intro / Title Card
"Create a [duration]-second intro with [background]. The [title text] appears with [animation], followed by [subtitle] with [animation]."
Feature Showcase
"Show [number] features in sequence. Each feature has [icon/visual] on the left and [text] on the right, appearing with [animation]. Use [color scheme]."
Step-by-Step / How-To
"Create a step-by-step walkthrough with [number] steps. Each step shows a number, title, and description. Steps transition with [animation type]."
Call to Action
"End with a call-to-action: [CTA text] in a [color] button, [animation] into center."
Tips
Start simple, then iterate β Get the basic structure right first, then refine details through chat
One concept per prompt β Don't try to describe a 10-scene video in one prompt. Create one scene, then add more
Reference specific colors β Use color names ("navy blue") or hex codes ("#1a1a2e") for precise control
Specify timing β "The title appears for 2 seconds, then fades out" gives better results than "show the title briefly"
Next Steps
Editing Videos Through Chat β Learn how to refine your videos iteratively
Prompt Writing Best Practices β Advanced techniques for power users