Google’s Nano Banana Pro (Gemini 3 Pro Image) has quickly become one of the most powerful tools available to digital marketers. It generates ultra-high-quality images, handles text inside visuals better than previous models, and produces graphics, photos, diagrams, and branded assets with minimal prompting.
Below are lots of clear, practical use cases showing exactly how marketers can use Nano Banana Pro today — each with example prompts you can copy and paste.
1Social media hero images and carousel covers
Scroll-stopping visuals determine how well a social post performs. Whether it’s LinkedIn, Instagram, or TikTok, a bold, well-composed hero image dramatically increases engagement.
Why it matters:
You can generate unique, branded creative instead of relying on generic stock photos. It also lets you tailor visuals precisely to the post’s angle.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Instagram carousel cover, 4:5 format. Photorealistic flat-lay of winter clothes in a black and grey palette on a wooden table. Subtle white overlay with dark decorative font text reading ‘7 Essential Accessories for Winter’
2Infographics for newsletters and blog posts
Nano Banana Pro is unusually strong at embedding text inside images — something most models still struggle with. This makes it ideal for creating infographics that are clean, readable, and brand-consistent.
Why it matters:
Infographics break up long content, improve comprehension, and boost shareability. They work extremely well in email newsletters.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Blue and white, flat design-style infographic explaining the basics of the social media algorithms in the simplest possible way. Use visual rather than text explanation where possible. Use brand colours dark blue (#003366) & cyan (#00B8D9). Include header ‘How Social Algorithms Work’.
3Slide deck or website background images
Training sessions, webinars, and presentations all benefit from bespoke imagery. With Nano Banana Pro, you can generate classroom scenes, dashboards, abstract backgrounds, and more.
Why it matters:
Custom visuals elevate perceived production value, which is important for course creators, consultants, and B2B educators.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Wide-angle cinematic photo of a modern workshop space, mixed-gender professionals, warm golden-hour window light, shallow depth-of-field, presenter pointing at a large screen showing a colourful automation flowchart.
4Ad creative and promotional graphics
Whether you’re running LinkedIn ads, Instagram ads, or promoting a course launch, Nano Banana Pro makes it easy to produce high-impact creative variations.
Why it matters:
Strong visuals lift click-through rate. You can also generate multiple variants for A/B testing quickly.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Studio portrait of a male creator (age ~45) seated at a clean desk with two monitors showing LinkedIn analytics dashboards. Composition: subject centered, monitors angled toward camera. Lighting: high-contrast single spotlight with deep shadows. Camera: 50 mm lens, crisp focus. Style: photorealistic, premium tech-ad aesthetic. Branding: orange accent (#FF5E00) on mug. Add overlay text: ‘Scale Your LinkedIn Influence – 6-Week Masterclass’, bold white sans-serif, positioned at top-left with strong legibility.
5Blog headers and article hero visuals
Long-form content performs better when paired with a compelling header image. Nano Banana Pro can create anything from hyper-real photos to abstract 3D illustrations.
Why it matters:
Unique blog visuals increase shareability and help your articles stand out.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Abstract 3D illustration of a giant neural-circuit brain floating above a modern office skyline at dawn. Composition: symmetrical wide shot with city silhouette at bottom. Lighting: cool-blue ambient glow with metallic highlights. Camera: wide cinematic 16:9 framing. Style: high-detail 3D render with slight film grain. Add small header text: ‘Inside the AI Tools Marketers Ignore’, aligned lower-right with clear legibility.
6Visual case studies and campaign recaps
When presenting before/after results, a custom visual improves clarity and communicates impact.
Why it matters:
Case studies convert leads, justify pricing, and demonstrate authority. Visualising results makes them more persuasive.
Example prompts (produced the above image):
This is a 2-stage prompt. First analyse your data, secondly visualise the analysis as above. FYI I created fictitious dummy ad campaign data to do this, it’s not based on any real campaigns for real clients!
- Analyse the data from this TikTok ad campaign and create a very brief overview of the main insights you can derive from the data.
- Create an infographic which visually communicates these insights. Ensure complete accuracy and legibility with text.
7Branded icon sets for courses, websites, or content hubs
If you’re building an online brand through web pages, social media, presentations, documents, brochures etc, consistent iconography helps users feel like they’re with your specific brand.
Why it matters:
Icons create a professional visual identity and make your ecosystem look cohesive.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Set of 5 square icons on white: 1) AI assistant, 2) LinkedIn network nodes, 3) Email with gear, 4) TikTok phone + graph, 5) Google Sheets table + automation arrow. Dark blue (#003366) + orange (#FF5E00). Flat design with subtle shadow.
