Product visual illustrating a structured photography prompt

Fictional planning example

Fictional refill bottle prompt

An unbranded fictional refill bottle is placed in a clean bathroom campaign while its pump, label grid, and translucent material remain fixed.

This example is fictional and demonstrates planning structure only. It is not a client campaign, testimonial, or performance result.

Step-by-step workflow

Move from the brief to a reviewable output.

  1. Fill the fixed product identity block.
  2. List only details visible in references.
  3. Choose one campaign world and surface.
  4. Add lens, light, crop, and copy-space rules.
  5. Write accuracy and grounding checks.

Quality framework

Check the work before delivery.

  1. Fixed and variable blocks are separate.
  2. Unverified product details are omitted.
  3. Logo and label positions are explicit.
  4. Surface contact and shadow are directed.
  5. The output has a comparison gate.

Example deliverables

What the fictional exercise produces.

  • Identity block
  • Campaign variable block
  • Negative constraints
  • Acceptance checks

Common mistakes

Problems to catch before another generation.

  • Leading with mood before product facts
  • Inventing hidden package details
  • Combining several lighting directions
  • Accepting readable-looking but incorrect text

Connected next steps

Questions

Frequently asked questions.

01What should I prepare before using this template page?

Prepare clean front and relevant side references, verified package facts, final crop, campaign direction, and the text or logo details that require manual checking.

02Does this system guarantee a production or business result?

No. It structures inputs, decisions, and quality checks, but output quality and business outcomes still depend on references, tools, execution, offer fit, distribution, and human review.

03Should I learn the workflow or ask the Studio to produce it?

Use the Academy to learn and operate the system yourself. Use the Studio when a brand needs the same method applied to a defined production brief.