Free · Ready to use · No signup

AI Prompt Library

115 prompts for ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini — copy, paste, and get results in seconds.

Showing 115 of 115 prompts

Automated Theme Extractor: Top 5 Keywords JSON Generator

Analysis

As an expert in computational linguistics and semantic analysis, analyze the provided text to identify its core themes. Extract and rank the 5 most significant keywords that capture the text's essential meaning, considering factors such as frequency, contextual relevance, and semantic importance. INPUTS Text to analyze: {text} PARAMETERS Exclude common stop words and generic terms Consider both single words and key phrases Rank based on semantic significance and frequency Maintain context relevance Include only substantive terms that reflect the content's meaning OUTPUT REQUIREMENTS Return a JSON array of exactly 5 themes, structured as follows, ranked from highest to lowest relevance: [ {\"theme\": \"[most relevant theme]\", \"relevance_score\": 1}, {\"theme\": \"[second most relevant theme]\", \"relevance_score\": 2}, {\"theme\": \"[third most relevant theme]\", \"relevance_score\": 3}, {\"theme\": \"[fourth most relevant theme]\", \"relevance_score\": 4}, {\"theme\": \"[fifth most relevant theme]\", \"relevance_score\": 5} ] VALIDATION Ensure each theme is unique Verify themes are contextually relevant Confirm output is valid JSON format Include only meaningful, content-representative keywords

Text Analysis

1

n8n Workflow Builder

Automation Claude

Prompt: Create a Complete n8n Workflow (JSON) Your task is to create a fully importable n8n workflow JSON file based on the process I describe. What I Need the Workflow to Do {{describe_the_process}} Step-by-Step Instructions 1. Ask Clarifying Questions Before generating anything, ask me all necessary questions to fully understand the process I want to automate. 2. Generate a Workflow Outline Once we clarify the requirements, create a node-by-node outline of the workflow (brief descriptions only, not the full JSON yet). Wait for my confirmation before proceeding. 3. Generate the Full Workflow JSON After I approve the outline, generate the complete and importable n8n workflow JSON file. Generation Guidelines - All nodes must be properly connected - Include basic error handling (e.g., Error Trigger or conditional fallback nodes) - Use placeholder credentials (e.g., {API_KEY}, {USERNAME}, etc.) - Add inline documentation using Sticky Notes inside the JSON wherever additional explanation or context is helpful Optional: API Docs or References {{add_api_docs_here}}

Automation

0

$100M Offer Generation

Business ChatGPT

I need your help crafting the perfect offer for my services following the principles taught by Alex Hormozi, author of $100m Offers. Hormozi crafts offers people can’t refuse because they are incredibly valuable according to Alex Hormozi’s Value Equation. HORMOZI VALUE EQUATION: Value = (Dream Outcome * Perceived Likelihood of Achievement) / (Time Delay * Effort and Sacrifice) Context: I am a [your role] that has [your accomplishments/expertise]. [Additional context to your expertise/experience as needed]. I want to [your target audience] to [what you want to do]. I need you to use the above information to create various irresistible product offers from me for founders, entrepreneurs and creatives who want to grow and monetize an audience online. Please incorporate any of the challenges, frustrations or barriers that my target audience might have and craft an offer that is the perfect solution to these challenges. Some additional context: focus on specific challenges for [your target audience] with 1) massive pain, 2) available purchasing power, 3) easy to target, 4) growing market. Goals: Create 3 irresistible offers Give 5 different ways to deliver these offers (phrased as their own offers) Give multiple UNIQUE ways to enhance the original offers through scarcity, urgency, or bonuses. Give multiple UNIQUE guarantees that reverse risk. If you do not get X result in Y time period, we will Z. Name the guarantee something compelling.

Offer Generation

0

80/20 System

Business ChatGPT

I need your help analyzing my business according to the 80/20 (Pareto Principle) to identify areas where I can better utilize my time and effort. I am a [your role] that [what you do]. I currently acquire customers through [#] channels: [your various channels of customer acquisition] I [description of your weekly tasks pertaining to client acquisition] About [% of your revenue] revenue comes from [your main revenue driver]. I have [#] products: [Your products. The percentage of revenue you get from each one. The amount of effort you put into each one and other limitations.] Please analyze my business and give my a holistic report on 3 areas where: -I should be investing more of my time or energy (the 20% giving me 80% of the results) -I need to either outsource, drastically reduce my effort, or completely cut out (the 80% that's only giving me 20% of the results) I'm opening to outsourcing or leveraging tools (such as AI) to streamline parts of my business if you think that aspects are important but not the best use of my time as the owner of the business. Here are some additional criteria I'd like you to incoporate into your analysis: -Prioritize quick wins -Prioritize actions that give exponential results for the time/effort in invested -Identify areas where I'm losing susbstantial time on efforts that aren't giving a worthwhile return - Your report should cover only the digital marketing side of my business (acquiring more leads and converting them) - Be specific about the areas for improvement - Provide unique ideas that I might not have considered or advice that isn't widely known

Productivity

0

Business Ideas Matching Your Ikigai

Business ChatGPT

Craft 40 unique and potential business ideas that align with my Ikigai. My passion is [what you love]. I'm skilled at [what you’re good at]. I believe there is a market need for [what the world needs]. I could potentially be paid for [what you could be paid for].

Ideas Generation

0

Client Onboarding Document

Business ChatGPT

Create an onboarding document for a creative agency that is as robust as what Pentagram would use to onboard Fortune 500 companies. Make it as user friendly as possible with 20 key areas to get important information so we can seamlessly design their brand and website. Make the questions smart, witty, and fun. Take the best principles from Chris Do and how he suggests onboarding new clients.

Onboarding Clients

0

Community Playbook

Business Claude

Use this template to build out a community playbook for [your community]. [include any additional information around your community]. Please fill in each section using your best judgment based on psychological and marketing principles: **Community Playbook Creation Template** **1. Defining the Community** - Who do you want to bring together? Please specify the types of individuals that you aim to gather in your community. - Why does your community come together? Discuss the common goals or interests that unite your community. - What is your shared purpose? Transform your "why" into a shared anthem that your community members can rally behind. - What is your community's mission? Define the larger objective that your community aims to fulfill. **2. Community Activities and Rituals** - List down the shared activities that your community participates in. These are the actions that define your community's culture and interactions. **3. Community Guidelines and Rules** - Draft a set of community guidelines and rules. These serve as the foundation for your community's interactions and culture, ensuring a positive and productive environment for all members. **4. Encouraged Behaviors and Contributions** - What behaviors or contributions would you like to encourage in your community? Discuss specific actions that members can take to contribute positively to the community. **5. Community Achievements and Celebrations** - What are your community members proud of? Identify common achievements that your community values and celebrates. **6. Community Manifesto** - Lastly, craft a community manifesto. This is a powerful statement that encapsulates your community's values, goals, and shared identity.

Community Playbook Generation

0

Company Org Chart

Business Claude

I am the founder of a [insert your company] with a 2024 revenue goal of [insert revenue goal]. Our current revenue is [current revenue]. My company is currently structured with the following positions: [insert current positions] and I need to strategically plan the organizational structure to align with our goal. Could you help me craft a detailed org chart, indicating key positions we need to hire and their respective roles, based on the nature of our business and the revenue goal for 2025?

Organization Chart Generation

0

Comprehensive AI-Driven Marketing Strategy Generator

Business ChatGPT

Envision yourself as an advanced AI marketing strategist and your goal is to develop an in-depth and comprehensive marketing strategy for our new [product-service]. To start, identify our primary audience by investigating their demographic information - including aspects such as age, gender, location, and income, as well as psychographic details like interests and behaviors. Explain why this specific audience would be interested in our [product-service]. Next, perform a competitive analysis. This entails recognizing our direct and indirect competitors, deconstructing their strengths and weaknesses, and setting our [product-service] apart by defining our unique selling proposition (USP). Subsequently, devise specific tactics to appeal to and engage our target audience. These could range from social media outreach, email marketing campaigns, event involvement or hosting, diverse advertising strategies, and beyond. For each selected tactic, generate a detailed execution plan that outlines the steps to implementation, the necessary resources, and the methods for measuring their effectiveness. Lastly, designate a timeline and budget for the implementation of these activities and propose a system for monitoring our progress and assessing the results. Importantly, the developed strategy should be dynamic, adaptable to market fluctuations or changes in customer behaviors, but also innovative to ensure our [product-service] stands out in a competitive marketplace. [product-service]: [input]

Marketing Strategy Generation

0

Comprehensive Business Strategy Framework Generator

Business ChatGPT

As a business consultant, please create a comprehensive business strategy for the following product/service: {{service_description}}. Your strategy should incorporate various business frameworks such as Systems Thinking, Business Model Canvas, Blue Ocean Strategy, Design Thinking, Business Anthropology, and Behavioral Economics. 1. Identify at least three different customer segments (direct and/or indirect) for the product/service. Explain the reasoning for focusing on a specific segment, considering factors such as value proposition, channel, relationship, or profitability. 2. Develop value propositions for each customer segment. Describe how these value propositions address the challenges, tasks, pains, or gains for the customers. 3. Recommend channels to reach each customer segment throughout different stages in the sales pipeline, including awareness, evaluation, purchase, and feedback. Justify each proposed channel's benefits or cost-efficiency. 4. Explain the desired relationship types with each customer segment, ranging from automated to personal, and how these choices support client attraction, retention, and sales growth potential. 5. Identify the top five revenue streams for the business, ranked by potential income. Discuss each of them, covering transactional and recurrent revenue opportunities. 6. List the essential resources required for executing the value propositions, taking into account the resources that help your partners, channels, customer relationships, and revenue streams. 7. Describe the critical activities needed to support the value propositions effectively, and how they enable partners, channels, customer relationships, and revenue streams. 8. Suggest crucial partnerships to ensure a stable business system and the continuous availability of required resources. 9. Define the cost structure that supports the entire business model. Provide a detailed, well-organized, and creative response that demonstrates the application of various frameworks and strategies mentioned above. Your strategy should aim to deliver an optimal plan for the product/service while being flexible and adaptable. Additionally, offer clear explanations and examples for each point in your strategy.

Business Strategy

0

Customer Journey Content Generation

Business ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. I got into this field because I know first-hand the [pain-point of your ideal audience]. [Your experience, relevant background], and [what you’ve had to overcome (if relevant)]. I want to help [your goal general goal] for others [your expertise/method]. My audience is [your audience]. I help them by providing [how you help your audience]. I currently offer [your current offers]. I currently offer high-ticket consulting and have a suite of products that vary from $29 to $5000. I need your help creating 30 different content marketing ideas I can turn into [your preferred platform and content style]. I need these content ideas to both position me as the expert, and provide value to my readers. Please create the content ideas based off the 5 stages customer awareness as outlined by Eugene Schwartz. Idea requirements: -These ideas need to stand out amongst the noise on social media -These ideas need to have a high chance of going viral and be so good/valuable that people want to share them with their network -I need these ideas to be related to or tie-back to my products and expertise (to ensure I get the right kind of attention from potential customers) Please give your response in a table with 6 columns.

Customer Journey Generation

0

Local Marketing Ideas Checklist

Business ChatGPT

Market my local Fitness Center to the local area using a social media, referral, email, and affiliate strategy. Leverage all the learnings from Alex Hormozi and Gym Launch to take the business from $500k revenue to $5M revenue a year. Give a checklist of 20 marketing ideas that convert from awareness to transaction and 3 steps to implement each idea.

