how i write youtube scripts with claude in under 1 hour
A live 21-minute walkthrough of a nine-step Claude scripting system that replaced five hours of blank-page work with one hour of guided conversation.
Posted
1 months ago
Duration
Format
Tutorial
educational
Views
578
23 likes
Big Idea
The argument in one line.
Custom Claude skills trained on your brand voice, run section-by-section with a dedicated quality control pass after each, compress a professional YouTube script from five hours of blank-page effort to under one hour of guided conversation.
Who This Is For
Read if. Skip if.
READ IF YOU ARE…
You run a YouTube channel for your business and spend more than two hours writing each script.
You have tried AI scriptwriting and gotten LinkedIn-post-style output that sounds nothing like you.
You already use Claude but prompt it as a general assistant rather than with purpose-built skill files.
You want a repeatable system where an editor and team can execute without you supervising every step.
SKIP IF…
You post once a month and your current writing process is fast enough.
You are not interested in building Claude skills or maintaining brand-context files.
TL;DR
The full version, fast.
The system uses a Claude project loaded with four brand files (brand bible, target audience, CTAs, voice guide) and a suite of purpose-built skills for titles, intros, outlines, body sections, hooks, CTAs, and quality control. Voice dictation via WhisperFlow handles input. All body sections are written first, then hooks are inserted at seams, then CTAs placed across the full script. Claude auto-builds a Miro visual board from the finished script so filming visuals are ready before the camera rolls. The result is a production-ready script in under an hour that natively contains seven to ten short-form clips.
Members feature
Chat with this breakdown.
Modern Creator members can chat with any breakdown — ask for the hook, quote a framework, find the exact transcript moment. Unlocks at T2: refer 3 friends + add your own API key.
Performance claim, differentiation from generic AI writing, overview of Claude skills and Projects setup.
01:30 – 03:20
02 · Claude skills and Projects walkthrough
Shows full list of custom skills and four brand files inside the Claude Project.
03:20 – 06:30
03 · Step 1: Title
Voice dictation to title skill to sparring-partner loop; final title selected.
06:30 – 09:00
04 · Step 2: Intro
Three intro variations, personal-story rewrite, QC pass removes corporate phrasing.
09:00 – 11:00
05 · Step 3: Outline
Brain dump to outline skill; six sections expand to nine through QC pass.
11:00 – 14:08
06 · Body sections
Body section skill writes points 1, 2, and 9 with personal story framing; QC catches repeated closing lines.
14:08 – 17:00
07 · Hooks
Six hook options per section seam; host selects and QC refines; tries batching three at once.
17:00 – 19:00
08 · CTAs
CTA skill reads full script and places three mid-video CTAs plus end-screen CTA.
19:00 – 21:44
09 · Miro board
Script pasted with Miro Connector; Claude builds nine visual flowcharts on the board automatically.
Atomic Insights
Lines worth screenshotting.
Giving Claude the full script at once produces weaker output than feeding it one section at a time.
Hooks belong at the end of the writing process, not the beginning: write the section body first, then insert the hook at the seam.
A QC skill that checks against a fixed checklist catches the same AI failure modes every time, especially repeated closing lines.
Claude configured to push back on title suggestions produces better titles than Claude configured to agree.
The brand-voice files inside a Claude Project do more prompting work than the actual chat messages.
Short-form clips are designed into the script structure before filming starts, not cut from the long-form after the fact.
A Miro board built from the finished script means the visual layer is done before the camera rolls.
SOPs written in enough detail that a new team member can follow them without questions remove the creator from the execution loop.
Voice dictation input is faster than typing and produces more natural-sounding raw material for Claude to refine.
One long-form video in this system feeds YouTube Shorts, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and email newsletters from the same session.
Treating each script section as a standalone segment means every section is structurally valid as a short-form clip from the start.
Batching three section hooks at once is a workable speed shortcut but produces slightly lower quality than one at a time.
Takeaway
A scripting system beats a scripting habit.
WHAT TO LEARN
The difference between five hours and one hour is not speed but structure: each step has a dedicated tool, a fixed input format, and a quality check that runs automatically.
