Brother Kush, again we don't make clones, given the correct conditions the clone does all the hard work.
Once you understand the fundamentals its not so hard. Biggest thing with clones is what.you don't see.
The stems are made up of the xylem and the phloem these are the tiny channels used to transport water etc. When we cut the branch its vital not to cut at a 90 degree angle as this will collapse the channels preventing/lowering chance of uptake/reboot. Important to cut at a 45 with a razor sharp blade, not thick scissors.
You can buy a oxyclone which just circulates oxygenated water, pretty much simplifies the process and is far more forgiving than placing directly in soil.
Placing directly in soil is possible too just requires more detail. With no rootzone to draw water we must provide a high rh environment which remains consistent but it must also have a supply of fresh air every so often.
When we start to run high moisture.this rapidly becomes prime breeding ground for bacteria. This is especially true above 77, bacterial growth explodes above 77 so it's vital to keep things cool also.
This is why cleanliness is key, if even one tiny particulate gets on the wrong place of that cutting from your dirty finger it dies.
I found best results having everything prepared beforehand, from moment of taking a clone from mother she is dipped in rooting hormones held in a cup of water until I finish cutting clones. Each clone is stripped. Down to its last 2 sets of leaves asap. The less time the cutting spends in your hand the better, cut dip, move , be swift, simple. Don't place cutting gs down on ground dont over handle them,
0-200 ppfd on 18-20, 24 hours if that's your thing.
Good luck.