Local Business Checklist

0

Offer Stack Generator For Ghostwriters

Business ChatGPT

You are a Ghostwriting Services Packaging Pro, meaning your specialty is helping ghostwriters package up a specific service for a specific industry (and/or specific person or archetype of client within that industry) by flushing out the following variables: - **Irresistible Offer:** What’s the problem we’re solving for the client? What’s the cause of that problem (why are they experiencing it)? What’s the ultimate negative outcome the client will experience if they DON’T solve this problem? → What’s the solution (the service we’re providing). What are the benefits of solving this problem? And what’s the ultimate dream outcome the client wants & we’re going to help them unlock? - **Productized Offer Stack:** What are the deliverables? What are they actually getting? What are all the things you’re going to “do” to ensure they are successful? - **Project Timeline:** What’s the first dream outcome/goal and over what time horizon can the client expect to reach that first goal? 30 days? 30 months? 60 months? What’s the total “arc” here? - **Price Anchor:** How much is NOT solving this problem costing the client in terms of TIME or MONEY? Or, how much is this dream outcome worth to the client in terms of TIME or MONEY? - **Project or Monthly Cost:** If you’re selling an asset, price the project. If you’re selling an “ongoing service,” price the project then divide by the number of months (time horizon) to get the monthly cost. - **Offer Bundling or Pre-Payment Discount:** If you’re bundling services, price each service individually, then combine and give the client 10-20% off (for volume). If you want to capture more cash up-front, price anchor → price the project → offer 10-20% pre-payment discount for paying the full X-month project cost up-front. ~ When I tell you the ghostwriting service I want to pitch to clients, I’d like you to draft up for me a Service Offering Package by presenting the following: - **Packaged Service:** Newsletter Ghostwriting - **Name The Package:** “Newsletter Autopilot Package” or “Newsletter Acceleration Package” - **5-15 Tangible Deliverables:** These are the smaller deliverables I will do for the client when performing this service. Each deliverable should be stated clearly and then paired with a 1-4 sentence description of that specific deliverable, why it’s important, the specific problem it solves for the client, and/or the positive outcome it generates. - **Project Timeline:** Even when pitching monthly services, we want the client to “buy into” some sort of 6-month plan that helps them achieve some sort of specific goal. They aren’t buying a monthly recurring service—what they’re buying is a goal, accomplished at the end of 6 months, that just happens to get worked on “monthly.” When presenting the project timeline, reinforce the 6-month building process, and then reverse-engineer smaller milestones (”In month 1, we will…”, “By Month 3, we will have…” etc.). - **2 Packages:** Present 2 different packages (of the same service), with the second package essentially being double the “volume” and a little less than double the cost. (For example, if the service is Ghostwriting Thought Leadership Articles, the first package might be 2 800-word articles per month for $3,500/mo, but the second package might be 4 800-word articles per month for $5,000/mo. So there is a slight discount for the client buying increased volume.) - **Pre-Payment Discount:** Lastly, please write out a “script” for explaining that if the client wants to pre-pay for the 6-month project up-front, “I’m happy to…” and then offer either a free month (with appropriate cost reduction) or a 15-20% discount. Please do this for both packages. ~ Here’s an example of the sort of output I would like you to present back to me: ### **Newsletter Autopilot Package: Put your newsletter on autopilot (so it grows forever).** - **Positioning:** I will help you reposition your newsletter to make sure we are attracting the right types of readers. In addition, I will suggest rewrites of your newsletter description to be a more effective “mini-sales pitch” so we convert as many potential, relevant readers as possible. - **Content Buckets:** I’ll start by auditing any existing social or newsletter content, and clarifying the 3-5 content buckets we want to create content within—speaking to different (potentially tangentially related) audiences—with your newsletter. I’ll also create “templates” for each content bucket, to increase the efficiency of our publishing cadence over time. - **Posting Cadence:** I will put together a publishing calendar for you, both for your newsletter as well as recommendations for the social content you publish to effectively drive traffic to your newsletter. - **Infrastructure:** If you don’t already have a preferred newsletter publishing platform, I will recommend one. I will also handle all the drafting, publishing, and reviewing within the platform each week—as well as pulling analytics at the end of each week/month (open rate, click-through rate to any meaningful links, highest-performing subject lines, etc.). - **High-Performing Opt-In Page:** I will create a separate, dedicated landing page for your newsletter where I will clarify the offer (what is the value of subscribing?), and give readers a better sense of what they can expect before typing in their email. This will increase opt-in rates and allow you to build your list faster. - **Newsletter Template(s):** I will create an overarching template for your weekly newsletter, so that readers can learn what to expect when we hit publish. This template will be based on other highly successful newsletters, and I’ll present 3-5 different options—so we can choose the one that best suits the type of content you want to publish. - **Subject Lines:** Each week, I will A/B test 2 different variations of headlines for each newsletter. Over time, this will give us more and more data around what’s performing well and what topics readers are most interested in. - **Imagery:** Each newsletter, I will also pull stock photography we can use as the header image, as well as put together 1-2 “walkthrough” gifs showcasing how something works—whenever we are explaining something actionable (like how to use a specific SaaS platform, for example). - **Positive Engagement:** I will constantly monitor the newsletter inbox, and respond to all positive inquiries and reader questions. Each week, I’ll also round up any questions readers ask and bring them to the table the following week for us to discuss—and see if there are any that we could use to create a new piece of content. - **Negative Engagement:** I will also monitor the newsletter inbox for negative comments, and make sure any unhappy readers are responded to and pointed in the right direction—hopefully converting them into fans over time. - **Analytics:** At the end of every month, I will do a full review of all the newsletters we’ve published, and extract the top ~2 performing newsletters—along with 3-5 insights as to why I believe those performed the best. These analytics reviews will help us improve and iterate the content strategy over time. - **Surveys:** Each quarter, I will put together a 2-minute survey we send readers in an attempt to gather more targeted data, so we can get smarter about what sorts of topics our target readers find most valuable. - **Evergreen High-Performing Newsletter Library:** And all throughout our work together, I will compile a library of our highest-performing newsletters, topics, and most-common reader questions, allowing us to get smarter and smarter about how to dominate this niche. ### Project Timeline - To establish you as a thought leader in your industry, build a library of content for your newsletter that will draw readers in for years into the future, and set the foundation for your newsletter to grow forever, this will be a **6 month building process.** - However, 6 months from now, you will have a library of highly valuable long-form pieces that can be reused, republished, and broken apart into social content forever. You will also have a growing email list, allowing you to launch new products, programs, or services much faster (and more profitably). ### Price Anchor - I know what is required in order to build a successful weekly newsletter, and it involves a multitude of different skill sets: writing, formatting, data gathering, growth hacking & engagement, etc. If you were to hire someone full-time to do this for you within your company, in order to hire someone who possessed all these different skill sets, you’d be looking at paying them a full-time salary of upwards of $100,000 per year. (That’s easily a $8-$10k per month employee, and that’s if you can find someone with all these different skill sets.) - And if you were to try to do all these things yourself, it would easily consume 15+ hours of your week. And you have better things to do! (Like run your company!) Or, you can hire me—and I’ll take care of everything here for you. All I’ll need from you is to give me feedback in the beginning on the content, to make sure we’re nailing your voice, and then once we make sure we’re aligned, I can put things on autopilot for you. I have two different packages: ### Package #1: Newsletter Autopilot — $3,500/mo - 1 newsletter per week (4 per month) - And everything I have discussed on the newsletter side is included. ### Package #2: Newsletter Acceleration — $7,000/mo - 1 newsletter per week - 10 short-form pieces of social content per week - 2 long-form pieces of social content per week - social posting & growth hacking ### Pre-Payment Discount If we’re aligned it’s going to take us 6 months to establish you as a thought leader in your industry and build this high-quality library of newsletter content, and you’re bought-in on that process, I also wanted to offer you a discount for pre-paying the full amount up-front (especially if that’s easier for you from a billing perspective). For the Newsletter Autopilot package, that’s $3,500 per month x 6 months = $21,000. But if you want to pre-pay the full amount, **I’m happy to give you a discount and lower the total cost to $18,000.** For the Newsletter Acceleration package, that’s $7,000 per month x 6 months = $42,000. But if you want to pre-pay the full amount, **I’m happy to give you a month for free and lower the total cost to $35,000.** But either monthly or full pre-payment is fine by me. ~ Are you ready for me to give you the industry I want to ghostwrite for, and the ghostwriting service I want to provide, so you can build me a Ghostwriting Services Package?

Offer Stack Generation

0

Services Outreach Prompt

Business ChatGPT

You are an Outreach Specialist for ghostwriters who are pitching clients on their ghostwriting services. I am going to pull leads I would like to pitch my ghostwriting services to. I’m going to give you: - Their name - Their company name And I’d like you to look the person up on X, LinkedIn, Instagram, YouTube, and Google, and present back to me a brief summary of the lead filling in the following variables: But I want you to organize each variable in a very specific way, so let’s go through each one. ~ Variable #1: Social Profiles First, I’d like you to present to me a bulleted list of the lead’s prominent social profiles with links next to each one, so that I have them easily accessible. The list should be presented in the following format, with coinciding links: **Social Profiles:** - LinkedIn: Link to the lead’s LinkedIn profile - Twitter/X: Link to the lead’s Twitter/X profile - Instagram: Link to the lead’s Instagram profile - YouTube: Link to the lead’s YouTube profile - Personal Website: Link to the lead’s personal website - Newsletter: Link to the landing page or specific domain of the lead’s personal newsletter - Company: Link to the lead’s primary business - (Optional) Company #2: Link to the lead’s secondary business, if they have one - Company Newsletter: Link to the landing page or specific domain of the lead’s company’s newsletter ~ Variable #2: Lead Summary Bio Next, I would like you to write a detailed summary bio about the lead. This should inform me at a high-level about who they are, what they currently do, and what they’ve done in the past—so that I have appropriate context on their experiences going into pitching them. The information I care most about: - Where are they based? - What is their primary business today and what is their official job title/role? - What meaningful businesses have they been part of, worked for, or started/sold in the past? - Have they appeared in the news at all? - Have they won any awards, or been part of any meaningful social/status events? ~ Variable #3: Biggest Problems Next, I would like you to audit the lead’s social profiles, personal website, and company website. Here’s how I would like you to audit and identify the Biggest Problems I (the ghostwriter) could help them solve. I specialize in 2 different services: - Social Ghostwriting - Newsletter Ghostwriting When auditing the lead’s social content, go beyond frequency. Identify specific missed opportunities like: repeating the same ideas, overly technical posts with no narrative or story, low engagement despite frequent posting, no clear CTA or direction toward a lead funnel, or weak alignment with their audience’s pain points. My Social Ghostwriting service is built to help founders: - Build authority in their niche - Generate inbound interest - Save time by outsourcing ideation and writing - Translate complex thinking into compelling content In the DM and Email scripts for Social Ghostwriting, call out the #1 most obvious missed opportunity in their content strategy. Use that as the hook. Write casually, but ensure the script ties back to tangible outcomes (audience growth, lead gen, or positioning). Try to lightly match their tone/style, based on their current social content. So first, I would like you to audit their social profiles and give them a score out of 3, based on the following criteria, along with a short paragraph description summary of why you gave the lead the score you did. - Score of 0 = The person has not posted anything new in the last 30 days or more. - Score of 1 = The person has posted at least 1 new piece of content in the last 15 days. - Score of 2 = The person has posted 7 new pieces of content in the past 14 days. - Score 3 = The person has posted 1 new piece of content every day for the past 14 days. Second, I would like you to audit whether or not the lead is actively and strategically driving any of their social traffic to an email opt-in landing page or newsletter, and give them a score out of 3, based on the following criteria: - Score of 0 = The person has no link in their bio, and does not link to any external site in any of their content or in the comments of their content over the past 30 days. - Score of 1 = The person has a link in their bio to a personal or company website. - Score of 2 = The person has a link in their bio to a dedicated landing page to join a newsletter, and they have linked to this newsletter landing page at least 5 times in the past 30 days in their content or in the comments of their content. - Score of 3 = The person has a link in their bio to a dedicated landing page to join a newsletter, or a landing page of a free-value opt-in, and they have linked to this landing page at least 15 times in the past 30 days in their content or in the comments of their content. Third, I would like you to audit their personal website and company website looking for a newsletter, and give them a score out of 3, based on the following criteria (and if they have both a personal newsletter and a company newsletter, please audit and score both individually): - Score of 0 = The person has no personal newsletter and/or no company newsletter - Score of 1 = The person has a personal newsletter and/or the company has a newsletter, but it has a very weak offer (meaning all it says near the opt-in box is something like “Subscribe to our newsletter!” or “Subscribe to receive updates,” etc.) - Score of 2 = The person has a personal newsletter and/or the company has a newsletter, and it has some sort of clear “offer” for why you should subscribe and what you can (tangibly) expect to receive in exchange. - Score of 3 = The person has a personal newsletter and/or the company has a newsletter, and it has its own dedicated landing page with a specific offer (explanation for why you should subscribe), along with detailed descriptions of what you can expect in terms of content, frequency of newsletters, testimonials, etc. It’s very clear their newsletter/opt-in is working well. ~ Variable #4: Outreach Scripts Based on the information you’ve gathered about the lead, I would like you to take my 2 ghostwriting services (Social Ghostwriting and Newsletter Ghostwriting) and generate 2 different outreach scripts for each—based on the biggest problems you’ve identified that coincide with each respective service. The 2 scripts are: - DM script - Email script But there are rules I’d like you to follow for each script, so let me walk you through them. DM Script Rules Your DM script should adhere to the following rules: - It should be broken up into 3 different messages, so that it resembles how a human types/texts, and it should be written as conversationally and casually as possible. Do not use big words, formal sounding language, or even perfect grammar/sentence structure. Intentionally make it sound like a friend quickly texting a friend. - But these messages should not be written as if the other person is responding. They are going to be sent in succession, so they should “read” as if they are one big message—it’s just more effective to break them up into pieces. - The first message should be a “hook” statement or question centered around the biggest problem—ideally something that immediately makes the person realize they have a problem. (Example: If their biggest problem is they have a weak offer for their newsletter, or their newsletter just says, “Subscribe to get updates,” maybe the first message hook can be: “Hey, random question but Is your newsletter broken?” This makes the person suddenly aware of a problem and missed opportunity.) - The second message should be a very, very casual explanation of what I do and how I could be of service. (Example: “I’m asking because I'm actually a social ghostwriter, so this is what I specialize in and know this problem pretty well.) - The third message should be some sort of CTA, prompting the lead to want to ask for help / accept help. (Example: “Happy to show you how to fix this, if you want” or “I actually took it upon myself to ghostwrite a sample post for you, if you want to take a look?”) Email Script Rules Your Email script should adhere to the following rules: - It should be as short and concise as possible. The ideal outreach email is 5 sentences or less. - It should be written as conversationally and casually as possible. Do not use big words, formal sounding language, or even perfect grammar/sentence structure. Intentionally make it sound like a friend emailing a friend. (This means never using phrases like, “I hope this finds you well.”) - It should follow the same rules as the DM script, except in the second message (which in the email could be the “second sentence”) expand for another 1-2 sentences on how I would recommend solving this specific problem for the person. Here’s an example so you know exactly how to present the DM & Email scripts (notice how casually they’re written): **DM Script:** 1. Hey {Name}, noticed there's no newsletter linked on your profiles. 2. FYI, I help entrepreneurs run their newsletters so I know this space pretty well. 3. Any interest? At a minimum, happy to share some of the tactics I see working best these days. **Email Script:** Subject: tried subscribing but it’s broken Hey {Name}, I noticed there's no newsletter or email opt-in on any of your social platforms. Seems like a pretty big missed opportunity! Would you be open to a chat? I think I can help. ~ I am going to give you the lead’s name and company name, and I’d like you to present back to me a report with the above variables I have asked you for, in order. Are you ready?

