The meeting discussed the recently launched capabilities of combining AI super agents, particularly GenSpark, with the new Veo3 Fast video generation API to create high-quality, cinematic viral videos quickly and at scale.
Demonstrations included how creators are achieving up to 72,000 views on AI-generated videos, details on prompt engineering, scene generation, and stitching, and tips for maximizing effectiveness while managing usage costs.
The benefits and limitations of current AI video generation platforms, community resources, automation tools, and pricing options were also reviewed.
Action Items
— All Participants: Review the AI Success Lab and AI Profit Boardroom for additional resources, prompt templates, and automations referenced in the session.
— All Participants: Experiment with GenSpark and Veo3 Fast for video creation using provided prompt strategies.
— All Participants: For those interested in automating social posting, review the NA10 automation and Foul API integrations discussed.
— Interested Members: Book a free AI strategy session if one-on-one guidance or implementation is needed.
Veo3 Fast & GenSpark Integration
Veo3 Fast allows much longer video scene generation and integration with AI agents like GenSpark, which can now create, script, and stitch multiple scenes (including dialogue and style) into complete videos in a few clicks.
Demonstrations showed videos generated in the styles of well-known directors (Tarantino, Scorsese, Nolan, etc.) and comedic vlogs (e.g., Bigfoot/Yeti with a selfie stick), with scenes stitched together automatically.
GenSpark can embed generated videos on web pages or upload them directly to YouTube.
The process now supports prompt approval before video generation, helping manage usage and credits.
Prompt Engineering & Workflow Optimization
Prompts should specify short dialogue (due to scene length), visual and storytelling style, camera movement, lighting, and pacing to maximize engagement and viral potential.
Recommended workflow: generate and approve prompts scene-by-scene to avoid unnecessary credit use and ensure quality.
Avoid generating all scenes/videos in a single prompt to better manage resources and outputs.
Explicitly request no subtitles and seek approval at the prompt/scene level for best results.
Community Resources, Automations, and Examples
The AI Success Lab and AI Profit Boardroom offer prompt templates, automation guides, daily trainings, and example assets for members.
Automations using NA10 and Foul API allow users to stitch videos and automate posting to social channels.
Coaching calls and prompt review sessions are regularly scheduled, and custom automations may be requested by community members.
Cost Management and Platform Limitations
GenSpark has credit limits; careful stepwise creation/approval of scenes is recommended to avoid unnecessary spending.
Veo3 Fast offers cheaper API rates and higher quality outputs compared to free or earlier options, but long-form and audio-synced videos may cost $3–$6 per video (with NA10) or $39/month for broader access via GenSpark.
Free alternatives exist with lower output quality; more advanced features require paid plans.
Example Use Cases and Results
Recent user videos (e.g., "World According to AI" Bigfoot vlogs) have gone viral with tens of thousands of views.
GenSpark was used to rapidly generate, customize (including director style and humor), and combine multiple scenes in a single video.
The meeting included step-by-step demonstrations and prompts for members to replicate results.
Decisions
Use Veo3 Fast with AI super agents (GenSpark) as preferred workflow for scalable, high-quality AI video generation — rationale: higher output quality, audio sync, and improved workflow efficiency over previous or free solutions.
Open Questions / Follow-Ups
What additional director styles or genres resonate best with target audiences for viral videos using this technology?
Will limits or pricing models for Veo3 Fast or GenSpark change in the near future as demand increases?
Are there emerging compliance or ethical considerations for distribution of AI-generated content on major platforms (e.g., YouTube, TikTok)?