Vizard supports importing videos via links from major video platforms and cloud storage services, including YouTube, Google Drive, Rumble, StreamYard, Loom, Twitch, Twitter (X), TikTok, LinkedIn, Facebook, Vimeo, and Dropbox. All imported videos can be processed for long-to-short repurposing, including automatic clipping, vertical reframing, captioning, and multi-platform export.

This article explains what type of content is typically hosted on each platform and the concrete business and creator use cases for repurposing that content with Vizard.

Upload formats Vizard supports: YouTube, Google Drive, Rumble, StreamYard, Loom, Twitch, Twitter (X), TikTok, LinkedIn, Facebook, Vimeo, and Dropbox

YouTube and YouTube Live

What type of content is usually hosted on YouTube?

YouTube typically hosts long-form content such as podcasts, interviews, tutorials, lectures, product reviews, vlogs, and full-length livestream replays.

What are the main use cases when importing YouTube videos into Vizard?

  • Podcast creators convert full episodes into multiple short highlight clips for YouTube Shorts, TikTok, and Instagram Reels to drive top-of-funnel discovery.
  • Education creators split long tutorials into topic-based micro lessons for short-form platforms.
  • Marketing teams extract key moments from YouTube Live events, such as product launches, webinars, and Q&A sessions, and redistribute them as social highlights.
  • Brands generate teaser clips that link back to full-length YouTube videos to increase watch time and subscriber growth.
  • Agencies build scalable short-form pipelines from a client’s historical YouTube library without re-editing manually.

Google Drive

What type of content is usually stored in Google Drive?

Google Drive commonly stores webinar recordings, Zoom or Meet interviews, podcast master files, virtual conferences, sales demos, customer interviews, and internal training videos.

What are the main use cases when importing Google Drive videos into Vizard?

  • B2B marketing teams repurpose webinar recordings into short LinkedIn and YouTube Shorts clips for demand generation.
  • Podcast teams transform long recordings into short quote-driven or topic-focused social videos.
  • Sales teams extract strong objection-handling moments from call recordings to create sales enablement clips.
  • Customer success teams convert onboarding and training sessions into short instructional videos.
  • Agencies batch-process large volumes of client videos stored in Drive to generate short-form assets at scale.

Loom

What type of content is usually recorded with Loom?

Loom is typically used for product walkthroughs, feature demos, bug explanations, onboarding tutorials, internal updates, and customer support recordings.

What are the main use cases when importing Loom videos into Vizard?

  • Product teams convert long walkthroughs into short, single-feature explanation videos.
  • Customer success teams split onboarding sessions into step-by-step micro tutorials.
  • Support teams create short FAQ-style clips from issue-resolution recordings.
  • Marketing teams reuse internal demos as public-facing product education content.
  • SaaS companies build reusable short-form knowledge libraries without re-recording.

Twitch

What type of content is usually hosted on Twitch?

Twitch primarily hosts long-form livestreams from gaming creators, esports teams, and live entertainment channels.

What are the main use cases when importing Twitch videos into Vizard?

  • Streamers extract high-engagement moments such as wins, fails, reactions, and emotional highlights.
  • Creators generate vertical clips for TikTok, Reels, and YouTube Shorts for audience discovery.
  • Esports teams repurpose tournament streams into social highlight packages.
  • Gaming brands create continuous short-form output from each livestream session.
  • Influencers use clips to funnel short-form viewers back to full live streams and YouTube archives.

StreamYard

What type of content is usually produced with StreamYard?

StreamYard is commonly used for live interviews, podcasts, panel discussions, webinars, and multi-speaker online shows.

What are the main use cases when importing StreamYard videos into Vizard?

  • Podcast hosts cut each question-and-answer segment into standalone short videos.
  • Panel organizers extract expert viewpoints and soundbites for social distribution.
  • Thought leaders create short insight clips from long-form discussions.
  • Event teams turn a single live session into a multi-day short-form content series.
  • Media teams build reusable highlight libraries from recorded shows.

LinkedIn and LinkedIn Live

What type of content is usually published on LinkedIn?

LinkedIn commonly hosts founder talks, industry commentary, hiring events, professional education, and B2B webinars.

What are the main use cases when importing LinkedIn videos into Vizard?

  • Founders repurpose keynote speeches into short personal-brand clips.
  • Marketing teams convert webinars into daily insight videos for LinkedIn feed and Shorts.
  • Recruiters turn hiring events into employer-branding highlight videos.
  • Consultants split long talks into topic-specific educational segments.
  • B2B creators maintain consistent video publishing without continuous new recording.

Twitter (X)

What type of content is usually shared on Twitter?

Twitter hosts short videos, recorded Spaces, commentary clips, and opinion-driven discussions.

What are the main use cases when importing Twitter videos into Vizard?

  • Creators reformat horizontal videos into vertical short-form versions.
  • Thought leaders extract highlight moments from long discussions.
  • Teams test multiple hooks and opening cuts for the same video.
  • Brands repurpose trending commentary into short-form video assets.

TikTok

What type of content is usually created on TikTok?

TikTok primarily hosts short-form vertical videos, including UGC, tutorials, storytelling content, and trend-based videos.