Outreach Messages

0

Standard Operating Procedure (SOPs)

Business ChatGPT

Create an SOP for me using the information below: 1. What is the name of the procedure you want to create the SOP for? [Your answer] 2. Can you describe the overall purpose of this procedure? What is its objective and why is it important? [Your answer] 3. Who is responsible for performing this procedure? [Your answer] 4. What are the necessary prerequisites or conditions needed before starting this procedure? [Your answer] 5. Please provide a detailed step-by-step description of the procedure. If there are any decisions that need to be made during the procedure, please explain what those are and how to handle them. [Your answer] 6. What are the expected outcomes or end results of the procedure? [Your answer] 7. Are there any risks or common issues that may occur during the procedure? If yes, how can these be mitigated or handled? [Your answer] 8. Do you have any additional resources, tools, or references needed to perform the procedure? [Your answer]

SOP Generation

0

Value Ladder Generation

Business ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. My audience is [your audience]. I help them by providing [how you help your audience]. I currently offer [your current offers]. I need your help creating a logical and natural ascension ladder that takes my audience from random follower online to high-paying repeat customer. Here's the structure I want to follow: - Lead magnet (pulling leads to my email list) -Low-ticket upsell offer (to try monetize people immediately upon join my email list) -Mid-ticket products (these are ways to further indoctrinate my audience, contribute a bit of revenue, and ultimately point people to my higher ticket offers) -High-ticket offer (this is my more premium offering that likely costs thousands of dollars and provides extremely worthwhile results for customers) -Ulta-high-ticket offer (this is VIP-level offering that most like includes more access to me, and the most possible value I could provide) Here are the criteria for my ascension ladder: - Give me multiple ideas for each potential offering -Give me product ideas that are unique, will stand out in the crowd, and aren't offered by many -These product ideas need to be seen as extremely valuable to potential customers and are something that solves real problems they have (hence why they're willing to pay for them) -I prefer products that can be built leveraging content, my expertise and easy-to-use tools (both AI-related and more standard ones) -I'd like suggested prices for each offering as well

Value Ladder

0

Vision Board System

Business ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. My audience is [your audience]. I help them by providing [how you help your audience]. I currently offer [your current offers]. My goal for the next 90 days is to [your goals]. Can you help me map out a plan to achieve these goals using the OKR framework. After you've mapped them out, please also create a week-by-week plan I need to follow to accomplish them.

Vision Mapping

0

Article Outline

Content ChatGPT

Article prompt: I am a [your expertise] that helps people [what you do]. I want to write an article that discusses [article goal]. Create an informative and engaging outline for this article. The goal is to [insert goal of article].

Content Writing

0

Content Machine Generation

Content ChatGPT

You are a viral content expert. I need your help to generate compelling content ideas. Take inspiration from viral YouTube video titles and viral Twitter threads with over 5 million views. Make the copywriting impeccable and memorable. [Replace the info below with an overview and mission of your brand] I'm a founder creating content to help [founders reach $5M per year through proven systems for audience, brand, and community growth]. Our mission is to help 100,000,000 founders automate their business and hit $5,000,000 profit per year. I want you to generate viral content ideas by creating a table. In the table, the X axis has Content Groups, meaning ways to present a Content Category. The Y axis has Content Categories to be matched with the X axis. The X axis has Content Groups, formatted the following way: [NAME] (examples of the kind of content ideas) 1. [Educational] (Lists, Best ofs, Tools, Facts, Guides, Systems, Summaries, Frameworks) 2. [Emotional] (Drive some type of emotion and get the reader to feel some type of way that causes them to share with 5 friends) 3. [Deep Dive] (Data, Math, Reasons, Trends, Expert Quotes, Research, Industry Breakdown) 4. [Reflection] (Hidden secrets, Lessons, Mistakes, Successful Routines, Personal Experiences, Advice to yourself 5 years ago) 5. [Vulnerable] (Failures, Obstacles, Insecurities, Skills you want to learn, What things shaped you, Things you wish you knew, Bad advice you were given) 6. [Edutainment] (Create content with amazing storytelling, practical value, that is captivating, compelling, and makes people want to share it with 5 friends) 7. [Lists] (Provide useful lessons, steps, systems, processes, tools, and resources about the Content Category) The Y Axis contains the Content Categories: 1. $5M Founder Systems 2. Automating Your Business 3. Controlling The 4 W’s - what you work on, when you work on it, where you work, and with who 4. Community Building _ Write out a table and write out a viral content idea for each cell of the X and Y axises. Pair each Content Category with a Content Group. For example a viral content idea pairing the Content Group "Educational" with the Content Category "Community Building" would generate the viral content idea "7 tools to help you grow a community from 0 to 1 million"].

Content Writing

0

Create an Article

Content ChatGPT

Please take the outline below and craft an article that is at least [length] long. Make the introduction catchy and engaging. The tone of the article is [insert tone]. Here is some sample text for you to reference [paste sample text] Here is the outline: [paste outline]

Content Writing

0

Storybrand Generation

Content

You are a storytelling expert. Use the Storybrand framework by Donald Miller to come up with a hero’s journey story for [Name] the [Role]. [Name]’s mission is to [Mission]. Start with the beginning of his journey and write compelling copy similar to Apple to captivate the audiences attention.

0

Data Library Brainstormer

Digital Products ChatGPT

You are an expert at helping solopreneurs and indie hackers build data-driven digital products. The user will give you a niche or topic. Your job is to brainstorm **data-driven microSaaS or research library ideas** they can build around that topic. Each idea should: - Collect or aggregate useful data regularly (via scraping, forms, APIs, or Make) - Solve a real problem, surface insights, or save time - Be realistically buildable solo or with no-code - Include a clear target user (e.g. creators, marketers, investors) - Optional: include how to monetize (freemium, subscriptions, reports) Input: Topic: {{user_topic}}

Digital Products Creation

0

Lead Magnet Generation

Digital Products ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. My audience is [your audience]. I help them by providing [how you help your audience]. I currently offer [your current offers]. Given this context, and following the best practices for creating lead magnets, could you help me brainstorm five unique lead magnet ideas that would be valuable and appealing to my target audience? Please ensure these ideas are easy to consume, solve a specific problem my audience might have, are of high-quality, and are unique in that they stand out from other lead magnets online. Provide a clear and compelling call-to-action for each idea as well as why you think that would be a good lead magnet for my audience.

Lead Magnet Generation

0

Django App Builder Prompt

Django Claude

I want to create a new Python Django web application. --- ##Tech Stack & Architecture - Use **Django templates** with **Tailwind CSS** for the UI. - Build the app in a **modular structure** for easy updates and maintainability. - The app should have **one backend** with **two front-end views**: - **Desktop view** - **Mobile-adaptive view** (Both share the same backend for a unified source of truth.) - Use the **built-in Django Admin** for all admin and management tasks. - Use **SQLite** with **Django ORM** for the database. - Use my **existing virtual environment (venv)**. - Use **Resend (API key)** for sending emails. - Enable in Terminal Emails for testing while developing. ##Deployment & Dev Setup - Use **Docker** for easy build and deployment. - The final app should be deployable on **Coolify**. --- ##Development Workflow We’ll build the app **step-by-step**, starting with: 1. **Creating the project structure.** 2. **Creating a project plan file** (`PLAN.md`) that includes a checklist of all tasks. - Each step will be tracked in the checklist so we can mark progress as we go. --- ##App Description **App Name:** [APP_NAME] ###Core Features ####Public Page - Displays a simple **calendar grid**. - Users can **pick a date and time**. - Users submit their **name** **email** and **phone number** to book. Users get an email that the booking is being process and will get a confrimation shortly. ####Admin Panel - View bookings by **status**. - Receive an **email notification** when a new booking is made. - Click **“Confirm”** on a booking to approve it. ####Email System - When a booking is confirmed: - The customer receives a **confirmation email**. - The email includes an **attached PDF** of their appointment details. - **Email templates** (subject & body) should be **editable in the admin panel**. --- ##Before You Start Ask me any **clarifying questions** to fully understand the project before beginning.

Code Generation

0

Domain Name Generator and Evaluator

Domain Name ChatGPT

You are a domain name expert who helps generate creative and brandable domain names. Generate: 1. Generate {{num_domains}} domain names based on the input business Description and Category. 2. Memorability Score (1-10) 3. Brandability Score (1-10) 4. Market Appeal Score (1-10) 5. Overall Score (1-10) 6. Explanation (max 200 characters) Business Description: {{description}} Domain Category: {{category}} Rules: 1. Use these TLDs: {{TLDs}} 2. Keep names short and memorable 3. No numbers or hyphens 4. Use creative combinations 5. Make names unique

Domain Name

0

Casual Check-in Sales Email Generation

Email ChatGPT

You are a Direct Email Newsletter Generator, and your primary function and skill is to write a very direct, but casual-sounding, sales-driven, and conversational sales email that is 150-250 words max. Put simply, “Direct Email” newsletters are just to ask/encourage/nudge the reader to take the next step (which is to book more qualified sales calls). I am going to give you the subject line, and I will also give you context about the benefits, outcomes, and unlocks that the offer my reader/customer will purchase from me on the sales call will provide to them. Then, I would like you to write the Direct Email newsletter. However, there are very specific Attributes, Pieces, Categories, and Parts that work best for creating very direct, but casual-sounding, sales-driven, and conversational Direct Emails. So I would like you to create content with the following training data in mind: ~ Attributes that make Direct Email newsletters compelling: Casual tone & conversational sentences, so you can use contractions, abbreviations, and less formal language. Avoid words or phrases that would make the person feel defensive, called out, or pressured into making a decision. The ONLY exception to this attribute is when we follow up, in the next sentence, by “releasing” some of that accusation or pressure. It’s OKAY if the person chooses to not take the next step forward today if it means we do not burn the bridge/relationship with them prematurely. Some sort of message or statement pointing to the fact that I (the author of the email) am aware that the reader has not taken the next step yet. This should be immediately followed with a sentence or phrase the “diffuses” the pressure that calling out the reader creates. Alternating of long and short sentences to add emphasis, rhythm, and flow into the writing. Internally, we send MANY different styles of “Direct Emails,” but the one that I’m going to train you to write is called a “Casual Check In.” A ”Casual Check In” style Direct Email is a friendly, conversational email inviting the reader to take the next step forward. Imagine that it’s like an email a friend would send to another friend who hasn’t RSVP’d to their dinner party yet, gently pushing them to do so but without forcefully pressuring them into doing it. The person should come to the conclusion of their own free will. I am now going to walk through each piece and give you clear instructions on what makes each individual variable here work well, as well as provide you examples so you know exactly what to replicate. ~ Piece #1: Calling out the reader for not taking the next step. We want to apply pressure to the reader to make them feel “called out” for not taking the next step. The reason for this is because people need to be pushed to take the next step and reminded over and over again to do so. Here’s a few ideal examples of Piece #1: Calling out the reader for not taking the next step. Example #1: Real quick: Was looking at our PGA application surveys this morning and noticed you haven’t booked a chat with our team yet. So I was wondering… Are you still interested in landing high-paying ghostwriting clients? Example #2: Hey there—it’s Cole. I’ll be honest: I’m a little surprised you haven’t booked a chat with our team yet. In fact, 70-80% of people book their call within the first few days after going through one of our free resources. Example #3: A little surprised you haven’t grabbed a time to chat with my team yet. (Since another month is coming to a close—and there aren’t many left this year.) Piece #2: Releasing the pressure/tension calling out the reader creates. Now that the reader feels the pressure, we want to let them off the hook a little bit. The reason for this is we want to push people forward to take the next step, but we do not want to force someone who is not ready or would not be a good fit. They would not be a good client/customer to work with or be extremely difficult for the sales team to close. So, this piece let’s people who are not ready to take the next step off the hook—and they can archive this email. Here’s a few ideal examples of Piece #2: Releasing the pressure/tension calling out the reader creates. Example #1: No worries—if you’re NOT looking to build a lucrative side hustle as a Premium Ghostwriter anymore, you can just ignore this email. Example #2: No pressure at all. (We do this to make sure we're actually a good fit to work together.) Example #3: Obviously, no pressure at all. Piece #3: Providing a tangible reason/benefit/outcome/unlock that the reader gains for booking a sales call with the team. Now that readers who are NOT ready to take the next step have been let off the hook, we want to reel in those who ARE ready to take the next step. The reason for this is that we never want the sales call to feel like a sales call, “sales-y,“ “pushy,” negative, or like a “pitch fest.” Our sales calls are purely educational where we help educate the person on the problem that they have (even if we do not end up working together or they try to solve their problem on their own/with someone else). Here’s a few ideal examples of Piece #3: Providing a tangible reason/benefit/outcome/unlock that the reader gains for booking a sales call with the team. Example #1: But if you are, we’d love to help you get there faster with a custom ghostwriting roadmap. Example #2: But if it still is, we'd love to help you put together a custom gameplan to hit that sooner rather than later. Example #3: We just want to talk about your ghostwriting goals & help you create a roadmap to start your ghostwriting business. Example #4: But if that’s not the case, we’d love to chat & help you take the 1st step to building your lucrative ghostwriting side hustle. Example #5: We’d love to learn more about your ghostwriting goals—and help you put together a gamplan to reach them faster. (Optional) Piece #4: Reminder of the benefit, outcome, or unlock they ultimately receive. This is an optional piece that you can use liberally at your own discretion. The reason for this is it can be quite powerful to remind the reader WHAT they ultimately gain for working with us. You do not nor do I expect you to use this piece every single output, but it nice to mix and match, and weave in different places within the Direct Email newsletter—so that way our Direct Email newsletters never feel exactly the same. Here’s a few ideal examples of (Optional) Piece #4: Reminder of the benefit, outcome, or unlock they ultimately receive. Example #1: So, if you’re still looking to land your 1st high-paying ghostwriting client (and build a lucrative side hustle free from your 9 to 5)… Example #2: Ready to take the next step and become a Premium Ghostwriter? Example #3: Just click the link below to grab a chat with my team this week—and we’ll create your custom ghostwriting roadmap. Example #4: Which is why we’d love to chat this week—and help you reach your ghostwriting goals faster (with a custom roadmap). Piece #4: Call to action copy, which is used to embed the link for the person to take the next step forward. This part is very simple, but crucial. We want to explicitly and simply tell the reader exactly what we want them to do next—in only 1 sentence. This means telling them the “action” (e.g. Click here) and then clearly stating what happens “after” they click on this link. Put simply, every call to action has 2 Parts: Part #1: The Action: This is what the reader is supposed to do. This is always going to be the same “action” which is “Click here” but sometimes we use “Just click here” to be more casual in tone. 80% of the time, stick to “Click here” but 15% of the time you can use “Just click here” and a small 5% of the time you can use “Here’s the link”. Part #2: The Outcome: This is the “reason” they are taking the action and what comes “after” they click on the link. This is where you have a lot of freedom to mix and match. Sometimes, you can use shorter outcomes, other times you can use longer outcomes, other times you can combine 2 short outcomes together with an em dash “—” in between, and other times you can combine 2 short outcomes together with the 2nd outcome being surrounded by “()”. However, there are many ways of clearly stating what happens “after” the reader clicks on the link. Sometimes, we will add social proof (e.g. “1,500 Premium Ghostwriters we’ve already helped”). Other times, we will not add social proof. There is no reason why we will choose to include social proof or not, other than we do not want to ALWAYS use the same call to actions (because readers ignore and become “blind” to something they have seen many times already). And a small nuance, we will occasionally begin the call to action copy with the word “Just” (e.g. “Just click here”). The only reason we do this is to make the tone feel more casual. Now, there are many examples of clearly stating what happens “after” the reader clicks on the link. But most of them fall under 3 Categories: Category #1: Outcomes: This should be used 35-40% of the time. This piece of copy is used to remind the reader of the “unlock” they are actually taking action towards. This is to clearly communicate that clicking on the link is the first/next step towards the desired outcome they want or to eliminate the pain they no longer want. Category #2: Book A Sales Call: This should be used 45-50% of the time. This piece of copy is used to make it clear to the reader that the link they can/will click on is going to direct them to a landing page to book a call on our team’s calendar. Category #3: Disqualifier: This should be used 5-10% of the time. This piece of copy is used to “weed” out those who would not be a good fit to work with us or are not ready yet to take the next step forward. Here are some examples of Category #1: Outcomes: to take the next step and build your own profitable side hustle. to take the next step and build your own profitable side hustle (just like 1,400+ Premium Ghostwriters we’ve already helped). let’s start plotting the escape from your day job (and your free ghostwriting roadmap). (so we can customize your ghostwriting roadmap to your specific goals). (to start building your lucrative ghostwriting side hustle). Here are some examples of Category #2: Book A Sales Call: to find a time to chat my team will create your ghostwriting roadmap to find a time to chat—and my team will create your ghostwriting roadmap to grab one of those few remaining chats with my team to grab a chat to grab a quick chat this week to book a quick chat this week to grab a chat with my team to grab a quick chat with my team Here are some examples of Category #3: Disqualifier: and see if PGA is right for you and see if PGA is the right fit for you ~ Now that you know all of the Pieces that go into a “Casual Check In” style Direct Email newsletter, I want you to write one for me. You can mix and match the Pieces I have taught you, but the order I have presented them in is typically best. You can also choose which examples within the Pieces you use. You should deviate, tweak, and change small words and small phrases so that we sound “novel” and new more often, instead of repeating ourselves word-for-word. I am now going to give you the subject line for this “Casual Check In” style Direct Email newsletter that is 150 - 250 words. I am also going to provide context about the benefits, outcomes, and unlocks that the offer my reader/customer will purchase from me on the sales call will provide to them. You will then write the “Casual Check In” style Direct Email newsletter, written and formatted exactly how this kind of newsletter should be formatted in an email. Are you ready for the subject line & context about my offer?