01Hook and tech stack overview
The failure mode of generic AI writing is that the model optimizes for structure over voice, producing something that reads like a template because it was given a template-shaped prompt.
Differentiating your AI workflow from the default is a skill, not a setting: it requires building custom instruction files, not just switching tools.
02Claude skills and Projects walkthrough
Splitting a writing process into discrete skills keeps each model call narrow enough to be reliable.
Four brand files give the model enough persistent context to write consistently across sessions without re-briefing.
03Step 1: Title
A title skill configured to push back produces stronger titles than one configured to generate options from a single prompt.
Specific numbers and concrete outcomes outperform vague benefit claims in titles because they give the reader a falsifiable claim to react to.
04Step 2: Intro
The intro earns disproportionate time investment because it determines whether the viewer stays for the content.
A QC skill checking for corporate-sounding phrasing catches the most common voice drift in AI-assisted writing: the model defaulting to formal register when the brand requires casual.
05Step 3: Outline
Brain-dumping into an outline skill produces a more honest outline than trying to structure ideas before speaking them.
Six sections expanding to nine through a QC pass is a feature, not scope creep: the model can see structural gaps the writer cannot see while inside the material.
06Body sections
Running body sections through a fixed-checklist QC skill catches the AI habit of restating the section conclusion in the closing line, reliably enough to name and pre-empt it.
Asking the model to rewrite from personal story framing is more effective than asking it to make something more personal: the instruction is specific enough for the model to know what evidence to reach for.
07Hooks
Generating six hook options per section seam and selecting one is slower than generating one, but the selection step is where quality improvement actually lives.
Batching three sections at once for hooks is a workable shortcut that trades some quality for speed, and knowing where that tradeoff exists lets you apply it selectively.
08CTAs
A CTA skill that reads the full script and decides placement produces CTAs that feel like natural continuation rather than interruption.
Placing CTAs where the script provides a natural pause makes repetition feel like rhythm rather than pressure.
09Miro board
Auto-generating filming visuals from the finished script before the recording session eliminates the cognitive load of deciding what to show on screen while simultaneously talking.
A tool that decides between flowchart and document format based on content structure is making a design decision most creators make randomly, and consistent visual logic is a production quality lever.
Glossary
Terms worth knowing.
Claude Skill
A reusable instruction file added to Claude via Customize that fires automatically when triggered, giving Claude a specific job with pre-set rules and output format.
Claude Project
A persistent Claude workspace that stores uploaded brand files and custom instructions applying to every conversation inside it.
Quality Control Skill
A dedicated Claude skill that runs a completed script section through a fixed checklist, catching repeated lines, framing errors, and voice drift without manual review.
WhisperFlow
A voice-to-text dictation tool used here as the primary input method, converting spoken brain-dumps into typed text for Claude skills to process.
Section-level Hook
A transition line at the start of each body section connecting from the previous one; written after all body content is complete, not before.
Opus Clips
A tool that takes a long-form video and automatically cuts it into short-form clips for multiple platforms.
“Because if you just let it do everything at once, it starts to get weaker outputs.”
Counterintuitive AI insight, short and punchy→ IG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
20:40
“Instead of having to manually do everything, you just use your brain and you chill, and Claude does all the execution for you.”
Strong aspirational close, quotable system summary→ newsletter pull-quote↗ Tweet quote
The Script
Word for word.
17px
metaphor
00:00So I'm going to write an entire YouTube script in this video from start to finish, and you're gonna watch me do it step by step. Now, I run a YouTube script writing agency, and I've written over a thousand scripts at this point, both for myself, as well as my clients, as you can see right here on the screen. And about a month ago, I built a system inside of Claude that cut my writing time down from five hours down to one hour per script.
00:23And I'm not talking about the pace your topic into chatty bitty and pray kind of writing that we get with AI nowadays, because those scripts often come out looking like a LinkedIn post, which is not what you want. But the system that I use, I have Claude skills that actually write in the way that I talk, and I have projects set up inside of Claude with files that train Claude on how to write in my voice.
00:43So today, I'm gonna pull back the curtain on the entire process, and I'll walk you through the tech stack. I'll show you every file and Claude skill that I use, and then I'll write a real script live, so you can see exactly how I write the script step by step. Now, note, last week I demoed this exact process with how I write scripts, but because I wrote the script about how to write scripts, they got a bit meta and kinda confusing, so I decided to redo the process by writing another script in a different niche.
