Alternative to Creatify
Creatify gives you a fast template for an AI avatar UGC ad. For a 7-figure skincare brand, that template is the easy part. The hard part is making the actual product look right on camera, locking the label and pantone across a campaign, and getting the founder, designer, and agency aligned in one place. Avocado AI handles the whole chain inside Storyboards, a multiplayer canvas where the brief, the variants, and the final cut all live together.
Creatify earned its place in the AI ad stack by collapsing what used to take a shoot day into a template. Pick an avatar, plug in a script, point at your product page, and out pops a TikTok-shaped UGC ad ready to post. For a performance marketer running cold traffic against a generic supplement or accessory, that loop is gold.
For a 7-figure skincare brand, the same loop hits a wall on the product itself. Skincare ads sell on a hero shot of the bottle, accurate label text, the viscosity of the serum, the way the dropper catches light. Stock B-roll and avatar templates cannot deliver that. The category lives or dies on brand-accurate product photography, and that is the gap Avocado AI was built to close.
Avocado runs nineteen image models tuned for commercial work, including Flux 1.1 Pro, Seedream, and Imagen 4 Ultra. You can fine-tune any of them on your own product photos, which locks label text, pantone, and product identity across an entire campaign. The result is hero stills that survive a Meta or TikTok ad review, a Shopify storefront, and a side-by-side with your existing brand book. Marian, who runs creatingadswithmarian.com for beauty brands, has shipped this pipeline daily for the last six months.
Creatify lets you upload product images, but it treats them as inputs to a template, not as a brand identity that persists. There is no fine-tuning. There is no fix for label drift. For a small DTC skincare brand pushing seven figures, that drift is not a polish issue, it is a campaign-killer.
Skincare campaigns need both ends of the spectrum. They need a UGC creator pushing the bottle in front of the camera, and they need the cinematic pack shot, the slow pour, the texture macro. Avocado covers both. Seedance 2.0 handles cinematic b-roll. Kling and Veo 3 cover the social and brand spots. The same workspace that produced your stills cuts the video, drops the voice, and assembles the music, all under one credit pool.
Creatify focuses on the avatar UGC format and stitches in stock B-roll. It is fast, but it does not give you the cinematic pack shot or the room to direct the cut. For a brand that wants its hero ad to feel like a real spot rather than a fast draft, the ceiling shows up early in the workflow.
A 7-figure skincare brand rarely has a single person making ads. There is a founder who knows the brand voice, a designer who sets the visual direction, and an agency partner who runs paid acquisition. In Avocado, all three open the same Storyboards canvas, drop variants, comment on frames, and assemble a shot list together. The Lini agent sits inside the session, holds brand context across hours, and generates new variations on demand when the team plateaus.
Creatify is single-player. Each user logs in, builds a template, and posts. There is no shared canvas, no live commenting, no agent that remembers the brand. Handoffs happen in Slack and Figma, which is fine for solo operators and brittle for a real team.
A finished skincare ad needs a voice, a track, and a clean mix. Three tools minimum, usually five. Avocado keeps voice generation, voice cloning, music generation, and the Music Studio inside the same workspace that produced your stills and clips. Compose, the built-in editor, finishes the cut and exports platform specs for TikTok, Reels, YouTube, and Shopify. One file, one team, one session.
Creatify generates the voice and the cut as part of the template flow, but finishing tends to happen elsewhere. For a brand that wants a polished final file rather than a quick draft, the workflow gets fragmented again.
Creatify currently lists Starter at thirty-three dollars per month and Pro at forty-nine dollars per month, with custom Enterprise pricing for studio services and white-label deployments (as listed on creatify.ai/pricing, May 2026). Avocado starts at nineteen euros per month, includes commercial rights on every plan, and pools credits across image, video, music, and voice. For a small skincare team running weekly campaigns that need stills and video and voice and music, one Avocado plan often replaces three or four tool subscriptions, which usually nets out lower than stacking Creatify Pro with a video editor, a music tool, and a voice tool.
At seven figures, brand consistency is no longer a soft requirement. A label that drifts five percent in pantone gets flagged on Meta. A serum bottle that shifts shape between hero shot and pack shot looks like a different SKU. The skincare buyer is sensitive in a way that the gym-supplement buyer is not, and the ad creative carries that signal more than any other channel. A creative platform that produces fast UGC drafts but cannot guarantee brand fidelity is fundamentally a top-of-funnel tool, not a brand tool.
