For creators stuck making clips nobody pays for.
The Taste + Orchestration Method: how to develop the creative judgment brands pay for, then build agentic workflows that let you deliver at volume without the quality dropping.
21-Day Client-Ready Guarantee: if the sprint doesn't get you there, full refund.
Apply to AI Video LabsI'm Harry Beechinour. I went from $0 to $200K/mo with AI video in 9 months.
Creative Director at Whop. Production work for Polymarket, GTE, and brands I can't name yet. More inbound client requests right now than I can take on.
I didn't get here by collecting tools. I got here because I learned to direct instead of render. You have the same tools I do. The gap between your output and mine is taste, plus a system that converts taste into delivered work fast enough to run a business around it.
That's what this teaches.
The tools aren't the advantage. Creative taste is.
You've seen it happen. Someone with the exact same tools produces something that makes your work look amateur... and you can't reverse-engineer why. They didn't use a secret model or a better prompt. They had taste, and they had a system that let taste drive every decision in the pipeline instead of leaving it to the AI's defaults.
That's the Taste + Orchestration Method.
Your eye decides what good looks like: what to cut, what to push, what to kill, what to keep. This isn't innate talent. It's pattern recognition built by studying real client work, not tutorials. We train it explicitly, with before/after breakdowns that make the invisible visible.
Instead of manually prompting every shot, you build pipelines where AI agents handle generation, iteration, and assembly while you direct. You become the creative director of a production that runs at machine speed. That's what "orchestrator, not operator" looks like when it's not just a tagline.
[BEFORE / AFTER DEMONSTRATION]
Companies are budgeting $2K-$15K for AI video and can't find people who deliver work that doesn't look machine-generated. The supply of people who can generate AI video is infinite and growing every week. The supply of people who can direct it well enough that a brand would put their name on it is close to zero.
You already know what the low end looks like. You've scrolled past it. Same aesthetic, same pacing, same "I let Veo do whatever it wanted" energy. That's what brands are drowning in and trying to hire their way out of.
The creators who establish themselves in this window become the defaults. The ones who wait will be competing against everyone who didn't. And unlike most "first-mover advantage" claims, this one has a specific expiration: the moment quality AI video becomes commodity (and it will), the only people still charging premium are the ones who built reputations before that happened.
A repeatable process for spotting concepts worth producing before they peak, and turning vague client briefs into visual stories that convert. Not brainstorming tips. Detection.
The core of the entire program. Creative judgment training with before/after demonstrations that show exactly where taste decisions separate production-level work from slop. You'll start seeing things in your own work you're currently blind to.
How to build workflows where AI agents handle generation, iteration, and assembly while you keep creative direction. Nobody else teaches this because nobody else has built it at production scale. That's not a marketing line, it's a statement about what exists right now.
Editing, color, sound. The finishing layer between "cool AI demo" and "work a brand would publish." Built around real client projects, not hypotheticals.
Portfolio, positioning on X, outreach templates, contracts, proposals, pricing. The 21-Day Client Sprint lives here: a structured track from "I just joined" to "I have a paying client." Income isn't tacked on as the last module. It's woven through every one.
Live project breakdowns, portfolio feedback, client referrals, and tool updates as things change. AI video tools shift fast enough that a static course decays in weeks. The community isn't a bonus. It's the thing that keeps the system working past month one.
Outcome testimonials from beta cohort go here.
"[Name] went from [situation] to [result] in [timeframe]."
How to find concepts worth producing before they peak, turn client briefs into visual stories, and build an ideation process that means you never sit on a blank page wondering what to make next.
The full pipeline: Figma storyboards, Midjourney character consistency, Veo animation, Kling transitions. And the agentic layer on top: building workflows where agents handle the tedious parts while you direct the creative decisions. This is where you learn to produce at agency speed as one person.
Editing, color grading, sound design, and export workflows pulled from real $5K-$15K client projects. Immediate access to the Asset Library: 500+ sound effects, LUTs, overlays, and AI prompts, ready to use on day one.
Portfolio that attracts the right buyers, X positioning, pricing at $5K-$15K and how to justify it, conversation frameworks that close deals, retainer strategy. The 21-Day Client Sprint is a structured track from "just joined" to "sent my first proposal."
Complete the 21-Day Client Sprint. Submit your portfolio for review. If you're not client-ready in 21 days, you get a full refund.
You have to do the work. That's the condition. If you go through the sprint, build the portfolio, and it still doesn't get you to a place where you could take on a real client... you shouldn't pay for this.
The question is whether you can direct it well enough that someone pays you $5K-$15K to do it again.
Apply to AI Video Labs21-Day Client-Ready Guarantee: complete the sprint, submit your portfolio. If you're not client-ready, full refund.