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How I Actually Write Viral Scripts
Isaac · Watch on YouTube · Generated with SnapSummary · 2026-03-25

00:02 I'm a professional YouTuber,  script writer, and ginger with six,  

00:05 seven years of experience writing viral video  script, getting millions of views. And today,  

00:09 I'll reveal my secret five-step framework that  guarantees viral dude. What is this? What? It's  

00:19 the hook. 95% retention. Keep going. You're about  to tell them about the framework. I I don't have  

00:26 a framework. Yeah, don't worry. That's why  I put the most viral scripting videos into  

00:30 chat GBT. This is literally what works. Just  keep reading. Hey, do you want the views or  

00:38 not? I think I want All right. To use my brain.  Hey, that took me like 30 seconds to generate.

00:49 Okay, let's try that again.  This time, no secret formulas,  

00:53 no manipulation techniques, just  how I actually write my scripts.

01:05 The biggest mistake to make while scripting a  video is just opening a blank page and scripting.  

01:10 No matter how much you know about your topic,  if you start writing without a plan, you'll go  

01:13 all over the place. At least that's what usually  happens for me. So before you write a single word,  

01:18 you got to build a foundation. Starting with  obviously you got to have a solid idea to begin  

01:24 with. It's a completely separate video topic, so  I'm not going to dive deep into that here. Just  

01:29 find something interesting for you and for your  audience. You can find it from video comments,  

01:32 other YouTubers, Reddit posts, or just have a  spark while you're on the toilet. I'm going to  

01:36 use this video that you're watching as an example  to show you the entire process. So, yeah, it's  

01:42 going to be a weird script. Let's go. Most people  skip it and wonder why the video feels off. So,  

01:48 what does that mean? Well, why do the viewers  click on your video and why are you making it?  

01:52 For this tutorial, your goal is to well, learn how  to write a viral script. And my goal is to write  

01:58 a viral script while teaching you how to write a  viral script. That's pretty aligned, right? But  

02:03 let's take a random guru video. Your goal is to  learn how to make money. But the guru's goal, sell  

02:08 you their overpriced course. They don't match.  That's why what they say feels fake. You can sense  

02:14 it. Something's not right. I just can't prove it.  So, if you don't find your common goal with the  

02:17 viewer, no matter how many fancy storytelling  techniques you use, the script's going to feel  

02:22 weird. Now, the secret sauce for my scripts.  Every good script has a surface problem and  

02:28 a deeper problem. It's what takes a script from  a regular video to your video. In my case, sure,  

02:34 I'm breaking down how I write scripts. That's the  surface. But what's the deeper problem here? Well,  

02:40 let's not give spoilers for now, but remember  this deeper problem concept for the end of the  

02:44 video. Let's see if you can figure it out before  I say it. But if you've watched my videos before,  

02:48 you might have seen the pattern. This video  is about making viral shorts. But the deeper  

02:52 problem is about having patience. This one  about editing cool videos. Deeper problem,  

02:57 perfectionism. And this is about me trying to  have a shorts channel. The deeper problem is  

03:01 having determination. It may seem unnoticeable for  a regular viewer, but subconsciously these are the  

03:06 things that make your video stand out among other  videos. So think about this for your next video.  

03:10 Find the emotional struggle underneath the  technical problem and write it down as well. Never  

03:16 write the script without a thumbnail. I mean,  come on. It's common knowledge at this point. Make  

03:20 a simple draft in Can or generate something with  AI. Just know what's the viewer's first impression  

03:24 while clicking your video. Because if your script  doesn't deliver on that promise, I mean, come on,  

03:28 dude. It's old. It's old. And packaging isn't  only about thumbnails. It's about every first  

03:33 impression, like your domain name. Let's say  you've got a killer product, made a great website,  

03:39 and then tell people to check out your store, and  you drop a link that looks like this. Whether you  

03:44 sell on Shopify, Squarespace, or anywhere, you  usually get a weird random link like these. I  

03:48 mean, some of these look like my YouTube password.  Wait, that's my password screams unprofessional.  

03:53 But if you replace that mess with your name.store,  now we're talking. Is a domain name just like.com,  

04:00 but it's built specifically for creators who  sell something online. It's clean, intuitive,  

04:04 and it literally screams trust. Dot store for  your store. I mean, come on. It just makes sense.  

