📋 Table of Contents
- Why Most YouTube Scripts Fail (And How AI Fixes It)
- The YouTube Video Script Formula That Retains Viewers
- Hook Prompts — The First 30 Seconds That Decide Everything
- Full Script Prompts — 10-Minute Videos in 15 Minutes
- Title and Thumbnail Prompts
- Description and SEO Prompts
- Shorts Script Prompts
- Frequently Asked Questions
ChatGPT YouTube Script Prompts — Write Better Videos Faster in 2026
The YouTube algorithm does not care how long you spent scripting your video. It cares about one thing: how long viewers watch. Click-through rate and audience retention are the two metrics that determine whether YouTube promotes your content — and both are heavily influenced by your script quality, particularly the hook and the structure.
Most creators who use AI for YouTube scripts make the same error: they ask ChatGPT or Claude to "write a script about X" and get a generic, lecture-style output that no algorithm will promote. The prompts in this guide are structured differently — they specify the exact elements that drive retention: a hook that creates a reason to watch, a structure that delivers on the hook's promise, and an ending that prompts action.
The YouTube Video Script Formula That Retains Viewers
| Section | Duration | Purpose | Retention Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hook | 0:00–0:30 | Give a reason to keep watching | Highest — determines drop-off at 30 seconds |
| Promise | 0:30–1:00 | Tell them exactly what they will get | High — reduces drop-off at 1 minute |
| Context | 1:00–2:00 | Establish credibility and relevance | Medium — brief is better |
| Main Content | 2:00–8:00 | Deliver the value in clear sections | Depends on content quality and pacing |
| Re-engagement | Every 2–3 minutes | Pattern interrupt — keep viewers alert | High — prevents mid-video drop-off |
| Recap | 8:00–9:00 | Summarize key takeaways | Medium — viewers who stayed deserve a payoff |
| CTA | Final 60 seconds | Subscribe, comment, watch next | Drives subscriber conversion |
Hook Prompts — The First 30 Seconds That Decide Everything
Write 5 different hooks for a YouTube video about: [TOPIC].
The viewer's goal: [WHAT THEY WANT TO ACHIEVE OR LEARN]
Create one hook for each of these formulas:
1. Counterintuitive claim: Start with something that contradicts what most people believe about [TOPIC]
2. Specific result promise: State the exact outcome they will get from watching this video
3. Common mistake: Open with the mistake most people make that this video prevents
4. Story cold open: Start mid-action in a relatable scenario — no introduction
5. Curiosity gap: Tease a surprising fact or outcome you will explain in the video
Each hook: under 60 words, spoken language (will be read aloud), ends on a line that creates momentum into the video body.
Write the opening 90 seconds of a YouTube video about [TOPIC].
Channel niche: [NICHE]
Target viewer: [WHO THEY ARE AND THEIR SPECIFIC PROBLEM]
Sections:
Hook (0:00–0:20): One sentence that makes stopping the video painful. No "Hey guys, welcome back." Start with the viewer's world or a bold statement.
Promise (0:20–0:50): "By the end of this video you will know exactly how to [SPECIFIC OUTCOME]." Then list 3 specific things they will learn, spoken naturally.
Context (0:50–1:30): Brief credibility and relevance — why this topic matters right now, one real example or statistic, why you are covering it.
Write in natural spoken English — not essay style. Use [pause], [slow down], or [emphasize] where they add delivery value.
Full Script Prompts
Write a complete script for a 10-minute YouTube video. Topic: "[TITLE]"
Channel niche: [NICHE] | Viewer: [WHO] | Tone: [STYLE — e.g., educational, conversational, energetic]
Script structure:
— Hook (0:00–0:30): Bold claim or cold open — no intro
— Promise (0:30–1:00): What they will get
— Intro (1:00–1:45): Who you are + why this topic now
— Main content (1:45–8:30): 4–5 sections, each with a heading, the key point, one example or story, and a transition to the next section
— Re-engagement at the 3-minute and 6-minute marks: one pattern interrupt (a question, a surprising stat, or "here is where it gets interesting")
— Recap (8:30–9:15): 3–4 key takeaways in one sentence each
— CTA (9:15–10:00): Ask for subscribe + recommend a specific next video
Write at 130 words per minute speaking pace. Natural, spoken English throughout. Add [B-ROLL: description] cues where visuals should change.