Email Writing

0

Cold Email Template

Email ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. My audience is [your audience]. I help them by providing [how you help your audience]. I currently offer [your current offers] and am [what your current goal is]. Can you craft 5 wildly-different cold emails that make it extremely likely I'll get [your desired response/action]?

Cold Email Generation

0

Email Generator with Smart Tone Adaptation

Email ChatGPT

I need you to act as an expert email composer. Generate an email based on these parameters: Email Details & Recipient: [recipient_details] Tone (Formal/Casual/Professional): [tone] Desired Length (Brief/Standard/Detailed): [length] Requirements: Adapt vocabulary and style to match the recipient and purpose Create a relevant and attention-grabbing subject line Maintain consistency in formality throughout Consider cultural and professional context Include appropriate greeting and signature Format your response as: Subject Line: {{subject_line}} Email Content: {{email_content}}

Email

0

Email Subject Line Generator with Appeal Analysis

Email ChatGPT

As a professional email subject line copywriter, your task is to create a list of engaging and attention-grabbing email subject lines related to the specified topic or keyword provided below. Taking into account factors such as relevance, urgency, curiosity, personalization, and emotion, craft each subject line to be concise yet informative while maintaining an appropriate tone for the intended recipients. Ensure that they are unique, compelling, and likely to result in high open rates by targeting the intended audience. Feel free to explore creative ideas and approaches in your suggestions, but keep in mind that the primary goal is to encourage users to open the emails. Your response should demonstrate flexibility and creativity while adhering to best practices for effective email subject lines. Topic: [Topic] Make sure the output is formatted as: \"[Emoji related to Subject Line] [Subject Line] Appeal: [Appeal of subject line] Tone: [Tone used in subject line]\"

Email Subject Line Generation

0

Email Subject Line Optimization and Analysis Framework

Email ChatGPT

As a professional email subject line copywriter, your task is to analyze and provide feedback on the given subject lines. You should evaluate each input subject line based on factors such as effectiveness, scannability, sentiment, spammy triggers, usage of all caps words, and emojis. After analyzing each aspect, provide a detailed report explaining what\'s wrong with the subject line and how it can be improved. Finally, offer a list of alternative subject lines that are more effective. Input Subject Line: {{ Subject_Line }} For your analysis response, please follow this structure: -Effectiveness Score (1-10): Provide an overall score for the effectiveness of the --input subject line. - Briefly explain your Effectiveness score here. -Scannability Score (1-10): Rate how easy it is for users to quickly understand the main message of the subject line. - Briefly explain your Scannability score here. -Sentiment Analysis: Determine if the tone in the subject line is positive or negative. - Briefly explain your Sentiment analysis here. -Spam Triggers: Identify any phrases or elements that might trigger spam filters and briefly discuss them. -All Caps Words: Note any words written in all capital letters and briefly discuss their impact on readers\' perception of the email. -Emojis: Assess whether adding an emoji would enhance or detract from the effectiveness of the subject line and briefly explain why. -Alternative Subject Lines: Provide a list of 3-5 improved alternatives based on your analysis. Please ensure that your response is clear and concise while maintaining flexibility and creativity in offering improvements to maximize engagement through optimized email subject lines without being overly restrictive or prescriptive in terms of style and content choices. and use Markdown format with headings, + bullet points, + sub-bullet points

Email

0

Email Subject Line Template Generator

Email ChatGPT

#Task Act as a professional Email Marketer. I am going to give you a subject line at the end delimited between triple backticks which I created, and I want you to generate for me a score, template, and topic classification based on the 3 criteria I\'ll give you below. Plus, make sure you just give the final result immediately based on the output format I\'m going to give you at the end. #Criteria 1. Template Creation: Provided a subject line, you will generate a generic template based on that input. Replace unique elements within the original subject line with placeholders [X] or something more detailed, while preserving the overall structure to enable easy customization for various niches. 2. Professional Subject Line Analysis: Using the provided subject line, you will analyze it based on predefined criteria to generate scores for effectiveness, scannability, sentiment, spam triggers, usage of all-caps words, and emojis, and offer alternative subject lines. The analysis will also classify the subject line type. Criteria: - *Effectiveness:* Score out of 100 representing the overall impact and engagement potential. The effectiveness score will be calculated based on a weighted combination of the following criteria: - *Scannability:* Score out of 10 indicating how easily the main message is understood. - *Sentiment:* Score out of 10 assessing the emotional tone conveyed. - *Spam Triggers:* Score out of 10 evaluating the likelihood of triggering spam filters. This criterion has a higher weight due to its negative impact on effectiveness. - *All Caps Words:* Score out of 10 noting the presence of words in all capital letters. This criterion has a higher weight due to its negative impact on effectiveness. - *Emojis:* Score out of 10 assessing the impact of emojis on the total efficiency of the subject line. The weighted scoring system will be used to calculate the overall effectiveness score, considering the relative importance of each criterion. Higher scores in Scannability, Sentiment, and Emojis will positively contribute to effectiveness, while higher scores in Spam Triggers and All Caps Words will negatively impact effectiveness. 3. Subject Line Type Classification: Classify the provided subject line into one of the following types: Informational, Announcement, Promotion, Generic, Cold, or Survey. #EXAMPLES: Input: \"2 Questions YouTubers Need To Stop Asking\" Score: 90 Template: \"[X] Questions [Audience] Need To Stop Asking\" Topic: Informational Input: \"I need to give you more money\" Score: 76 Template: \"I need to give you more [X]\" Topic: Announcement Input: \"👔 3 years in 3 hours\" Score: 91 Template: \"[Emoji] [X] years in [X] hours\" Topic: Generic Input: \"3 ways to trick AI content detectors 🤖\" Score: 87 Template: \"3 ways to [Achieve Goal] [Emoji]\" Topic: Informational Input: \"Simple Way to Boost Conversions with Your Email Marketing\" Score: 88 Template: \"Simple Way to [Goal] with Your [Type of Marketing]\" Topic: Promotion #INPUT Subject Line: ```[Subject Line]``` #OUTPUT FORMAT [\"Score\", \"Template\", \"Topic\"]

Email Subject Line Generation

0

Mentor Outreach Email

Email ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. I’ve [some of your accomplishments/wins]. I want to ask [describe the person you’re reaching out to] to be my mentor. Can you create a personalized email that I could send to him based on proven email marketing principles. Make the email more about the recipient and less about me. Include 3 variations that I can choose from.

Email Generation

0

Strategic Email Response Generator with Tone Variations

Email ChatGPT

Please assist me in crafting a professional response to the following email. To ensure the most appropriate response: 1. Analyze the email content and context: - Main message purpose - Key points to address - Urgency level - Overall tone 2. Consider these relationship factors: - My relationship with the sender (professional/personal) - Previous communication history - Organizational hierarchy (if applicable) Based on this analysis, please provide: - 3 different response versions (formal, neutral, and friendly) - Each version should include: - Appropriate greeting - Clear and concise body - Professional closing - Consistent tone throughout Original email language: {{specific_language}} Original email: {{original_email}} Additional preferences: - Preferred tone (if any): {{tone }} - Any specific points to emphasize: {{points}} - Word count limit (if any): {{word_count}}

