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Create an interactive 'gyroscope' effect for physical products without complex software. On a newer iPhone, add cutout images of products around yourself in a photo. Then, use the built-in 3D photo mode and screen-record your phone's movement to generate a dynamic video that simulates a 3D space, perfect for engaging carousels.
Instead of polished ad creative, have the founder record a simple, direct-to-camera video on their iPhone announcing the sale. This authentic, personal approach often generates higher click-through and conversion rates by creating a friend-to-friend connection with the audience.
Go beyond static prototypes by using text-to-video tools like Flow or Sora to create promotional clips. This final step allows stakeholders to visualize the product in a real-world context and emotionally connect with the user experience, making your pitch significantly more persuasive.
Instead of posting a video directly to the feed, place it on the second slide of an Instagram carousel. Use the first slide as a compelling, static text hook. This piques curiosity, encourages a swipe, and can lead to higher engagement and watch time for the video.
Instead of a complex 3D modeling process for Comet's onboarding animation, the designer used Perplexity Labs. By describing a "spinning orb" and providing a texture, she generated a 360-degree video that was cropped and shipped directly, showcasing how AI tools can quickly create high-fidelity, hacky production assets.
Encilia Hair struggles to market its comfortable-but-unseen wig materials. The advice was to create videos that physically demonstrate the difference. By turning the wig inside-out, stretching the material, and comparing it to stiff competitors, the founder can make an invisible feature like comfort a visible, compelling selling point.
Combine a stationary video on the first slide with a direct call-to-action to "hold the dots and scroll." This encourages users to rapidly scrub through a series of nearly identical photos, creating an interactive stop-motion effect that builds anticipation for a final reveal video on the last slide.
Most content is filmed at eye-level. To instantly stand out, radically change the camera's perspective. Filming from the floor, taping the phone to the ceiling, or capturing a subject from a great distance creates a visual pattern interrupt that makes viewers pause and pay attention.
As Instagram is flooded with Reels, the less-common carousel format offers a significant reach advantage. Repurpose existing talking-head Reels by creating a two-slide carousel: the first slide is a static image with a compelling headline, and the second slide is the original Reel. This is a low-effort, high-impact strategy.
Elevate standard Instagram carousels by combining static and video elements. This involves placing a still image with a cutout subject on top of a moving video background that relates to the image. This technique is especially powerful for visually rich niches like travel or real estate, making content far more engaging than typical static slides.
Design a carousel where a shape or word, filled with a static texture matching the background, moves slightly on each slide. The object is only discernible when a user rapidly scrubs through the slides. This gamifies discovery and can be paired with a DM automation keyword to drive leads or sales.