InfuseOS Workflow Pack #4: The YouTube Script Engine

Web Search → YouTube → Google Docs (research → angles → script, done) YouTube doesn’t reward effort. It rewards packaging + relevance + consistency.

Rahul Bhadja
Rahul Bhadja
Co-Founder
Published

Web Search → YouTube → Google Docs (research → angles → script, done)

YouTube doesn’t reward effort. It rewards packaging + relevance + consistency.

Most creators and teams already have the expertise—they just don’t have an operator loop that reliably turns:

  • what’s happening right now (web)
  • what’s already winning (YouTube)
  • what viewers actually want (comments)

…into a clean script in a Google Doc that’s ready to record.

InfuseOS runs that loop end-to-end with one command.

The stack (simple, powerful, repeatable)

Inputs

  • A niche + audience (or just a rough idea)
  • Optional: your channel style (founder, technical, story-driven, etc.)

Outputs

  • A topic shortlist (high-confidence angles)
  • A winning outline (hook → value → proof → CTA)
  • A complete Google Doc script (plus title + thumbnail text ideas)

The tools used (today)

Tool group

What we do with it

Web Search (web_search, web_fetch)

Pull current facts, trends, examples, definitions, sources

YouTube (youtube_search, youtube_get_videos, youtube_get_comment_threads)

Find what’s performing, reverse-engineer packaging, mine viewer demand

Google Docs (google_docs_create, google_docs_append, google_docs_insert, google_docs_find_replace, google_docs_read)

Produce the script as a clean, reusable artifact you can record from

Workflow playbooks (single prompts, multi-tool execution)

1) Topic sniper: trends + winners + viewer pain → 10 video ideas

Research what’s changing right now in [niche] (last 30–90 days). Then search YouTube for the top-performing videos on [niche] and pull their titles + structure patterns. Read the top comment threads for the 5 best matches and extract repeated questions/pain points. Create a Google Doc called “YouTube Ideas — [Niche]” with: (1) 10 video ideas, (2) the target viewer for each, (3) the hook, (4) why now, and (5) suggested title options.

What this does: web = “what’s new”, YouTube = “what wins”, comments = “what people beg for”.

2) Reverse-engineer a winning video into your script

Find the top 3 YouTube videos for [keyword]. For each, summarize: hook, pacing, segments, proof points, and CTA. Then create a new script that follows the best structure but uses my perspective and examples. Write it as a Google Doc titled “Script — [Your Video Title]” with timestamped sections and exact lines for the first 30 seconds.

Outcome: you don’t start from a blank page—you start from a proven shape.

3) Comment-mined FAQ video (guaranteed demand)

Search YouTube for [topic] and pull comment threads from the top 3 videos. Identify the 12 most common questions and misconceptions. Then use web research to validate the best answers with concrete examples. Create a Google Doc titled “FAQ Script — [Topic]” with: hook, 12 Q&As, 3 myth-busters, and a closing CTA.

Why it’s lethal: it’s literally built from what viewers asked for.

4) “One idea → three episodes” (content batching)

Using web research + YouTube search, generate a 3-part mini-series on [theme] for [audience]. For each episode: pick an angle that is distinct, write a title + hook + outline. Then create a single Google Doc called “Series — [Theme]” containing all three scripts, each with a 30-second hook, segment bullets, and CTA.

Outcome: consistency becomes a system, not a mood.

5) Packaging pack: title options + hook options + thumbnail text (from winners)

For [topic], find the 10 best-performing YouTube titles in the niche and categorize them by pattern (how-to, contrarian, mistake, framework, comparison). Then propose: (1) 15 title options for my video, (2) 10 hook lines, (3) 8 thumbnail text options (max 4 words). Put everything into a Google Doc titled “Packaging — [Topic]”.

Outcome: you ship stronger packaging without guessing.

Copy/paste prompts (cross-tool by design)

  • Trend-to-script
Research what’s new in [niche] → find top YouTube videos → mine comment threads → write a complete script in a Google Doc.
  • Winner-to-your-version
Find 3 winning videos on [keyword] → extract structure → write my version as a Doc with timestamps + first 30 seconds written word-for-word.
  • Comments-to-FAQ
Pull comment threads from top videos → cluster repeated questions → web-verify answers → output a Doc script.

What this workflow includes today (and what it doesn’t)

  • We can research, analyze videos + comments, and generate full scripts in Docs.
  • Typical YouTube actions that may not be part of the current surface include: editing existing videos after upload, scheduling publish time, thumbnails management, analytics, and comment moderation/replies.

(So this pack is optimized for the highest-leverage loop: research → decide → write → record.)