Reviewing and Editing Your Script
After you send your prompt and the AI finishes writing, the script appears in the right-side panel.
Written By Rishikesh from ngram
Last updated About 1 month ago
This guide explains how to review the script, make edits, and decide on your next steps before moving to the storyboard.
Where to Find the Script
Once the AI finishes generating your script, the right panel switches to the Script tab. The tab label shows "Ready", indicating the script is complete and available for review.
The chat panel on the left also shows a summary of what the AI wrote, along with action buttons for common next steps.

What the Script Looks Like
The script is organized into scene sections, each containing narration text that the AI voiceover will read aloud. A typical script includes:
Scene labels such as Hook, Feature, Solution, Demo, and CTA
Narration text for each scene, written in the style and tone matching your prompt
Approximate durations for each scene that add up to your requested video length
The script is designed to be read as a voiceover, so the language is conversational and direct. Each scene represents a distinct segment of your final video.
Editing the Script Directly
If you spot something you want to change -- a phrase, a product name, a statistic -- you can edit the script text directly:
Click the Edit button in the top-right corner of the script panel.
The narration text becomes editable. Make your changes inline.
Save your edits when finished.
This is the fastest way to make small corrections like fixing a name, adjusting a number, or rewording a sentence.
Editing the Script via Chat
For larger changes, use the chat input at the bottom of the left panel. Describe what you want changed in plain language. The AI will rewrite the script accordingly.
Examples of chat-based edits:
"Make the opening more dramatic"
"Add a call-to-action at the end asking viewers to sign up"
"Shorten the demo section to just 10 seconds"
"Replace the technical jargon with simpler language"
"Change the tone from formal to casual and friendly"
The AI will regenerate the script with your requested changes and present the updated version in the Script tab.
Using the Action Buttons
After the script is generated, the AI presents a set of action buttons in the chat panel:
These buttons are suggestions, not requirements. You do not have to use them. You can type anything you want in the chat input instead. The buttons are there for convenience -- they represent common requests that most users make at this stage.
Tips for a Good Script
Be Specific in Your Feedback
Instead of "make it better," tell the AI exactly what you want changed. "Make the hook shorter and mention the pricing" gives the AI clear direction and produces better results in fewer iterations.
Review Scene by Scene
Read through each scene section individually. Check that:
The narration flows naturally when read aloud
Product names, features, and terminology are correct
The pacing matches your target video length
The tone is appropriate for your audience
Consider Your Audience
If your video targets startup founders, the language should be different from a video targeting enterprise IT teams. Mention your audience in your feedback if the tone feels off.
Why Editing Before Storyboard Matters
Tip: Review the script carefully before proceeding to the storyboard. Once you click "Create the storyboard," the AI generates images for each scene. If you change the script after that, the images may need to be regenerated -- and image generation uses credits. Getting the script right first saves both time and credits.
This does not mean the script needs to be flawless. Minor text tweaks can be made later at the scene level in the storyboard. But major structural changes -- adding scenes, removing scenes, or changing the overall narrative arc -- are much cheaper to make at the script stage.
Moving Forward
When you are satisfied with the script, click "Perfect! Create the storyboard" or type something like "Looks good, let's create the storyboard" in the chat. The AI will begin generating the storyboard with scene images.
The Script tab remains available throughout the rest of the process. You can always switch back to review the script text even after the storyboard and video are generated.
Next Steps
New to ngram? Start with Creating Your First Video for the full end-to-end walkthrough.
Ready for the storyboard? Continue to Understanding the Storyboard to learn how scenes, keyframes, and images work together.