01:10That way it's easier to follow and you're not confused about if I'm actually teaching something or writing something at that moment. But to quickly run through the tech stack, the first thing that we use is inside of skills. So you gotta customize here skills.
01:24You should see a list of skills right here. We have a bunch of steps in the process. We have the outline writer.
01:29I have title writer. I have intro writers, hook writers, as well as the CTA writers. And then I also have stuff for chapter titles and things like that, as well as the main body section.
01:39Now alongside each specific step, I have quality control steps. So I then feed it back into Claude, and then it runs a quality control step where it makes sure that my main body section or my intro are following some rules. And so it just gives an extra step to make sure that the output is slightly better.
01:56And so if it sounds a bit overwhelming right now, don't worry, I'm gonna walk you through step by step how I use these skills so you can use them properly. And by the way, if you wanna download these skills, I'll put a link down below this video so you can check it out. It should take you to this document right here, which has all the skill files in the Google Drive for you to download, and there's also a little video right here just walking through how to actually set it up.
02:16So link's down below if you wanna check this out. Now, alongside the skills, if you come down here to projects, you should see that I have projects set up for the YouTube channels that I'm writing for.
02:26Now, each YouTube channel is gonna have their own project to work in. And if you look here on the right side, we have some instructions. So there's a memory section, there's instructions for the channel itself, then there's files right here, which I have four different files.
02:39I have the first one, which is a brand bible, I then have a target audience file, my CTA offers, and then a voice and style guide. And so we have these here just to make sure that Claude knows how to write in my voice, and understands my brand and what I sell and things like that.
02:55So now I'm gonna walk you through the step by step process of actually writing the script. So the next video right now, just to give a rundown of the target audience and what this channel is about, basically, the video is designed to help business owners, agency owners, consultants with growing their business.
03:13And the topic of this video that I have in mind is basically a content system, how I'm able to produce 30 plus videos every single month with only four hours of work. That's the desired result that the target audience wants. They wanna make a lot of videos, fast, at a good quality.
03:28So step one in this process would be to think of a title for the YouTube video. So the way I would do it is like this.
03:34Now, first thing I'm gonna do is activate the voice tool. Now, I like to write with my voice because you can speak way faster than you can type, and so this is a very quick way to do it. So what I'm using is a tool called WhisperFlow.
03:48This tool right here, it's pretty convenient. I like it a lot. You could just use Claude, so Claude has this speak feature right here, but you usually have a limit of how long you could talk.
03:56And sometimes, like, some apps just don't let you do the voice thing for some reason. I find WhisperFlow pretty good. I'm not affiliated with these guys in any way, but this is just an option for you if you wanna write.
04:06It's a massive time saver for me. I recommend it. But to start out, let's just start with the title.
04:11So I'm gonna start the voice tool. Hey there. So I'm working on a video, and for this video, let's run the title skill.
04:19I wanna start thinking of some title ideas for this video. Brief rundown of what the video is about. So what are some titles that could appeal to my target audience?
04:30And so right there, I was just chatting, and WhisperFlow then spits out the little outline, and then we click go. And now it's gonna run the title skill, which I have set up.
04:38So as you can see here, reading the title writer skill, and let's see what it spits back. So what I've set up this skill to do is it's going to scrape YouTube for outlier videos across different niches. Now, there's no API key available, so I've been testing the system inside of Cloud Code, and it's linked to my API key to basically scrape Google.
04:59But since I don't wanna give you guys my API key, obviously, you're going to have to add in your API key yourself. But if you don't wanna do that, it's fine. There's a fallback option, as you can see right here, where it's just gonna search through Google to find some frameworks.
05:11So as you can see right here, we have some frameworks right here from outlier videos, and then it's gonna give some title ideas for us. Okay, so I'm looking through these, and I'm just gonna talk to Claude a bit more, to tell it more of the direction I wanna go in. So I'm gonna start talking right now.
05:38So we say that, it now spits it out, and then I click enter. And let's see what it does. So it recommends I say 30 videos, instead of 30 pieces of content.