Avocado was built for the brand-tool job. Fine-tuning on your products, a Storyboards canvas where the team aligns on direction, real product photography that survives platform review, video that includes the cinematic pack shot, and a final cut produced inside the same workspace that started the brief. That is the loop a 7-figure skincare brand needs, and Creatify is not the tool that closes it.
We will not claim Avocado wins every category. Creatify is faster than us if your job is to mass-produce avatar UGC variants for paid acquisition and you do not need product fidelity. That lane is real, and Creatify owns it. What Avocado does is take the lane on the other side, brand-accurate skincare ads where the bottle has to look right, the team has to align, and the final file has to ship from one workspace.
Fine-tune image models on your actual skincare products. Label text, pantone, and bottle identity stay locked across an entire campaign. No drift between iterations.
Founder, designer, and agency open the same canvas, drop variants, comment on frames, and assemble the shot list together. The Lini agent holds brand context across the session.
Seedance 2.0 for cinematic b-roll and pack shots. Kling for stylized social. Veo 3 for brand films. Compose finishes the cut inside the same workspace.
Avocado pools credits across every modality. One subscription replaces three or four standalone tools, including a separate editor, a music app, and a voice generator.
Every Avocado plan from nineteen euros per month includes full commercial rights. No rights upgrade required to run generations in paid ads or on Shopify.
Lini holds brand context, recalls past variants, suggests new directions, and can generate stills, clips, voice, or music on demand without the team leaving the canvas.
Not exactly. Creatify is purpose-built for fast AI avatar UGC ads, often for performance marketers running cold traffic. Avocado AI is a creative workspace built for brand-accurate ads. It includes nineteen image models, brand fine-tuning, cinematic video models like Seedance 2.0 and Veo 3, AI music, voice cloning, multiplayer Storyboards, and a Lini agent. If your only need is mass-producing avatar UGC drafts, Creatify is faster. If your job is shipping a real campaign for a brand, Avocado replaces the entire stack around the avatar.
Skincare ads stand or fall on the hero shot of the bottle. Label text has to be exact, pantone has to be exact, and the product identity has to stay consistent across an entire campaign. Avocado lets you fine-tune image models on your own product photos, which locks all of that across hundreds of generations. Creatify uploads your product as a template input, not as a persistent brand identity, so drift shows up almost immediately. For a 7-figure skincare team, that drift is the difference between a campaign that ships and a campaign that gets flagged.
Yes. Every Avocado plan from the starter tier at nineteen euros per month includes commercial rights. You can run the generations in paid ads, on Shopify, and across your owned channels without a rights upgrade. Pricing for ads is one of the most common reasons DTC teams move off cheaper tools that quietly restrict commercial use on lower tiers.
Yes. Avocado includes Seedance 2.0 for cinematic b-roll and pack shots, Kling for stylized social video, Veo 3 for brand films, plus several other video models for specific looks. You can chain clips together in Compose, the built-in video editor, and export platform-ready cuts for TikTok, Reels, YouTube, and Shopify. Creatify focuses on the avatar UGC format and stock B-roll auto-mixing, which is a different lane.
Storyboards is a multiplayer infinite canvas. Founder, designer, and agency partner can open the same canvas, drop variants, comment on frames, and assemble a shot list live. The Lini agent sits inside the session, holds brand context across hours, and generates new variations on demand. Creatify is single-player, so all that coordination happens outside the tool in Slack and Figma. For teams that ship weekly, the difference compounds.
Creatify currently lists Starter at thirty-three dollars per month and Pro at forty-nine dollars per month, with custom Enterprise pricing (per creatify.ai/pricing, checked May 2026). Avocado starts at nineteen euros per month, pools credits across image, video, music, and voice, and includes commercial rights on every plan. A small skincare team that needs stills, video, voice, and music tends to replace three or four standalone subscriptions with one Avocado plan, which usually nets out cheaper than stacking Creatify Pro with a video editor, a music tool, and a voice tool.
For most small DTC teams, yes. The first day is fine-tuning a model on your existing product photos. The second day is rebuilding your top three ad variants in Storyboards using your fine-tuned product model and Avocado video models. The rest of the week is voice, music, and the cinematic pack shot. By the end of the week, the brief, variants, voiceover, and final cut all live in one Avocado session, replacing whatever fragmented chain you had with Creatify plus a separate editor plus a separate music tool.
Image, video, music, voice, and UGC in one workspace, with Lini guiding the work. Start free, upgrade when you are ready to scale.