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Claude Fable 5 + Higgsfield MCP Will Make You Rich!

Higgsfield AI · 2,956 words · 14 min read

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Intro

0:00Everyday I receive hundreds of questions

0:02on how to make money with AI. Anthropic

0:04just dropped Claude 3 5 and I discovered

0:06the absolute easiest [music] and fastest

0:08way. And today I'm going to show it to

0:10you. You'll learn how to earn money on

0:12AI, create ads, build a portfolio, and

0:15most importantly, find clients even

0:17without any experience in sales or

0:19motion design. AI will do most of the

0:21heavy lifting.

0:25Hi, I'm Adele. Today we're creating

0:2815-second [music] ads for real

0:30businesses using one of the best AI

0:32combos out there, Claude plus the Hixle

0:35MCP, and then we're going to monetize

0:37it. So, my main goal is to show you how

0:40even beginners can make their first

0:42money on AI. But before a brand trusts

0:44you with their money, you'll need a

0:45strong portfolio. And that's exactly

0:47what we're building today. Once your

0:49portfolio is ready, you'll need clients

0:51to see it. So, stick around till the end

0:53and I'll show you the easiest way to

0:55find them. And along the way, I'll break

0:57down the exact cost and AI credits so

1:00you can see how to turn this method into

1:03actual income. Let's get into it.

Why motion design pays?

1:10Here's what nobody really says out loud

1:12about marketing. People don't really buy

1:14products. They buy how those products

1:17make them feel. Emotion delivers exactly

1:20that. That's why the brands using it are

1:22making the biggest profits. But most

1:24businesses just skip it because agencies

1:26charge $3 to $6,000 for this minimum.

1:29Even though motion graphics has been

1:30around for a long time, demand for great

1:33visuals remains high. Companies

1:36regularly use it for marketing and

1:37advertising. And that's why they're

1:39willing to pay big money for it. That's

1:41exactly what we need. And here's what

1:43makes this interesting right now. You

1:45can deliver the exact same result for

1:48$300. The company saves thousands, you

1:50make hundreds, and everyone wins.

Building your portfolio

1:57Before looking for clients, we need a

1:59portfolio because the first thing any

2:01client asks is can I see examples of

2:03your work? And we need to have something

2:06to show so clients understand what

2:08they're paying for. I'm going to pick

2:10three of the most common niches right

2:11now and create a specific motion video

2:14for each. It'll be tech, beverage, and

2:17education and build a motion video for

2:19them step-by-step. So, step one is

2:21preparing a setup. The whole thing runs

2:24on one setup. Claude but the Hixle needs

2:26to be connected. Connecting it will only

2:28take a minute and think of it this way.

2:30Claude is the brain [music] that talks

2:32me through it and Hixle is what actually

2:35makes the video.

2:36So, first if you don't have a Hixle

2:38account, go to Hixle AI and sign up.

Setting up Claude + Higgsfield MCP

2:41Now, open Claude, go to settings,

2:44connectors, [music]

2:45hit add custom connector,

2:47name is Hixle and paste this URL.

2:50Click connect and now your Hixle and

2:53Claude accounts work together

2:54automatically.

2:56And to make this even easier, I built a

2:57motion design skill specifically for

2:59this workflow. It's an absolute

3:01game-changer. The built-in assistant

3:03literally takes you by the hand and

3:04guides you through the entire process

3:07even if you're starting from absolute

3:08zero. It handles all the crucial details

3:10automatically so by the [music] end

3:12you'll have a high-quality motion video.

3:14I'll leave the download link in the

3:15description. Just [music] drop it into

3:17Claude and it walks you through every

3:19step exactly the way I just showed you

3:21with Hixle running under the hood. Step

3:23two, generating.

3:25So, I'm typing make [music] a motion

3:26design video

3:28and enter.

3:30Now, based on the motion design skill we

3:32just uploaded, Claude asked me a few

3:34[music] questions to make sure the final

3:35motion turns out exactly how we want.

3:38I don't have a logo yet so Hixle

3:40generates one automatically. But if you

3:42have it, just upload [music] the asset.

3:44Duration, I go with 15 seconds. That's

3:47the perfect timing for motion.

3:50Format, let's do horizontal.

3:52Uh the style, you can pick from what the

3:54skill suggests or just type your own if

3:56nothing fits.

3:57One step left before we get the result.

4:00Now, we need to create a storyboard. I

4:02go with eight frames. The more detailed

4:04the storyboard, the better the final

4:06video turns out.

4:08Now, here's where it gets interesting.

