A good OmniVideo prompt behaves like a short creative brief. It tells the model what job the draft has, what should happen on screen, and how the team will judge the result.
The patterns below are not magic phrases. They are structures for making text-to-video and image-to-video work easier to review.
Related guides:
The review-first structure
Goal: [what decision this draft should support].
Audience: [who needs to understand the scene].
Source: [text idea or uploaded image].
Shot: [subject, setting, one action].
Camera: [one camera behavior].
Frame: [vertical, square, or horizontal].
Guardrails: [what must stay stable or avoided].
Review focus: [what the team should judge].Use all fields when the idea is complex. For quick tests, keep the same order and remove what you do not need.
1. Text-to-video hook test
Goal: test the opening hook for a vertical product ad.
Audience: shoppers comparing alternatives.
Shot: the product sits on a clean surface as the main benefit is revealed through one visible action.
Camera: slow push-in, stable composition.
Frame: vertical.
Guardrails: no fast cuts, no crowded background.
Review focus: can the benefit be understood in the first three seconds?2. Product page motion from an image
Use the uploaded product image as the visual anchor.
Motion: gentle push-in with a small light shift across the hero detail.
Camera: locked composition with slight depth.
Guardrails: keep shape, logo placement, color, and main composition recognizable.
Review focus: does the still asset become more useful without losing product accuracy?3. Founder or spokesperson scene
Goal: create a short visual draft for a founder explanation.
Audience: website visitors who need a clear product problem.
Shot: a calm presenter faces camera in a simple workspace and gestures once toward the product.
Camera: locked shot with subtle push-in.
Frame: horizontal or vertical depending on placement.
Guardrails: natural expression, no exaggerated movement.
Review focus: does the scene support a concise caption or voiceover?4. Feature explanation beat
Goal: show one product feature becoming useful.
Shot: start with the before state, then reveal one visible change that makes the benefit obvious.
Camera: clean close-up or UI-focused frame.
Motion: one controlled transition.
Guardrails: avoid extra interface elements or background action.
Review focus: can the change be understood without narration?5. Brand mood pass
Goal: test campaign mood before production.
Shot: the product or subject remains central while the environment adds controlled atmosphere.
Camera: slow drift or locked push-in.
Motion: subtle light, fabric, steam, screen, or background movement.
Guardrails: keep the composition simple.
Review focus: does the pace match the brand energy?How to repair weak drafts
If the result misses, diagnose before rewriting. Was the job unclear? Was the shot overloaded? Did the camera conflict with the action? Did the image need stronger guardrails? Change one answer, then run the next draft.
Final takeaway
Prompting OmniVideo is less about sounding cinematic and more about making review possible. Give the model a job, one shot, one motion idea, and a clear reason for the team to say yes or no.

