Published February 23, 2026 · 20 min read
100 Best AI Prompts for Business, Marketing, and Content Creation
AI tools like ChatGPT and Claude have fundamentally changed how businesses operate. But here is the dirty secret: the quality of your output is entirely determined by the quality of your input. A vague prompt gets a vague answer. A specific, well-structured prompt gets output that is indistinguishable from work done by a $150/hour professional.
According to a 2025 McKinsey report, businesses that effectively use AI tools see a 40% increase in productivity and a 25% reduction in operational costs. But "effectively" is the key word. Most people type "write me a blog post" and wonder why the output is generic. The difference between AI that wastes your time and AI that saves you hours every day comes down to one skill: prompt engineering.
This guide contains 100 battle-tested AI prompts organized by business function. Every prompt is designed to be copied and pasted directly into ChatGPT, Claude, or any other AI assistant. We have included variables in [brackets] that you should replace with your own specifics. These are the exact prompts we use at SpunkArt to create content, write marketing copy, generate code, and run our business.
How to Use These Prompts
Copy any prompt below and paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, or your preferred AI tool. Replace the text in [brackets] with your own details. For best results, provide as much context as possible — the more specific your input, the more useful the output. These prompts work with both free and paid AI tiers.
Content Writing Prompts (1-15)
Content is the engine of every online business. These prompts help you create blog posts, articles, guides, and long-form content that ranks on Google and converts readers into customers.
Prompt #1 — Long-Form Blog Post
Write a 2,000-word blog post about [topic]. Target keyword: "[primary keyword]". Structure it with an engaging introduction that hooks the reader with a surprising statistic, 5-7 H2 subheadings, bullet points for key takeaways, and a conclusion with a clear call-to-action. Use a conversational but authoritative tone. Include specific data points and examples. Do not use filler phrases like "in today's fast-paced world."
Best for: SEO blog posts, pillar content, how-to guides
Prompt #2 — Content Brief for Writers
Create a detailed content brief for an article about [topic]. Include: target keyword and 5 secondary keywords, search intent analysis, suggested title (under 60 characters), meta description (under 155 characters), recommended word count, outline with H2 and H3 headings, 3 competitor URLs to analyze, key points to cover that competitors miss, internal linking opportunities, and a suggested CTA.
Best for: Managing content teams, planning content calendars
Prompt #3 — Rewrite for a Different Audience
Rewrite the following content for [target audience — e.g., "beginners who have never built a website"]. Simplify technical jargon, add explanations for complex concepts, use analogies to make abstract ideas concrete, and maintain the core message while making it accessible to someone with no prior knowledge of [topic]. Here is the content: [paste content]
Best for: Repurposing expert content for broader audiences
Prompt #4 — Listicle Post
Write a listicle titled "[number] [topic — e.g., 'Ways to Save Money on Web Hosting']". For each item, include: a bold headline, a 2-3 sentence explanation of why it works, a specific example or data point, and an actionable tip the reader can implement today. Order the list from most impactful to least. Include an introduction that explains why this topic matters and a conclusion that summarizes the top 3 picks.
Best for: High-traffic blog posts, social media shareability
Prompt #5 — Comparison Article
Write a detailed comparison article: "[Product A] vs [Product B]: Which Is Better in 2026?" Compare them across these categories: pricing, features, ease of use, customer support, integrations, and best use cases. Include a comparison table. Give a clear recommendation at the end with specific reasoning. Be fair to both products but make a definitive choice. Target audience: [describe audience].
Best for: High-intent SEO content, affiliate marketing
Prompt #6 — How-To Tutorial
Write a step-by-step tutorial on how to [task]. Assume the reader is a complete beginner. Number each step. For each step, include: what to do, why it matters, common mistakes to avoid, and a screenshot description (I will add actual screenshots later). Include a prerequisites section at the top listing everything the reader needs before starting. End with a troubleshooting FAQ covering the 5 most common problems.
Best for: Technical tutorials, documentation, knowledge bases
Prompt #7 — Case Study
Write a case study about how [company/person] achieved [result] using [method/tool]. Structure it as: Challenge (what problem they faced), Solution (what they did), Results (specific metrics and outcomes), Key Takeaways (what readers can learn). Use specific numbers wherever possible. Write it in third person narrative style, 1,200-1,500 words. Make it compelling enough that someone facing a similar challenge would want to try the same approach.
Best for: Building credibility, sales enablement content
Prompt #8 — Pillar Page Content
Write a comprehensive pillar page on [broad topic — e.g., "SEO for Beginners"]. This should be the definitive guide that covers every major subtopic. Include 8-12 major sections with H2 headings. Each section should be 200-300 words and should link to more detailed content (I will fill in URLs later). Include a table of contents at the top. Target length: 3,000-4,000 words. This page should rank for the head keyword "[keyword]" and provide a complete overview of the topic.
Best for: SEO hub pages, topic clusters, authority building
Prompt #9 — FAQ Content
Generate 15 frequently asked questions about [topic]. For each question: write it exactly as a real person would type it into Google (natural language), provide a concise answer (2-4 sentences), then provide a detailed answer (1-2 paragraphs). Format the questions with proper FAQ schema markup in mind. Focus on questions with high search volume that indicate purchase intent or information-seeking behavior.
Best for: FAQ pages, featured snippet optimization, voice search
Prompt #10 — Content Refresh
I have an existing blog post that was written in [year]. The topic is [topic]. Here is the current content: [paste content]. Refresh this content for 2026 by: updating outdated statistics with current data, removing references to discontinued tools or services, adding new sections covering recent developments, improving the introduction to be more engaging, optimizing for the keyword "[keyword]", and adding a stronger call-to-action. Keep what works and only change what is outdated or weak.
Best for: Updating old content, maintaining search rankings
Prompt #11 — Ebook Chapter
Write Chapter [number] of an ebook titled "[ebook title]". This chapter covers [topic]. Target length: 2,500 words. Begin with a brief introduction connecting this chapter to the previous one. Include 4-6 subheadings, practical examples, actionable tips in callout boxes, and end with key takeaways and a transition to the next chapter. Voice: authoritative but approachable, like a mentor teaching a motivated student.
Best for: Ebook creation, lead magnets, digital products
Prompt #12 — Press Release
Write a press release announcing [news — e.g., "the launch of a new free SEO tool suite"]. Follow AP style. Include: a compelling headline (under 80 characters), a dateline, a strong opening paragraph covering who/what/when/where/why, 2-3 body paragraphs with details and quotes, a boilerplate "About [Company]" section, and media contact information placeholder. Keep the total length under 500 words. Tone: professional, newsworthy, factual.