4:10Gixel creates a storyboard using GPT

4:13image 2 automatically. Without the

4:15skill, you just get random disconnected

4:17shots from some random generator models.

4:20But with Gixel MCB, you don't need to

4:22guess which models to use or what will

4:24work. The AI handles everything for you.

4:27All right.

4:29There it is. Everything lines up. I hit

4:32approve and generate.

4:35To generate the video, Gixel

4:36automatically runs Cidence 2.0, the best

4:39video generation model out there right

4:40now. While it generates, let me explain

4:42something. So, the secret to charging

4:45more is knowing that different clients

4:47need different approaches. You don't

4:49need a marketing degree and you don't

4:51need to overanalyze your clients. Just

4:53memorize [music] this. Classic motion is

4:55for digital products, hyper motion is

4:57for physical products. Now you know

5:00exactly what to offer to different

5:01clients.

5:03All right, our video is done. Let's

5:05check it out.

5:06>> [music]

5:15[music]

5:17>> Okay, I mean, look at the text. Holds in

5:20every frame. Transitions are clean.

5:23If I saw this without context, I'd

5:24honestly ask, "Did you [music] use

5:26professional motion design programs for

5:28any of this?" It just doesn't look like

5:30AI at all.

5:32Okay. Let's go to the next one. I still

5:34need to create two more videos for my

5:36portfolio. So, [music] instead of

5:37wasting time doing this manually, I'm

5:40just going to drop in this prompt.

5:43You can just copy it. I will leave the

5:45full prompt in the description.

5:47As you can see, the AI took over and

5:49started generating everything [music] on

5:50its own.

5:52MCP is a content machine, so it can run

5:54all of the motion videos at the same

5:56time.

5:57Again, this is what we got.

6:00>> [music]

6:07[music]

6:14>> This used to take so many hours to make

6:16it manually. Now we have high-quality

6:19motion videos in naturally 5 minutes

6:21with zero design experience.

6:24And here's the best part, it gives you a

6:26massive unfair advantage. On the market,

6:29clients rarely order just one video.

6:31They usually want a whole bunch, like 10

6:33variations for different product colors,

6:35flavors, or models. Before AI, you'd

6:38have to build every single variation

6:40from scratch. If one video took you 8

6:42hours, a pack of 10 would burn 80 hours.

6:46But with Pixso and MCP, you can multiply

6:48a product into 10 different variations

6:50in literally minutes.

6:54>> [music]

Finding clients

6:57>> Okay, the portfolio is done, but let's

6:59be honest, a great portfolio is nothing

7:01without distribution. If you have no one

7:03to sell to, all that beautiful work is

7:05just a waste. So now, it's time to talk

7:08about making money and figure out

7:10exactly how to find clients.

7:12I'll show you three of the fastest

7:14sources to find clients, and you don't

7:16need to do anything hard or find the

7:18clients [music] yourself, because AI is

7:19going to handle all of it. Let's start

7:21with the simplest, but incredibly

7:23effective one, Google Maps. We need to

7:25pull up contacts for restaurants,

7:28boutiques, [music] gyms, coffee shops,

7:30and studios. I'll try to find only

7:32emails to make it faster and easier.

7:35>> [music]

7:35>> We can reach them out on Instagram,

7:37other social media, or whatever contacts

7:39you can find. I'm not going to do this

7:41research manually. Instead, I'll just

7:44upload my custom client finder skill

7:46into Cloud MCP and drop in a simple

7:48prompt.

7:50I'll paste that in.

7:52And all right. It's starting the

7:54analysis,

7:54>> [music]

7:55>> and this skill automatically filters out

7:57inactive accounts that nobody uses

7:59anymore. It targets only active emails

8:02>> [music]

8:02>> belonging to owners and head managers.

8:05And it doesn't just stop at Google Maps.

8:07It automatically scrapes other public

8:09platforms to find the company's contact

8:11info and share the results. I mean,

8:14think about how much time this saves.

8:16Imagine doing this by hand,

8:17>> [music]

8:17>> searching for restaurants, digging for

8:19emails, and if they aren't listed,

8:21manually searching the web just to find

8:23a way to contact them. A whole day

8:26wouldn't be enough to find 100 emails,

8:28>> [music]

8:28>> and probably half of them would be dead

8:30anyway. That's why I built the skill. It

8:33does 100% of the heavy lifting for you.

8:35All you have to do is copy my

8:37ready-to-use prompt and paste it into

8:39Claude.

