Prompt Guide
A practical prompt system for Seedance 2.0 workflows, creative testing, and production reliability.
Prompt Guide
The best Seedance prompt is not the most poetic one. It is the one your team can reuse.
The Five-Part Prompt Structure
- Objective: what the clip needs to do
- Subject: who or what must stay consistent
- Scene and motion: what changes over time
- Style and camera language: how it should feel
- Constraints: what must not drift
Example Base Prompt
Create a 9:16 product demo video for a skincare serum.
Keep the bottle shape, cap, label placement, and color palette consistent.
Open with a clean tabletop hero shot, then push into a close-up application scene.
Use premium studio lighting, controlled camera motion, and polished ecommerce pacing.
Do not change the product silhouette, packaging text placement, or scene mood.What Good Teams Keep Fixed
- offer
- product proof
- continuity anchors
- camera logic
- success metric for the batch
What Good Teams Change Deliberately
- opening hook
- emotional tone
- pacing
- CTA wording
- shot order
Anti-Patterns
- prompting for every idea in one run
- using vague adjectives without continuity constraints
- adding new references only after drift has already happened
- comparing outputs that changed multiple variables at once