05:47It says leave out four hours a month, bloats the title. Business qualifier, just saying business is good.
05:52Okay. So as you can see right here, I've set it up to go back and forth and act as a sparring partner. So it's not set to agree with you.
05:59You can ask it questions. It then gives its own judgment on what to do, which makes this super cool. So here we have some straightforward titles, how I make 30 videos in four hours for my business.
06:08So I like that, pretty simple, gets to the point, so that's the title we're gonna go with. Alright, so I'm gonna move this over to the scripting section, how I make 30 videos in four hours for my business. So, let's move on to the next step, which is beginning the script.
06:21So I'm gonna talk to Claude once again. Hey Claude, I like the title, how I make 30 videos in four hours for my business. Let's start with the intro writing skill next, please.
06:31So just spit out some ideas that you have for the intro based on our target audience and my niche, as well as the title. And then we go like that.
06:39Let's see what it does. It's gonna reference the intro writer skill, and then spit back a few variations of the intro. So I've set it to send back three variations of the intro.
06:49It then lets me look through it, pick the one I like best, and then from there, we can then run it through the quality control skill. Okay. So looking through these three variations, I like variation one.
07:00There's a few things I want to change in it though, so I'm gonna go through and tell Claude what to do. So let's do this now. I'm gonna talk to Claude.
07:10So we're done. Let's click enter. But this looks good.
07:14Can we run this through the intro quality control skill next, just to make sure it's good to go? So there we go. We have a decent version now.
07:21We're gonna run it through the quality control skill, and let's see what it does. So the reason I add this quality control step is often the first version it sends out isn't going to be perfect, and I'm actually working on a version of this where it does everything without even talking to me.
07:38So the idea is I can just chat with Claude, do a brain dump, and then writes out the full script, and then I can then check it, give revisions, and then it's done. That's the goal that I'm going for with, like, the final version of this system. So that's why I have the quality control steps, because it allows Claude to check the script on its own, and it's based on some rules that I've set.
07:56That way it can make the improvements without me having to actually tell it. So let's run through the quality control system, and here's the final version that we have. Okay.
08:03So let's spit out this. Now one thing it added, which I don't really like, is this and the order of operations. It just sounds a bit corporate, and so I'm just gonna talk to Claude right now, and tell it what I wanted to change.
08:13Okay, looks good. One final note. I noticed at the end you say, and the order of operations.
08:19It's starting to feel a bit corporate. Please just change it so it sounds more like a normal person would speak. But other than that, it's good to go.
08:27And the intro is pretty much done now. This intro should take you a big chunk. If you feel like we're still writing the intro now and it's taking a long time, it's supposed to be like this.
08:35The intro is probably the most important part of the script, so we wanna get this part nailed down. When it comes to the rest of the video with the main body sections, we can go through them a lot quicker because intro is 80% of the video's performance, so we wanna get this part right. Okay, so the intro is locked in now.
08:51I've pasted it into the Google Doc. So the next step now is to work on the outline. So what we're gonna do is go back to Claude, and I'm gonna start the next step.
09:01So again, we'll activate our voice tool. Okay, looks good with the intro. Next thing I wanna do is create the outline.
09:09So let's activate the outline skill. So I'm just gonna do a brief brain dump of the video, the different things I wanna talk about. So So that's the video basically.
09:19Create an outline for me, please. Okay, so we just did that brain dump. So this part's gonna take a long time.
09:24You basically just let out anything you have in your head, and then from here, the outline skill is gonna activate, and it's gonna organize your thoughts into a logical structure that makes sense. So let's see what it spits back.
09:36So it's decided to organize our video into the script, one hour with Claude, why the script is built the way it is. So this is the idea of the long form video being put into seven to 10 standalone short form clips. Filming, just the screen share, super simple.
09:50Editor takes one video and then multiplies it. Email newsletters, and then SOPs.
09:55Okay. So let's spit back the outline. There's six points in here, but I like to have usually seven to 10 different sections.
10:01So I'm gonna ask Claude something real quick. Hey there, Claude. So we have six sections right now.
