Some things are easier to show than tell. A product demo that walks someone through exactly what they're buying. A founder introducing themselves before asking for a lead. A customer describing their experience in their own words, on camera. Text can describe all of these things — and good copy absolutely should — but there's a gap between reading about something and watching it. For a certain kind of audience, in a certain kind of moment, that gap is the difference between converting and clicking away. Video closes it. And it's now available on every DayClerk landing page.
What's New
Every campaign type DayClerk supports — lead generation, retail, brand awareness, affiliate — can now include a Video module on its landing page. The process is straightforward: paste a YouTube or Vimeo link, and DayClerk takes care of everything else. The embed is handled automatically, the layout is composed to sit cleanly within the page structure, and the background color is matched to your brand palette so the module feels native to the page rather than dropped in as an afterthought. There's no code to write, no third-party widget to configure, and no layout work to redo every time your branding changes.
The AI Recommends — You Decide
The fact that a Video module is now available doesn't mean it appears on every page. That's not how DayClerk works. Every element of a landing page — every section, module, and content block — goes through the same evaluation process: does this belong on a page built for this audience, in this context, for this campaign goal? The Video module is no different.
DayClerk's simulation models how a given audience segment is likely to behave when they arrive on a page. For some segments, video is a strong signal of credibility — it humanises a brand, demonstrates a product, or provides the social proof that tips a decision. For others, it adds friction, slows the page down psychologically, or simply isn't relevant to what they came to do. The simulation weighs this the same way it weighs whether to include a FAQ section, a testimonial block, or a pricing table. Nothing is hardcoded in because it's available. Everything earns its place.
Nothing is hardcoded into your page just because it's available. Every module earns its place based on how your audience is likely to behave.
Already Have a Video? DayClerk Finds It
If you've already got a video ready to go, you may not need to do anything at all. When DayClerk reads your campaign brief during page generation, it's looking for signals about what your page needs — and that includes video. If your brief mentions a video, references a demo, or includes a YouTube or Vimeo link anywhere in the copy, DayClerk picks that up automatically and factors it into the page build. The link gets used, the module gets placed, and the embed is configured without you having to revisit the editor to wire it up manually.
Include a YouTube or Vimeo link anywhere in your campaign brief and DayClerk will detect it automatically during generation — no manual setup required.
This is part of a broader principle in how DayClerk reads briefs: the more context you provide, the more the system can do without asking. A link in your brief isn't just a URL — it's a signal that you have video content and consider it relevant to this campaign. DayClerk acts on that.
Full Control in the Editor
When a Video module appears on your page — whether placed by the AI or added manually — you have complete control over how it's configured. All of it is editable inline, the same way you'd edit any other module on a DayClerk page. You can set an eyebrow label above the video to give it context — something like 'See It In Action' or 'From Our Founder' — and add an optional caption beneath the player for a supporting line of copy. Autoplay can be toggled on or off depending on whether you want the video to start immediately or wait for the visitor to engage. Player controls can be shown or hidden based on how you want the viewing experience to feel. None of this requires leaving the editor or touching any configuration outside the page itself.
The consistency here matters. DayClerk is built around the idea that editing your page should feel like one coherent experience, not a series of separate tools stitched together. The Video module follows the same inline editing model as your headline, your CTA, your testimonial block — same interactions, same save behaviour, same everything.
Video is one more example of DayClerk operating the way it's designed to: building the page your audience actually needs, not the page that's easiest to generate. You don't have to decide whether video belongs — the simulation handles that. You don't have to find your link and paste it in if it's already in your brief — DayClerk handles that too. And when you do want to shape the details, the editor gives you exactly the controls that matter. It's the always-on operator model applied to one more layer of your landing page. To understand more about how DayClerk recommends which modules appear on any given page, take a look at how the audience simulation drives module selection.
