New Siri Vs Old Siri Spike
A side-by-side test where you give “new siri vs old siri” the exact same real-life tasks and score what actually changed.
Most people will assume it’s a total upgrade, but the reveal is which everyday prompts still fail (or got weirder) even after the “new” label.
- Split-screen screen recording of both Siri versions answering the same prompts
- Timer on screen for response speed
- A simple scoreboard overlay (Pass/Fail/Partial)
- On-camera reactions to obvious wins/fails
- Real-world tasks: texting, reminders, calendar, directions, “summarize my last message,” etc.
Viewers leave with a clear checklist of what “new siri” is better at, what’s unchanged, and the 3 prompts they should actually use.
THE TAKE
“New siri vs old siri” is a distribution event because it’s a built-in comparison story: people are already arguing in their head which one is real, which one is hype, and whether they’ll feel the difference today. Your job is to turn that curiosity into visible proof fast.
THE MECHANISM
This keyword travels because it hits three behaviors at once:
- Low-friction curiosity: “Did it actually change?”
- Social proof hunger: viewers want an answer they can repeat in one sentence.
- Easy judging: side-by-side tests make the audience feel smart instantly.
If you show the same prompts, same phone context, and a simple scorecard, viewers don’t need trust—they can see it.
EXECUTION
Packaging (3 fast title angles):
1) “New Siri Vs Old Siri: Same Prompts, Wild Results”
2) “I Tested New Siri Vs Old Siri (10 Real Tasks)”
3) “New Siri Vs Old Siri: What Actually Changed?”
Ship-today video idea (Format + length): 45–60s Short, split-screen test.
Hook line to say on camera: "New siri vs old siri—same 5 prompts, and one of them embarrasses itself."
Thumbnail angle: Big split screen “NEW” vs “OLD” + a 3-word stamp: “PASS / FAIL”.
Filming plan (do this):
- Record both versions attempting the same 5 prompts (pick 2 practical, 2 AI-ish, 1 weird).
- Add an on-screen timer and a Pass/Fail/Partial score after each answer.
- End with “Top 2 prompts to steal” + “1 thing still broken.”
Don’t do this: read update notes—show the prompts.
Everyone loves progress until the stopwatch shows up.