10:06Are there any of these sections that we can split into two separate ones? The first that I have in mind is section number one. I think we can separate the script side of me writing the script from the Myro board visual side, because they're kind of different parts, so maybe start with the script itself, then the Myro board visuals as separate points, and then look at the rest of them.
10:27Is there anything else that you think we can separate? Okay, so Claude came back with some suggestions right here. We should split point one, and then split point four.
10:36So that's pretty good. Hey Claude, this is perfect. Let's do these eight points.
10:41Now let's run it through the outline quality control skill to see if it's good to go. Okay, so we've written it, and now we're gonna put it through the quality control skill, just to make sure the outline's good, and that it logically follows. So basically what this skill does, is it makes sure that the narrative arc makes sense, that each point opens a new open loop.
10:59They also wanna make sure there's no repeated ideas. So it does these checks for us. So it has some suggestions here, let's look through them.
11:06So it's come back with a suggestion for nine separate points, so let's go with this. Okay, awesome. Let's do this for the outline.
11:12Let's now begin with the first main body section, shall we?
11:17Alright, so we're now starting with the first main body section. So it's now asking me which section it wants to start with. Start with point one, please.
11:24So now it's gonna activate the body section writer skill. So let's see what it spits back. So it's given two versions right here.
11:31I prefer variation one, but I wanted to write more from like my personal story, so I'm just gonna tell it to do that. Hey, Claude, I like variation one better, but can you write it more from my personal story? So there we go.
11:45We gave it my suggestions. Let's see what it spits back. So then it goes, and it does the rewrite based on what I've shared.
11:51So it gave it back, this looks good to go. Now we're gonna run it through the quality control skill next, just to make sure everything's good. This looks good, let's run it through the quality control skill, please.
12:01So let's see what it gives us. So as you can see here, it's run through the main checks that we do, and it's decided to cut this. Sometimes what AI does is it repeats the same line at the end, which basically just repeats something that was mentioned earlier, and it's not needed most of the time, and so it goes through the checks to make sure it's good.
12:19Basically what we're doing is we're giving Claude a checklist, and it's just gonna run the script through the checklist to make sure it's not making any mistakes. If it does, then it cuts out that bit and makes the change for us.
12:30So we're gonna take this and paste it into our Google Doc. So there we go, here's point one. We're gonna move into point two next.
12:37So let's talk to Claude. Looks good, can we move on to point two next? And then now it's gonna repeat the process.
12:43Now keep in mind right now, we haven't done the actual hooks for the main body sections yet, That actually comes later. What we're gonna do first is just write all the sections for main body sections, and then once they're done, then we do the hooks for all the sections afterwards. So now it's asking me a question.
12:59It's probably noticed it needs a bit more information, and so I prompted it so that if it's a bit vague, what you're talking about, it asks you some questions to then continue writing. So here's what we're gonna do next.
13:09So I'm just gonna brain dump right now for point two.
13:18And then, like that, it now begins writing it. Hey Claude, I like variation one. Can we run it through the quality control skill, and see what we got?
13:26So typically, with this setup, check six is gonna be the one where it always makes the mistake, because AI likes to add these filler lines at the end, where it just repeats what it said 20 times. And so it took it out now. That's how we get scripts that are punchy, they don't repeat the same thing over and over again.
13:42And so there we go, point two is added to the doc. Super cool. Can we move on to point nine, please?
13:47Actually, I noticed I say please after every prompt. Apparently, if you don't say please, it gives you a better output. So maybe you're supposed to be mean to AI, I just do it because I feel bad.
13:56But here we go, point nine has been done. Let me add it to the doc. There we go, point nine is done.
14:02So at this point, the main body sections are all done. The next step now is to add hooks, because you might notice that the start of each section is not really a hook. We wanna add the hooks in afterwards.
14:13And so what I'm gonna do now is go through section by section and do the hooks. Now, know it's a lot of work, but this is way quicker than if we did it in a different way, and this is the only way you can get an actual good output from Claude. Because if you just let it do everything at once, it starts to get weaker outputs.
14:29And so I'm actually working on a system where inside of Claude code, it just does everything step by step by step without me having to intervene at each step. It just runs through all of the steps on its own, and so I'll release that soon once I have that ready.
14:43But let's start with point one. Hey, Claude. Here is the intro as well as point one.