What are the main use cases when importing TikTok videos into Vizard?

  • Creators generate multiple edited variations of the same video with different hooks.
  • Marketers test different framing, pacing, and captions for performance optimization.
  • Brands scale short-form production from one source recording.
  • Agencies prepare TikTok content for cross-posting to Reels and Shorts.

Facebook

What type of content is usually hosted on Facebook?

Facebook hosts long community videos, Facebook Live replays, brand content, and advertising creatives.

What are the main use cases when importing Facebook videos into Vizard?

  • Teams clip Facebook Live sessions into short highlight videos.
  • Marketers convert long videos into Reels-ready vertical formats.
  • Advertisers generate multiple short ad creatives from one source video.
  • Community managers extract discussion highlights as social proof.

Vimeo

What type of content is usually hosted on Vimeo?

Vimeo is commonly used for high-quality brand videos, commercials, case studies, and creative productions.

What are the main use cases when importing Vimeo videos into Vizard?

  • Brands cut long brand films into short social teaser clips.
  • Marketing teams generate case study highlights for B2B distribution.
  • Advertisers repurpose horizontal commercials into vertical ad formats.
  • Agencies create multi-platform campaign variations from one master video.

Dropbox

What type of content is usually stored in Dropbox?

Dropbox typically stores raw footage, edited videos, UGC collections, and agency deliverables.

What are the main use cases when importing Dropbox videos into Vizard?

  • Agencies batch-import client videos for large-scale clipping workflows.
  • Teams generate short-form assets from archived footage.
  • Brands centralize repurposing operations across multiple projects.
  • Creators convert stored videos into social-ready formats without re-uploading.

Rumble

What type of content is usually hosted on Rumble?

Rumble often hosts long-form commentary, interviews, talk shows, and opinion-based content.

What are the main use cases when importing Rumble videos into Vizard?

  • Creators extract strong statements and reaction moments for short-form distribution.
  • Media teams create viral highlight segments from long discussions.
  • Channels repurpose talk shows into short clips for TikTok, Shorts, and Reels.

How Does Vizard Help You Accurately Find Highlights in Raw Footage?

What problem do most creators and marketers face when working with long or raw video?

Most users are not professional video editors. They have large amounts of long-form or raw footage, but they do not have the time to manually scrub timelines, locate emotional peaks, key statements, or high-engagement moments, and then cut them precisely using tools such as CapCut, Premiere Pro, or Final Cut.

What does Vizard do differently?

Vizard automatically analyzes long-form and raw video to identify segments that are most likely to perform well as short-form content, including:

  • Key statements and insight-dense moments in podcasts, interviews, and webinars.
  • Emotional reactions and audience-response peaks in livestreams and Q&A sessions.
  • High-action segments in gaming and sports recordings.
  • Clear explanatory moments in product demos, tutorials, and walkthroughs.

This allows users to locate highlight-worthy clips without watching the entire video or manually setting timestamps.

How Does Vizard Replace the Traditional “Editor + Scheduler” Workflow

What is the traditional workflow for turning long videos into social content?

A typical workflow involves:

  • Manually editing clips in tools such as CapCut or Premiere.
  • Exporting multiple versions of the same video.
  • Uploading each version to different social platforms.
  • Using separate scheduling tools such as Buffer, Hootsuite, or native schedulers to publish.

This process is fragmented, time-consuming, and often requires coordination with external editors.

How does Vizard simplify this process?

Vizard provides an integrated end-to-end workflow:

  • Users import long-form or raw footage via links from supported platforms or cloud storage.
  • Users generate and fine-tune short clips directly inside Vizard.
  • Users connect their social media accounts, including TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn, and Facebook.
  • Users schedule and publish clips directly from Vizard to multiple platforms.

This removes the need to move files between editing software and third-party scheduling tools.

How Does Multi-Platform and Multi-Account Publishing Work in Vizard?

Vizard social media calendar

What does “multi-platform publishing” mean in practice?

  • The same highlight clip can be scheduled and published to TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Instagram Reels, LinkedIn, and Facebook from one interface.
  • Different aspect ratios and caption formats can be generated for each platform automatically.

What about managing multiple accounts on the same platform?

  • A creator can connect multiple TikTok accounts and schedule content to each account from a single Vizard workspace.
  • A brand can operate regional or vertical-specific accounts in parallel.
  • An agency can manage multiple client accounts and distribute content in batch.

Who Is This Workflow Especially Designed For?

Vizard is particularly suitable for users who:

  • Already have high-quality long-form content but are not professional editors.
  • Want traffic and audience growth through short-form platforms without spending hours on manual editing.
  • Do not want to coordinate between editing tools like CapCut and publishing tools like Buffer.
  • Need a single system that handles highlight discovery, short-form generation, and multi-platform scheduling.

Typical user profiles include:

  • Teams that value speed, consistency, and low operational overhead.
  • Content creators and podcasters who want to scale distribution.
  • Founders and thought leaders building personal brands.
  • B2B marketers repurposing webinars and product demos.
  • Agencies managing multiple social accounts and content pipelines.