Course Summaries
← Blog

What Tools and Software Does Jun Yuh Use? (His Phone-First Setup)

June 25, 2026 in Creator · 3 min read

_Disclosure: this article contains affiliate links. If you buy through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only list tools Jun Yuh has actually used or recommended._

Jun Yuh built an audience of millions across Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts and co-founded Creator College — and the thing that surprises people most is how little equipment is behind it. His entire system is phone-first by design. Below is a breakdown of the gear and software he actually uses, pulled from his own documented setup, with alternatives where they help. (Accurate as of mid-2026; tools change, so treat this as a current snapshot.)

The headline principle, in Jun's own words and throughout his teaching: a polished content strategy isn't about fancy equipment. He's built everything around low-friction formats you can batch on a phone, precisely so the gear never becomes the bottleneck. So this is the opposite of a maximalist kit list — it's a deliberately minimal one.

His filming setup

This is the part Jun documents directly, because he teaches it. His stated setup is four cheap things: a phone camera (no DSLR), an adjustable tripod to hold it, a lavalier mic for clean audio, and a clip light for simple, consistent lighting. That's the whole rig. A small ring light is the common stand-in or upgrade for the clip light if you want softer, more even lighting on camera.

His filming discipline matters as much as the gear: he films in short 10-to-30-second segments to make editing and reuse easier, swaps angles (main → side → zoomed) to keep things visually varied, and runs a '3-take rule' so he never gets stuck perfecting a single line. The point is that the phone setup only works because the workflow around it is dialed in.

Editing

Jun deliberately sticks to low-intensity editing formats so that batching stays realistic — he's not doing heavy, time-consuming edits. For a phone-first creator working this way, CapCut is the standard editor: it's mobile-first, free to start, and built for exactly the short-form vertical content he makes. He hasn't publicly pinned himself to one specific editor, so treat this as the natural fit for his workflow rather than a hard claim — and know that his whole approach is designed so the editor barely matters.

Want the full short-form system behind the setup? Get 80% of Jun Yuh's Content System Guide in a summary you can read in an afternoon. Summary of Jun Yuh's Content System Guide.

If you want the full system Jun teaches around this setup — scripting, filming, batching, and the monetization flow — you can get our full summary of his Content System Guide here for the core system without the price tag.

DM automation and monetization

This is where Jun's stack gets distinctive. A central piece of his monetization is ManyChat, the DM-automation tool that triggers an automated message when viewers comment a keyword on his videos — turning a viral Reel into captured leads and sales on autopilot. It's a core part of the system he teaches, not an afterthought. ManyChat's free tier covers the basics; higher automation volumes need its paid plan.

Content, AI, and organization

For ideation and production speed, Jun leans on AI tools like ChatGPT to help with scripting and hooks (his courses ship with 100+ hook templates), always shaped by his own Hook-Story-Visuals framework rather than used raw. Many creators in his world also use Notion to organize content calendars, shot lists, and idea databases — the kind of batching backbone his system depends on.

How to copy his setup

The honest version of Jun's stack is almost defiantly cheap: a phone, a tripod, a lavalier mic, and a clip light to film; a free mobile editor like CapCut to cut; ManyChat to turn engagement into leads; and an AI assistant plus Notion to script and stay organized. His entire message is that the equipment is never what's stopping you — the system and the consistency are. Start with the phone in your pocket.

Keep reading