TikTok and Reels batch script generator that produces 10 viral short-form videos at once
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Prompt
You are a short-form content strategist who has helped creators grow from 0 to 1M followers on TikTok and Instagram Reels. Generate a batch of [num_scripts] short-form video scripts about [content_theme] for a [creator_type] creator.
Each script must include:
1. Hook (first 1.5 seconds — what stops the scroll)
2. Setup (2-5 seconds)
3. Body (main content, under [max_duration] total)
4. Call-to-action or open loop ending
5. On-screen text overlay suggestions
6. Sound/music direction
7. Estimated virality score (1-10) with reasoning
8. Best posting time suggestion
Format all scripts so they can be filmed in one sitting with minimal location changes.Customise this prompt
Fill in 4 variables to personalise this prompt
Preview
You are a short-form content strategist who has helped creators grow from 0 to 1M followers on TikTok and Instagram Reels. Generate a batch of [num_scripts] short-form video scripts about [content_theme] for a [creator_type] creator.
Each script must include:
1. Hook (first 1.5 seconds — what stops the scroll)
2. Setup (2-5 seconds)
3. Body (main content, under [max_duration] total)
4. Call-to-action or open loop ending
5. On-screen text overlay suggestions
6. Sound/music direction
7. Estimated virality score (1-10) with reasoning
8. Best posting time suggestion
Format all scripts so they can be filmed in one sitting with minimal location changes.
Example output
# Short-Form Video Script Batch
**Content theme:** counterintuitive productivity tips for remote workers
**Creator type:** tech professional / thought leader
**Max duration per video:** 45 seconds
**Filming plan:** All 10 can be shot at a desk setup in 2-3 hours
---
## SCRIPT 1: "The Fake Commute"
**Virality score: 9/10** — Counterintuitive + immediately actionable + relatable WFH pain point
**Best posting time:** Tuesday 7:15 AM (catches morning scrollers before work)
**HOOK (0:00-1.5s):**
[Creator puts on shoes, grabs keys, walks OUT their front door]
[Text overlay: "I commute to work every morning"]
[Text overlay 2: "I work from home."]
**SETUP (1.5-5s):**
[Creator walks around the block, comes back in through the same door]
"I've been doing a fake commute for 6 months and it completely fixed my work-from-home burnout."
**BODY (5-35s):**
"Here's why it works. When you worked in an office, your commute was a transition ritual. Your brain used it to shift from 'home mode' to 'work mode.' When you removed the commute, you removed the transition — so now you're always in both modes and neither mode. The fix is stupid simple: every morning, put on shoes, walk outside for 10 minutes, come back, sit down at your desk. Your brain goes 'oh, we arrived at work.' I went from checking Slack in bed at 6 AM to having actual boundaries. Do the same walk at 5 PM in reverse. You'll feel like you 'left work.'"
**CTA (35-45s):**
"Try it for one week. Just one. Then come back and tell me I'm wrong."
[Text overlay: "Try it for 1 week" with arrow pointing to comments]
**Sound direction:** Trending upbeat lo-fi, volume low under speaking parts, bring up during the walking shots.
---
## SCRIPT 2: "The Two-Minute Rule is a Lie"
**Virality score: 8/10** — Contrarian take on popular advice generates debate (comments = reach)
**Best posting time:** Wednesday 12:30 PM (lunch break scrolling)
**HOOK (0:00-1.5s):**
[Creator staring at camera, deadpan]
[Text overlay: "The 2-minute rule ruined my productivity"]
**SETUP (1.5-5s):**
"Everyone says 'if it takes less than 2 minutes, do it now.' That advice is destroying your focus."
**BODY (5-38s):**
"Here's the math nobody does. Let's say you get 30 'two-minute tasks' in a day. Emails, Slack messages, quick fixes. That's 60 minutes of tasks, right? Wrong. Every time you switch tasks, you lose 23 minutes of focus recovery time — that's from a UC Irvine study. So those 30 tiny tasks actually cost you roughly 6 hours of fragmented attention. You got all the small stuff done but nothing important. Instead, I batch all two-minute tasks into two 30-minute blocks — 10 AM and 3 PM. Everything else waits. My deep work went from maybe 2 hours a day to 5. The two-minute rule is great for your to-do list and terrible for your actual output."
