You have hours of long footage and you need shorts that look like your brand
You are sitting on a 52-minute webinar, a stack of podcast episodes, a founder interview, three customer calls you already paid to record. The reach is in there. Your job is to pull a steady stream of shorts out of it, week after week, that look like your brand posted them.
Getting clips out is the easy part now. The hard part is what comes back: generic AI slop. The clips look like every other brand's, the footage was good, and the edit gives it away the second a viewer sees it. At the volume you need to post, that is expensive. A clip that looks auto-made does more harm than no clip, because it sits next to the rest of your feed and tells your audience you shipped something you never looked at.
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1.0 Bevyl learns your brand in five minutes
Before it touches a frame, Bevyl learns how your content looks and sounds. That five-minute setup is what every clip is measured against after.
2.0 Drop in the recording you already have
Hand Bevyl the raw file: the Zoom export, the podcast master, the interview straight off the card. One file, no notes. It works from the real footage you already shot.
3.0 It edits that footage to look like your brand
This is the part that decides whether you post the clip. Bevyl edits with taste: it finds the moment worth posting and finishes the clip so it looks like your brand made it. Where the auto tools hand back generic AI slop, Bevyl hands back something tasteful and on-brand.
4.0 The clip reads as the same brand as everything else you post
Set a Bevyl clip next to the rest of your feed and it belongs there. A stranger who never saw the source gets the whole point. Someone who follows you never clocks it as the one post that came out of an AI.
5.0 A batch of finished shorts you would actually post
You open a folder of clips that look tasteful and on-brand. Keep the ones you want, send the rest back for a different cut, schedule them. The footage is already shot. What changes is whether the thing you pull out of it is something you put your name on.
What good looks like, in one clip: a strong moment, finished so it belongs in your feed. Set it beside your last three posts. If a stranger could pick out the one that came from a generator, it is not done. That last test is the real bar, and it is the one generic AI slop keeps failing.
The footage is already shot and already paid for. Pull a month of on-brand posts out of it this week.