8:40>> [music]

8:40>> Now, let's look at source number two,

8:42Kickstarter. We use the same workflow,

8:44just change the platform name to

8:46Kickstarter. [music]

8:47With it, we skip projects with zero

8:49funding as they lack market validation

8:52and a working budget. We also skip the

8:54multi-million dollar giants because they

8:56usually have long-term agency contracts

8:59or their own in-house teams. My go-to

9:01target is campaigns that have raised

9:04between 10 and 50% of their goal. These

9:07businesses need clear explainer videos

9:09and product animations. And the skill

9:12handles all of this filtering

9:13automatically. In total, I pulled

9:16[music] 50 high-potential campaigns from

9:18Kickstarter.

9:19Now, let's move on to source number

9:21three, Amazon and Shopify sellers. These

9:25are established businesses with active

9:27sales and working storefronts.

9:29>> [music]

9:29>> However, most sellers still follow the

9:31old playbook, relying only on basic

9:32photos and text reviews. This makes our

9:35offer incredibly relevant to them as it

9:37helps the product stand out from the

9:38competition and directly drives up their

9:40sales. The skill finds brands with

9:43strong reviews and pulls their contact

Sending automated outreach via Gmail

9:45info. That's another 50 potential

9:47clients. In total now, we have 200

9:50emails that AI found for us in minutes.

9:54Here's how to send offers to all of them

9:56fully automated with AI doing every

9:58step. So, first go to settings, then

10:01connectors, and connect your Gmail

10:03account.

10:03>> [music]

10:04>> Same way we connected Geekflare, just

10:06paste the URL and hit connect. Now, go

10:08back to the email list the AI just found

10:10for us. And I'm typing

10:13copy all emails into a clean list.

10:17It outputs them in one block.

10:19Uh I'm selecting all,

10:21copy,

10:22and paste it directly into the next

10:24prompt.

10:25Send this email to every contact on this

10:27list.

10:29The Gmail connector picks it up,

10:31personalizes [music]

10:32each message, and sends all 200 emails

10:35automatically. The whole blast takes

10:36about 2 minutes. So, the skill found the

10:39contact emails, and the Gmail connector

10:42sent all of [music] them out. Don't be

10:43afraid to reach out and don't overthink

10:45whether they'll reply. You have nothing

10:47to lose. You're offering a solution that

10:50>> [music]

10:50>> businesses actually need, and in the

10:52worst case scenario, they just don't

10:53reply. In the best case, you make a

10:55couple hundred bucks for a couple of

10:57hours and get a new [music]

10:59professional skill you can monetize

11:01anytime. This outreach method I just

11:03showed you is just [music] one way to

11:05find clients. There are at least 10

11:06more, including strategies where they

11:09come straight to you with a done deal.

11:10So, if you want it, let me know in the

11:12comments. Okay, I'm done for today. It's

11:15already evening, so I'm hoping to get

11:17some replies by tomorrow morning.

Getting replies and closing deals

11:22>> [music]

11:23>> Okay, I'm back. It's been 14 hours since

11:26I sent those messages, and when I opened

11:28my laptop, I was pretty shocked. I was

11:30hoping to get maybe five replies, but

11:33reality turned out completely different.

11:35I got 16 replies. Some of them straight

11:38up said they didn't need it right now,

11:40but seven of them were interested and

11:42they agreed to move forward after

11:44hearing the price. By the way, if you're

11:46wondering what to charge as a beginner,

11:48you can always ask Claude to research

11:50average market rates.

11:52My analysis shows that

11:53>> [music]

11:54>> a quality motion video starts at around

11:56$300 depending on your skills and the

11:58brief. Now, for cold outreach, I

12:00purposely charged less. The AI credit

12:02cost is minimal, so I'll still come out

12:04ahead and a lower price makes it a

12:06no-brainer for a new client to say yes.

12:08And [music] this is a good result

12:10considering I'm not a motion designer,

12:12not a 3D artist, not a VFX specialist. I

12:15literally built my portfolio just

12:16yesterday and did the outreach right

12:19after. [music]

12:20In my replies to those seven leads, I

12:22asked them to send over their product or

12:24company logo and briefly describe what

12:26kind of motion video they wanted. So,

12:28for the remaining seven, I just created

12:30the motion videos using the exact same

12:32workflow we used for our portfolio.

12:34During outreach, I also tested different

12:36writing styles. Most of them got

12:37completely ignored, but [music] one

12:39specific message structure performed

12:41like crazy. It got the highest response

12:43rate by far and honestly, it's the main

12:45reason I got these orders. Here's the

12:48exact winning formula that actually

12:49works.