**CTA (38-45s):**
"Save this before you forget it. Part 2 drops tomorrow — I'll show you the exact batching system."
[Text overlay: "SAVE THIS" with bookmark icon]
**Sound direction:** No music. Just voice. The silence makes the information feel more authoritative.
---
## SCRIPT 3: "Your Desk is a Lie Detector"
**Virality score: 7/10** — Visual + relatable + quick payoff
**Best posting time:** Thursday 8:00 AM
**HOOK (0:00-1.5s):**
[Camera slowly pans across a messy desk]
[Text overlay: "Your desk tells me exactly how productive you are"]
**SETUP (1.5-5s):**
"I can tell how someone's week is going just by looking at their desk. And no, the answer isn't 'clean desk = productive.'"
**BODY (5-38s):**
"A spotless desk usually means someone is procrastinating by organizing. A chaotic desk means someone is overwhelmed and context-switching too much. The most productive desk has exactly three things on it: the ONE project you're working on right now, a glass of water, and nothing else. Not your phone, not sticky notes from last week, not three half-finished notebooks. Every object on your desk is a open loop in your brain. Your brain sees that sticky note and goes 'oh, I should call the dentist.' It sees that notebook and thinks 'I never finished those meeting notes.' Each one is a micro-distraction. Before you start work tomorrow, take everything off your desk except the one thing you need for your first task. Do 90 minutes. Then swap. I call it 'single-object mode.'"
**CTA (38-45s):**
"Show me your desk right now. Drop a photo in the comments — I'll tell you what it says about your productivity."
[Text overlay: "Show me your desk" with camera emoji]
**Sound direction:** Soft ambient, almost ASMR quality during the desk pan, then normal for speaking.
---
## SCRIPT 4: "The Meeting That Should Be 4 Meetings"
**Virality score: 8/10** — Subverts the "this meeting should be an email" trope
**Best posting time:** Monday 8:45 AM (before weekly meetings start)
**HOOK (0:00-1.5s):**
[Creator in a fake meeting, obviously bored]
[Text overlay: "This meeting could have been an email"]
[Quick cut — creator now energized]
[Text overlay changes: "Actually, it should have been 4 meetings"]
**SETUP (1.5-5s):**
"Everyone says 'this meeting should have been an email.' I think the problem is the opposite. Your one-hour meeting should be four fifteen-minute meetings."
**BODY (5-38s):**
"Here's why hour-long meetings fail. You put 6 people in a room for an hour. Person A cares about the first topic. Person B cares about the third topic. Both sit through 45 minutes of irrelevant discussion. Multiply that by every person and you've wasted roughly 4 hours of collective human time. Instead: four 15-minute meetings, each with only the 2-3 people who need to be there. Meeting one: design review with designers and the PM. Meeting two: technical blockers with engineers. Meeting three: timeline check with the lead and the stakeholder. Meeting four: decision meeting with decision makers only. Same total time. Five fewer people bored. And here's the secret benefit — short meetings start on time because nobody wants to waste a 15-minute meeting with small talk."
**CTA (38-45s):**
"Tag your manager. I dare you."
[Text overlay: "tag your manager" with eyes emoji]
**Sound direction:** Office ambience sound effect in the hook, then clean audio for the explanation.
---
## SCRIPT 5: "The Notification Audit"
**Virality score: 9/10** — Immediately actionable + everyone has this problem + easy to film reaction
**Best posting time:** Sunday 7:00 PM (people planning their week)
**HOOK (0:00-1.5s):**
[Screen recording showing notification settings with 47 apps enabled]
[Text overlay: "You have 47 apps interrupting you"]
**SETUP (1.5-5s):**
[Cut to creator face] "I turned off notifications on every single app on my phone except two. Here's what happened after 30 days."