8YouTube and TikTok thumbnails
Thumbnails determine click-through rate, especially on YouTube where a video can live or die based on how well the title and thumbnail win those clicks. A strong visual with bold composition is key.
Why it matters:
Nano Banana Pro can create thumbnails that instantly signal the topic and mood of your video.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Create a YouTube thumbnail with a cut-out image of me in exactly the pose in this photo. The thumbnail is for a video titled “Nano Banana Pro is Insane”. Make the thumbnail really pop and get the highest possible click-through rate from an audience interested in the latest AI tools and specifically Google’s Nano Banana Pro.
9Webinar, event, or workshop posters
If you’re promoting a live session, you can generate polished event posters for social media, email campaigns, or landing pages.
Why it matters:
Strong creative can significantly boost sign-ups.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Vertical 1080Ă—1920 poster. Style: clean modern event-poster aesthetic. Add text:
LIVE WEBINAR
15th Feb 2026
13:00 GMT
at top, and ‘Mastering Content Automation with AI’ centered in large bold type. Include small logo at bottom.
10Testimonial card graphics for website
A customer review, designed to your exact specification, even allowing you to specify the font!
Why it matters:
Trust signals are a huge factor in building confidence to buy in visitors to your website.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Testimonial card with white background, soft drop shadow, circular profile picture left-aligned, star rating above text. Accent colour: teal (#00B8D9). Font: Vollkorn. Add headline: “What Our Clients Say”.
11Email header banner
Make your email newsletter look more professional with an on-brand banner, in which you can specify colours and fonts exactly how you like.
Why it matters:
You could quickly create a new banner every issue to keep things fresh, always in the same style but reflecting the content of this current issue. This gives the impression of a well-curated email.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Pink and purple email header in 3:1 ratio featuring modern, trendy, feminine graphics and cool font. Add bold title text: “Spilling the Social Media Tea”.
12Brand mood boards
Mood boards help anchor visual identity for campaigns and rebrands.
Why it matters:
They align teams and provide direction for creators.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Aesthetic brand mood board with 6 panels: texture, colour palette, typography, lifestyle photo, icon style, and UI sample. Muted earthy tones.
13Social media quote graphics
Quotes generate engagement, especially when visually distinctive.
Why it matters:
They reinforce expertise and thought leadership.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Square Instagram quote graphic with beige background, serif typography, and thin border. Add centred text: “Consistency beats intensity.”
14Data visualisations and stat cards
Stats presented visually are more persuasive and shareable.
Why it matters:
They help case studies and insights land more clearly.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Minimal stats card with large number “78%” in dark blue. Below it: “of users prefer personalised content”. Light grey background, blue accent bar.
15Carousel slide sequences
Carousels require coherent, visually consistent multi-slide sets.
Why it matters:
Consistency improves readability and saves time.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Set of 5 LinkedIn carousel slides with matching style. Clean black text on off-white background, subtle geometric corner shapes, numbered headers.
16Retargeting ad visuals
Retargeting ads benefit from clarity and visual urgency.
Why it matters:
Remarketing is consistently the most profitable kind of paid advertising online. If you run an e-commerce store it’s an essential element of your marketing mix.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Facebook ad designed for re-marketing someone who has already looked at this product.
Use an image of the product and in a tasteful e-commerce font, the words
Still thinking about this?
Include a clear CTA button. You must use the attached product image
17Seasonal marketing graphics
Seasonal campaigns demand timely creative updates.
Why it matters:
Seasonal relevance boosts conversion and engagement.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
[As a follow-up to the above prompt and its output] now make it festive-themed for an end of year sale. Add the words ‘End of year sale’. Make it extremely festive.
18All the product shots you need
Put your product in any photo, illustration, graphic, or design that you can imagine.
Why it matters:
In marketing, we need to move fast. We can’t wait for photo shoots or the art department. Being able to quickly spin up different product shots to try in different versions of ads, content, CRM, and more is invaluable.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Plain product image:
Put this hand soap product on a heritage-style vanity bathroom sink with a Victorian green colour scheme, in the style of an editorial magazine photograph, 16:9
19Product ad creative
Easily turn product shots into on-brand paid ad creative.
Why it matters:
This is where you can realistically run multi-variate tests with a very high volume of different creatives competing for budget, unlocking ad spend efficiency (and ultimately ROI) that you’ve never seen before.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Now copy the Aesop font from their logo to overlay text on a 1:1 square version of this photo to be used in Instagram ads. The text reads: Black Friday | Now on
20Event countdown graphics
Countdown visuals build anticipation for live events or launches.
Why it matters:
They boost attendance and urgency.
Example prompt (produced the above image):
Bold countdown tile with black background, large white “3 Days Left”, neon outline clock icon, and small event date beneath.


