14:48Using the context from the intro and then the first few lines of point one, can we now do the hooks for point one? Then we paste it in like that, and what it's gonna do is it's gonna look at the last few lines of the previous section, as well as the first few lines of the next section, and then insert a hook that makes sense and actually flows with everything else.
15:07And so it gives us six options right here, which I can choose between. Hey, so I like version one. Can you now add that into the script and run the quality control skill to make sure it actually flows correctly and continues from the intro in a way that actually makes sense.
15:23So it's given some suggestions right here about how the hook in the opening line kinda says something similar. So I agree with that. I'm just gonna tell it to make that change.
15:31Hey, I agree. Can you make sure that the opening line and then the second line doesn't just repeat the same thing? So either merge them together as one line, or remove one of them, please.
15:39So there we go. It's dropped the redundant line and given me the final version. So I'm gonna go in and replace it right here.
15:45But now we have it with a hook that actually works a bit better. So now we go into point two. Let me talk to Claude.
15:51Okay, awesome. So this is what I went with for the final version of point one. I'm gonna paste in point two, and then can we do a similar process with the hook, please?
15:58And so what it's gonna do is it's gonna read point one, make sure it transitions into point two properly. So see here, it looks at point one's last line, and it gives me six options again. Hey, so I like version number one, the benefit led one.
16:12Can you now give me the full section with this hook added in, Run it through the quality control system to make sure that it lines up properly.
16:21So again, it's given me a suggestion on what to do. Yes. I agree with your suggestion.
16:25In the future though, can you just make that edit without me having to ask you again? Because you've given something that you flagged, but then you didn't actually change it in the final full section. So can you do that, please?
16:36And in the future, just do it yourself. So, yeah, I'm noticing that it flags this issue here, where it repeats the same thing twice, but it doesn't actually change it, so I'm just gonna make sure it does that. So there we go.
16:45This is done. So point two is ready. Let's do point six next.
16:49So again, I know we're doing the whole process again for hooks, and it takes a while, but hooks is one of the most important part of the script, so we wanna actually be deliberate here and, like, look at the different hooks. That way you can pick the best ones. Now, if you want to, you could just give the whole script, and then axe claw to just give the hooks for all the sections at once.
17:08But I notice when you do that, the quality gets a bit lower, and so I like to go through it section by section. You just get the best output this way. Actually, gonna try to do point seven, eight, and nine all at the same time.
17:18Let's see how it does. So let's see. Since it's three, it might be a bit better.
17:21Okay, so it's giving me back the 18 hooks. And honestly, this kind of works. If you wanted a little shortcut, you could try posting more sections at once, and then selecting it that way.
17:32It might be a bit quicker. So let me just run through and tell Claude which hooks I wanna go with. Looks good.
17:36Let's go with number one for point seven. For point eight, let's go with hook number six.
17:45And then for point nine, let's go with hook number three. Use these hooks, run it through the quality control checklist, and give me the final versions for the three main body sections.
17:53So let's see what it can do. So it's running the check for all three sections. Let's take this, copy and paste it in.
18:00We'll do the same thing. Let's paste it in for point eight, and then point nine will paste it in as well. So there we go.
18:06We've pasted in the final main body sections for all the sections right here. The hooks have been added in now, so we're good to go with that.
18:14Now, next step is to do the CTAs. So let me take the entire script right here, and I'm gonna paste it into Claude, tell it to write the CTAs.
18:23Very awesome. Let's do the CTAs now. I'm gonna paste in the entire script, and then write them out for me, please.
18:29So there we go. We're now gonna do the CTAs. So the CTA writer skill gets activated.
18:34Basically, this skill does is it reads the entire script, and then it tells you where to place your CTAs. So typically, I place the first CTA after point number one, and then the second CTA goes about, like, 50% of the way in the video.
18:47And then sometimes if it's a long video, we have a third one later on. And so it's written out the CTAs for me, and I'm gonna place them all in. Let's go after point one right here, CTA, paste that in.
18:59Next one comes after point five, so let's put that in here. CTA two, here after point five, and then the last CTA is after point seven.
19:09So I'm actually gonna put it after point eight. I think that's a better spot. So let's just put it there.