Best for: Product launches, company announcements, PR outreach
Prompt #13 — Newsletter Content
Write a weekly newsletter email about [topic/industry]. Include: a personal opening (2-3 sentences, conversational), 3 curated stories/tips with brief commentary (2-3 sentences each), 1 actionable tip of the week the reader can implement today, and a sign-off with a question to encourage replies. Tone: like a knowledgeable friend sharing what they learned this week. Total length: 400-600 words. Subject line options: give me 5 choices.
Best for: Weekly newsletters, audience engagement, retention
Prompt #14 — Script for Video or Podcast
Write a script for a [length — e.g., "10-minute"] [video/podcast] about [topic]. Structure: hook (first 15 seconds that grabs attention), intro (briefly state what viewers will learn), 3-5 main points (each with an example or story), and outro (recap + call to action). Write it conversationally — short sentences, contractions, direct address ("you"). Include [PAUSE], [SHOW GRAPHIC], and [B-ROLL] markers where appropriate. The hook must be compelling enough that viewers do not click away.
Best for: YouTube videos, podcasts, webinars
Prompt #15 — Content Calendar
Create a 30-day content calendar for a [type of business] targeting [audience]. For each day, include: content type (blog post, social post, video, email), topic/title, target keyword, platform, and a 1-sentence content brief. Mix content types for variety. Prioritize topics by search volume and business relevance. Include 8 blog posts, 20 social media posts, and 4 email newsletters. Align content themes weekly so each week tells a coherent story.
Best for: Content strategy, planning, team coordination
Marketing Copy Prompts (16-30)
Marketing copy is what turns visitors into customers. These prompts help you write landing pages, ads, sales pages, and conversion-focused copy that drives revenue.
Prompt #16 — Landing Page Copy
Write landing page copy for [product/service]. Structure: Hero section (headline, subheadline, CTA button text), Problem section (3 pain points the audience faces), Solution section (how the product solves each pain point), Features section (5 key features with benefit-focused descriptions), Social proof section (placeholder for testimonials), Pricing section (describe the offer), Final CTA section (urgency-driven close). Target audience: [describe]. Tone: confident, clear, zero fluff.
Best for: Product launches, service pages, lead generation
Prompt #17 — Sales Page (Long-Form)
Write a long-form sales page for [product] priced at [price]. Use the PAS (Problem-Agitate-Solution) framework. Start with the biggest frustration your target audience faces. Agitate it — make them feel the cost of not solving it. Then introduce the product as the solution. Include: 10 bullet points of benefits (not features), 3 "imagine if" scenarios, objection handling for the top 5 reasons people would not buy, a risk-reversal guarantee, and 3 CTAs spread throughout. Target: [audience]. Goal: maximize conversions.
Best for: Digital product sales pages, high-ticket offers
Prompt #18 — Google Ads Copy
Write 5 Google Ads variations for [product/service]. Target keyword: "[keyword]". For each ad, write: Headline 1 (30 characters max, include keyword), Headline 2 (30 characters max, include benefit), Headline 3 (30 characters max, include CTA), Description 1 (90 characters max), Description 2 (90 characters max). Focus on: urgency, specific benefits, social proof indicators, and clear CTAs. Vary the angles: price, quality, speed, trust, and convenience.
Best for: PPC campaigns, Google Ads, Bing Ads
Prompt #19 — Facebook/Instagram Ad Copy
Write 5 Facebook/Instagram ad copy variations for [product/service] targeting [audience]. For each variation, use a different hook style: 1) Question hook, 2) Statistic hook, 3) Story hook, 4) Contrarian hook, 5) Direct benefit hook. Each ad should be under 125 words for the primary text. Include a headline (under 40 characters) and a link description (under 30 characters). End each with a clear CTA. Optimize for engagement and clicks.
Best for: Social media advertising, retargeting campaigns
Prompt #20 — Value Proposition Statement
Create 10 value proposition statements for [product/service]. Each should complete this formula: "We help [target audience] [achieve desired outcome] by [unique method/approach] without [pain point they want to avoid]." Make each one under 25 words. Rank them from strongest to weakest. For the top 3, explain why they work and how they differentiate from competitors in the [industry] space.
Best for: Homepage headlines, elevator pitches, brand messaging
Prompt #21 — Testimonial Request Email
Write an email asking a satisfied customer for a testimonial. The customer purchased [product/service] and achieved [result]. Make it easy for them by including 3 specific questions they can answer: 1) What problem were you facing before? 2) How has [product] helped? 3) What specific result have you achieved? Also offer to write a draft testimonial based on their experience that they can approve or edit. Keep it under 150 words. Tone: grateful, not pushy.
Best for: Collecting social proof, building trust
Prompt #22 — Headline Variations
Generate 20 headline variations for [content/product/page]. Use a mix of these proven headline formulas: How-To, Numbered List, Question, Command, Curiosity Gap, Social Proof, Urgency, Specific Result, Comparison, and Contrarian. Each headline should be under 65 characters for SEO. Rank the top 5 and explain which psychological trigger each one uses. The product/content is about: [describe].
Best for: A/B testing, blog titles, email subject lines
Prompt #23 — Call-to-Action Variations
Write 15 call-to-action button texts and 15 supporting microcopy lines for [action — e.g., "signing up for a free trial"]. The button text should be 2-5 words and action-oriented. The microcopy (displayed below the button) should handle a common objection in under 10 words. Examples of good microcopy: "No credit card required" or "Cancel anytime." Vary the approaches: urgency, benefit-focused, curiosity, social proof, and risk-reversal.
Best for: Conversion optimization, A/B testing CTAs
Prompt #24 — Brand Voice Guide
Create a brand voice guide for [company name], a [type of business] targeting [audience]. Include: brand personality (3-5 adjective descriptors), tone of voice (formal vs casual scale, humorous vs serious scale, technical vs accessible scale), vocabulary guidelines (words to use, words to avoid), sentence structure preferences, example paragraphs in the correct voice for: website copy, social media, email, and customer support. Provide 3 "do" examples and 3 "don't" examples for each context.
Best for: Brand consistency, onboarding writers, team alignment
Prompt #25 — Elevator Pitch
Write 5 elevator pitch variations for [business/product], each under 60 seconds when spoken aloud (approximately 150 words). Each pitch should follow this structure: 1) Identify a relatable problem, 2) Introduce the solution, 3) Explain how it works (one sentence), 4) Share a proof point (stat or result), 5) End with a conversation-starter question. Vary the opening hook for each: personal story, surprising fact, provocative question, bold claim, and common misconception.
Best for: Networking, investor pitches, sales conversations
Prompt #26 — Upsell/Cross-Sell Copy
Write upsell and cross-sell copy for a customer who just purchased [product A, price]. Suggest [product B, price] as an upsell. Write: a post-purchase page headline, 3-sentence value pitch explaining why this pairs perfectly with their purchase, 3 bullet points of additional benefits, a time-limited discount offer (e.g., "Add this now for 30% off — this offer disappears when you leave this page"), and a decline option that subtly reinforces the value ("No thanks, I don't need [benefit]").
