TL;DR
Meta’s Edits app gets an AI assistant that analyses Instagram data and suggests video ideas, plus a desktop version. Over half of Reels viewers see Edits content daily.
The AI assistant uses Instagram performance data to suggest content ideas, while a desktop version closes the gap with ByteDance's CapCut
Meta’s Edits app gets an AI assistant that analyses Instagram data and suggests video ideas, plus a desktop version. Over half of Reels viewers see Edits content daily.
Meta is adding an AI assistant and a desktop version to Edits, its video-editing app built to compete with ByteDance’s CapCut. The company previewed the features at an invite-only creator event in Los Angeles on Wednesday. The AI assistant is currently in testing with event attendees. The desktop version is “coming soon.”
The AI assistant uses a creator’s Instagram data, including views and video-retention metrics, to analyse what is working and suggest new content ideas. It can recommend topics based on performance trends and flag trending audio. The goal is to keep creators inside Meta’s ecosystem instead of turning to external tools like ChatGPT for brainstorming or analytics.
Meta launched a similar AI assistant for Facebook creators last week. YouTube Studio already offers an AI-powered Inspiration tab, and TikTok has its own creative assistant. The feature is table stakes in the platform war for creators, but integrating it directly into the editing app, rather than the social platform, is a deliberate move to make Edits stickier.
The desktop version addresses one of the biggest gaps between Edits and CapCut. CapCut has offered desktop editing since launch, giving creators precise control on a larger screen for advanced workflows. Meta says creators will be able to sync projects seamlessly between mobile and desktop.
Several features launched today alongside the announcements. A Beta tab gives creators early access to experimental features still in development. Expanded audience insights now include demographic breakdowns and peak engagement times. Creators can also search specific topics in the app’s Inspiration feed to discover trending Reels and templates, and create multiple versions of a single video to A/B test performance before publishing.
Meta did not share download numbers for Edits. But it said content made with the app sees a 10% higher save rate and 2% higher reshare rate than content not made on Edits. More than half of people watching Reels on Instagram see Edits-created content every day.
Edits launched last year as a direct response to the TikTok and CapCut threat. The timing of its arrival coincided with the US ban scare that briefly took both TikTok and CapCut offline. Meta moved fast to fill the gap. The AI assistant and desktop version are the next steps in turning Edits from an opportunistic launch into a permanent platform tool that keeps creators producing content for Instagram rather than its competitors.
Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.