Higgsfield ships Marketing Studio with 9 ad formats from one product link
Creators say Higgsfield's Marketing Studio can turn one product link into nine ad formats, from UGC to TV spots, with face and brand consistency. Multiple posts also cite about $0.347 per generation, but that pricing detail is user-reported.

TL;DR
- CharaspowerAI's demo and Linus Ekenstam's walkthrough both show Higgsfield's new Marketing Studio turning a single product link into nine ad formats in one session.
- Higgsfield's Marketing Studio intro page says the tool spans UGC, tutorials, product reviews, unboxings, TV spots, CGI, and virtual try-on formats, all powered by Seedance 2.0.
- The official Click to Ad page says a pasted product URL is enough to extract images, descriptions, logo, and brand colors before generation starts.
- Consistency is a big part of the pitch: Higgsfield's Marketing Studio FAQ says users can pick from 40+ avatars or generate their own with Soul 2.0, while MayorKingAI and CharaspowerAI both highlight face-locked outputs across multiple ads.
- The repeated "about $0.347 per video" figure comes from user posts like MayorKingAI, hasantoxr, and CharaspowerAI, not from an official Higgsfield pricing page.
You can browse Higgsfield's full Marketing Studio format list, check the simpler Click to Ad workflow, and see Seedance 2.0 positioned on Higgsfield's own site as a global, multi-shot video model. The interesting bit is how much of the ad stack Higgsfield is collapsing into one screen: product import, avatar selection, creative mode, scripting, shots, and final edit.
Nine formats from one link
Higgsfield's own Marketing Studio page lists nine formats:
- TV Spot
- UGC
- Tutorial
- Product Review
- Unboxing
- UGC Virtual Try-On
- Hyper Motion
- Pro Virtual Try-On
- Wild Card
The split matters because these are not minor style tweaks. Higgsfield groups them into creator-style clips, cinematic ads, and CGI-heavy product spots, while Linus Ekenstam shows the same product generating a full grid of distinct angles from one pasted link.
URL import and auto-built ads
The official Click to Ad page says Higgsfield scans a product URL and pulls four things automatically: product images, descriptions, logo, and brand colors. From there, the app asks for an ad style, avatar, and caption style, then assembles the script, shots, and edit.
That lines up with the user demos. In hasantoxr's example, the workflow is less "prompt a video model" and more "drop in a storefront and get a ready-made outbound sample pack." The same post claims a freelancer used that flow to generate free spec ads for Shopify stores instead of sending a pitch deck.
Avatars, face lock, and reuse
Higgsfield's Marketing Studio FAQ says users can choose from 40+ stock avatars or generate custom ones through Soul 2.0, then pin, rename, and reuse them across campaigns. The site also frames avatars as presenters for talking-head reviews, tutorials, and try-on content.
The tweet evidence pushes that feature harder than the official copy. MayorKingAI pitches a "same face locked across every video" agency workflow, while CharaspowerAI calls out face locking as the piece that makes nine fast variants look like one coherent brand campaign.
Seedance 2.0 powers the whole stack
Higgsfield's Seedance 2.0 page describes the model as a multi-shot video generator with native audio and says it is available globally on Higgsfield. The Marketing Studio FAQ adds that Seedance handles motion, audio, and speech in one pass, with native lip-sync and consistent characters across shots.
That helps explain why the launch is landing as a creator tool, not just another ad template library. Higgsfield is packaging ByteDance's video model behind a product-import workflow that starts with a URL instead of a storyboard.
Mixed formats in one prompt
One useful detail is buried in Higgsfield's FAQ: Marketing Studio can combine formats inside a single prompt. The example on the page is an ad that starts as an unboxing and then shifts into a talking-head review.
That is a different claim from "nine outputs from one link." It means the system can also splice multiple ad grammars into one finished clip, which is closer to creative direction than batch templating.