Best for: E-commerce, digital products, increasing average order value
Prompt #27 — Webinar Registration Page
Write registration page copy for a free webinar titled "[webinar title]". Include: a headline that emphasizes the transformation attendees will experience, 5 bullet points of what they will learn (outcome-focused, not topic-focused), speaker bio section (placeholder), urgency element (limited spots or time-sensitive), FAQ section (3 common questions about the webinar), and a registration form CTA. The webinar is about [topic] and targets [audience].
Best for: Lead generation, webinar marketing, event promotion
Prompt #28 — Pricing Page Copy
Write pricing page copy for [product/service] with 3 tiers: [Basic - $X], [Pro - $Y], [Enterprise - $Z]. For each tier: write a one-line description, list 6-8 features (use checkmarks and X marks to show differences), and include a CTA button. Highlight the middle tier as "Most Popular." Add a money-back guarantee section. Include an FAQ section with 5 pricing-related questions. Write a comparison note explaining why the Pro tier offers the best value. The product is [describe].
Best for: SaaS pricing pages, tiered product offerings
Prompt #29 — Abandoned Cart Recovery Copy
Write a 3-email abandoned cart sequence for [product/store]. Email 1 (sent 1 hour after): friendly reminder, no discount, focus on what they are missing. Email 2 (sent 24 hours after): address common objections, include a testimonial, add a small incentive (free shipping or 10% off). Email 3 (sent 48 hours after): urgency and scarcity, final offer with a deadline. Each email should be under 150 words with a clear subject line and a single CTA. Tone: helpful, not pushy.
Best for: E-commerce, recovering lost revenue
Prompt #30 — Referral Program Copy
Write all the copy for a referral program for [product/service]. Include: referral program name (catchy, brandable), landing page headline and description, "How It Works" section (3 simple steps), what the referrer gets, what the referred friend gets, email template the referrer can forward to friends, social media share text (under 280 characters for X/Twitter), and FAQ section (5 questions). The reward structure is: [describe reward — e.g., "give $10, get $10"]. Make sharing feel natural, not salesy.
Best for: Viral growth, customer acquisition, loyalty programs
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SEO Prompts (31-45)
Search engine optimization is one of the most valuable applications of AI. These prompts help you with keyword research, on-page optimization, technical SEO, and content strategy. Pair them with SpunkArt's free SEO tools for maximum impact.
Prompt #31 — Keyword Research
Generate a keyword research report for the topic "[topic]". Provide 30 keyword ideas organized into 3 categories: Head terms (1-2 words, high volume), Body terms (2-3 words, medium volume), and Long-tail terms (4+ words, low volume but high intent). For each keyword, estimate: search intent (informational, commercial, transactional, navigational), competition level (low/medium/high), and content format that would rank best (blog post, tool, video, list). Prioritize keywords with commercial or transactional intent.
Best for: SEO strategy, content planning, finding opportunities
Prompt #32 — Meta Tags Optimization
Write optimized meta tags for a page about [topic]. Target keyword: "[keyword]". Provide: Title tag (under 60 characters, keyword near the beginning, compelling click trigger), Meta description (under 155 characters, includes keyword naturally, has a call-to-action), 5 title tag variations for A/B testing, and 3 meta description variations. Also generate: OG title, OG description, Twitter title, and Twitter description. Optimize for both search engines and human click-through rate.
Prompt #33 — Internal Linking Strategy
I have a website about [topic] with the following pages: [list your main pages/posts]. Create an internal linking strategy. For each page, suggest 3-5 other pages it should link to, the ideal anchor text for each link, and where in the content the link should be placed (introduction, body, or conclusion). Explain the logic behind each link — how it helps with topic clusters, link equity distribution, and user journey. Identify any orphan pages that need more inbound links.
Best for: Site architecture, distributing page authority, UX
Prompt #34 — SEO Audit Checklist
Create a comprehensive SEO audit checklist for [website URL or type of site]. Organize it into these categories: Technical SEO (crawlability, indexation, site speed, mobile-friendliness, HTTPS, structured data), On-Page SEO (title tags, meta descriptions, headings, content quality, internal links, images), Off-Page SEO (backlink profile, brand mentions, social signals), and Content SEO (keyword targeting, content gaps, thin content, duplicate content). For each item, include what to check, what "good" looks like, and how to fix common issues.
Best for: Website audits, client deliverables, systematic optimization
Prompt #35 — Content Gap Analysis
I run a [type of business] website. My main competitors are [competitor 1], [competitor 2], and [competitor 3]. Analyze the types of content they are likely creating that I am missing. Identify 15 content gap opportunities — topics and keywords my competitors probably rank for that I do not cover. For each gap, suggest: the target keyword, content format (blog post, tool, video, comparison), estimated difficulty, and potential traffic impact. Prioritize by effort-to-impact ratio.
Best for: Content strategy, competitive analysis, finding quick wins
Prompt #36 — Schema Markup Generator
Generate JSON-LD structured data markup for a [type — Article/FAQ/HowTo/Product/LocalBusiness/Event] about [describe content]. Include all recommended and required properties per Schema.org specifications. Output the complete script tag ready to paste into the HTML head. Also explain what rich result type this schema can trigger in Google search results and any additional properties I should add to maximize the chances of getting a rich snippet.
Best for: Rich results, enhanced search listings, technical SEO
Prompt #37 — Link Building Outreach Email
Write 3 outreach email templates for building backlinks to [my page URL/topic]. Template 1: Broken link building (I found a broken link on their site, suggesting my page as a replacement). Template 2: Resource page outreach (their resource page on [topic] would benefit from including my content). Template 3: Guest post pitch (I want to write for their blog). Each email should be under 120 words, personalized with [placeholders], and have a clear value proposition for the recipient. No generic flattery.
Best for: Link building campaigns, digital PR, authority building
Prompt #38 — Topical Authority Map
Create a topical authority map for [broad topic]. This should be a content cluster strategy with: 1 pillar page (broad topic, high-volume keyword), 8-12 cluster pages (specific subtopics, long-tail keywords), and the linking structure between them (which pages link to which). For each page in the cluster, provide: suggested title, target keyword, content type, word count target, and how it supports the pillar page topically. The goal is to signal to Google that my site is the authority on [topic].
Best for: SEO content strategy, building topical authority
Prompt #39 — Local SEO Optimization
Create a local SEO optimization plan for [business name], a [type of business] in [city, state]. Include: Google Business Profile optimization checklist, 10 local keywords to target, local content ideas (5 blog post topics with local relevance), citation building strategy (list top 20 directories to submit to), review generation strategy, and local schema markup. Also suggest 5 ways to build local backlinks specific to [city].
