Home
Templates
Media & Entertainment
YouTube Templates
Filmreel — YouTube Ad Creative Landing Page Template
Storyboard is a horizontal scroll landing page template built for YouTube ad creative shops. It gives mid-tier creators and direct-to-consumer media buyers broadcast-quality storyboard templates covering title cards, hook sequences, and call to action end-screens. The editorial magazine layout and Electric Indigo color system make every ad frame feel like a campaign worth watching.
by Rocket studio
Storyboard is a single-page horizontal scroll template designed for YouTube ad creative shops. It presents storyboard templates in an editorial magazine format, guiding visitors through a curated community gallery before converting them into free masterclass registrations. The Electric Indigo palette and Fraunces serif type give every section the weight of a professional advertising annual.
This template is built for creators and media buyers who know their video ad needs to stop a scroll, not just fill a slot. It fits anyone who has outgrown generic visuals and needs a faster path to broadcast-quality production frames.
Most creators launching a new project hit the same wall. They have a great idea, a strong script, and a clear audience in mind, but their ad visuals look like a screen-recorded slide deck. A weak first frame kills the impression before the message even lands.
You get a fully designed horizontal scroll page that functions as a living advertising annual for your storyboard templates. Every section is purposefully sequenced to build trust, demonstrate quality, and guide visitors toward signing up for the masterclass.




Theme
Editorial Magazine
Creative direction
Community Gallery
Color system
Electric Indigo
Style
Horizontal Scroll
Direction
Event Registration
Page Sections
Full-bleed Editorial Hero Section
Horizontal Scroll Community Gallery
Pull-quote Social Proof Panels
Sticky Masterclass Registration Dock
Dark Accordion Frequently Asked Question Section
Horizontal Flow Footer
Who is this template designed for?
What storyboard templates are included in this design?
Does the horizontal scroll gallery work on mobile devices?
How does the sticky masterclass registration form work?
Can I customize the colors and typography for my own brand?
This template is built around a clear set of capabilities drawn directly from the brief. Each one serves a specific role in the page's visual and conversion flow.
The hero opens on an art-directed flat-lay photo of a creator's desk, complete with a YouTube Studio dashboard, printed storyboard cards, and a bold hook frame propped against the screen. After three seconds, a single white serif headline rises from the bottom. The delay creates a cinematic first impression that earns the viewer's attention before asking for anything.
The gallery is the core of the page. Visitors swipe right through a curated wall of real campaigns built with the storyboard templates. Each card shows a creator's channel icon, a before-and-after video ad frame comparison, and a view-count badge. The progression moves from solo creators to small agencies to recognizable brand names, building social proof laterally as visitors browse.
Between gallery cards, oversized italic pull-quotes appear like magazine callouts, reinforcing the quality of the ad results. These panels give the template page the feel of a trusted advertising annual, where every spread adds another reason to believe your next YouTube video ad could look this good.
After the third gallery panel, a dark card docks to the bottom of the viewport. It carries the primary call to action and a lightweight form asking for a first name, email address, and a single qualifying question about what the visitor is advertising. The dock stays visible as visitors continue to browse, reducing friction without interrupting the scroll experience.
The form uses four pill-select buttons, Course, Product, Service, and Not Sure Yet, to qualify visitor intent before registration. This detail helps the template shop understand its audience and adds an interactive element that feels considered rather than generic. A strong call to action paired with a simple format keeps completion rates high.
A dark-styled accordion section handles remaining visitor questions without cluttering the main scroll flow. It keeps the page clean while covering the practical details that move a hesitant visitor closer to clicking the call to action.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Full-Bleed Hero | Cinematic editorial opener with delayed headline reveal |
| Horizontal Gallery | Swipeable wall of real campaign frames with view-count badges |
| Social Proof Panels | Pull-quote callouts between gallery cards to build trust |
| Masterclass call to action Dock | Sticky bottom registration form with pill-select qualifier |
| frequently asked question Accordion | Dark accordion answering pre-purchase visitor questions |
| Footer | Horizontal flow footer with contact info and navigation links |
The visual identity follows an Editorial Magazine theme powered by the Electric Indigo color system. The palette feels like the glow of a monitor in a dark edit suite, indigo and neon violet bleeding off the screen into a deep page black. Typography pairs Fraunces serif headlines with DM Sans body text, giving every section the contrast of a magazine masthead next to clean editorial copy.
The template is designed desktop-first, with horizontal scroll snap as the primary navigation format. A mobile fallback converts the gallery to a vertical scroll layout so visitors on smaller screens can still move through the full sequence of storyboard template examples without losing context.
The page is structured so that by the time a visitor reaches the registration form, the work has already been done. The gallery earns the click; the sticky dock just makes it easy to act. The layout guides the eye toward the conversion point the same way a storyboard guides a viewer's attention through a scene.
This template supports the full pre production planning cycle that serious video ad campaigns require. A good storyboard is the first vital step in pre production for any video project, and the frames included here help creators visualize a concept and anticipate everything they will need to shoot before a camera rolls.