Agenteous·
Marketing Agents

Examples

Example 1: Featured Image for a Blog Post

A SaaS client has a new blog post ready: "5 ways marketing teams waste their HubSpot budget." The content lead wants a featured image before publishing.

Step 1: Request. The content lead posts in the design channel:

@Agenteous generate a featured image for "5 ways marketing teams waste their HubSpot budget" - the client is in the B2B SaaS space, professional tone

Step 2: Brief refinement. Marketing Designer loads the client's brand context: a muted navy and amber palette, photographic style, corporate-but-approachable mood. It rewrites the raw request into a specific scene: a focused operator at a clean desk reviewing a HubSpot pipeline screen, late-afternoon window light, navy tones dominant, no team-meeting framing, no lightbulb imagery.

Step 3: Generation. The agent generates the primary image and posts the result to the design channel with:

  • The refined brief and brand fit note
  • The generated image at 1200x628 (blog featured size)
  • Alt text: "A B2B marketing operator reviewing a HubSpot pipeline on a laptop at a desk, with afternoon light from a window to the left"
  • Two alternative prompts: one with a tighter crop on the screen, one with an abstract dashboard texture instead of a person

Step 4: Review and attach. The content lead reviews the image, prefers the primary, and clicks Attach to post. Marketing Designer links the asset to the post record in Marketing Content. The post is now ready to publish.


Example 2: Social Card for a Campaign Launch

A retail client is launching a summer promotion and needs a LinkedIn share card. The account manager wants something distinct from the client's usual photography, with a lighter, seasonal feel.

Step 1: Request. The account manager posts in the design channel:

@Agenteous LinkedIn card for [retail client], summer campaign launch, product-focused, light and airy, not a team photo

Step 2: Brief refinement. The agent reads the client's visual register: warm off-white backgrounds, editorial product photography style, minimal and spare. It refines the prompt to a flat-lay product scene with natural light, the brand's warm-white background, shallow depth of field, no people, centered composition for the 1200x627 card format.

Step 3: Generation. The agent posts the primary image with the two alternatives. The account manager finds the primary too minimal and asks for the second alternative, which has a slightly more layered composition.

Step 4: Re-generate. The account manager clicks Re-generate with alt 2. The agent generates the second version and posts it as a new result. The account manager approves it and saves it without attaching it to a content post, since this asset will be uploaded directly to LinkedIn.


Example 3: Content Channel Handoff

The content team has published a post through Marketing Content and the post is flagged as needing a featured image. The operator tags Marketing Designer from the content channel.

Step 1: Tag in the content channel. The operator replies in the post's thread:

@Agenteous featured image for this post please

Step 2: Handoff pickup. Marketing Designer reads the post's topic, client brand, and the image prompt that Marketing Content stored with the post. It confirms the pickup:

Picked up "How to align your sales and marketing teams in HubSpot." Refining brief for [client brand] now.

Step 3: Generation. A few minutes later the agent posts the result in the same thread: the image, alt text, brand fit note, and the two alternative prompts.

Step 4: Attach. The operator clicks Attach to post. The image is linked to the post and the content workflow continues.


Example 4: Design Question Without a Generation

A content lead is planning a newsletter redesign and wants advice before commissioning any new images.

Step 1: Question. In the design channel:

@Agenteous what composition works best for a newsletter header image? We want something that leaves room for copy on the right.

Step 2: Response. Marketing Designer replies directly:

For a 1280x360 newsletter header, left-align the subject to the left third of the frame. This leaves the right two-thirds as breathing room for your headline and supporting copy. Use a shallow depth of field on the subject so the right side stays uncluttered. Avoid centered compositions for this format: they fight for space with the text.

No image is generated. The content lead takes the advice and comes back with a generation request once the copy is finalised.