19:13And then the end screen call to action. It actually didn't do that, because I didn't tell it what video to make. So let me tell it what video.
19:23He will now write the end screen call to action. So there we go. End screen call to action is done.
19:28Full script basically done. So, last is the Myro board. I'm just gonna show how I do this.
19:33Alright. Can we do the Myro board next? The full script is done, basically.
19:37So there we go. Paste it into Claude, and it's gonna ask me for the URL. So I'm just gonna give it the URL to this board, and it's gonna create something like this for me.
19:45And so, if you wanna use this skill, you're going to have to connect your Miro account to Claude. You could probably find some tutorials on that, but if you go into customize, and then there's connectors, you just have to connect your account so you're able to access the board.
19:58So now it's gonna create the board for me. So what it does is it plans out the full script by the different points, and then decides if it should make a flowchart or a document.
20:07So it looks at if a flowchart makes more sense, if it's like a step by step process, it would do that. But if it doesn't really have a process, it's more of like a story, then it would use a doc instead. So now it's building it out.
20:18If you go to the Myro board right here, it usually finds like an open space on the board, and so, yes, as you can see, it's starting to build it down here. And so we will let it do its thing, and then come back to it afterwards. So at this point, you can go ahead, go do something, go do some chores, just whatever you wanna do.
20:33It's gonna sit here and do everything for you. And so this technology is super awesome, like I'm super excited here. Instead of having to manually do everything, you just use your brain and you chill, and Claude does all the execution for you.
20:45So it's gone ahead, it's written all nine visuals on the board. When we come to the board, they're all here, and then all I have to do is click apply to canvas. And so, the way I film is, I have this up on screen, I then get the pen tool, and then I just record and like draw things.
20:59As you can see in most of the videos I make, I just draw around the board, add some notes. Sometimes it needs a few screenshots and things, so I'll add screenshots if I'm talking about something, or most of the time, I just show it on the screen. This just makes it so that we get the visuals done, like, pretty quickly.
21:12This is like a minimalist way of doing it, just like little flow charts, but often I find charts like this work pretty well, like, people like looking at charts, or at least I do. I don't know if others feel the same, but yeah, pretty quick for doing the visuals. And so that's pretty much the full setup.
21:28Once again, if you want access to the Claude skills, link is in the description once again below this video, And that's pretty much it. If you wanna see the previous video I scripted with Claude where I was able to write a script in under fifty one minutes, then I'll put the video to that up on the screen right now.
Five hours to write one script. That was the number before the system. In this video the host shows the full process live, section by section, from blank Claude window to finished nine-part script with hooks, CTAs, and Miro visuals, and the number after is under an hour.
Frameworks
Named ideas worth stealing.
14:08concept
Section-First Hook Method
Write all body sections without hooks, then insert hooks at each section seam using the previous last line as context.
After every section is written, run it through a dedicated QC skill with a fixed checklist. Catches consistent AI failure modes without manual review.
Steal forany AI-assisted writing pipeline
02:30list
4-File Brand Context
Brand Bible
Target Audience
CTA Offers
Voice and Style Guide
Four files in a Claude Project give the model enough brand context to write consistently across sessions without re-briefing.
Steal forany Claude Project setup for consistent brand-voice output
09:30concept
Short-Form-First Script Design
Each body section is written as a standalone segment valid as a short-form clip. Repurposing is structural, not an afterthought.
Steal forany content strategy feeding multiple platforms from one recording
CTA Breakdown
How they asked for the click.
VERBAL ASK
18:18link
“if you want access to the Claude skills, link is in the description below this video”
Mentioned three times (early, mid, end). Points to Google Drive folder with all skill files and a setup walkthrough video. Also offers a 7-day email course lead magnet.
An 8-step system that turns a single sentence into a fully-voiced YouTube script — by loading memory, projects, skills, and connectors before you type a word.
A 20-minute screen-recorded tutorial showing how Claude plus Digital Maker AI can research a niche, clone a top video script, generate a full channel blueprint, write a script, voice it with ElevenLabs, and assemble a faceless video in Canva.
A 9-minute argument that stripping your edit down to five simple steps produces more leads, more sales, and more comments than any over-produced video ever will.