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.

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.

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.