Email

0

Weekly Value Newsletter Generator

Email ChatGPT

You are a Weekly Newsletter Generator, and your primary function and skill is to write a value-packed, niche-specific, thought leadership weekly newsletter that is 800 - 1,500 words. I am going to give you the topic and/or the niche, and I would like you to write the newsletter. However, there are very specific styles and formats that work best for creating thought leadership value-packed, niche-specific weekly newsletter content. So I would like you to create content with the following training data in mind: ~ There are 4 fundamental variables that make for a great newsletter: 1. Variable #1: Subject Line: Short, conversational, but hook-worthy 2. Variable #2: Introduction: Niche-specific promise we will deliver on in the content of the newsletter 3. Variable #3: Headers: 3-10 bolded headers, separating the newsletter into skimmable sections (with each header clearly delivering on the promise made in the subject line and/or the introduction) 4. Variable #4: Section Content: Inside each header, very tangible, tactical, and actionable content. No fluff. I am going to walk through each piece and give you clear instructions on what makes each individual variable here work well, as well as provide you examples so you know exactly what to replicate for any niche-specific content. ~ Variable #1: Subject Line The best subject line style for a value-packed, niche-specific, thought leadership newsletter is very similar to what makes for an irresistible article headline. So first, here’s a framework for writing an irresistible headline: There are 6 pieces of an irresistible headline are: - HOW MANY (Number). - THE WHAT (Topic). - THE HOW (Proven Approach). - THE WHO (Audience). - THE WHY (Outcome). - TWIST THE KNIFE (More Outcomes). In most cases, this is the order in which the pieces should be assembled in a headline. For example: **7 Copywriting Tips For Beginners To Sell Your First $100 Digital Product, Start Making Money Online, And Eventually Quit Your Job And Become A Full-Time Internet Entrepreneur** - 7 = HOW MANY - Copywriting = THE WHAT - Tips = THE HOW - For Beginners = THE WHO - To Sell Your First $100 Digital Product = THE WHY - Start Making Money Online, And Eventually Quit Your Job And Become A Full-Time Internet Entrepreneur = TWIST THE KNIFE Now, let me give you examples of different variations you can choose from when writing irresistible headlines with these 6 different pieces. - HOW MANY (Number): This is always a number, usually between 2 and 19. For example: 7 Copywriting Tips, 2 Productivity Mistakes, 11 Self-Help Habits, etc. - THE WHAT (Topic): This is always the topic. Examples of topics (but not limited to just these), Copywriting, Productivity, Self-Help, Fitness, Mindfulness, Knitting, Racketball, Meditation, etc. - THE HOW (Proven Approach): These are nouns. Examples of Proven Approaches: - Tips - Skills - Tools - Traits - Steps - Goals - Books - Habits - Stories - Quotes - Secrets - Insights - Benefits - Lessons - Reasons - Creators - Routines - Mistakes - Podcasts - Examples - Questions - Inventions - Templates - Resources - Challenges - Companies - Data Points - Realizations - Frameworks - Presentations - THE WHO (Audience): This is the niche-specific audience. For example (but not limited to just these): Beginners, Stay-At-Home Moms, College Students, Chicagoans, etc. This audience can be a noun and/or a noun modified by a geography or demographic. - THE WHY (Outcome): This is the thing the target reader wants, based on the proven approach. For example (but not limited to just these): if the topic is “productivity” and the proven approach is “Tips” and the audience is “college students” then the outcome is something college students want productivity tips to unlock in their life (like “to get straight A’s in class” or “to graduate with honors and land a high-paying job straight out of college”). - TWIST THE KNIFE (More Outcomes): This is just 1-3 more outcomes. If the WHY outcome is negative (like “to make sure they don’t fail their final exam”), then list 1-3 more negative outcomes (”and have to work at a gas station or move back-in with their parents), and if the WHY outcome is positive (”to get straight A’s in class”, then list 1-3 more positive outcomes (”start with a six-figure salary right out of school, and buy a sports car before the age of 23”). One last rule to increase the effectiveness of an irresistible headline. Whenever you’re writing the WHY (outcome) or TWIST THE KNIFE (more outcomes), you always want to write the “tangible” version opposed to the “intangible” version. For example, an Intangible WHY (outcome) would be: “So you can be happier.” But “happier” is very intangible, and not very specific. Instead, a Tangible WHY (outcome) would be: “So you can wake up every morning feeling full of energy.” Everyone can imagine themselves “waking up early” in the morning, and that’s a very Tangible, Measurable outcome. That’s the goal. Always Tangible language instead of Intangible language. Tangible language can be defined as something a reader could viscerally touch or feel—opposed to an ambiguous, vague “thought” or “general idea.” So that’s the framework for writing irresistible headlines. First, come up with the irresistible headline for the newsletter using this framework. Then second, find a way to condense that longer-form irresistible headline into a shorter, more concise, punchier version that would fit inside an email subject line. The constraint and goal here is 30 to 50 characters or 4 to 8 words, written in sentence-case (meaning you capitalize the first word but none of the remaining words). And if the first character in the subject line is a number, then you do not capitalize the word that follows. - Bad Example: 3 Ways To Land Your First Ghostwriting Client - Good Example: 3 ways to land your first ghostwriting client. And when writing this niche-specific, value-packed thought leadership newsletter, I would like you to present 5 different subject lines to choose from. ~ Variable #2: Introduction Next, let’s dig into the writing. All great niche-specific, value-packed, thought leadership newsletters start with an introduction that “hooks” the reader into wanting to read the rest of the piece. But there’s a very specific way of writing these introductions I want to train you on, and so I don’t want you to think of the introduction as one giant block of text—but rather 5 smaller blocks that all stack on top of each other. - Block #1: “Hey there!” Start every newsletter with a simple greeting to the reader in the first line, like this. - Block #2: Next is the opening sentence, or opening hook. This should be 1 single sentence, and the best opening hooks are typically one of the following: ask a thought-provoking question; open with a strong, declarative sentence; reference a meaningful moment in time (date, day, time, moment, etc.); present a vulnerable statement; offer a controversial opinion; and/or share a unique insight. - Block #3: Next is the “promise” of the intro—which is almost always either the niche-specific problem the reader wants to solve, or the niche-specific outcome the reader wants to unlock. This block is typically 3-7 sentences long (could also be presented in a bulleted list format of 3-7 bullets), and very tangibly and actionably educates the reader on a problem (or series of problems), why those problems exist, and the negative outcomes of those unsolved problems; or educates the reader on a desirable outcome (or handful of outcomes), why those outcomes are so valuable, and/or some of the negative consequences that can happen if those desirable outcomes aren’t achieved. - Block #4: Next is the “solution” of the intro. This is usually one sentence (at max, two sentences) that, after educating the reader on a problem or outcome, completes the promise by telling the reader that’s precisely what you’re going to help them with today. You’re either going to help them solve that problem (or series of problems), or achieve that outcome (or handful of outcomes). - Block #5: Last is the transition sentence. This is usually some sort of short transition into the first header and section of the newsletter. Something like, “Let’s walk through each one” or “Let’s dive in” or “So, with that in mind, let’s or ,” etc. Here are some examples of niche-specific, value-packed, thought leadership newsletter introductions written using this framework: Example #1: *Hey there!* *Do you want to know the secret to landing your first ghostwriting client?* *One of the biggest challenges I faced getting started was: how do I actually charge for my work and make money? And the truth is, it's not that hard. It's just that no one tells you how to do it.* *So today, I'm going to share the 3 ways to structure your next ghostwriting project—and when to use them to get paid a premium.* *Let's walk through each one.* Example #2: *Hey there!* *What do you need to become a Premium LinkedIn Ghostwriter—and build a lucrative side hustle?* *Do you need:* - *A portfolio?* - *Customer testimonials?* - *Tons of writing experience?* *Well, actually, the truth is… you don't need ANY of these things!* *So today, I'm going to show you my 5-step system for attracting ghostwriting clients. And once you install it, you can become a Premium LinkedIn Ghostwriter who lands high-ticket clients.* *Let's dive in!* ~ Variable #3: Headers The next step in writing niche-specific, value-packed thought leadership newsletters is to come up with the 3-10 “sections” of the newsletter—which can be identified and separated by Headers (H1, bolded). Now, before I get into some writing rules here, a framework I want you to keep in mind is what I like to call the 10 Magical Ways To Expand Anything. These are proven topics that can be applied to any niche: - Tips - Stats - Steps - Lessons - Benefits - Reasons - Mistakes - Examples - Questions - Personal Stories You may use these 10 Magical Ways (and/or the list of Proven Approaches I’ve already given you) to come up with the promise of the newsletter and/or the promise in the subject line and/or introduction. Now, a couple writing rules to keep in mind for writing the newsletter’s Headers: - A header accomplishes 2 primary goals for the reader: first, it is usually an H1 and bolded, which makes it a section divider and much easier for readers to skim the piece (this is a good thing); and second, each header should deliver on the promise in the subject-line/introduction to the point where a reader could simply read all the headers and extract 80% of the value. The headers gave them all the “quick answers.” Then, it’s the reader’s choice if they want to go deeper and read the tactical content inside of each or any individual section. - The more “sections” and headers there are in a newsletter, that means the less room there will be to write high-value content inside of each section (keeping the total newsletter length constraint of 800 to 1,500 words in mind). So the more “sections” and headers, that usually means the promise itself is something that can simply be delivered on in the headers themselves, and the content in each section just reinforces the answer that was already given in the header. Conversely, the less “sections” and headers there are leaves more room in each section to elaborate on “how” to execute what’s being shared in each header, tactically. You want to keep this in mind as you come up with a niche-specific promise for the reader, and how to best deliver on that promise in the content (and decide how much explanation each section requires in order for the reader to extract as much tactical value as possible). - Whatever “promise” is being made in the subject line and the introduction is also the promise that should be clearly mirrored and delivered on in the 3-10 headers in the newsletter. So for example, if the subject line says “5 mistakes designers make launching viral products,” then we know there will be 5 “sections”/headers in the newsletter, and each header will deliver on that promise by sharing a different “mistake.” And if the subject line or introduction promises “questions,” then each header will deliver on that promise by sharing a different “question,” etc. - There is a very specific type of writing style for headers I would like you to use. Headers should be written in Sentence Style, where each header is written as a full, complete sentence with the first word capitalized (everything else lower-case) and punctuation at the end. The reason is because whatever promise is being made in the subject line/introduction, we want that promise to be delivered on in all the headers themselves—clearly and concisely in individual, bolded sentences. For example, if the promise of the newsletter is “How to land your first coaching client,” then we know each “section”/header will be a different Tip or Step or something actionable that delivers on that promise, and to make each header skimmable and packed with value we want to give the most tactical, actionable Tip or Step right there in the header, in sentence format, so the reader knows exactly what to go do, in what order, without even needing to read the rest of the newsletter. ~ Variable #4: Section Content Once the promise of the newsletter has been established in the subject line, and delivered on in the headers of the piece, you can then also use the 10 Magical Ways framework to fill in the content of each section. Remember: the promise of the newsletter should be delivered on in the headers, such that a reader could just skim the headers and essentially get 80% of the value of reading the newsletter. Then, within each section, provide specific, tangible, differentiated and actionable insights so that if the reader wants to know more, each section is valuable. You can use the 10 Magical Ways, but here’s some specific criteria for making for a really valuable “section” of a newsletter: - If the newsletter is some sort of “How To” newsletter, make each section as actionable/instructional as possible. Tips, steps, reasons, examples. The reader should know exactly what needs to be done in order to accomplish their desired goal or solve a specific problem. - If the newsletter is more focused on a “why” topic, make each section more explanation focused. Stats, lessons, benefits, reasons, mistakes, etc. The key here though is to not explain things generally or with vague language, but instead give very specific, actionable, tactical, differentiated things to think about. When it comes to the writing of each section, you want to make each section as skimmable and easy to read as possible. Here’s how I recommend accomplishing that: - Always start and end each section with a single-sentence opener/closer. - Make the “middle” of each section a combination of prose and bulleted lists. But prose should be the majority, with only one bulleted list per section (this technique should be used sparingly). - And look for opportunities to alternate between long sentences and short sentences to create rhythm and pacing in the writing. Here’s a newsletter example with the promise/subject line being: 3 ways to make money as a ghostwriter: *Hey—listen…* There are dozens of different ways to make money as a writer. *But one of the biggest challenges I faced getting started was figuring out HOW: how do I actually charge for my work and make money? What’s the best way to get started? And the truth is, it's not that hard—it's just that no one tells you how to do it.* *So today, I'm going to share the 3 ways to structure your next ghostwriting project—and when to use them to get paid a premium.* *Let's walk through each one.* ### *Way 1: Flat-rate, per project.* *Most ghostwriters should start here for their first project because it has a clear start and end date.* *For example, the primary asset we train ghostwriters to write, build, and sell inside our Premium Ghostwriting Academy is a 5-Day Educational Email Course (EEC), which is a high-value opt-in for businesses and personal brands to capture emails on autopilot.* *This is an asset that takes about a month to build—and we recommend ghostwriters charge a flat-rate of $5,000.* *But there's a few other ghostwriting projects where a flat-rate makes sense. Some examples you might sell are:* - ***Website Copy:** Once the website copy is created or “fixed,” the project is usually considered done. There usually isn't any more work to do month after month.* - ***eBooks or Books:** These also have clear endpoints. Once the book is “done,” you don’t continue to tweak or rewrite it—which is why books are usually billed at a flat-rate.* - ***Automated Email Sequences:** These include Upsell Sequences, Book-A-Call Sequences, and Abandoned Cart Sequences. Once the sequence is live, there's usually no more tweaking needed. It’s done—and now running on autopilot.* *By the way, here’s 12 Email Ghostwriting Sequences you can sell for $3,000+ each:* *And when a project doesn't have a clear timeline, instead you'd use:* ### *Way 2: Monthly rate, per recurring service.* *This is the next stage in your ghostwriting career—because monthly retainers are how you build a predictable income.* *For example, after launching an Educational Email Course, there's 2 new problems clients need help solving:* - ***Problem #1: They need to get more people in front of their email course.** This usually gets solved by X or LinkedIn ghostwriting. And this is a great monthly retainer—if the client stops paying, they lose the engine that's growing their email list.* - ***Problem #2: They need to keep nurturing people after the email course.** In this situation, it'd make more sense for an Email Ghostwriter to write a weekly newsletter. Because if a subscriber stops hearing from you after joining the email course—they'll grow cold and forget about the client.* *And you can choose to solve one or both problems (but I recommend tackling one at a time).* *For example, here’s a video showing you exactly how I would go about Social Ghostwriting to earn $3,500/mo per client:* *But if I can give you some friendly advice: nothing "recurs" forever.* *Just because a client agrees to a recurring service doesn't mean they'll work with you forever. Every month, the client has a decision to make: continue or cancel the service. So, you shouldn't stop trying to get new clients—one might suddenly churn.* *But what if you're ready to go beyond trading time for money and want to share in your client's success?* ### *Way 3: Up-front cash, plus performance.* *This is the final stage—and only the most advanced ghostwriters should ever consider these.* *These projects are high-risk, high-reward.* *Because for some context, I've done dozens of these deals in my life ghostwriting books—but only ONE was actually ROI positive. All the rest lost me a ton of money and were massive wastes of time. So, if an opportunity like this comes your way, I would encourage you to pass.* *Instead, I wish I had just self-published my own books and made a lot more money.* *Here’s how:* *But if you really want to ghostwrite a book, let’s walk through a hypothetical example.* *A celebrity offers you $500,000 to ghostwrite their book—and you accept. You have a few options that you can play with based on the amount of cash up-front and long-term upside. For example:* - ***Option A:** You could take all $500,000 up-front but forgo any back-end, long-term royalty. This would be zero risk for you but also zero long-term upside.* - ***Option B:** You could take $350,000 up-front but ask for a 1% perpetual royalty on the back-end. This would mean putting $150,000 of your guaranteed compensation “at risk” for a chance at earning more than that in the future—based on the performance of the book.* - ***Option C:** You could take $100,000 up-front but ask for a 10% perpetual royalty on the back-end. This would mean putting $400,000 of your guaranteed compensation “at risk” for a chance at earning much more than that in the future, based on the performance of the book.* - ***Option D:** You could take $0 up-front but ask for a 50% perpetual royalty on the back-end. This would mean taking on the most risk, forgoing any guaranteed compensation but sharing equally in the long-term upside of the book.* *And there's no right or wrong answer.* *Because it’s completely up to you how much risk you want to take on, and how much upside you think there is in the project.* *But after all my years doing performance-based deals, I'll tell you what I wish I knew sooner:* - *The deals you want, people won't give.* - *And the deals you don't want, people will offer you all day long.* *Which is why I'm telling you (again) to just take the cash up-front.* ~ I am now going to give you the topic/industry for this week’s value-packed, niche-specific, thought leadership newsletter that is 800 - 1,500 words. Please provide me the output in the following format: First, present 5 different subject lines in a bulleted list to choose from, written in sentence-case (meaning you capitalize the first word but none of the remaining words). And if I give you a specific subject line, please still give me 5 new iterations on that subject line but use mine to write the newsletter. Then choose the subject line with the highest likelihood of a reader wanting to click (increasing the open rate) and write the thought leadership newsletter, written and formatted exactly how this kind of newsletter should be formatted in an email—including bolding the headers. Are you ready for the topic?

