Visual Storytelling Prompt Writer
Alignerr · United States · 1 wk ago
RemoteRemotePublic RelationsContract
About the Role
We're looking for creative writers with a strong eye for film and visual narrative to help train the next generation of AI video models. At Alignerr, we work with leading AI labs to build richer, more nuanced understanding of how stories are told on screen — not just what's visible, but how a scene feels, moves, and means.
What You'll Do
- Watch video clips and write detailed prompts that describe their visual storytelling
- Capture characters, settings, camera perspective, lighting, and emotional tone with precision
- Balance technical cinematographic detail with narrative and mood context
- Produce multiple prompt variants for the same scene when required
- Follow style guides for wording, specificity, and point of view
- Suggest alternative phrasings and articulate how each shifts interpretation
- Maintain a consistent, high-quality writing voice across large batches of clips
Who You Are
- Must-Have:
- Strong writing skills with an emphasis on visual clarity and expressive language
- A solid understanding of film language — shot types, scene composition, story flow, and camera fundamentals
- Ability to describe what's happening on screen without relying on dialogue or scripts
- Comfortable following detailed prompt-writing guidelines and adapting to style standards
- Nice to Have:
- Experience writing prompts for generative AI image or video tools
- Background in creative writing, screenwriting, storyboarding, or film criticism
- Familiarity with AI training workflows or annotation platforms
Why Join Us
- Work on cutting-edge AI projects with top research labs shaping the future of video AI
- Fully remote and flexible — work on your own schedule, anywhere
- Creative, intellectually engaging work that blends film knowledge with writing craft
- Freelance perks: autonomy, variety, and a chance to contribute to meaningful AI development
- Potential for ongoing work and contract extension based on quality and output