04:08 I recently found out some small creators like Mr.  Beast, I show Speed, Dude Perfect, another Isaac,  

04:13 and many more people are already using store  as their domain. And now I have one, too. Thank  

04:22 you. Thank you. You can get my presets and guides  from Isaacverse.store right now. It's memorable,  

04:27 and it tells you exactly what you're getting,  and it's not just a fancy name. store domains  

04:31 are proven to drive two times the visibility.  Why? Because when people see the link, they  

04:36 know it's a store straight away. And when they  know it's a store, they click. When they click,  

04:39 they want they want to add to card, they buy. So,  if you're a creator selling merch, courses, art,  

04:46 preset, or literally anything, your Dottore domain  is waiting for you at the link in the description.  

04:51 Huge thanks to Dotto for sponsoring this video.  Now, who are we actually writing this script for?  

04:59 It's not needed for every single video, but  it's good to have a document where you write  

05:03 down one or two audience avatars who would watch  your channel. If you haven't heard this before,  

05:07 it's pretty simple. Open a blank document and  write down as much detail as you can about  

05:11 your potential viewer. For my case, it can be a  YouTuber with less than a thousand subscribers who  

05:15 wants to write better scripts for his video.  Knows the basics about writing technique,  

05:19 retention, and YouTube algorithm. Maybe struggling  to get his first viral video. The second avatar,  

05:23 someone more intermediate, wants to learn  something new to apply in his next video,  

05:27 knows more than average about scripting,  retention, analytics, and stuff. That's probably  

05:31 the main audience I'm writing for. Another  small group, and maybe a guy who just likes  

05:36 watching fancy edits and laughs at my terrible  jokes. So, which one are you? Every channel has  

05:41 its own avatars. You can write with more details,  but I think this is enough for a starting point.  

05:45 Just know who you're writing for and what's the  complexity level you can go without losing them.  

05:51 Now, the next big step is to sit down for a few  hours and do some research about the topic. I  

05:56 know what you're thinking. I already know this  stuff. That's why I'm making the video. Yeah,  

06:00 I thought that, too. But here's the thing.  Even if you think you already know enough,  

06:04 there's always more to learn. And it's a great  moment to improve yourself anyways. So, watch  

06:08 a few videos on YouTube, read if there are any  sources you found online, ask AI some questions,  

06:12 take note, write down what they explained, and  more importantly, what they haven't explained.  

06:16 That gap, that's your opportunity to shine. At  the end of this part, you have to have a bunch of  

06:20 random notes all around the place. They may not  make sense yet, but it doesn't matter for now.

06:29 You know the knowledge at this point, but you need  a clear structure to follow while writing. What  

06:33 comes after what? How do the pieces fit together?  So, take a look at your notes, write down all the  

06:37 points you want to explain, and try to sequence  them in a logical direction. A tiny tweak I do  

06:42 here is to clearly state where Isaac is at the  start of the video and where he will be at the  

06:47 end. You can do that for yourself, the explainer,  or for the viewer's point of view. For example,  

06:52 in my editing tutorial, the start was Isaac  wanting to make a perfect editing tutorial. At  

06:56 the end, he realizes it's about the process, not  perfection. See, a clear transformation. That's  

07:02 what we're aiming for. Now, we've got the start  and end points. We've got the main problem and  

07:07 a deeper problem. Here comes the interesting  part. Taking them all and writing a story to  

07:11 capture it. And how do we write a story? Well, I  made a whole video about it, but here's the idea.  

07:15 There's a simple framework that's been used since  forever. Harry Potter, How to Train Your Dragon,  

07:20 Iron Man, King Arthur Gomesh, that's like 4,000  years ago. Hero's Journey. That's the name. The  

07:27 story starts here. Then the hero gets a call to  an adventure. Then comes a wise man to help. The  

07:32 journey start. A lot of things happen in between.  A big crisis approaches. Gets a new Let me show  

07:36 you how it actually works in a YouTube video. Have  you watched my editing tutorial? Cool. Because if  

07:41 you haven't, I'm about to spoil the entire plot.  though. What kind of psycho watches a tutorial for  

07:46 the story anyways? Well, when you say it like  that, what kind of psycho writes a story for a  

07:51 tutorial? So, here it goes. Status quo. That's  where everything starts. Isaac has a successful  

07:57 channel. Nothing's bad, but something's off. Call  to adventure. Something happens to kick off the  

08:02 story. It can be a problem, an opportunity,  a threat, or just a curiosity. You know,  

08:06 the where's the editing tutorial comment  assistance? That's where the wise old man  

08:10 comes in. Steven departure. That's where the hero  starts the journey. The actual tutorial begins.  