12:54Let's send them over [music] and see how

12:55they react.

Real payments + final results

13:00>> [music]

13:01>> All right, let's open up the email and

13:03see what the clients wrote back.

13:06Out of those seven clients,

13:07one was expecting a different result and

13:09refused to pay. That's okay though

13:11because it was our first time doing this

13:13and this is just how the business works.

13:16And the other client came back with way

13:18too many edits, but we're not going to

13:19give up on him. It's all part of the

13:21experience and you need to know how to

13:24handle these situations. I'm going to

13:25keep working with him, but let's not

13:27delay the video. Luckily, the other five

13:29clients loved their videos. They had a

13:31few small edits, so I jumped back into

13:33Hey Sel MCB and fixed everything, and

13:36they approved my [music] work. So, you

13:38can go ahead and congratulate me. I just

13:40received my first payment for a motion

13:42design order.

13:43>> [music]

13:43>> One Amazon seller I found already paid

13:45my $300 invoice. And honestly, he told

13:48me it was worth every cent.

13:57>> [music]

14:04>> Even though we made it super fast and

14:06simple, the final result looks

14:08incredibly expensive. It completely

14:09changes how customers perceive this

14:11product. And as a bonus, I also made him

14:14five product photo cards. For the other

14:16clients, I made videos for $260, $280,

14:20$240, and $200. And honestly, I'm pretty

14:24shocked. This was a pretty small

14:26experiment for me, too, but it proves

14:28that today, in the era of AI, nothing is

14:31impossible. [music]

14:32From a completely cold audience with

14:33zero skills in motion design or editing,

14:36and without being pushy or salesy, I

14:38made $1,280

14:40in total. And this is just insane,

The math: ROI breakdown

14:43because in the current market, even

14:45beginners charge at least $300 minimum

14:47for motion design. And let's be real,

14:50beginners' work often looks pretty

14:51basic. But what we created today, on the

14:54market, this quality actually [music]

14:56costs way more. In total, I spent

14:58exactly 5 hours on everything: finding

15:01clients, doing the outreach, generating

15:03the videos. 5 hours sounds like a lot

15:06until you see almost $1,300 in your bank

15:08account. That's $256 per hour. And

15:12remember, this is while your rates stay

15:14at the beginner level. As soon as you

15:16start building a solid portfolio and

15:18packing it with high-quality case

15:19studies, you can easily start charging

15:21300, 500, or even $700 per project. And

15:26the best part, this income will

15:28constantly grow. As you keep using the

15:30platform, your eye for design gets

15:32better, your videos look even cooler,

15:34[music]

15:35so your clients will start actively

15:36recommending you to their network. This

15:39organic growth allows you to easily

15:41double or triple your rates.

15:43Now, let's look at the real math and see

15:46if this was actually worth it. Here's

15:48the moment everyone's been waiting for.

15:50To make this whole challenge happen, I

15:51spent 5,935

15:54credits, or $250 on the subscription.

15:57Clients paid me $1,280

16:00in total, which is a five-times return

16:02on what I put in. And my net profit was

16:05$1,030 in a single day.

16:08If you treat this like a real side

16:09hustle and spend just 3 hours a day and

16:117 days a week, that's only 21 hours a

16:14week. For a beginner, that's a steal

16:16compared to the money you can bring in.

16:18At our current rate, that's easily

16:20around $3,000 in net profit a week on

16:23average minimum. And keep in mind, today

16:26I only showed you the motion design

16:27part. But Keyshot and MCP is actually a

16:30full-scale content factory. You can

16:33generate viral UGC videos, create a

16:35brand completely from scratch. By the

16:37way, you can watch the full tutorial on

16:39how to do that in my previous video.

16:41And it doesn't stop there. You can

16:43create content for websites,

16:45high-converting ads, banners, and

16:47cinematic [music] product photo shoots.

16:49In this I showed you how to master a

16:52whole new profession from scratch. But

16:53honestly, you don't even need to do the

16:55heavy lifting.

16:56>> [music]

16:56>> So, here's a challenge for this week.

16:59Go out there and find just one client.

17:02Set up your portfolio, send them out

17:03your first pitches, and see what

17:05happens.

17:06Once you get your first reply or close

17:08your first deal, drop a comment with

17:10your results. [music]

17:11I really want to see how much you make,

17:13and we'll share the best success stories

17:15in our next videos. [music]

17:17As always, if you find this video

17:18helpful, hit the like button, subscribe,

17:21and I'll see you guys in the next one.

17:26>> [music]

17:31[music]

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