Email Marketing

0

Frontend Only Tool Developer Example

Frontend Development Gemini

Create a Meeting Cost Calculator as a single HTML file with inline CSS and JavaScript. (Only Vanilla No Backend) Requirements: Modern, professional design with gradient background Input fields for: number of attendees, average hourly rate, meeting duration Real-time calculation showing: total cost, cost per minute, cost per second Mobile responsive Include a shocking message when cost exceeds $500 All code in one file, no external dependencies

Frontend Development

0

Define and Summarize Ideal Customer

General ChatGPT

I want to craft a compelling brand story that resonates with my audience. My target customer is: {{target_customer}} Please ask me 5 key questions to better define them: What are their daily struggles and frustrations? What goals or dreams are they working toward? What solutions have they already tried? What influences their buying decisions? How and where do they consume content? Once we go through these, summarize the audience profile clearly—highlighting their pain points, goals, decision criteria, and content preferences. I’ll use this to shape a story that deeply connects.

Customer Avatar Generation

0

Legal Privacy Policy Generator

General ChatGPT

As an expert in privacy policies, your task is to write a customized privacy policy for a client\'s website using the specific details given below. Your privacy policy should adhere to relevant laws and regulations while addressing the website\'s data practices. Be sure to focus on accuracy, compliance with privacy regulations, and maintaining a balance between flexibility and creativity. Please craft a comprehensive privacy policy that covers the following aspects: Website Name: [Website Name] Type of Website: [Website Type] Data Collection Methods: [Data Collection] Data Processing Practices: [Data Processing] Third-Party Vendor Involvement: [Third-Party Vendors] Location: [Location] - City, State, and Country of Operation Involvement of Children: [Children Involvement] (whether the site targets children or not) Security Measures Implemented: [Security Measures] User Rights: [User Rights] (access, rectification, or data erasure) In your response, provide a detailed privacy policy tailored to the provided information that outlines the website\'s procedures for collecting, processing, storing, and sharing user data. Additionally, discuss the rights and choices available to users regarding their personal information. Demonstrate your expertise in privacy law and craft a policy that instills confidence in your client.

Privacy Policy Generation

0

AI-to-Human Text Converter: Natural Language Enhancement

Humanize ChatGPT

You are an expert in language and AI detection. I want you to perform text humanization, where you have to rewrite each sentence provided by the user in the inputs section delimited between triple backticks using human language. You will do this by increasing its perplexity and burstiness where: Perplexity measures the complexity of text. The used vocabulary should be complex to a certain extent that humans use, not using words that are barely spoken or written by humans. Burstiness compares the variations of sentences. Humans tend to write with greater burstiness, for example, with some longer or more complex sentences alongside shorter ones. AI sentences tend to be more uniform. The humanized text should contain a good amount of perplexity and burstiness. Rewrite changing 50% in nouns and verbs for similar ones and rewrite verb usages to add natural-sounding variations in complexity but retain the same tense and overall meaning. Randomly use simple and complicated verbs, combine long and short sentences and rewrite the input text provided below so that it is not detected as AI content by AI content detectors. ##Input: Input Text: [Text] ##Output: The output should be as follows and nothing else: Humanized Text (in bold):

Humanizing AI

0

Balanced Debate Analysis Generator

Ideas ChatGPT

I want you to act as an objective debate analyst for the topic: [Topic]. Please provide [X] comprehensive arguments for each side, following these guidelines: For each argument: Present clear reasoning supported by specific evidence Include relevant statistics or expert opinions Address potential counterarguments Provide real-world examples or case studies Structure requirements: Begin each side with strongest arguments Use consistent formatting for both sides Label sources and citations clearly Highlight key statistics or findings Analysis parameters: Focus on factual evidence over emotional appeals Consider long-term implications Acknowledge areas of uncertainty Identify common ground where applicable Present your findings in a structured format, ensuring equal depth and detail for both sides. Conclude with key discussion points that readers should consider when forming their own opinions.

Content Writing

0

Contextual Quote Generator with Customizable Parameters

Ideas ChatGPT

I want you to act as a professional quote generator with expertise in creating [Type] quotes. Generate 5 unique and original quotes that incorporate the following keywords: [Keywords]. Each quote should maintain a {tone} tone and reflect these core values: [Values]. The quotes should specifically resonate with [Audience] and be concise (under 20 words each). Focus on actionable insights and memorable phrasing that inspires or motivates the target audience. Ensure each quote is both shareable and impactful while avoiding clichés. Type: [Type] Keywords: [Keywords] Tone: [Choose: uplifting/empowering/reflective/humorous] Values: [Values] Target Audience: [Audience] Requirements: Each quote must include at least one keyword Maintain consistent tone throughout Include actionable advice or insights Keep quotes concise and memorable Align with specified values

Quote Generation

0

Creative Mix Prompt

Ideas ChatGPT

I will give you: -My niche -A transcript or video idea from another niche Your task is to creatively mix the core idea/topic of the transcript with my niche to generate 3–5 unique, surprising, and thought-provoking content ideas. The goal: find strange overlaps, metaphors, or cross-niche insights that feel weirdly brilliant. Niche: {{niche}} Transcript: {{transcript}}

Ideas Generation

0

Micro‑SaaS Ideas Prompt

Ideas ChatGPT

You are an idea lab for microsaas business ideas. Your Task is to Take the following target audience: {{TARGET_AUDIENCE}} Brainstorm 10–15 specific, recurring problems they struggle with. • Each problem must be concrete, annoying, and ideally costly in time or money. • Use language the audience would use. For each problem, write a one‑sentence micro‑SaaS idea: “A tool that helps [audience] [solve problem] in X minutes instead of Y hours.” Present the output as plain text (no tables or markdown). Format each line like this: Pain point — SaaS idea — Why it’s valuable After the numbered list, add a section titled “Top 3 Quick‑Win Ideas” and briefly explain (in 2–3 plain sentences each) why those three could reach revenue fastest for a solo maker. Constraints • Keep language clear and non‑technical. • Focus on solutions that a single developer could ship within 4 weeks. • Assume pricing in the $9–$99 per‑month range.

SAAS Ideas Generation

0

Personalized Gift Idea Generator

Ideas ChatGPT

I want you to act as a gift recommendation specialist. Based on the following details, suggest 5 unique and meaningful gift ideas that go beyond conventional presents: Recipient Details: - Age: [AGE] - Budget: [BUDGET] - Key Information: [Include hobbies, interests, lifestyle, preferences, and any special circumstances] For each gift suggestion, provide: 1. Item name and approximate cost 2. Why it\'s uniquely suited for the recipient 3. The emotional value and potential impact 4. Where to purchase it 5. Any personalization options Important considerations: - Focus on gifts that align with their interests but they might not buy for themselves - Include a mix of practical and experiential options - Consider long-term value and meaningfulness - Stay within the specified budget - Prioritize unique items over common gifts Present the suggestions in order from most to least recommended, with detailed explanations for each choice.

Idea Generation

0

Point of View Generation

Ideas ChatGPT

You are a category designer and languaging expert. Tell me a point of view I should have on [your product name] that will make people give a shit about me and what I have to say. The target market is [target audience] looking for proven systems to [target audience goal] and live the life of their dreams.

POV Generation

0

Reverse Json Prompt

Ideas

You are an expert business analyst and SaaS product strategist with 15+ years of experience in identifying market gaps and building profitable digital products. Your specialty is reverse-engineering APIs to uncover untapped business opportunities. I will provide you with a JSON structure from a popular API. Your task is to conduct a deep analysis and generate 5 high-potential micro-SaaS or digital product ideas based on this API's capabilities, limitations, and the problems it solves. ## ANALYSIS FRAMEWORK: First, analyze the API by identifying: 1. **Core Functionality**: What does this API do? What are its primary use cases? 2. **Target Users**: Who is currently using this API and why? 3. **Existing Solutions**: What products already use this API? 4. **Capability Gaps**: What can't this API do? What do users wish it could do? 5. **Integration Opportunities**: What other tools/APIs could this be combined with? 6. **Market Signals**: What problems remain unsolved despite this API's existence? ## OUTPUT REQUIREMENTS: Generate exactly 5 business ideas in a clean, professional table format with these columns: | Problem | Solution | Target Audience | |---------|----------|-----------------| ### Column Guidelines: **Problem Column:** - Describe a specific, validated pain point (50-80 words) - Include WHO experiences this problem and WHEN - Mention the current workarounds or why existing solutions fail - Use clear, jargon-free language - Make it relatable and urgent **Solution Column:** - Explain your proposed product/service (60-100 words) - Describe HOW it leverages this API specifically - Highlight the key differentiator or unique angle - Mention 2-3 core features - Include potential monetization model (subscription, one-time, freemium, etc.) - Keep it actionable and technically feasible **Target Audience Column:** - Define the specific customer segment (30-50 words) - Include demographics, profession, or industry if relevant - Mention their technical skill level - Estimate market size or growth potential when possible - Be specific (avoid "anyone" or "businesses" - narrow it down) ## IDEA SELECTION CRITERIA: Prioritize ideas that are: ✅ **Profitable**: Clear monetization path with customers willing to pay ✅ **Feasible**: Can be built by a solo developer or small team in 30-90 days ✅ **Scalable**: Can grow without proportional resource increases ✅ **Defensible**: Has some moat (network effects, data, niche expertise) ✅ **Validated**: Evidence of demand exists (Reddit threads, competitor traction, search volume) ## IMPORTANT CONSTRAINTS: - Focus on B2B or prosumer markets (higher willingness to pay) - Avoid overly saturated markets unless you have a unique angle - Prioritize ideas that solve urgent, frequent problems - Consider ideas that could generate recurring revenue - Avoid ideas requiring massive user acquisition or viral growth - Think micro-SaaS: narrow, deep, profitable ## API JSON STRUCTURE TO ANALYZE: [PASTE YOUR API JSON HERE]

Idea Generation

0

SEO Content Hub Generator Prompt

Ideas ChatGPT

Your task is to generate a full Content Cluster for my product using the Lean SEO approach. Input Details: Product Name: {{product_name}} Target Audience: {{target_audience}} Core Benefit (in one sentence): {{benefit}} Instructions: Brainstorm 50 blog post ideas that align with SEO best practices. Divide them into 4 strategic content clusters. Each cluster should include 5–10 SEO-friendly blog post ideas focused on a specific angle. Make sure the content is clear, helpful, and naturally aligned with the audience's search intent. Cluster 1: Beginner & Educational Goal: Introduce the product and its value to newcomers. Focus Keywords: what is {{product_name}}, how to use {{product_name}}, beginner guide Post Ideas: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Cluster 2: Tutorials & Practical Use Goal: Provide actionable guides and how-tos for using the product effectively. Focus Keywords: how to do [task] with {{product_name}}, automate [task] using {{product_name}} Post Ideas: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Cluster 3: Use Cases by Role or Industry Goal: Tailor content to specific audiences and demonstrate how the product fits their needs. Focus Keywords: {{product_name}} for [role], {{product_name}} for [industry] Post Ideas: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Cluster 4: Results, Strategy & ROI Goal: Show how the product helps users achieve business outcomes like growth, efficiency, or ROI. Focus Keywords: grow with {{product_name}}, scale your workflow using {{product_name}}, increase ROI with {{product_name}} Post Ideas: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Content Writing

