What if viewers could ask your video what they really want to know?

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As a Content Marketing Manager, I’ve worked with video content for quite a few years, and there’s one limitation I keep coming back to: a video can only answer the questions you thought of while making it.

As soon as someone wonders, “What does this mean for my situation?” or “Can you explain that part again?”, they’re usually on their own.

That’s why I find Agentic Videos interesting. People can pause the video, ask a question by voice or chat, and get an answer right there.

The answers are grounded in the video script and any additional sources you choose to add, so the experience can stay focused on the content and context you actually want to provide.

For onboarding, training, or product demos, that could make a real difference. Instead of dropping off when something is unclear, viewers can just ask.

And from a content perspective, the questions are useful too. They show what people actually care about, where they get stuck, what they want to understand better, and what might be missing from the content.

That’s probably the part I like most: the video doesn’t just speak. It listens too.

Agentic Videos by D-ID launched on Product Hunt today:



What would you use Agentic Video for?

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The point about videos only answering the questions you thought of ahead of time really resonates with me.

I've seen so many onboarding and training videos where the content is good, but the moment someone has a question that's even slightly outside the script, the experience breaks down. They either go looking for an answer somewhere else or give up entirely.

Seeing what people actually ask can tell you a lot about where your content is landing and where it isn't.

 True. Those questions provide strong audience insight. They show where people lose context, which topics generate genuine interest, and what information they are actively seeking. That can help improve the video itself, but it can also inform future campaigns, content clusters, sales materials, and the wider editorial strategy. At the same time, viewers get a more relevant experience because the content can respond to what matters to them in that moment.

This is fascinating...videos that can actually respond to real viewer questions could transform how training and education content works. If you're up for it, I'm launching The Sponge on PH soon...would appreciate a follow (See "PRODUCT HUNT LAUNCH" Link in my profile). It's an AI-powered flashcard app that turns any webpage into study material.