Write a step-by-step tutorial YouTube script for: "How to [TASK]"
Viewer: [WHO — their experience level]
Number of steps: [NUMBER]
For each step:
— Clear step title (on screen text)
— Spoken explanation (what to do and why — not just what)
— One common mistake to avoid at this step
— Transition to next step
Open with: why this matters + what they will be able to do by the end
Close with: encourage them to try it now + subscribe for more tutorials like this
Total target length: [X] minutes at 130 words per minute
Delivery: encouraging and clear — like teaching a friend, not lecturing a class
Write a "Top [NUMBER]" YouTube script for: "[TITLE — e.g., Top 7 AI Tools for Freelancers in 2026]"
Niche: [NICHE] | Viewer: [WHO]
Structure:
— Hook: tease the best item (do not reveal until the end) + why this list matters now
— For each item: item name, what it is (1 sentence), the main benefit, who it is best for, one honest limitation
— Order: start strong (items 5–4), middle (items 3–2), finish with the strongest item
— End card: ask for their favorite from the list in the comments + next video recommendation
Keep each item to 60–80 spoken words. Total: [X] minutes. Conversational and opinionated — "this one is my personal favorite because..." style beats neutral recitation.
Title and Thumbnail Prompts
Generate 10 YouTube title options for a video about [TOPIC]. Target viewer: [WHO]. The main hook of the video is: [WHAT MAKES THIS VIDEO WORTH WATCHING].
Create 2 titles using each formula:
1. Number + benefit ("5 Ways to...")
2. Counterintuitive claim ("Why X Actually Hurts Your...")
3. Specific result in timeframe ("How I Did X in Y Days")
4. Versus or comparison ("X vs Y — Which Is Actually Better?")
5. Question the viewer is already asking themselves
Keep all titles under 60 characters. Include the main keyword [KEYWORD] naturally in at least 5 titles. Avoid clickbait that over-promises.
Suggest 5 thumbnail text concepts for a YouTube video titled: "[TITLE]".
For each concept describe: the 3–5 words of text on the thumbnail, the emotion or reaction it should create, and how it pairs with the title (the thumbnail text and title should work together, not repeat each other).
Thumbnail text rules: maximum 5 words, large enough to read at 100px, creates curiosity or promises a specific result.
Description and SEO Prompts
Write a YouTube video description for a video titled: "[TITLE]".
Main keyword: [KEYWORD]
Video summary: [2–3 SENTENCES ABOUT WHAT THE VIDEO COVERS]
Description structure:
— First 2 lines (visible before "show more"): hook that includes the main keyword naturally
— Paragraph 1 (100 words): expand on what the viewer will learn — specific, not generic
— Timestamps: write placeholder format [TIME] — [SECTION NAME] for each main section I listed
— Resources mentioned: [LIST TOOLS OR LINKS — I will add actual URLs]
— Channel links: [SUBSCRIBE LINK PLACEHOLDER] | [SOCIAL LINKS PLACEHOLDER]
— 5 hashtags at the end
Total: 250–350 words. Include [KEYWORD] and [2 SECONDARY KEYWORDS] naturally.
Shorts Script Prompts
Write a YouTube Shorts script on: [TOPIC]. Length: maximum 60 seconds at 150 words per minute = 150 words maximum.
Structure (no flexibility — Shorts demand instant engagement):
— Second 1–3: Hook line. The most interesting/surprising thing about [TOPIC]. No intro.
— Second 3–45: Deliver ONE insight, tip, or story. One. Not three. Focus is everything in Shorts.
— Second 45–55: Quick recap in one sentence
— Final 5 seconds: CTA — "Follow for more [TOPIC] tips" or "Comment [X] if you want more on this"
Write as if speaking directly to camera with zero script pauses — every word must earn its place. Punchy, direct, zero filler.
Here is the transcript/outline of my long-form YouTube video: [PASTE OR DESCRIBE CONTENT].
Identify 5 moments or sections that would make strong standalone YouTube Shorts. For each:
— The timestamp or section it comes from
— Why it works as a Short (hook potential, standalone value)
— A rewritten 60-second script optimized for Shorts (not just a clip of the original)
— A title for the Short
Prioritize sections with a surprising fact, a counterintuitive claim, a clear tip, or a memorable story moment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can AI write a full YouTube script by itself?
AI can produce a strong first draft — structure, talking points, hook options, and transitions. What it cannot add are your personal stories, specific examples from your experience, your on-camera delivery style, or the nuances that make your channel feel unique. Plan for 15 to 25 minutes of editing and personalization after any AI script draft before recording.
Does using AI scripts affect YouTube SEO?
YouTube's algorithm does not detect how your script was written — it measures viewer behavior. A video scripted with AI that keeps 60% of viewers to the end outranks a manually scripted video that loses 80% of viewers in the first minute. Audience retention and click-through rate are the metrics that matter.
How do I make the script sound like me and not AI?
Three edits reliably close the gap: (1) Replace one generic example with a specific story from your own experience. (2) Remove any phrase that no person would say in conversation. (3) Read the script aloud before recording — anything that feels unnatural when spoken will sound unnatural on camera. Fix those sections before the camera turns on.
For more YouTube and AI content guides, visit MisMono's AI Guides section.

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