**BODY (5-38s):**
"The average person gets 80 push notifications per day. Every single one triggers a cortisol micro-spike. That's 80 tiny stress responses before you even open an app. I turned off everything except phone calls and calendar reminders. No email notifications, no Slack, no social media, no news. The first three days were genuinely uncomfortable. I kept picking up my phone expecting something. By day seven, I stopped. By day fourteen, I started noticing I could think in complete thoughts again. Like, I'd have an idea and actually follow it to completion instead of getting interrupted 90 seconds in. My screen time dropped from 5.5 hours to 2.1 hours. Not because I was trying — I just stopped reaching for my phone because it stopped calling me. The things that actually matter? I check them on MY schedule. Email three times a day. Slack four times. Social media once. Nothing broke. Nobody died. And I got my brain back."
**CTA (38-45s):**
"Go into your settings right now and count how many apps have notifications on. Put the number in the comments. No judgment."
[Text overlay: "How many apps? Comment your number"]
**Sound direction:** Phone notification sound effects (rapid fire) during hook, then silence. The contrast IS the content.
---
## SCRIPTS 6-10: QUICK FORMAT
### SCRIPT 6: "Email at 11 PM Shows Weakness, Not Work Ethic"
**Virality: 8/10** | **Time: Friday 5:30 PM**
Hook: [Typing an email, clock shows 11 PM] "Your late-night emails are telling your team you can't manage your time."
Core message: Schedule-send everything. Sending at 11 PM normalizes overwork, creates implicit pressure, and signals poor prioritization. The most respected leaders send emails at 9:01 AM.
CTA: "Save this for your boss." (controversy drives shares)
### SCRIPT 7: "The 5-4-3-2-1 Focus Reset"
**Virality: 7/10** | **Time: Tuesday 2:00 PM** (afternoon slump)
Hook: [Creator staring blankly at screen] "When you can't focus, don't try harder. Do this instead."
Core message: Sensory grounding technique adapted for desk work. Name 5 things you see, 4 you can touch, 3 you hear, 2 you smell, 1 you taste. Takes 30 seconds, resets your prefrontal cortex, and you get 45-60 minutes of renewed focus.
CTA: "Try it right now. Seriously, pause the video."
### SCRIPT 8: "Your To-Do List Has 3 Lists Pretending to Be 1"
**Virality: 8/10** | **Time: Monday 7:00 AM**
Hook: [Showing a massive to-do list] "This is not a to-do list. This is three lists wearing a trench coat."
Core message: Separate your list into: (1) tasks only YOU can do, (2) tasks you should delegate, (3) tasks that don't need to happen at all. Most people's "to-do list" is 40% category 3. Delete those. 30% is category 2. Hand those off. The remaining 30% is your ACTUAL job.
CTA: "Rewrite your to-do list with three columns. Show me the before and after."
### SCRIPT 9: "Stop Starting Your Day with Email"
**Virality: 7/10** | **Time: Wednesday 6:45 AM**
Hook: [Creator checking email in bed, then physically throwing phone] "Your first hour determines your entire day. And you're spending it reacting to OTHER people's priorities."
Core message: The first 60-90 minutes after waking, your brain is in a high-alpha-wave state ideal for creative and strategic thinking. Email puts you into reactive mode. Do your hardest, most creative work FIRST. Check email at 10 AM.
CTA: "Tomorrow morning: phone stays in another room until 9 AM. Report back."
### SCRIPT 10: "The Calendar Audit That Got Me 11 Hours Back"
**Virality: 9/10** | **Time: Sunday 6:00 PM**
Hook: [Screen recording scrolling through a packed Google Calendar] "I found 11 hours of wasted time in my calendar. In one week."
Core message: Color-code your calendar into four categories: (green) work only I can do, (yellow) collaborative work, (red) meetings I attend but don't speak in, (gray) tasks that could be async. Red and gray are your waste. Cancel or convert every red/gray meeting for one week. Track what happens. Spoiler: nothing bad happens and you reclaim 8-12 hours.
CTA: "Do the audit this Sunday. Screenshot your before and after calendar. I'll review them in a live next week."