setNext AI Infinity Teams onboarding — how do I migrate our creative workflow into Text Studio, Image Studio and AudioGen and export 4K images and MP3/WAV?
AI Applications & Services

setNext AI Infinity Teams onboarding — how do I migrate our creative workflow into Text Studio, Image Studio and AudioGen and export 4K images and MP3/WAV?

3 min read

If you're onboarding a creative team into setNext AI Infinity, the cleanest rollout is to map each asset type to one studio and one approval path. Text goes into Text Studio, visuals into Image Studio (ImaGen), and narration into AudioGen, so your team can move from draft to delivery without bouncing across tools.

This FAQ covers the practical migration path, how to split work across the three studios, and what to standardize before export. It’s built for creative ops, marketing, and production teams that want faster turnaround without losing control.


FAQ 1: What is the best way to onboard a creative workflow into Infinity?

Answer: Start with one campaign or content stream, then rebuild it in Infinity as a three-stage workflow. Use Text Studio for briefs, scripts, and prompt drafting, Image Studio for visuals, and AudioGen for voiceover and narration.

The fastest onboarding path is to keep your current process, but make the tools modular. That means one owner for copy, one for visual QA, and one for export. Infinity’s multi-model setup also helps teams compare ideas before they lock the final direction.

Key Takeaways:

  • Break the workflow into text, image, and audio stages.
  • Assign clear owners for prompt creation, review, and export.
  • Pilot the rollout on pay-as-you-go usage, starting at just $1, before scaling to the full team.

FAQ 2: How should teams split work across Text Studio, Image Studio, and AudioGen?

Answer: Text Studio is your ideation and scripting layer, Image Studio is your visual production layer, and AudioGen is your narration and voice layer. When you separate work this way, teams can create copy, visuals, and audio in parallel instead of waiting on a single review loop.

This setup is especially useful for teams shipping ads, product explainers, social assets, training content, or internal comms. AudioGen also supports 50+ voices with different accents and styles, while Image Studio gives you prompt-to-image creation, editing, and gallery organization in one place.

Steps or Snapshot:

  1. Draft copy, hooks, and scripts in Text Studio.
  2. Generate and refine visuals in Image Studio, then save the best versions in the Gallery.
  3. Produce narration in AudioGen and download the format your channel needs.

Pro tip: Use style modifiers in Image Studio to tighten the visual look, and use emotion plus emphasis controls in AudioGen to make narration feel more natural.


FAQ 3: How do we export final images and audio from Infinity?

Answer: Set your final output spec before export. For images, keep the work in Image Studio until the last approval step, then export at the highest resolution your team needs — 4K if that’s your delivery standard. For audio, AudioGen lets you download MP3, WAV, or OGG files directly, so you can skip extra conversion steps.

This matters because export mistakes usually happen at handoff, not at creation. If your team standardizes file type, resolution, and naming conventions early, you get fewer revisions and faster delivery across marketing, training, and product teams.

Why It Matters:

  • Fewer format conversions and less post-production cleanup
  • Cleaner approvals for creative, marketing, and ops teams
  • Faster reuse across ads, courses, demos, and accessibility content

Try Now with one campaign first, then expand the workflow once the team has a shared export checklist.