A good UGC video looks effortless — like a friend filmed a quick recommendation between errands. That "effortless" is the craft. It's a repeatable process: pick a concept, write a hook, shoot it clean on your phone, and cut it tight. Do it deliberately and one video becomes a spec sample that lands paid deals.
Step 1: Pick one product and one concept
The most common beginner mistake is trying to say everything about a product in one video. Don't. Pick a single product and a single angle — one problem it solves, one feature that surprised you, one moment it fit into your day.
Then choose a format that suits it:
- Testimonial — you talk to the camera like you're telling a friend what you found.
- Problem-then-solution — show the frustration first, then the product as the fix.
- Demo / how-to — the product actually working, in your hands.
- "Get ready with me" or routine — the product folded naturally into something you already do.
One product, one concept, one format. Constraint is what makes it look real, not like a commercial cramming in three selling points.
Step 2: Write a hook and a short script
The first three seconds decide everything. If your hook doesn't stop the scroll, nothing after it matters. A hook is a bold claim, a problem stated out loud, or a pattern interrupt — "I almost returned this until I realized…", or a visual surprise in frame one.
Then write a script that's shorter than you think — 5 to 8 spoken lines for a 30-second video. Structure it: hook, the problem, the product as the turn, one concrete detail that proves it's real, and a soft close. Write it the way you actually talk, contractions and all. Read it out loud; if it sounds like ad copy, rewrite it looser.
Staring at a blank page is normal. Plug Pro's Workbench can draft scroll-stopping hooks and script variations from your product and angle, then run a brief-check so your video hits every deliverable a brand asked for before you hit record.
Film three or four hooks for one clip. Brands love options — hook variations are the most valuable thing you can hand over. Same body footage, four opening lines turns one video into an A/B test they can run.
Step 3: Shoot it on your phone
You don't need a real camera. A recent phone, good light, and a steady frame beat expensive gear every time.
- Lighting — face a window. Natural light is the most flattering and the most "native." Never shoot with the light source behind you.
- Framing — shoot vertical (9:16), leave headroom, and keep your eyes in the top third. Lock the phone on a cheap tripod so it doesn't drift.
- Audio — record somewhere quiet; clean audio matters more than resolution. A clip-on mic is a cheap upgrade later; a quiet room is enough to start.
- B-roll — grab cutaway shots: the product close-up, your hands opening it, it on your counter. These make the final edit feel alive instead of one static talking-head take.
Plan your shots before you film so you don't forget the cutaways. A shot list template keeps you from re-shooting, and if you're working to a brand's brief, a brief template makes sure every required beat gets captured on the day.
Step 4: Edit tight and native to the platform
Editing is where an okay clip becomes a scroll-stopper. Cut ruthlessly — every pause, "um," and dead half-second. Tight pacing separates UGC from a home video.
Then make it native to where it'll run:
- Captions — burn them in. Most people watch muted, and captions lift completion rates.
- Cutaways — drop your b-roll over the talking sections so the eye always has something new.
- Sound — a trending or low, unobtrusive track under natural audio, never fighting your voice.
- Restraint — resist over-polishing. The moment it looks like a slick ad, it stops converting. Authentic beats cinematic.
Free apps like CapCut cover all of this. For a full rundown of apps and gear, see the sibling guide on the best tools for making UGC videos.
Step 5: Export the right formats
Deliver what the brand can actually use — the defaults that cover most deals:
- 9:16 vertical, 1080×1920, MP4 for TikTok, Reels, and Shorts — the workhorse format.
- A clean version with no captions or music if the brand wants to add its own or localize.
- Raw footage only if it's in the agreement — that's a separate deliverable you should price for.
Ask before you export, not after. The wrong aspect ratio is the most avoidable reason a deal drags into revisions.
What makes a UGC video actually convert
Every converting UGC video shares the same DNA: it feels like a friend, not a brand; it leads with a real problem before the product; it sounds like a genuine reaction, not a script being read; and it earns the next three seconds at every cut. While editing, keep asking one question: would I actually send this to a friend? If not, it's too polished or too salesy — loosen it.
Turn your best video into a spec that lands deals
Here's the move that gets beginners hired: make an example (spec) video for a brand you love, unpaid, before anyone asks. It proves you can do the job, not just describe it. Two or three strong spec videos are a portfolio — and a portfolio is what turns a cold pitch into a booking. (More on the full path in how to become a UGC creator.)
Once the work exists, it needs a home. On Plug Pro your storefront is that home — your best videos, your rates, and a track record on one getplug.io link. You set your own rate, the brand pays you directly through your own accounts, and you keep 100% — Plug Pro is a flat monthly subscription with no per-deal cut. Make the video, put it on your page, and let the work do the pitching.
Start your free Plug Pro trial — 7 days free, no card, and the Workbench drafts your first hook.