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How to Use ChatGPT to Write YouTube Scripts (That Actually Get Views)

Devon Canup · April 2026 · 7 min read

Most people using ChatGPT for YouTube scripts get garbage output. Not because ChatGPT is bad — because their prompts are bad.

After building faceless YouTube channels that generate $8M+ in revenue, and coaching thousands of students through the same process, here's the framework we actually use.

Why ChatGPT Changes Everything for Faceless YouTube

The #1 bottleneck in faceless YouTube is script writing. A good 10-minute video needs roughly 1,500 words of tight, engaging narration. That used to take 3–5 hours per video. With the right ChatGPT system, it's 45 minutes.

The math changes completely. Instead of 2 videos a week, you can publish 6–8. The channel compounds faster. The revenue hits sooner.

The 4-Part Prompt Framework

1. Role Assignment

Start every prompt by telling ChatGPT exactly who it is. "You are a documentary scriptwriter for a YouTube channel in the [niche] space. Your tone is authoritative but conversational — like a knowledgeable friend explaining something fascinating over coffee."

This one step fixes 80% of the generic-sounding output problem.

2. Hook First

Never ask ChatGPT to write a full script in one go. Ask for the hook separately first:

"Write 5 different opening hooks for a video titled '[title]'. Each hook should be under 30 seconds when read aloud, create immediate curiosity, and avoid starting with a question."

Pick the best one. Then build from there.

3. Outline Before Draft

Ask for an outline before the full script. "Create a 5-section outline for a 10-minute YouTube video on [topic]. Each section should have a 2-sentence description of what it covers and what the viewer will feel/learn."

Review and edit the outline. A bad outline produces a bad script no matter how good the AI is.

4. Section-by-Section Drafting

Write one section at a time. "Using this outline, write Section 2 of my YouTube script. Write it as narration — no screen direction, no camera notes. Target 250–300 words. Keep it punchy. Every sentence should earn its place."

The Retention Trick Nobody Talks About

Add this to every script prompt: "Every 60–90 seconds, include a 'pattern interrupt' — a surprising fact, a counterintuitive statement, or a story shift that re-engages the viewer."

This is how documentary channels hold 50%+ retention on 15-minute videos. Humans need re-engagement constantly. Build it into the structure.

What to Feed ChatGPT (The Research Layer)

Raw ChatGPT outputs generic information because it only knows what it was trained on. The unlock: paste in your own research first.

Before writing, dump your research notes, key facts, timestamps, and quotes into the prompt. Tell ChatGPT: "Using only the information I'm about to paste, write a YouTube script section on [topic]. Don't add anything I haven't provided."

Now your script has original information ChatGPT couldn't fabricate. That's what makes a channel worth subscribing to.

The Tools That Make This Faster

Common Mistakes

Asking for the full script in one prompt. ChatGPT degrades in quality past ~800 words in a single output. Split it up.

Not editing the output. The goal is 80% AI, 20% human polish. Read it aloud. Cut anything that sounds robotic.

Using the same prompt every time. Build a prompt library. Save what works. Test new variations. The best performing channels treat prompting like a skill.

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