Prompt generator for NotebookLM infographic styles
Use layout, art style, palette, typography, and emphasis to get more predictable NotebookLM infographic outputs.
The 5-part prompt anatomy
A strong custom prompt does not need to be long. It needs to remove ambiguity. Describe the layout first, then the art style, palette, typography, and the one thing the image must emphasize. That gives the generator enough direction without burying it in conflicting instructions.
Layout
Say whether the output should be a timeline, grid, flow, mind map, comparison, or one-page summary.
Art style
Name the visual treatment: sketch note, clay, editorial, professional, scientific, bento, or another clear style.
Palette
Set the color mood in plain language, such as calm blue, high contrast monochrome, soft pastel, or dark neon.
Typography
Ask for short headings, readable labels, large numbers, serif display type, or clean sans-serif labels.
Emphasis
Tell the model what should stand out: the main conclusion, a decision path, a sequence, a risk, or a practical checklist.
Copy-paste prompt templates
These templates are written for NotebookLM's custom prompt field. Replace the topic details only if you need a narrower output.
Flat overview
Create a flat vector infographic in portrait orientation. Use clean geometric shapes, solid fills, generous white space, short section headings, and 5-7 labeled facts. Emphasize the key takeaway at the top.
Isometric system
Create an isometric 3D infographic with a consistent 30-degree grid. Show the source material as a connected system with 4-6 parts, soft shadows, compact labels, and a clear flow from left to right.
Sketch notes
Create a sketch-note infographic with ink linework, marker highlights, casual handwritten-style headings, and small doodle icons. Organize the main ideas into clusters with arrows and margin notes.
Chalkboard lesson
Create a dark chalkboard-style infographic using white and pastel chalk marks. Make it feel like a concise classroom lesson with one central rule, 3 supporting examples, and a quick recap box.
Paper cutout summary
Create a layered paper cutout infographic. Use construction-paper shapes, subtle drop shadows, simple icons, and stacked sections. Prioritize the most important facts with larger foreground pieces.
Clay explainer
Create a 3D claymation-style explainer with rounded plasticine shapes and soft studio lighting. Use friendly role cards, short captions, and one small object or icon for each major concept.
Minimal brief
Create a minimalist monochrome infographic with one accent color, thin lines, extreme white space, and precise labels. Reduce the source to 5 essential points and make the hierarchy very clear.
Corporate report
Create a clean corporate infographic with a structured grid, crisp icons, and a professional blue palette. Include 3-5 sections, one metric callout, and a bottom row with practical next steps.
Editorial feature
Create an editorial magazine-style infographic with serif display headlines, a muted sophisticated palette, and strong typographic hierarchy. Present the source as a short visual feature with pull quotes.
Neon map
Create a dark infographic with vivid neon accent lines and glowing edges. Use it for a network, roadmap, or decision map, with high contrast labels and clear paths between nodes.
Watercolor story
Create a soft watercolor infographic with gentle washes, organic edges, and a storybook feel. Use a calm palette, rounded labels, and a beginning-middle-end structure for the source material.
Bento digest
Create a bento-grid infographic with rounded rectangular cards of varying sizes on a soft background. Put the main conclusion in the largest card and supporting details in smaller labeled cards.
Want to edit after generation?
Use these prompts for first drafts. When you need targeted edits to wording, colors, or layout, generate the infographic here and refine it directly.
Generate an editable infographic