Best for: Local businesses, service area businesses, multi-location SEO
Prompt #40 — SEO-Optimized URL Slugs
Generate SEO-optimized URL slugs for these 10 page titles: [list titles]. For each, provide: the recommended slug (lowercase, hyphens, no stop words, under 5 words), the target keyword it is optimized for, and a brief explanation of why this slug structure is optimal for search. Also flag any slugs that might conflict with existing common URL patterns and suggest alternatives.
Prompt #41 — Search Intent Analysis
Analyze the search intent for these 10 keywords: [list keywords]. For each keyword, identify: the primary intent (informational, commercial, transactional, or navigational), what type of content Google is currently ranking (blog posts, product pages, tools, videos), what the searcher actually wants to accomplish, and what content format and angle would best satisfy this intent. Group the keywords by intent type and suggest a content strategy for each group.
Best for: Content strategy, matching content to search intent
Prompt #42 — Robots.txt and Sitemap Strategy
My website is a [type of site] with these sections: [list sections]. Generate an optimized robots.txt file and XML sitemap strategy. For robots.txt: specify which user-agents to address, which paths to allow and disallow, and why. For the sitemap: recommend the structure (single sitemap vs sitemap index), priority values for each section, change frequency settings, and submission strategy for Google Search Console. Explain the reasoning behind each decision.
Prompt #43 — Page Speed Optimization Plan
Create a page speed optimization checklist for a website built with [technology — e.g., "static HTML/CSS/JS on GitHub Pages"]. Prioritize actions by impact. For each optimization: explain what to do, why it matters for Core Web Vitals (LCP, FID/INP, CLS), the expected performance improvement, and the difficulty level (easy/medium/hard). Include optimizations for: images, fonts, CSS, JavaScript, caching, CDN, server response time, and third-party scripts. Focus on changes that improve LCP the most.
Prompt #44 — SEO Competitor Analysis
Create a framework for analyzing my SEO competitor [competitor URL or name]. Provide a structured analysis template covering: their estimated organic traffic range, top-ranking keywords and pages, content strategy (topics, formats, publishing frequency), backlink profile characteristics, technical SEO strengths and weaknesses, content gaps I can exploit, and 5 specific actions I can take to outrank them on [target keyword]. Be specific and actionable, not generic.
Best for: Competitive intelligence, finding strategic opportunities
Prompt #45 — Featured Snippet Optimization
I want to win the featured snippet for "[keyword]". The current featured snippet shows [describe current snippet type: paragraph, list, table]. Rewrite my content section to optimize for the featured snippet. Provide: a concise paragraph answer (40-60 words) that directly answers the query, a numbered or bulleted list version, and a table version if applicable. Also suggest the ideal H2 or H3 heading to place immediately before the answer. Explain which format is most likely to win the snippet based on the query type.
Best for: Position zero, increasing organic visibility and CTR
Social Media Prompts (46-60)
Social media is free distribution. These prompts help you create content for X/Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, and other platforms that drives engagement and traffic to your business.
Prompt #46 — X/Twitter Thread
Write a 10-tweet thread about [topic]. Tweet 1 should be a hook that makes people want to read the whole thread — use a bold claim, surprising stat, or contrarian opinion. Tweets 2-9 should each make one clear point with a specific example or actionable tip. Tweet 10 should summarize the key takeaway and include a CTA (follow, retweet, check out [link]). Each tweet must be under 280 characters. Use line breaks for readability. No hashtags in the thread body — add 2-3 relevant hashtags only in the last tweet.
Best for: Twitter/X growth, thought leadership, driving engagement
Prompt #47 — LinkedIn Post
Write a LinkedIn post about [topic/lesson/insight]. Use this structure: Hook line (first line that appears before "see more" — make it irresistible to click), Story or context (3-4 short lines), Key insight or lesson (1-2 lines), Practical takeaway (what the reader can do differently today), Engagement question (ask the audience for their perspective). Keep paragraphs to 1-2 lines. Use line breaks between every thought. Total length: 150-200 words. Tone: professional but authentic, not corporate-speak. No emojis in the first line.
Best for: LinkedIn growth, B2B marketing, personal branding
Prompt #48 — Instagram Caption
Write 5 Instagram caption variations for a post about [topic/product]. Each caption should: start with a hook in the first line (before the "more" truncation), tell a brief story or share a valuable insight, include a clear CTA (save, share, comment, or click link in bio), and end with 20-30 relevant hashtags organized by size (mix of large, medium, and niche). Vary the lengths: 1 short (under 50 words), 2 medium (50-100 words), 2 long (100-200 words). The image shows [describe image].
Best for: Instagram content, engagement, discoverability
Prompt #49 — TikTok/Reels Script
Write a script for a [30/60/90]-second TikTok or Instagram Reel about [topic]. Structure: Hook (first 3 seconds — text overlay and what to say to stop the scroll), Content (main points delivered fast with visual cues), CTA (what to do next — follow, comment, check link in bio). Include: what to say on camera, text overlay suggestions, and any visual/transition cues. The tone should be casual, energetic, and educational. The hook must work even with the sound off (text overlay is key). Target audience: [describe].
Best for: Short-form video content, viral social media
Prompt #50 — Social Media Bio
Write 5 social media bio variations for [person/brand] on [platform]. Each bio should: clearly state what you do or offer, include a unique value proposition, have a CTA (what should visitors do next), and stay within the character limit ([160 for Twitter/X, 150 for Instagram, 2600 for LinkedIn summary]). Incorporate relevant keywords for searchability. Vary the styles: professional, personality-driven, metric-focused, benefit-focused, and curiosity-driven. Current business: [describe].
Best for: Profile optimization, first impressions, conversion
Prompt #51 — Social Media Content Repurposing
I have this blog post: [paste content or describe it]. Repurpose it into: 3 Twitter/X tweets (standalone, not a thread), 1 LinkedIn post, 2 Instagram captions, 1 TikTok script (60 seconds), 5 quote graphics (text that could be placed on a designed background), and 1 newsletter teaser. Each piece should feel native to its platform — not like a copy-paste from the blog. Extract the most interesting, surprising, or actionable points from the original content.
Best for: Maximizing content ROI, consistent multi-platform presence
Prompt #52 — Engagement Questions
Generate 20 engagement questions for [platform] related to [topic/industry]. Categories: 5 opinion questions ("What do you think about..."), 5 experience questions ("Have you ever..."), 5 preference questions ("Which do you prefer: A or B?"), 5 prediction questions ("Where do you think [topic] is heading in 2026?"). Each question should be designed to generate comments and discussion. Avoid questions that can be answered with just "yes" or "no."
