How Viral.ad Turns Your Shopify Link Into a Creative Brief
A behind-the-scenes look at how product URLs become scripts, visuals, and platform-ready ad creative.
Your Product Page Is the Source of Truth
Most Shopify stores already contain the raw material needed for ads. The page has product images, benefits, pricing, variants, reviews, FAQs, and offer language.
Viral.ad turns that page into creative inputs.
Step 1: Read the Page
The scraper extracts product context from the URL. It looks for images, page title, description, visible claims, and product metadata.
Step 2: Identify the Angles
The system turns raw product details into ad angles:
- Problem solved
- Main benefit
- Visual proof
- Audience fit
- Offer or CTA
- Objection to address
Step 3: Generate Creative
Those angles become scripts, captions, product ad images, and platform-specific layouts.
Instead of starting from a blank brief, the creative starts from the live product page.
Step 4: Export for Testing
The final output is not just a concept. It is usable creative for ad platforms, ready to download or keep iterating.
Why This Matters
The faster you turn a product page into a test, the faster you learn what the market responds to.
How to apply this to your next ad test
Treat this guide as a starting point for a small creative experiment. Pick one product, one audience, and one clear conversion goal. Then turn the main idea into three distinct hooks: a problem-led hook, a benefit-led hook, and a curiosity-led hook. This gives you enough variation to learn without turning the test into a full production project.
Before launching, check that each ad has the basics covered: the first frame is understandable without audio, the product is visible early, the claim is specific, the subtitles are readable on mobile, and the call to action matches the landing page. Small execution details can change performance as much as the script itself.
viral.ad helps teams move from idea to finished creative faster by using the product URL as the source material. Instead of rebuilding the same brief for every new concept, you can generate a first pass, compare hooks, regenerate weak sections, and export platform-ready creative for TikTok, Reels, Shorts, Facebook, Google, and other paid channels.
For a useful test, keep the budget, audience, landing page, and optimization event consistent while the creative changes. That makes it easier to understand whether the new angle improved click-through rate, watch time, conversion rate, or cost per acquisition. Save the best-performing script structure, then create follow-up variants around the same buyer insight.
This approach is especially helpful for small teams because it separates learning from production overhead. You do not need a large shoot to find out whether customers respond to a pain point, a comparison, a social proof claim, or a direct offer. Start with fast creative, measure the signal, and reserve expensive production for the ideas that have already shown promise.
When you review results, compare creative signals before rewriting the whole campaign. A higher hold rate usually points to a stronger first frame or hook. A higher click-through rate can mean the offer is clearer. A better conversion rate often means the ad and page are aligned. Those signals tell you what to regenerate next.
Keep the winning ad, the losing ad, and the notes from the test together. Over time this becomes a practical creative archive: not just what looked good, but what actually moved the numbers for your product, audience, and offer.
Ready to try it?
Your first video is just $1. No commitment. No camera. Just a link.
Create your first ad — $1