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Google Vids’ AI avatars and transcript tools push video production into self-serve territory

The news: Google Vids rolled out AI avatars, a Veo-powered image-to-video tool, and automatic transcript trimming.

  • Basic, Gemini-free features for Vids—Google’s video creation and editing suite—are now available to general consumers. More advanced AI tools are limited to enterprise customers, Google Workspace subscribers, and AI Pro and Ultra users.
  • Google also announced that features like noise cancellation, custom backgrounds, video filters, and appearance options will be generally available next month.

How it works:

  • AI avatars let teams write a script and select one of 12 pre-made avatars to deliver their message. Google said it’s ideal for trainings, demos, and onboarding videos.
  • Image-to-video capabilities can turn static pictures into eight-second video clips with audio.
  • Automatic transcript trimming balances sound and removes pauses or filler words like “um” or “uh” to streamline presentations.

Why it matters: Vids’ could dramatically reduce production time and costs.

Google Workspace product director Vishnu Sivaji said creating a 10-minute video with real actors can take six months and tens of thousands of dollars, per The Verge, after factoring in scripting, iteration, recording, and editing. “What we’re hearing from customers is that [Vids] allows them to dramatically scale how many people can make these kinds of videos and how often they can make them,” Sivaji said.

Automation risks: As with other generative AI (genAI) tools, automation could reduce the need for certain creative roles—notably, in this case, actors and producers. However, compelling campaigns still need human creativity to craft meaningful, engaging, and relatable content.

Sivaji said that just as spreadsheets didn’t eliminate the need for people to do math, AI won’t eliminate the need for humans in video production, per Axios.

Our take: This Vids expansion is another signal that AI is changing brands’ approach to video from a high-cost activity to a scalable, everyday content strategy.

Brands should:

  • Develop AI content guidelines that set up a clear voice, tone, and message structure to keep scripts brand-consistent.
  • Use AI for speed, not substance. Let the technology handle repetitive tasks, but rely on human input for concepting and storytelling to ensure messages retain emotional nuance—something AI may lack.
  • Pilot, then scale. Test AI video tools on low-risk internal content before expanding to public-facing campaigns.

This content is part of EMARKETER’s subscription Briefings, where we pair daily updates with data and analysis from forecasts and research reports. Our Briefings prepare you to start your day informed, to provide critical insights in an important meeting, and to understand the context of what’s happening in your industry. Non-clients can click here to get a demo of our full platform and coverage.

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