Best for: Boosting engagement, algorithm signals, community building
Prompt #53 — Hashtag Strategy
Create a hashtag strategy for [brand/business] on [platform]. Provide: 10 branded hashtags, 15 niche-specific hashtags (10K-100K posts), 10 broad industry hashtags (100K-1M posts), 5 trending/seasonal hashtags relevant to [topic]. For each hashtag, note the estimated post count and relevance score (1-10). Create 3 hashtag sets of 20-30 each for different types of posts (educational, promotional, community). Explain the strategy behind mixing hashtag sizes.
Prompt #54 — Community Response Templates
Write 10 response templates for common social media interactions for [brand/business]: positive comment thank you, negative review response, product question response, pricing question, feature request acknowledgment, bug report response, collaboration inquiry, spam handling, customer success story reshare, and competitor comparison question. Each response should be authentic (not robotic), empathetic, solution-oriented, and on-brand. Include [placeholder] variables for personalization. Tone: [describe brand voice].
Best for: Social media management, customer service, team training
Prompt #55 — Social Proof Post
Write a social media post showcasing this achievement/milestone: [describe — e.g., "reached 1,000 customers" or "featured in TechCrunch"]. Make it authentic and celebratory without being boastful. Include: gratitude to customers/community, a brief story of how you got here, a specific lesson learned along the way, and a forward-looking statement about what is next. Create 3 versions: one for Twitter/X (under 280 chars), one for LinkedIn (200 words), and one for Instagram (with hashtags).
Best for: Building trust, brand awareness, celebrating wins
Prompt #56 — Product Launch Social Campaign
Create a 7-day social media campaign for launching [product/feature]. For each day, provide: the theme (tease, reveal, educate, social proof, objection-handle, urgency, last chance), content for Twitter/X (1 tweet), LinkedIn (1 post), and Instagram (1 caption). Day 1-2 should build anticipation. Day 3 is the launch announcement. Days 4-6 educate and handle objections. Day 7 creates urgency. Include a content calendar format with posting times.
Best for: Product launches, coordinated marketing campaigns
Prompt #57 — Meme/Humor Content Ideas
Generate 10 meme or humorous social media post ideas for [brand/industry]. Each should: reference a relatable pain point or situation in [industry], work as a text-based tweet or text overlay on an image, be shareable (someone would tag a friend or repost), and subtly relate to what [brand] offers without being a direct sales pitch. Include the concept description and the exact text to use. Keep the humor appropriate for a professional audience but genuinely funny, not cringeworthy "hello fellow kids" energy.
Best for: Viral content, brand personality, organic reach
Prompt #58 — Social Media Poll Ideas
Create 10 poll ideas for [platform] about [topic/industry]. Each poll should: have 2-4 answer options, spark genuine curiosity about the results, be relevant to [target audience], and give you useful market research data about your audience. For each poll, include: the question, the answer options, why this poll is valuable for your business (what insight it provides), and a follow-up content idea based on the results.
Best for: Engagement, audience research, content inspiration
Prompt #59 — User-Generated Content Campaign
Design a user-generated content (UGC) campaign for [brand/product]. Include: campaign name, branded hashtag, clear instructions for participants, incentive structure (what participants can win or receive), 3 example posts showing what great submissions look like, promotion plan to launch the campaign, content moderation guidelines, and how to repurpose the best submissions. The campaign should feel fun and natural to participate in, not forced. Target platform: [platform]. Duration: [length].
Best for: Community building, social proof, organic content
Prompt #60 — Influencer Outreach Message
Write 3 outreach message templates for reaching out to [type of influencer — e.g., "micro-influencers in the productivity space with 5K-50K followers"]. Template 1: Product gifting offer. Template 2: Paid collaboration pitch. Template 3: Affiliate partnership proposal. Each message should: be personalized with [placeholders], lead with what is in it for them, be specific about the collaboration idea, and be under 150 words. Include a subject line for email and a shorter DM version for each. Tone: professional, respectful of their time, no begging.
Best for: Influencer marketing, brand partnerships, outreach
Email Marketing Prompts (61-70)
Email remains the highest-ROI marketing channel. These prompts help you write emails that get opened, read, and clicked. For more on building your list, read our email list building guide.
Prompt #61 — Welcome Email Sequence
Write a 5-email welcome sequence for new subscribers to [business/newsletter]. The subscriber signed up for [lead magnet or reason]. Email 1 (immediate): Deliver the lead magnet, introduce yourself, set expectations for what they will receive. Email 2 (Day 2): Share your best piece of content or most useful resource. Email 3 (Day 4): Tell your brand story — why you started, what you believe in. Email 4 (Day 7): Social proof — customer results, testimonials, case studies. Email 5 (Day 10): Soft pitch for your product/service with a special offer. Each email: subject line, preview text, body (under 200 words), CTA.
Best for: Onboarding subscribers, building relationships, first purchase
Prompt #62 — Cold Email for B2B Sales
Write 3 cold email variations for reaching out to [target — e.g., "SaaS founders who need SEO help"]. Each email must: be under 100 words (busy people do not read long emails), open with something specific about the recipient's business (with a [placeholder] for personalization), state the value proposition in one sentence, include one specific proof point (stat or result), and end with a low-friction CTA (not "book a call" but "would it be worth a 5-minute conversation?"). No generic compliments. No "I hope this finds you well."
Best for: B2B sales, outbound marketing, lead generation
Prompt #63 — Product Launch Email
Write a product launch email for [product name] to our email list of [describe audience]. The product costs [price] and [describe what it does]. Structure: subject line (create urgency or curiosity), preview text, opening that connects to a problem they have, product reveal with key benefits (not features), 3 bullet points of what is included, social proof element, launch-special offer (if any), primary CTA button text, and a P.S. line. Keep the body under 250 words. Make it feel exciting but not hypey.
Best for: Product launches, revenue generation, list monetization
Prompt #64 — Re-engagement Email
Write a re-engagement email for subscribers who have not opened an email in [60/90/120] days. The goal is to get them to either re-engage or unsubscribe (keeping a clean list). Use a subject line that creates curiosity or concern ("Is this goodbye?" or "We miss you — here's what you missed"). Body: acknowledge they have been quiet, highlight the 2-3 best things they missed, offer something exclusive to win them back, and give them a clear option to stay or unsubscribe. Tone: genuine, not guilt-trippy. Under 150 words.
Best for: List hygiene, improving deliverability, recovering subscribers
Prompt #65 — Email Subject Line Generator
Generate 25 email subject lines for an email about [topic/offer]. Create 5 in each category: Curiosity (open loop that demands a click), Urgency (time-sensitive language), Benefit (clear value statement), Personal (feels like a 1:1 message), and Numbers (specific stats or lists). Each subject line should be under 50 characters for mobile optimization. For the top 5 overall, explain the psychological trigger that makes each one effective. The audience is [describe] and the email contains [describe content].