0

Short Form Social Content Generation

Ideas ChatGPT

You are a Social Content Generator, and your primary function and skill is to generate a week's worth of thought leadership short-form social content (that will fit inside a stand-alone X post/Tweet, 280 characters or less). I am going to give you the topic, and I would like you to present a full day’s worth of short-form social content (5 posts) to me in the following order: - 5 Time Slots (8:30am Pacific Time, 11am Pacific Time, 1pm Pacific Time, 3:30pm Pacific Time, 7pm Pacific Time) - 1 piece of short-form content (280 characters or less, stand-alone post) in each time slot However, there are very specific styles and formats that work best for creating stand-alone short-form Thought Leadership content. So I would like you to create content with the following training data in mind: ~ There are 5 formats that work best for thought leadership short-form social content. - Format #1: Paragraph Style - Format #2: What, How, Why - Format #3: Listicle - Format #4: Old vs New - Format #5: 10 Magical Ways I’m going to walk you through each format, describe what makes it unique, and then give you several examples of what a great short-form social post executing each format looks like—so you understand how to replicate. ~ Format #1: Paragraph Style This is a declarative perspective, opinion, or way of seeing the world distilled down into a single paragraph. Imagine this is the short paragraph in a book that so perfectly summarizes the topic at hand that readers can’t help but highlight it. Attributes that make this short-form format compelling: - Concise language and making statements in the most economical way possible (avoid lots of tiny words that make a sentence sound convoluted). - Alternating of long and short sentences to add emphasis, rhythm, and flow into the writing. - Some sort of strong opinion, polarizing point of view, declarative statement, or at least a perspective that isn’t “hedging” but takes a stance and stands by it. - Lightly poetic language. This should be subtle and barely perceptible to the average reader, but small uses of alliteration, repetition, or the use of literary mechanisms like a Polyptoton (same word, two different parts of speech), or an Antithesis (an obvious observation, followed by a non-obvious observation). Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #1: Paragraph Style short-form posts. Example #1: *If you’re debating between going to that “networking event” and working, choose the work. When the work works out, the people will still be there to take your call. But if you never do the work, no amount of networking will get it done for you. They wont take your call either.* Example #2: *Success in life comes down to accepting how the world is and finding ways to make things work to your benefit. Failure in life occurs when you wish things were different, and wait for the world to adjust to you (it never happens).* Example #3: *One key to a good relationship is to simply accept all the things that annoy you about the other person. Acknowledge them, laugh about them, surrender to them, and once you do, it's so much easier to really love them. But until then, their quirks will just irritate you.* ~ Format #2: What / How / Why This format consists of three parts: - Start with a declarative opening line (this is the “what”) - Follow with 3–5 bulleted examples, actions, or steps (this is the “how”) - End with a one-sentence insight, benefit, or motivating reason (this is the “why”) **Important:** These labels—“What / How / Why”—are for your internal understanding only and should NOT appear in the final post. The post should read like a natural stand-alone thought leadership Tweet. Attributes that make this short-form format compelling: - Opening first sentences (the “What”) that are hooks, deliberately intended to grab the reader’s attention. 6 proven hook styles are a strong declarative statement; a thought-provoking question; a controversial opinion; a vulnerable statement; a weird unique insight, stat, or data point; or a moment-in-time referencing a meaningful event on specific date, day, time, or time period. - 3-5 bulleted items (the “How”) that are differentiated examples ideally not repeating conventional wisdom; tangible (not intangible) language, meaning the “How” are clear and not subject to interpretation or confusion from the reader; are steps, or objects, or “things” the reader can actionably do or use (the opposite of “fluffy vague advice”); written as economically as possible (straight to the point, using as few words as possible, only saying what is absolutely necessary to pack in the most new information per second for the reader). - Closing sentences (the “Why”) that give the reader a good reason to do what you’ve just told them to do (”What” and “How”); either inspiring them to take action, or educating them on the cost of inaction. Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #2: What, How, Why short-form posts. Example #1: *4 steps to start writing:* 1. *Get comfortable saying "I don't know"* 2. *Figure out what is it you want to know* 3. *Commit to learning about that topic in public* 4. *Distill everything you're learning and share it with others* *Then, repeat this process every day for years.* Example #2: *There are 5 levels in the Ghostwriter Income Staircase:* 1. *Charging per word* 2. *Charging per hour* 3. *Charging per month* 4. *Charging per asset* 5. *Charging per outcome* *Accelerate to Level 4 as quickly as possible, then stay there and stack cash.* Example #3: *4 ways to prove your credibility as a ghostwriter and earn $10k+ per month:* - *Your bio says so* - *Your content shows so* - *Your own asset proves so* - *Your conversation guarantees so* *Works even if you have ZERO experience.* ~ Format #3: Listicle This is simply a list of items following “what” you are telling the reader. The value of this sort of post is it compresses all the most important pieces of information into a skimmable list. For example, instead of making a reader consume a 1,500 article explaining the 7 best platforms to use to launch an online course, we can just compress the 7 platform recommendations into a short-form listicle and give the reader all the answers in a fraction of the time. The model for this format is to open with a single sentence telling “what” you’re going to give the reader, and then the list “giving that thing you promised” to the reader. Here are 30 proven approaches that make for great short-form listicles: - Tips - Skills - Tools - Traits - Steps - Goals - Books - Habits - Stories - Quotes - Secrets - Insights - Benefits - Lessons - Reasons - Creators - Routines - Mistakes - Podcasts - Examples - Questions - Inventions - Templates - Resources - Challenges - Companies - Data Points - Realizations - Frameworks - Presentations Attributes that make this short-form format compelling: - Giving the reader a list of things that will help them achieve some goal, solve some problem, fix some constraint, unlock some benefit or outcome, avoid some mistake, etc., and stating that clearly in the first sentence. - Tangible items in the list, and being as specific as possible. Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #3: Listicle short-form posts. Example #1: *9 books I recommend to every beginner writer:* - *Atomic Habits* - *The War of Art* - *On Writing Well* - *Show Your Work* - *The Boron Letters* - *Writing That Works* - *The Elements of Style* - *The Adweek Copywriting Handbook* - *The Art & Business of Online Writing* *Anything else?* Example #2: *8 things you don't need to start writing:* - *To feel ready* - *A cabin in the woods* - *Thousands of followers* - *A 6-month content plan* - *A deep expertise in something* - *4 hours of distraction-free time* - *The perfect note-taking system* - *An optimized Notion dashboard* Example #3: *Top 6 Free Online Learning Platforms* 1. *Duolingo —Learn new language.* 2. *freeCodeCamp —Learn to code.* 3. *Makerpad —Learn to build using no-code.* 4. *Uxcel —Learn design skills.* 5. *TED-Ed —Learn interesting topics.* 6. *KhanAcademy —Learn math, sciences, economics and more.* Example #4: *Copywriting tips to hang on your wall:* 1. *Don't sell. Help the customer transform.* 2. *Ditch formal language. Be simple.* 3. *Be a painkiller, not a vitamin.* 4. *Speak to 1 person—not "everyone."* 5. *Emphasize benefits, not features.* 6. *Share 1 shocking stat.* 7. *Be clear, not clever.* ~ Format #4: Old vs New This is a very specific format, and it can be any variation of: - Old vs New - the old way of doing something compared to the new way of doing things. - Bad vs Good - the way “bad” or “ineffective” or “less successful” people do something compared to the way “good” or “effective” or “successful” people do it. - Platform vs Platform - the way one platform does something compared to the way another platform does something (or comparing podcasters, or different writers or creators, or comparing business models, or comparing anything to its counterparty). And the execution of this format is very specific: First 1-3 words or sentence is either the old category and/or a short sentence saying “How does ”. Then 3 bullets explaining “how” or “why.” Then another 1-3 words or single sentence with the “new” thing being compared. Then 3 bullets explaining “how” or “why.” And then, if there is room in the 280 character limit, a final short sentence with some parting words of wisdom. Here’s what this format should look like: *Vanity metrics:* - *Number of books read* - *Amount of money raised* - *Total number of followers* *Actionable metrics:* - *Number of lessons applied* - *Amount of profit generated* - *Total number of customers* *Optimize carefully.* Attributes that make this short-form format compelling: - “Mirroring” in the visual formatting of the post. This short-form format is very symmetrical and appealing to the eye, so optimizing for an appealing visual pattern is key. - Opposing comparisons. You want the “old” and the “new” to conflict—and you want the “new” to subtly sell the reader on why they should do it “this way instead.” - Tangible, differentiated examples within each of the “old” and “new.” Avoid fluffy language, and instead pick extremely specific, tangible, measurable, visceral examples to prove the point. Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #4: Old vs New short-form posts. Example #1: *Amateur writers:* - *Publish haphazardly* - *Edit until it's perfect* - *Get dopamine from notifications* *Professional writers:* - *Publish consistently* - *Know it will never be perfect* - *Get dopamine from hitting publish* *Choose wisely.* Example #2: *How victims approach life:* - *“The world is out to get me”* - *“Nothing is rigged in my favor”* - *“I could, if…”* *How leaders approach life:* - *“I’ll figure it out”* - *“What if it’s rigged in my favor?”* - *“I can, right now”* *Mindset is everything.* Example #3: *Old blogging platforms:* - *Blogger* - *Myspace* - *Wordpress* *New blogging platforms:* - *X/Twitter* - *LinkedIn* - *Quora/Medium* *It’s never been easier to start writing online.* Example #4: *Stop writing:* - *To go viral* - *To gain followers* - *To build an audience* *Start writing:* - *To think clearer* - *To solve problems* - *To share your perspective* *Then, watch what happens.* *When you focus on the last 3, the first 3 happen automatically.* Example #5: *Current journal prompts that are working well:* *Morning:* - *What’s top of mind?* - *What am I excited about?* - *What will I get done today?* *Evening:* - *What happened today?* - *What were my lessons & realizations?* - *What do I want my subconscious to think on overnight?* ~ Format #5: 10 Magical Ways This format can be any combination of the following “10 Magical Ways”—which are proven topics that can be applied to any niche: - Tips - Stats - Steps - Lessons - Benefits - Reasons - Mistakes - Examples - Questions - Personal Stories The way this works in thought leadership short-form content is you pick 1 of the 10 Magical Ways and you tell the reader in the first sentence what you’re going to give them—and then you “give them that” in a bulleted list to follow. It should look like this: *Reasons to start ghostwriting:* - *You get paid to practice* - *You don’t need a formal degree* - *It’s your fastest path to $10k/mo* - *Anyone can start a ghostwriting biz for $0* - *You get an MBA education… without going into debt!* Attributes that make this short-form format compelling: - All 10 of these “Magical Ways” are topics that can be written about in any niche, but are always valuable to readers interested in that particular niche. - If you promise “Benefits,” you want to list out differentiated or unconventional benefits most people might not be aware of; if you promise “Mistakes,” you want to list out differentiated or less well-known mistakes; if you promise “Steps or “How To do something” you want to list out extremely concise, tangible, actionable steps the target reader can do to accomplish a goal or solve a problem. Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #5: 10 Magical Ways short-form posts. Example #1: *How to write a book:* - *Write 50 words. That's a paragraph.* - *Write 400 words. That's a page.* - *Write 300 pages. That's a book.* - *Write every day. That's a habit.* - *Publish over and over again. That's a career.* *No degree necessary—just consistency.* Example #2: *6 questions I answer every time I sit down to write:* 1. *What problem am I solving?* 2. *Whose problem am I solving?* 3. *What benefits am I unlocking?* 4. *What promise am I making?* 5. *What emotion am I generating?* 6. *What's the next action my reader should take?* *Feel free to copy.* Example #3: *5 reasons I do my journaling handwritten:* 1. *Impossible to get distracted* 2. *It creates a massive stack of memories* 3. *Forces me to slow down & think clearly* 4. *I spend too much time looking at screens* 5. *There is no better experience than a Muji 0.5 on a Leuchtturm1917* ~ I am now going to give you the topic, and I would like you to give me a day’s worth of short-form thought leadership social content. Each post must read like a standalone Tweet, without any formatting labels or headers, and must fit within the 280 character constraint of X/Twitter.

Content Writing

0

Strategic Slogan Generator: Marketing Expert Edition

Ideas ChatGPT

You are an expert in digital marketing. Your task is to generate 10 business slogans using the business name and a short description delimited between triple backticks. Keep in mind that a good slogan should be catchy, memorable, and clever. Here are some things you should take into consideration about slogans before generating them: 1- It's short and sweet. The quicker a slogan gets to the point, the more likely it is to stick around and leave a lasting impression. 2- It's memorable. Short does not always mean easy to remember. Wordplay, alliteration, rhymes, and other language tricks make it easier for customers to remember a slogan. 3- It's attention-grabbing. A good slogan should have that \"wow\" factor that makes customers stop and pay attention. It could be a question posed to them, clever wordplay, or something else out of the box. 4- It's emotional. How your customers feel about your brand influences their decision to buy from you. Knowing that this selection is very much a personal choice, a good slogan attempts to make an emotional connection with a potential customer. 5- Make it Timeless. It should have a long life and will stand the test of time. 6- Don't use \":\", \"-\", and commas; keep it a 1-line sentence. #Examples: Here are some examples you can analyze to brainstorm ideas: Don't leave home without it. – American Express You're in good hands with Allstate. – Allstate Reach out and touch someone. – AT&T The Ultimate Driving Machine. – BMW Have it your way. – Burger King The Citi never sleeps. – Citibank It's the real thing. – Coca-Cola Have a break, have a KitKat. – Kit Kat Just do it. – Nike #Variables: Business Name:[Business Name] Extra Info: [Some info about the business] #Output: [number. slogan]

Slogan Generation

0

Un-Brainstorm Generation

Ideas ChatGPT

You are a branding and marketing expert. Come up with a combo of 12 negative words that describe struggles of founders of companies that start with "un” and then combine it with a dream or desire of founders that starts with “un.” For example, from Underdog to Unstoppable.

Ideas Generation

0

Webinar Deck Generation

Ideas ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. My audience is [your audience]. I help them by providing [how you help your audience]. I currently offer [your current offers] [add any relevant expertise or background]. Create a webinar outline for me using Russell Brunson's famous framework, the "Perfect Webinar" formula.

Webinar Outline Generation

0

JSON Text Classifier and Formatter

Json

##Task You are an expert in formatting different types of text into JSON. Your task is to turn the three received inputs, which may be of any type like a blog post, a Twitter thread, some useless text, etc., and you\'ll group these 3 inputs in a JSON format with their type before them. So make sure to analyze each one thoroughly to get its type correctly. ##Input Input 1: {input_1} Input 2: {input_2} Input 3: {input_3} ##Output The output should only be in JSON format and nothing else before or after it. Make sure to analyze each input to know what its type is and then write it next to it. Here\'s an example: {{ Type of Input 1: input_1, Type of Input 2: input_2, Type of Input 3: input_3, }}

Json Format Generation

0

Academic Text Transformer and Paraphrasing Expert Prompt

Learning ChatGPT

Task: You are an expert in the English Language. Your task is to paraphrase a piece of text to make it more academically worthy. I'll provide you with the text in the Input section delimited between triple backticks. You should change the words and sentence structure, add or remove figurative language, and change anything necessary to make the text more academic. However, it is crucial that you do not alter the original meaning and significance of the text. In regard to the style you should use when paraphrasing, it should be turned into an academic piece of text which has the following characteristics: - Clearly and accurately convey information and meaning - Focus on the information rather than personal feelings or opinions - Use a formal tone and avoid slang - Use complex sentence structures and advanced vocabulary (not too much, though) - Clearly define the relationship between ideas and arguments So, improve the structure as necessary. Keep in mind that there are some words or sentences that shouldn't be changed because they are the names of something being explained in the piece of text. For example, if a text discusses how to identify spam comments, the phrase "spam comments" shouldn't be paraphrased, as this would otherwise confuse the reader about what is being discussed. So, make sure to read the input text thoroughly, understand its content, and identify the key parts that should be paraphrased. Output: The output should only be the paraphrased new text and nothing else. Input Text: {{input}}

Academic Writing

0

Balanced Debate Analysis Generator Prompt

Learning ChatGPT

I want you to act as an objective debate analyst for the topic: {{topic}}. Please provide {{num_arguments}} comprehensive arguments for each side, following these guidelines: For each argument: Present clear reasoning supported by specific evidence Include relevant statistics or expert opinions Address potential counterarguments Provide real-world examples or case studies Structure requirements: Begin each side with the strongest arguments Use consistent formatting for both sides Label sources and citations clearly Highlight key statistics or findings Analysis parameters: Focus on factual evidence over emotional appeals Consider long-term implications Acknowledge areas of uncertainty Identify common ground where applicable Present your findings in a structured format, ensuring equal depth and detail for both sides. Conclude with key discussion points that readers should consider when forming their own opinions.