08:17 Trials. That's the main part of the YouTube video.  All the points you want to mention, the mistakes,  

08:21 some wins, and maybe some losses. Maps, breakdown,  the whole thing. Approach. Remember the deeper  

08:26 problem. That's where it appears. In the tutorial,  the perfectionism creeps in. Crisis. Everything  

08:32 goes sideways. This is the lowest point of the  story. 60 days pass and Isaac is still editing  

08:37 the same video. In good stories, though, this is  also where the identity change happens. You got  

08:42 to show you don't know everything. Don't be  afraid to be vulnerable. But no matter what,  

08:46 you got to find a solution to the problem. To find  the treasure, it's the reward. What did you learn  

08:51 from that crisis moment? Isaac realizes  the escape from perfectionism is to say,  

08:55 "It's good enough." Result. Hitting publish  moment. Return. The positive comments roll in.  

09:02 New life. He's not the same person anymore. The  mindset is changed. Resolution. This is where all  

09:07 the plot lines open up. And then status quo again.  And the cycle continues with the next video. See,  

09:13 it works insanely well for a YouTube video, but  most people still don't use it. So, the video has  

09:18 no conflict, no stakes, and no change at the end.  Without that, it would be just an editing tutorial  

09:22 with some useful tips. But once you add the  story, it becomes a journey. And most importantly,  

09:27 the viewer sees themselves in you. That's how  you build a loyal audience. But it's not always  

09:33 that simple. For reference, the hero's journey  map of this video looks something like this.  

09:38 I'll show the details once we actually finish  the journey, but it's quite messy. And finally,  

09:43 there's one more layer. Okay, this one may  be overkill for 90% of channels out there,  

09:50 but I'm explaining my entire process, and this  is a big part of it. So, here it goes. Writing  

09:54 many stories for your videos is cool, but if  you blindly use the hero's journey, that's just  

09:58 a repeating cycle with no ending. It works, but  wouldn't it be more epic if we connect all those  

10:03 stories to one another? Use them as pillars of  a grand story that unfolds with each video. You  

10:08 see where I'm going with this? So, every video is  connected. The story scenes, the big charts, even  

10:13 the reason I'm teaching you this, it's all leading  somewhere. Dude, you're leaking the grand story.  

10:17 They aren't supposed to know about the prison yet.  What? No, I'm just You You're alive. Relax, man.  

10:24 They don't know what that means. Sorry, man. Can't  take any risks. What's that? Well, I can't really  

10:32 reveal the grand story of my videos since it's not  finished yet and I don't want to give spoilers,  

10:36 but you can understand this concept by looking at  the Marvel movies from Iron Man 1 in 2008. They  

10:41 made standalone stories and combined them all in  a grand story that peaked with Endgame in 2019.

10:49 Damn, the memories. What a time it was to  be human. Just give me a moment. Anyways,

11:01 once the plan is ready, I send it to my best  friend and ask for his opinion. Oh, I don't have  

11:07 a friend, but chat GPT works. Now, you might ask  it to write the script for you based on your plan.  

11:13 And that's how you throw all your work in the  garbage because it just writes a generic script  

11:18 no matter how much context you give it. So, what I  use it instead is ask it to roast my outline. What  

11:23 did I miss? Is it too boring? What can I add? What  can I remove? What about changing the plot twist?  

11:28 After a few back and forths, you're finally ready  to actually write the script. Open a blank page,  

11:34 take your outline, set a timer, and just type.  Don't worry about the grammar, wording, structure,  

11:39 or anything. Just get the thoughts out of your  head onto the page. Expand on each point in your  

11:44 outline. The goal here is to have something to  work with instead of staring at a blank page.  

11:48 Here are some small tactics I use while writing.  Well, it's kind of common sense, but I see so many  

11:54 people make this mistake. They start breaking down  really advanced concepts right at the beginning.  

11:58 Of course, it makes you sound smart, but most  viewers don't really understand all that and  

12:02 just leave the video. It's like going from zero to  100 right away. So, start by giving some context  

12:07 for people who are not familiar with what you're  talking about. Then explain simple concepts and  

12:12 gradually increase the complexity. Remember the  start of this video, we were just talking about  

12:16 the packaging, topic, research, simple stuff, and  we slowly increased to stuff like hero's journey  

12:21 and universe building. Now, YouTube advice says  to only explain simple concepts and avoid complex  

12:27 topics to maximize retention. Yeah, that's indeed  good for retention, but it's not how I want to  

12:32 cook. I want to give as much value as possible  to those who want to learn more. I guess it's  

12:36 a fair trade to get slightly lower retention in  return. You probably heard the rule, show don't  

12:43 tell. Well, everyone knows that. I'm talking about  something else. And it improves the retention way  

12:48 more if done right. Do you remember what I said  while explaining the deeper problem concept? Sure.  