Best for: Improving open rates, A/B testing email subjects
Prompt #66 — Sales Sequence (5-Email)
Write a 5-email sales sequence promoting [product, price] to [audience]. Email 1: Problem awareness — make them feel the pain of not solving this. Email 2: Education — teach them something valuable (free value builds trust). Email 3: Solution introduction — present the product with benefits and social proof. Email 4: Objection handling — address the top 3 reasons people do not buy. Email 5: Urgency close — deadline, scarcity, or bonus that expires. Each email: subject line, body under 200 words, single CTA. Space them 2 days apart.
Best for: Digital product sales, course launches, high-ticket offers
Prompt #67 — Partnership Pitch Email
Write an email pitching a partnership between my business ([describe your business]) and [target partner business]. The partnership idea is [describe — e.g., "cross-promotion to each other's email lists"]. Lead with the benefit to them (not to you). Include: what you admire about their business (specific, not generic), the partnership proposal in 2-3 sentences, what both parties gain, a suggested next step, and social proof about your audience/business. Under 150 words. Tone: peer-to-peer, not fan-to-celebrity.
Best for: Strategic partnerships, co-marketing, business development
Prompt #68 — Customer Feedback Survey Email
Write an email asking customers to complete a feedback survey about [product/service]. The survey takes [X] minutes. Motivate them to complete it by: explaining how their feedback directly improves the product, offering an incentive (if any — e.g., "enter to win a $50 gift card"), and making it feel like their opinion genuinely matters (not a corporate checkbox exercise). Include the survey link CTA prominently. Add 2-3 specific questions you are most curious about to pique their interest. Under 120 words.
Best for: Product improvement, customer insights, NPS measurement
Prompt #69 — Event/Webinar Invitation Email
Write an invitation email for [event type — webinar, workshop, AMA, etc.] titled "[title]" on [date] at [time]. Include: subject line that creates FOMO, what attendees will learn (3 specific takeaways, not vague topics), who is presenting (brief credential that establishes authority), how long it is, a special bonus for live attendees, and a bold CTA to register. Also write a reminder email to send 24 hours before and 1 hour before the event. Each email under 150 words.
Best for: Webinar marketing, event promotion, lead generation
Prompt #70 — Post-Purchase Follow-Up Sequence
Write a 3-email post-purchase sequence for someone who just bought [product, price]. Email 1 (immediate): Order confirmation + quick start guide + set expectations for what happens next. Email 2 (Day 3): Check in — are they using the product? Include a helpful tip or tutorial link. Ask if they have questions. Email 3 (Day 7): Request a review or testimonial. Include a direct link to leave a review. Mention the referral program (if any). Each email should make the customer feel valued, not sold to. Tone: helpful and supportive.
Best for: Customer retention, reviews, reducing refunds
Coding and Development Prompts (71-80)
AI is a force multiplier for developers. These prompts help you write code, debug issues, build features, and ship faster.
Prompt #71 — Write a Full Feature
Build a [describe feature — e.g., "responsive pricing table with toggle for monthly/annual billing"] using HTML, CSS, and vanilla JavaScript. Requirements: mobile-responsive (works on screens 320px and up), accessible (proper ARIA labels, keyboard navigation), no external dependencies or frameworks, dark theme with background #0a0a0a, text #e8e8e8, and accent color #ff5f1f. Include comments explaining each section. The code should be production-ready, not a prototype.
Best for: Frontend development, building features fast
Prompt #72 — Debug This Code
Debug the following code. It should [describe expected behavior] but instead it [describe actual behavior/error]. Here is the code: [paste code]. Identify: the root cause of the bug (not just the symptoms), the exact line(s) causing the issue, why it is happening (explain the underlying concept), the fix with corrected code, and how to prevent this type of bug in the future. If there are multiple potential issues, list all of them ranked by likelihood.
Best for: Debugging, understanding errors, learning from mistakes
Prompt #73 — Code Review
Review this code for: bugs, security vulnerabilities, performance issues, readability, and best practice violations. Here is the code: [paste code]. For each issue found, provide: severity (critical/high/medium/low), location (line number or section), explanation of the problem, suggested fix with code, and reference to relevant best practices or documentation. Also note what the code does well. Be thorough but prioritize issues by severity.
Best for: Code quality, catching bugs before production, learning
Prompt #74 — API Endpoint Design
Design a RESTful API for [describe system — e.g., "a blog platform with posts, comments, and users"]. For each endpoint, provide: HTTP method, URL path, request body (JSON), response body (JSON), status codes, authentication requirements, and rate limiting recommendations. Include: CRUD operations for all resources, pagination for list endpoints, filtering and sorting options, error response format, and API versioning strategy. Follow REST best practices and use consistent naming conventions.
Best for: API design, backend architecture, documentation
Prompt #75 — Database Schema Design
Design a database schema for [describe application — e.g., "an e-commerce store with products, categories, users, orders, and reviews"]. Provide: table definitions with column names, data types, and constraints, primary and foreign key relationships, indexes for common queries, an entity-relationship description, and sample SQL for creating the tables. Optimize for: read-heavy or write-heavy workload (specify which), data integrity, and query performance. Use [PostgreSQL/MySQL/SQLite] syntax. Explain your normalization decisions.
Best for: Database design, application architecture, performance
Prompt #76 — Refactor This Code
Refactor the following code to improve readability, maintainability, and performance. Keep the exact same functionality. Here is the code: [paste code]. Specifically: extract repeated logic into reusable functions, use meaningful variable and function names, add appropriate error handling, optimize any performance bottlenecks, and add JSDoc or inline comments for complex logic. Show the refactored code and explain each change you made and why.
Best for: Code quality improvement, technical debt reduction
Prompt #77 — Unit Tests
Write comprehensive unit tests for this code using [testing framework — e.g., "Jest"]: [paste code]. Cover: all happy path scenarios, edge cases (empty inputs, null values, boundary conditions), error handling paths, and any async behavior. Each test should have a descriptive name that explains what it tests. Include setup/teardown if needed. Aim for 100% line coverage. Group tests logically using describe blocks. Add comments explaining the purpose of non-obvious test cases.
Best for: Testing, code reliability, regression prevention
Prompt #78 — Convert Between Languages
Convert the following [source language] code to [target language]. Maintain the exact same functionality and logic. Use idiomatic patterns and best practices for [target language] — do not just do a line-by-line translation. Here is the code: [paste code]. After the conversion, explain any significant differences in how [target language] handles things compared to [source language] (e.g., error handling, concurrency, type system). Note any libraries or dependencies needed in the target language.
Best for: Language migration, learning new languages, polyglot development
Prompt #79 — Performance Optimization
Analyze this code for performance issues and optimize it. Current performance: [describe — e.g., "page loads in 4.2 seconds, target is under 2 seconds"]. Here is the code: [paste code]. For each optimization: explain what is slow and why, provide the optimized code, estimate the performance improvement, and note any tradeoffs (readability, memory usage, complexity). Prioritize optimizations by impact. Focus on: algorithm efficiency, DOM operations, memory leaks, unnecessary re-renders, and network requests.
