Translation. Region: Russian Federation –
Source: Peoples'Friendship University of Russia
An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.
Are you creating AI videos but are struggling with ideas? Or are you struggling to achieve high-quality videos from neural networks? RUDN.VC accelerator participants are working to solve these problems.
A team led by Dmitry Ryumin, an assistant professor in the Department of Public and Municipal Administration, and Victoria Ryumina, a graduate of the Department of Sociology at RUDN University, is working on the "Content Factory"—an autonomous virtual film studio powered by artificial intelligence.
Idea: From producer to bot
The project aims to solve pressing problems faced by creators: burnout due to the need to generate ideas daily, the difficulty of working with professional tools (not everyone knows how to create working prompts), and the inconsistent quality of AI video.
"Content Factory" offers a fundamentally different approach. It's not just a generator, but a multi-agent system in the format of a Telegram bot, where a virtual "writer," "director," and "critic" work together. The user simply enters a simple idea—for example, "a superhero cat saves Moscow." The system then independently writes the script, creates characters, and, using cutting-edge technology, generates a high-quality 32-second video—free of "hallucinations" and with a coherent storyline.
"The main value is that the user takes on the role of 'producer' rather than 'executor.' They don't need prompt engineering skills—they simply provide a creative idea, and the AI agents handle all the technical work," says Dmitry Ryumin.
Market and Economy: From Bloggers to Brands
The project targets two key audiences:
B2C (individual users): aspiring bloggers, Telegram channel creators, storytellers, and gamers who want to visualize stories without the budget for professional production; B2B (business): SMM agencies and brands, for whom the system can reduce the cost of advertising creative production by 10 times.
The monetization model is pay-per-video (payment for each completed video). The project's creators plan to break even within the fifth month of operation.
Roadmap: From MVP to Scaling
A working version of the Telegram bot (MVP) is already available. The team plans to promote their product through three channels:
Seeding on Telegram: advertising placement in channels focused on neural networks, marketing, and blogging. Influencer marketing: collaboration with bloggers who will demonstrate the bot's performance in shorts or reels. Telegram Ads: targeted advertising for precise audience reach.
The project's curator from the RUDN.VC accelerator highly values the startup's potential.
"I truly believe in the project—it's incredibly cool and will be in demand, especially since we already have a working MVP. The team's key is to identify the right target audiences to focus on. They'll succeed!" — Yulia Vorokhob.
Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source. It represents an accurate account of the source's assertions and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