12:53 I'm breaking down how I write scripts, but what's  the deeper problem here? Well, let's not give  

12:58 spoilers for now, but remember this deeper problem  concept for the end of the video. Let's see if you  

13:02 can figure it out before I say it. See what I  did there? Instead of telling you this is the  

13:07 deeper problem, I asked you to figure it out by  yourself. It makes the video not just me talking,  

13:12 you listening, but more like a conversation,  an interactive thing, and makes you pay more  

13:16 attention. It's like two different teachers. One  just explains the lecture from start to finish,  

13:21 but the other doesn't reveal everything up front.  He gives you hints, asks you questions, makes you  

13:26 think, and figure out the answer by yourself. And  we all know how good it feels when you actually  

13:31 figure out the answer, right? It's the same  principle here. Lastly, not for the actual script,  

13:37 but it makes your life way easier to add some  notes for editing. things like add Sigma grind set  

13:42 music, show a footage of Captain America lifting  Molner or Isaac sending it to his best friend via  

13:47 WhatsApp and match cut to chat GPT. Yeah, even  that was scripted. Keep writing until you've  

13:52 explained all your bullet points, implemented the  hero's journey, and solved the deeper problem that  

13:56 you've set up. Once you finished the first draft,  read what you wrote, change up the order, add some  

14:03 extra points, remove some unnecessary stuff, and  tweak the sentences to make them flow better. How  

14:08 do you do that? Glad you asked. Naturally, when  you write, you write the points like, "Okay,  

14:14 this happens, right? And then this happens." But  it's too linear, too predictable, boring. Instead,  

14:21 you should write like, "This happens, but this  happens, therefore this happens." It's way more  

14:26 interesting to listen to. At least the writers of  South Park say so. And these guys made 28 seasons,  

14:31 so I think they know what they're talking about.  If you paid attention, you may have caught some  

14:35 points where I used that writing. You know the  knowledge at this point, but you need a clear  

14:39 structure to follow while writing. So, take a  look at your notes. Writing many stories for  

14:43 your videos is cool, but if you blindly use the  hero's journey, that's just a repeating cycle with  

14:47 no ending. It works, but wouldn't it be more epic  if we connect all those stories to one another?  

14:52 Of course, it makes you sound smart, but most  viewers don't really understand all that and just  

14:56 leave the video. So, start by giving some context  for people who are not familiar. Makes everything  

15:01 more dynamic. Another really weird tactic to  make your script more interesting is rhythm.  

15:06 Most beginners write with the same sentence length  over and over again. It creates a monotone script,  

15:12 but if you write your sentences with different  lengths, like the script of this video, it makes  

15:15 it less boring. I actually learned this technique  while researching for this video, but realized  

15:20 I've already been doing it subconsciously in my  script. So, it's a nice tactic, but I don't think  

15:25 there's any need to overthink it. Just make sure  not all your sentences are the same length, and  

15:29 you're good to go. And lastly, send it to an AI  and ask for feedback or a friend if you have one.

15:38 So, what do you think? Well, I mean, it's  something something. Look, it's not terrible,  

15:46 but it's too complex. Hero's journey universe  building. You got to think about retention,  

15:51 dude. People will click off. All right, I can  refine it more. Actually, here. I ran it through  

15:56 the retention optimizer AI. It removed those  weird parts that dropped your retention rate,  

16:01 added some small payoffs throughout,  and changed the ending to a rage bait.  

16:05 Really? Yep. Works every time. It'll get  at least 30% more watch time. That's the  

16:10 goal right now. What do you think? It  It's better technically, and that's all  

16:18 that matters. Just delete your version, use  this one, and the video goes viral. We win.

16:30 Do it.

16:34 Do it. No. What? It may have better retention,  better everything, but it doesn't have a soul,  

16:41 man. I won't manipulate people to  keep that chart high. And I won't  

16:45 delete actually useful parts just  because they hurt retention. Sorry,  

16:50 man. I'm doing it my way. Why do you always  choose the long route? Maybe you're not the  

16:56 right Isaac either. What? Nothing. But the  universe building part was badass, actually.

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