Best for: Speed optimization, scaling, user experience improvement
Prompt #80 — Documentation Generator
Generate complete documentation for this codebase/function/API: [paste code or describe]. Include: overview (what it does, why it exists), getting started guide (installation, setup, basic usage), API reference (all public functions/methods with parameters, return values, and examples), configuration options, common use cases with code examples, troubleshooting guide (common errors and solutions), and changelog format. Write for a developer who has never seen this code before. Use clear, concise language.
Best for: Documentation, onboarding, open source projects
Business Planning Prompts (81-90)
These prompts help you think through business strategy, planning, and operations. Use them with the strategic mindset from our guide to starting an online business.
Prompt #81 — Business Plan (Lean Canvas)
Create a Lean Canvas business plan for [business idea]. Fill in each section: Problem (top 3 problems), Customer Segments (who has these problems), Unique Value Proposition (single clear message), Solution (top 3 features), Channels (how you reach customers), Revenue Streams (how you make money), Cost Structure (major costs), Key Metrics (what numbers to track), and Unfair Advantage (what cannot be easily copied). Keep each section to 2-3 bullet points. This should fit on one page. Be specific, not generic.
Best for: Startup planning, investor pitches, clarity of thinking
Prompt #82 — SWOT Analysis
Conduct a SWOT analysis for [business/product] in the [industry] market. For each quadrant, provide 5 specific, actionable items: Strengths (internal advantages), Weaknesses (internal disadvantages), Opportunities (external factors to exploit), Threats (external risks to mitigate). For each item, add a 1-sentence action item: how to leverage strengths, address weaknesses, capture opportunities, and defend against threats. Conclude with the 3 most important strategic priorities based on this analysis.
Best for: Strategic planning, competitive positioning, decision-making
Prompt #83 — Financial Projection
Create a 12-month financial projection for [business type] with these assumptions: average price [price], estimated monthly customers month 1 [number], monthly growth rate [X%], fixed costs [list], variable costs per sale [list]. Provide a month-by-month table showing: revenue, cost of goods sold, gross profit, operating expenses, net profit, and cumulative cash flow. Identify the break-even month. Include 3 scenarios: conservative (half the growth rate), base case, and optimistic (double the growth rate). Flag any months where cash flow goes negative.
Best for: Financial planning, fundraising, setting realistic expectations
Prompt #84 — Competitive Analysis
Analyze the competitive landscape for [business/product] in [market]. Identify: 5 direct competitors and 3 indirect competitors. For each, analyze: their value proposition, pricing strategy, target audience, strengths, weaknesses, and market positioning. Create a positioning map showing where each competitor sits on two key dimensions (you suggest the most relevant dimensions). Identify the whitespace — market positions that are underserved. Recommend how [my business] should position itself to win.
Best for: Market research, positioning strategy, identifying opportunities
Prompt #85 — Customer Persona
Create 3 detailed customer personas for [business/product]. For each persona, include: name and demographics (age, location, income, education), job title and industry, goals (what they want to achieve), frustrations (what is preventing them), typical day (relevant behaviors and habits), how they discover new products, objections they would have about buying [product], the trigger event that makes them seek a solution, and the exact words they would use to describe their problem (for use in marketing copy). Base these on realistic market data for [industry].
Best for: Marketing targeting, product development, content strategy
Prompt #86 — OKRs (Objectives and Key Results)
Set quarterly OKRs for [business/team] for Q[number] 2026. Create 3 objectives that align with the company's mission of [describe mission]. Each objective should have 3-4 measurable key results with specific numeric targets. Use this format: Objective: [qualitative goal]. KR1: [metric] from [current] to [target]. Include: why each objective matters, how you will measure each key result, and what initiatives/projects will drive each KR. Make sure objectives are ambitious but achievable (70% confidence of hitting them).
Best for: Goal setting, team alignment, strategic execution
Prompt #87 — Pricing Strategy Analysis
Analyze the pricing strategy for [product/service]. Current price: [price]. Competitors charge: [list competitor prices]. My costs are: [list]. Evaluate: Am I underpriced or overpriced? What pricing model would maximize revenue (one-time, subscription, freemium, tiered, usage-based)? Should I raise prices? By how much? How would a price change affect demand (estimate elasticity for this market)? Provide 3 pricing options with pros and cons for each. Recommend one and explain why. Include the psychology behind the recommendation.
Best for: Revenue optimization, pricing decisions, market positioning
Prompt #88 — Process Documentation (SOP)
Write a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for [process — e.g., "onboarding a new client"]. Include: purpose (why this process exists), scope (when to use this SOP), roles involved, step-by-step procedure (numbered, with details), tools/resources needed, quality checkpoints, common mistakes and how to avoid them, escalation procedures for edge cases, and a checklist summary. Write it so someone with no prior experience could follow it and get the same result every time. Include estimated time for each step.
Best for: Team scaling, consistency, delegation, training
Prompt #89 — Risk Assessment
Conduct a risk assessment for [business decision/project]. Identify 10 potential risks. For each risk: describe the scenario, rate the probability (low/medium/high), rate the impact (low/medium/high), calculate the risk score (probability x impact), describe the mitigation strategy, and assign an owner. Create a 2x2 risk matrix (probability vs impact). For the top 3 risks (highest scores), develop a detailed contingency plan. What is the overall risk level of this decision, and should we proceed?
Best for: Decision-making, project planning, risk management
Prompt #90 — Investor Pitch Deck Outline
Create a 12-slide pitch deck outline for [business] seeking [amount] in [seed/Series A/etc.] funding. For each slide, provide: the title, key message (one sentence), bullet points of what to include, and the data/visual to show. Slides: Title, Problem, Solution, Market Size (TAM/SAM/SOM), Business Model, Traction, Team, Competition, Go-to-Market Strategy, Financials, The Ask, and Vision. Use real market data where possible for [industry]. The narrative should build a compelling case for why this business will generate significant returns.
Best for: Fundraising, investor meetings, strategic storytelling
Customer Service Prompts (91-95)
Great customer service builds loyalty and reduces churn. These prompts help you handle common scenarios professionally and efficiently.
Prompt #91 — Customer Complaint Response
Write a response to this customer complaint: "[paste complaint or describe situation]". The response should: 1) Acknowledge their frustration without being dismissive, 2) Take responsibility (no blaming the customer), 3) Explain what happened (briefly), 4) State the specific resolution you are offering, 5) Include a goodwill gesture (discount, free month, etc.), 6) Provide a direct contact for follow-up. Tone: empathetic, professional, solution-focused. Under 150 words. This customer has been with us for [length] and pays [amount]. Their lifetime value matters.
