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This will change advertising forever...
(In a good way)

Hey fellow vibe marketer.
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Perfect for marketers, designers, and content teams who want to skip the blank canvas.
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Thought: If you want to reduce the number of edits for your AI ads, get more specific in your prompts. Specificity, just like in advertising, makes your prompts 5x more effective for proper outputs.
Now, on to this week’s AI ads!
*Ads sourced with inspiration from the most powerful AI ad tool and extensive ad library.
Ads of the Week
AG1, Kizik, Happy Tuesdays

AG1
Analysis:
If you want to create lifetime customers, create lifetime habits. This AG1 ad uses that habit formation psychology (and identity-based framing) to position its product as the must-have supplement for high performance. The headline “Peak Performance Starts with a Morning Routine” doesn’t sell a green drink, it sells discipline, success, and self-optimization. By attaching AG1 to a workspace with a journal, laptop, and espresso, the ad makes the product a morning essential for productivity and healthy living. So, there’s no morning routine without AG1.
How you can apply it:
Tie your product to an existing habit loop: morning routines, workouts, etc.
Sell the identity, not just the outcome. This isn’t nutrition, it’s becoming that health nut.
Use visual context to suggest lifestyle adoption: where and how your product lives matter.
Reinforce simplicity as strength: one scoop, one step, one win.
Prompt action with empowering CTAs or Call to benefits: “Start your routine” feels personal and proactive.
Prompt:
Create an ultra-realistic, cinematic static image for an AG1 ad titled “Peak Performance Starts with a Morning Routine.” The image should feature a clean, minimalist workspace setup that signals high performance. The desk surface is wood or stone with soft natural light pouring in from the side, casting subtle morning shadows. On the desk sits a closed MacBook with a leather notebook and a sleek pen placed neatly on top. Next to it, a vibrant green glass of AG1 sits beside a small, rich espresso in a glass or ceramic cup, both standing out with contrast and balance. Add subtle productivity cues like a folded pair of headphones, a wristwatch, or an aura ring nearby. Include a small sticky note on the notebook that reads “Big day today.” The entire scene should feel calm, focused, and intentional — a visual representation of a disciplined morning ritual. Overlay the headline at the bottom center: “Peak Performance Starts with a Morning Routine.” Beneath it, add the subheadline: “One scoop. 75 ingredients. All-in-one nutrition to start strong.” Include a small CTA in the bottom right corner: “Start Your Routine →” The aspect ratio is 1:1, and the style is aspirational, premium, and photo-realistic.

Kizik
Analysis:
Contrast bias and loss aversion spotlight the invisible pain of traditional shoelaces. I hate shoelaces. The split-screen visual compares the chaotic, tangled mess of lace-up shoes with the clean, effortless slip-on design of Kiziks. It gives you an “aha” moment. The headline “You Don’t Realize How Annoying Laces Are Until They’re Gone”, makes you question something you’ve always accepted. It’s simple but genius: remove friction, and suddenly it becomes an easy decision.
How you can apply it:
Highlight the problem your customer tolerates without even realizing it.
Use side-by-side comparison visuals to make your benefit unmistakable.
Reframe normal as inefficient, turn the default into the enemy.
Appeal to ease and time-saving (effortless = value).
Write copy that feels like a realization, as if the customer just discovered it themselves.
Prompt:
Create a hyper-realistic, cinematic static image ad comparing traditional laced shoes to Kizik’s hands-free slip-on sneakers. On the left side of the frame, show a chaotic, exaggerated pile of tangled shoelaces and worn-out sneakers — knotted laces, frayed ends, and old shoes that look frustrating to put on. Scattered socks and a bent-over person struggling to tie one shoe can be partially in frame. On the right side, contrast that with a sleek, clean pair of Kizik shoes positioned neatly on a minimalist surface like smooth concrete or hardwood — easy to access and inviting to step into. A person’s foot should be mid-motion, effortlessly sliding into the Kizik shoe without using hands. Use natural daylight coming in from the right, casting soft shadows and enhancing the contrast. Add the headline in bold sans-serif font at the top: “You Don’t Realize How Annoying Laces Are Until They’re Gone.” Keep the Kizik logo in the bottom right. Style should be clean, modern, and photo-realistic with a subtle lifestyle edge. Aspect Ratio: 1:1. Tone: Modern, clean, visual clarity. Psychology: Contrast bias + realization trigger

Happy Tuesdays
Analysis:
Emotional connection drives sales, not your product. And humor? That’s a goldmine few take advantage of. “You Can’t Cure the Ex-Text. But You Can Cure the Hangxiety.” uses that relatable humor to evoke a painfully universal post-party regret, then it shows the solution. The image of someone grimacing while rereading their texts adds narrative and story so people can feel the connection even more. Happy Tuesdays sells emotional relief, not hangover supps.
How you can apply it:
Lead with a highly specific emotional scenario that your audience has lived.
Use humor to lower defenses and build a connection.
Coin a memorable term or cultural shorthand (like “hangxiety”) for the problem.
Show your product as the quiet hero, not the star.
Frame the benefit emotionally, not just functionally, fixing feelings, not just symptoms.
Prompt:
Create a hyper-realistic, cinematic static image ad for Happy Tuesdays, focused on the theme of post-party regret and recovery. The scene takes place in a cozy, slightly messy bedroom or living room the morning after a night out. A young adult (mid 20s, gender-neutral appearance, casual post-party attire) is sitting on the edge of a couch or bed, sipping from a glass of water while side-eyeing their phone with a mix of horror and embarrassment — as if they just reread a text sent to their ex. Their posture should feel relatable and slightly slouched, evoking that “why did I do that?” energy. On the coffee table or nightstand in front of them sits an opened Happy Tuesdays Recovery Pack, front-facing and clearly visible. There should be subtle signs of a party from the night before: a glittery jacket draped on the chair, a solo cup on the floor, maybe a festival wristband still on. Use warm natural morning light and soft shadows to convey a mix of emotional humor and physical recovery. Headline (center-bottom in bold sans-serif): “You Can’t Cure the Ex-Text. But You Can Cure the Hangxiety.” Subheadline (beneath): Hydration, mood support, and nootropics. In one rip-and-sip pack. Aspect ratio: 1:1. Style: Ultra-realistic, cinematic, humorous yet warm tone
That’s a wrap for this week. As always, thanks for reading. Hopefully, you get a lot of value from these. If you don’t, be sure to let us know how we can bring even more to the table.
And remember, if you want to ship winning ads 10x faster, get AI recommendations, and premade one-click analytics reports, bounce over here!
P.S. When you decide to book a demo with our team, let them know if this newsletter was the reason you booked. It’ll help me keep my job and have super secret vibe sessions while drinking my morning coffee.
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