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AI Influencers

One AI Creator, 30 Days of Content: A Practical Playbook

A practical 30-day plan for one AI creator: batch the Studio's 17 scene templates by category, animate the best stills, and cast them in product ads.

LT

Lensgo Team

July 17, 20269 min read
One AI Creator, 30 Days of Content: A Practical Playbook

The hard part of running an AI creator's account isn't making one good image. It's showing up every day for a month with posts that look like they belong to the same person, living the same life, on the same feed.

This is the playbook for exactly that: one saved character, one sitting a week, thirty days of consistent content. It leans on three things in LensGo's AI Influencer Studio — the saved character itself, the built-in scene templates, and the animate and casting steps that turn your best stills into video and product ads.

You'll need a LensGo account, and it helps to have read how to create an AI influencer first if the character doesn't exist yet.

Step 1 — Pick or build the character once

Everything below assumes a locked identity: a saved character (a Lens ID) that every generation is anchored to, so the face doesn't drift between Monday and Thursday.

Two ways in:

  • Pick a preset. The Studio ships five ready-made characters. Preset photos cost 3 credits, so unused free daily credits can cover one; the allowance is shared with LensGo's other free tools, and free-tier output is watermarked. It's the cheapest way to test whether this workflow fits you before committing.
  • Build your own. The Builder lets you design the face — gender, age, look, hair, eyes — and shuffle until it's right. Custom characters use paid credits, and so do their photos and all video.

Either way, the character is stored as a small set of reference images and reused in every future generation. There's no training job and nothing to wait for; references, not training is the whole design.

Don't base the character on a real person. Fictional, always.

Step 2 — Learn the template grid before writing prompts

The Studio's scene templates are the engine of this calendar: 17 one-tap scenes across five categories — lifestyle, fitness, editorial, product, and travel. Tap one and it prefills the shot — scene, wardrobe direction, aspect ratio — for whichever character is active. "Golden-hour café," "Sunrise run," "Rooftop editorial," "Product in hand," "Tokyo nights" — finished scenes, not blank prompts.

Templates matter for a calendar for a reason that has nothing to do with saving typing: they keep the world coherent. A month of posts reads as one person's life when the scenes rhyme — the same kinds of mornings, the same taste in places. Seventeen art-directed scenes give you that spine; your own prompts fill the gaps.

A café scene from the template grid — the kind of everyday anchor post a feed is built on.
A café scene from the template grid — the kind of everyday anchor post a feed is built on.

Step 3 — Batch by category, one sitting per week

Don't generate day-by-day. Batch a week of posts in one sitting, and batch by category so each session has one mood, one wardrobe lane, and one editing pass.

A concrete 30-day split:

Week 1 — Lifestyle + editorial (the introduction). Run the four lifestyle templates ("Golden-hour café," "Slow morning," "City at dusk," "Farmers market") and the three editorial ones. That's seven anchor posts that establish who this person is: their mornings, their city, their polish. Editorial shots make strong pinned posts and profile imagery.

Week 2 — Fitness + travel (the range). Three fitness templates plus the four travel scenes. Now the character has a body of habits and a passport. Travel posts are also your best candidates for multi-image carousels — run the same template twice with small prompt variations for a two-frame story.

Week 3 — Product + your own prompts (the depth). The three product templates ("Skincare moment," "Unboxing," "Product in hand") plus free-prompt shots that templates don't cover: a niche hobby, a recurring location you invent, a running joke. Week 3 is where the account stops looking like a template reel and starts looking like a life.

Week 4 — Motion and ads (the payoff). Stop generating new scenes. Go back through three weeks of stills, pick the strongest frames, and spend the week on video and casting — the next two steps.

Practical batching notes:

  • Shoot more than you post. Generate a few takes per scene and publish only the frames that are unmistakably your character. Curation is half of consistency.
  • Keep a shot log. One line per post: template or prompt, wardrobe, where it ran. Week 5 gets much easier.
  • Mind the budget. Photos are 3 credits each. On a preset with free daily credits you can literally run this calendar one shoot a day; batching weekly sittings uses paid credits.

Step 4 — Animate the best stills

Feeds reward motion, and you already own the frames. Pick your strongest still from each week and animate it into a short clip: a slow push-in at the café, hair moving on the rooftop, a head turn on the dusk street.

Know the format so you can plan the edit: clips are 5 or 10 seconds, rendered at 480p or 720p, and they're silent B-roll — LensGo doesn't do lip-sync or speech. That's not a limitation to hide from; short-form feeds are full of caption-driven B-roll edits. Add on-screen text and a music bed in your editor and each clip becomes a post of its own.

Video uses paid credits, which is exactly why week 4 exists: you animate the proven frames, not everything.

A fitness still from the template grid — batch the category in one sitting, then animate the best take.
A fitness still from the template grid — batch the category in one sitting, then animate the best take.

Step 5 — Cast the creator in product ads

If the account exists to sell something — yours or a brand partner's — the last piece is Cast a creator: the same saved character, placed in a product ad.

The flow is two approvals, not one leap of faith. You pick the character and add a product image; LensGo generates an ad still of your creator holding or using that exact product — a 4-credit casting step. You approve that frame first. Only then is it animated into a short clip at normal UGC video pricing. Same face as the rest of the feed, now doing the unboxing.

That continuity is the point: by week 4, followers have seen this person's mornings, workouts, and trips. An ad fronted by the same face reads as a recommendation inside a life, not a stranger holding a bottle. The full production loop — hooks, variants, testing — is covered in AI UGC ads with a consistent creator.

And because it's an ad: disclose it. Label the creator as AI-generated, mark sponsored posts as sponsored, and keep product claims truthful.

The calendar, compressed

  • Week 1: lifestyle + editorial templates — introduce the person.
  • Week 2: fitness + travel templates — give them range.
  • Week 3: product templates + your own prompts — give them depth.
  • Week 4: animate the best stills; cast the creator in product ads.
  • Always: batch by category, curate hard, log every shot, disclose that it's AI.

Then week 5 is just week 1 with better instincts. Sign in to LensGo, open the Influencer Studio, and run the first sitting.

LT

Written by Lensgo Team

Lensgo's editorial team documents practical, reproducible workflows for AI image and video creation.

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AI-assisted media is identified in context. Product workflows are tested by the Lensgo team; outcomes vary by prompt, model, and source material.

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