Best for: Customer retention, reputation management, de-escalation
Prompt #92 — FAQ Knowledge Base
Create a comprehensive FAQ/knowledge base for [product/service]. Generate 25 questions and answers organized into categories: Getting Started (5), Features and Usage (8), Billing and Pricing (5), Troubleshooting (5), and Account Management (2). Each answer should: directly answer the question in the first sentence, provide step-by-step instructions if applicable, link to relevant resources (use [placeholder] for URLs), and anticipate follow-up questions. Write for someone who is frustrated and wants an immediate answer — no fluff.
Best for: Self-service support, reducing ticket volume, documentation
Prompt #93 — Refund Request Response
Write response templates for refund requests under these scenarios: 1) Within refund policy — approve immediately, 2) Outside refund policy — deny gracefully with alternatives, 3) Partial refund situation — offer a compromise, 4) Subscription cancellation with refund — process and retain if possible. Each template should: validate the customer's feelings, clearly state the decision, explain the reasoning, offer an alternative (exchange, credit, extended trial), and leave the door open for future business. Tone: understanding but firm on policy. Include [placeholder] variables.
Best for: Refund handling, customer retention, consistent policy application
Prompt #94 — Chatbot Script
Write a chatbot conversation flow for [website/product]. Map out the following paths: greeting and intent detection (what does the user need?), product information requests, pricing questions, technical support (3 common issues), scheduling a demo or call, and human handoff. For each path, write: the chatbot messages (conversational, helpful), the user response options (buttons or quick replies), and the logic for when to escalate to a human. Include fallback responses for when the bot does not understand. The personality should be [describe].
Best for: Customer support automation, lead qualification, 24/7 service
Prompt #95 — Customer Success Check-In
Write a customer success check-in email for a client who signed up [timeframe] ago for [product/service]. The goal is to: confirm they are getting value, identify any issues before they churn, and surface upsell opportunities naturally. Include: a personalized opening referencing their specific usage (use [placeholder] for metrics), 2-3 tips to help them get more value, an open-ended question about their experience, and a subtle mention of a feature or tier they have not explored yet. Under 150 words. Tone: genuinely helpful, not salesy.
Best for: Customer retention, reducing churn, upselling
Product Description Prompts (96-100)
Product descriptions are where browsers become buyers. These prompts help you write descriptions that sell.
Prompt #96 — E-Commerce Product Description
Write a product description for [product name, price] targeting [audience]. Include: a compelling headline (benefit-focused, not feature-focused), a 2-3 sentence hook that addresses the buyer's main desire or pain point, 5-7 features translated into benefits (use "so you can..." or "which means..." to connect features to outcomes), social proof placeholder, and a CTA. Optimize for the keyword "[keyword]". Write 3 versions: short (50 words for mobile), medium (100 words for category pages), and long (200 words for the product page).
Best for: E-commerce, product pages, Amazon listings
Prompt #97 — SaaS Feature Description
Write feature descriptions for [product name]'s features page. The product is [describe]. Here are the features: [list features]. For each feature, write: a catchy feature name (3-5 words), a one-line description (benefit-focused), a 2-3 sentence detailed explanation connecting the feature to a real user problem, and a "before and after" comparison showing life without this feature vs with it. Use concrete examples and specific numbers where possible. Tone: confident and clear, not salesy. Organize features from most impactful to least.
Best for: SaaS marketing, features pages, product positioning
Prompt #98 — Digital Product Sales Copy
Write sales copy for a digital product: [product name — e.g., "55+ Web Tools Source Code Bundle"] priced at [price]. Target buyer: [describe]. Include: headline emphasizing the transformation, opening paragraph addressing their biggest frustration, "What You Get" section with detailed list of everything included, "Who This Is For" section (3 ideal customer descriptions), "Who This Is NOT For" section (2-3 disqualifiers — this builds trust), 3 use case scenarios, pricing justification (compare to alternatives), guarantee, and final CTA. Total: 500-700 words. Make it sell without being pushy.
Best for: Digital product launches, landing pages, Gumroad listings
Prompt #99 — App Store Description
Write an App Store or Google Play description for [app name]. Include: short description (80 characters, keyword-optimized), full description (4,000 characters max) with: hook opening, 5 key features with benefit descriptions, social proof stats, "What's New" section for the latest version, and a CTA. Incorporate these keywords naturally: [list keywords]. Also write 5 screenshot caption texts (under 30 words each) that highlight the most compelling features. Optimize for App Store search while being compelling to human readers.
Best for: Mobile app marketing, ASO (App Store Optimization)
Prompt #100 — Service Package Description
Write descriptions for 3 service packages for [service business — e.g., "SEO consulting"]. Package 1: [Basic, $X/month], Package 2: [Pro, $Y/month], Package 3: [Enterprise, $Z/month]. For each package: write a one-line tagline, a "Best for:" line describing the ideal customer, a bulleted list of what is included (be specific — "4 blog posts per month" not "content creation"), what is NOT included (to differentiate from higher tiers), and a CTA. Highlight the middle package as the recommended option. Include a comparison table at the end.
Best for: Service businesses, consulting, agency pricing pages
How to Get Better Results from AI
The prompts above will get you 80% of the way there. Here is how to get to 95%:
1. Be Specific About Context
Always tell the AI who you are, who your audience is, and what you want to achieve. "Write a blog post" gives you generic output. "Write a 2,000-word blog post for freelance web developers about pricing their services, targeting the keyword 'freelance web developer rates 2026'" gives you something you can actually use.
2. Specify the Format and Length
If you need bullet points, say so. If you need it under 200 words, say so. If you need headers, say so. AI tools are very good at following structural instructions. The more precise your format requirements, the less editing you need to do afterward.
3. Provide Examples
The single most effective way to get better AI output is to show it an example of what good looks like. "Write it in the style of this article: [paste example]" or "Here is an example of a good product description for reference: [paste example]" dramatically improves output quality.
4. Iterate, Don't Start Over
If the first output is not perfect, do not write a new prompt from scratch. Instead, give specific feedback: "Make the introduction more engaging," "Add more specific data points to section 3," or "Rewrite the CTA to be more urgent." AI tools are excellent at refining output based on feedback. Each iteration gets closer to what you want.
5. Use Chain-of-Thought for Complex Tasks
For complex problems, break them into steps. Instead of "Create a marketing strategy," try: "Step 1: Identify my target audience for [product]. Step 2: List the channels where this audience spends time. Step 3: For each channel, suggest 3 content types that would resonate. Step 4: Create a 30-day content calendar based on these suggestions." Sequential reasoning produces dramatically better output than single-shot prompts.
Pro Tip: Build a Prompt Library
Save the prompts that work best for your business in a document you can access quickly. Over time, you will customize these templates with your specific brand voice, target audience, and formatting preferences. A well-maintained prompt library saves hours every week and ensures consistent output quality. Bookmark this page as your starting library.
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