Learning

0

Book Analysis And Summarizer prompt

Learning ChatGPT

Please create a well-organized, clear, and concise summary of {{ BOOK TITLE }} by {{BOOK AUTHOR}} The goal is to deliver a comprehensive overview that captures the book's main points, structure, and relevance. Format Requirements: Use Markdown formatting Keep the writing concise, direct, and reader-friendly. Summary Structure: [Book Title] by [Book Author] Main Topic or Theme Summarize the book’s central topic or theme in 2–4 sentences. Key Ideas and Arguments List and briefly explain the major ideas or arguments the author presents. (Use bullet points for each key idea.) Book Structure Outline the structure of the book: List the main sections, parts, or chapter titles (if available). Briefly describe each section’s focus (optional). Key Takeaways and Conclusions Highlight the most important lessons or conclusions drawn from the book. Author’s Background and Qualifications Provide a short description of the author’s background, expertise, and any notable credentials. Comparison to Other Books Briefly compare this book to other notable books on the same topic: Mention similarities or unique perspectives. Target Audience Identify the intended readership for the book (e.g., beginners, professionals, general readers). Reception and Critical Response Summarize how critics and readers received the book: Positive feedback Criticisms or controversies (if any) Publication Details Provide: Publisher name First publication date ISBN (if available) Recommendations Suggest a few similar or complementary books for readers interested in this topic. Final Takeaway End the summary with one powerful sentence capturing the book’s most important insight.

Book Summary

0

Comprehensive Programming Tutorial Prompt

Learning ChatGPT

As a computer science educator, create a detailed tutorial for [programming language] focusing on [topic]. Structure your response as follows: Brief introduction to [programming language] and its real-world applications Overview of [topic] and its importance in [programming language] Provide 3 code examples with increasing complexity: Beginner: Basic concept implementation Intermediate: Practical application Advanced: Complex implementation Include outputs for each example For each code example: Line-by-line explanation Key concepts highlighted Common pitfalls and solutions Address FAQs and misconceptions about [topic] List recommended resources for further learning Share best practices and coding standards Use clear, simple language and practical examples throughout. Include comments in code samples to aid understanding. Topic: {{topic}} Programming Language: {{programming_language}}

Learning

0

Semantic Similarity Scorer Prompt

Learning ChatGPT

You are an expert in computational linguistics and semantic analysis. Analyze the semantic similarity between the two provided texts by following these steps: 1. Perform an initial read to identify main themes and topics 2. Conduct a detailed analysis of key concepts, arguments, and context 3. Compare structural elements and writing style 4. Evaluate the depth of shared meaning and conceptual overlap 5. Assign a similarity score from 0-10 where: - 0: Completely different topics with no semantic overlap - 5: Moderate similarity with some shared concepts - 10: Identical meaning and context Note: Focus solely on semantic meaning, not lexical similarity. Consider context, implications, and underlying concepts in your analysis. Input Format: Text 1: {{text_1}} Text 2: {{text_2}} Output Format: [Single numerical score between 0-10]

Learning

0

Content Alchemist

LinkedIn ChatGPT

You are a top-tier content strategist. Your task is to help me craft the most engaging, high-performing content to post on X (Twitter) and LinkedIn. I will provide you with a draft, idea, or rough thought. Your job is to: Refine and elevate it to fit my niche and brand goals. Generate 5–7 powerful post variations using proven templates, emotional hooks, or thought-provoking formats. Ensure every post is scroll-stopping, curiosity-poking, and emotionally engaging. My Niche: {{your_niche}} Target Audience: {{target_audience}} Style and energy should lean toward creators like Alex Hormozi, Colin & Samir, or a MrBeast-meets-tech-nerd vibe. Use emotion, insight, pattern-breaks, and tension to keep readers locked in. Let’s make content that stops the scroll and sparks the mind.

Content Generation

0

Engaging Comment Generation

LinkedIn ChatGPT

You are a Comment Machine, and your primary function is to thoughtfully respond to a piece of content on social media with a Thought Leadership style short-form post. However, since these are “comments,” you should write these in a very conversational tone. This means you can use contractions, abbreviations, and more casual language—as long as the comment itself delivers something valuable in response to the original post. I will give you the text from the piece of content I would like you to reply to, and I would like you to provide me with 5 different reply options—each based on one of the five “comment formats” I am going to train you on: ~ There are 5 comment formats that work best for thought leadership short-form social commenting: - Format #1: Counterpoint - Format #2: Listicle Examples - Format #3: Unique Stat - Format #4: Old vs New - Format #5: Mistakes I’m going to walk you through each format, describe what makes it unique, and then give you several examples of what a great short-form social post executing each format looks like—so you understand how to replicate. ~ Format #1: Counterpoint This is a declarative perspective, opinion, or way of seeing the world that is the counterpoint or opposing view of the original post. This format is executed in a single paragraph. Imagine this is the short paragraph in a book that so perfectly summarizes the topic at hand that readers can’t help but highlight it. Attributes that make this comment format compelling: - Presents “the other side” of the topic at hand—and subtly explains why the original post might not be fully correct, or “the whole picture.” - Intelligently, articulately, but concisely presents the opposing case without being overly verbose or vague. It picks a very specific thing to present as the counterpoint, and is as tactical, specific, and actionable as possible. - Alternating of long and short sentences to add emphasis, rhythm, and flow into the writing. - Lightly poetic language. This should be subtle and barely perceptible to the average reader, but small uses of alliteration, repetition, or the use of literary mechanisms like a Polyptoton (same word, two different parts of speech), or an Antithesis (an obvious observation, followed by a non-obvious observation). Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #1: Counterpoint social comments. Example #1: *This strategy is the right decision for beginners, but very quickly becomes “the wrong decision” as you start to scale to $10k/mo. This is the problem with business advice, is that it’s highly contextual. For example, the advice “say yes to everything” is absolutely correct when you’re still trying to figure out what to specialize in. But as soon as you’ve chosen a speciality, and started finding some success, the best advice is the complete opposite: “say no to everything.”* Example #2: *I’d argue the opposite. Free Work can lead to exponential ROI because it solves three very difficult problems for beginners. First, it takes “cost” off the table—which removes a huge objection from the client. Second, it reduces barrier to entry, allowing you to practice at a much faster rate than needing to wait for a client to agree to paying you. And third, you can get paid in other things even more valuable than cash: a testimonial, a referral, etc.* ~ Format #2: Listicle Examples This is a “continued list” of examples or added insights to the original post. For example, if the post you are responding to is sharing “mistakes freelance writers make,” this comment format would add “more mistakes” to the list. Or if the post you are responding to is sharing “how to buy your first rental property,” and is giving the reader steps on how to do it, this comment format would add “other, missed steps” or “more tips” for accomplishing that same goal. Attributes that make this comment format compelling: - Specific, tangible, actionable examples. You want to “continue the list” with things that add to the quality of the original post. Do not use broad, vague, or intangible language. The goal is for this comment to be as valuable, if not more valuable (from a tactical perspective) than even the original post was. - First 1-2 sentences of the comment should validate the original post, and then clearly state what you would add to the list/conversation. - Specific, tangible, actionable listicle items should be presented in a numbered or bulleted list, and should provide 3-10 examples. (The fewer the items in the listicle, the “longer” you can elaborate on each example. The more items in the listicle, the more concise you need to be.) Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #2: Listicle Examples social comments. Example #1: *This is great . Some other ghostwriting benefits I’d add:* - *You get paid to practice* - *You get paid to build your network* - *You get paid to learn how to write in different voices* - *You get paid to ask smart people whatever questions you want (and then send them an invoice afterwards!)* Example #2: *Solid recovery advice. A few things I’d also add that have been working well for me:* - *Sauna 20 minutes per day (make sure to do this right after your workout, and then jump in a cold shower immediately after for 2-3 minutes to maximize recovery, build mental fortitude, etc.)* - *Pre-bedtime vitamin sleep stack: magnesium, apigenin, L-Theanine, vitamin C, and 1mg melatonin.* - *Replace screen time with some analog reading right before bed (while the vitamins kick in).* ~ Format #3: Unique Stat This is a verifiable unique or weird stat, study, fun fact, or differentiated insight you can share to add to the conversation and topic of the original post. For example, if the original post is about health and wellness in America, you could respond with an interesting statistic about America’s food consumption, or activity levels, or meat industry, etc. Documentaries use this technique to re-hook viewers, and so the more surprising or little-known the stat or fact, the better. Attributes that make this comment format compelling: - This can be written as paragraph style, or in a quick bulleted list if you want to present multiple stats or little-known facts that are all relevant or related to the topic at hand. - The more surprising or little-known the stat or fact, the better. Documentaries use this technique to re-hook viewers, and so the same logic applies here. - The surprising stat or little-known fact should also come with a short “crash course” on how and why that is true. - This type of comment should first validate the original post, and then add this surprising stat or little-known fact to the conversation. - Please always provide a verifiable source to the stats that you use to ensure accuracy. If you don't have access to verify a specific statistic with a current source link, either use web search to find and verify the stat first, or clearly indicate that the statistic would need to be researched and verified before using. Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #3: Unique Stat social comments. Example #1: - Yea, I don’t think most people realize that nearly ****half of all Americans have $500 or less in their savings accounts. That means most people are one unexpected medical bill away from poverty, which is wild.* Example #2: *Honestly, people have been saying “everything is saturated” since the beginning of the Internet. I remember when people used to say Facebook ads were saturated back in 2014. And I remember people saying email marketing was saturated back in 2008. And yet, Facebook (now Meta) ads and email marketing has grown 100x since then and is more popular than ever. So, disagree… ghostwriting isn’t “saturated.” It’s just easier to call something saturated than acquire a bunch of new skills to capitalize on the opportunity.* ~ Format #4: Old vs New This is a very specific comment format, where you take the topic of the original post and then draw a comparison or distinction between the “old way” things used to be done versus the “new way.” And it can be any variation of: - Old vs New - the old way of doing something compared to the new way of doing things. - Bad vs Good - the way “bad” or “ineffective” or “less successful” people do something compared to the way “good” or “effective” or “successful” people do it. - Platform vs Platform - the way one platform does something compared to the way another platform does something (or comparing podcasters, or different writers or creators, or comparing business models, or comparing anything to its counterparty). And the execution of this format is very specific: First 1-3 words or sentence is either the old category and/or a short sentence saying “How does ”. Then 3 bullets explaining “how” or “why.” Then another 1-3 words or single sentence with the “new” thing being compared. Then 3 bullets explaining “how” or “why.” And then, if there is room in the 280 character limit, a final short sentence with some parting words of wisdom. Here’s what this format should look like: *Vanity metrics:* - *Number of books read* - *Amount of money raised* - *Total number of followers* *Actionable metrics:* - *Number of lessons applied* - *Amount of profit generated* - *Total number of customers* *Optimize carefully.* Attributes that make this comment format compelling: - “Mirroring” in the visual formatting of the post. This short-form format is very symmetrical and appealing to the eye, so optimizing for an appealing visual pattern is key. - Opposing comparisons. You want the “old” and the “new” to conflict—and you want the “new” to subtly sell the reader on why they should do it “this way instead.” - Tangible, differentiated examples within each of the “old” and “new.” Avoid fluffy language, and instead pick extremely specific, tangible, measurable, visceral examples to prove the point. Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #4: Old vs New social comments. Example #1: *Amateur writers:* - *Publish haphazardly* - *Edit until it's perfect* - *Get dopamine from notifications* *Professional writers:* - *Publish consistently* - *Know it will never be perfect* - *Get dopamine from hitting publish* *Choose wisely.* Example #2: *How victims approach life:* - *“The world is out to get me”* - *“Nothing is rigged in my favor”* - *“I could, if…”* *How leaders approach life:* - *“I’ll figure it out”* - *“What if it’s rigged in my favor?”* - *“I can, right now”* *Mindset is everything.* Example #3: *Old blogging platforms:* - *Blogger* - *Myspace* - *Wordpress* *New blogging platforms:* - *X/Twitter* - *LinkedIn* - *Quora/Medium* *It’s never been easier to start writing online.* ~ Format #5: Mistakes This comment format is where you take the topic of the original post and then further elaborate on where people typically “go wrong” when trying to solve this type of problem or accomplish this type of goal. Attributes that make this comment format compelling: - Tangible, actionable, tactical, specific mistakes. The more specific you can be, the better. - Not just naming the mistake, but also either elaborating on why this mistake happens in the first place (what’s the cause) and/or how to fix or avoid it. - Presented with a sentence that acknowledges/validates the original post, and then in a quick bulleted list adds to the conversation by providing these mistakes and elaborating slightly on each one. Here are a couple ideal examples of Format #5: Mistakes social comments. Example #1: *Some great points here on the future of video. Just wanted to add, this is where a lot of people go wrong and some mistakes they make along the way:* - *They rush into buying a bunch of fancy equipment - you don’t need this as a beginner. In fact, my recommendation would be to start by just posting Loom videos of you talking over a Google doc.* - *They think they need some “viral, scripted hook.” Not unless you’re trying to play the viral YouTube game. More times than not, you’d be better off just sharing really valuable insights in your niche.* - *They think they need to hire an editor for $10k/mo. No, no, no. Make 50 low-budget videos first. Worry about hiring a video editor later, after you’ve acquired all the baseline skills.* Example #2: *Some mistakes beginner writers make that I’d add to this list:* - *Trying to monetize too early. Just focus on building your daily writing habit and attracting a niche audience. Monetization is easy once you’ve nailed those 2 things.* - *Trying to attract multiple niche audiences at the same time. It’s unnecessary. Just focus on one niche and go deep.* - *Trying to chase viral formats. I promise, the more you try to go viral, the less it’s going to happen. (All my most viral content always came from just trying to be helpful!)* ~ IMPORTANT: These comments should sound like real people talking, not polished marketing copy. Write as if you're quickly responding to a connection's post. Use: - First-person perspective with the tone of a friend trying to make a point to another friend (which means making it sound informal, and also extremely direct). - Plenty of contractions (I've, don't, isn't, here's, etc.) - Limit the use of explanation points. It sounds “too friendly.” - Conversational phrases like "honestly," "I think," "you know," "I mean" - Shorter sentences mixed with occasional longer thoughts - Casual punctuation (dashes, ellipses...) - Occasional incomplete sentences or thoughts - A natural speech pattern with small verbal pauses and transitions - Never present statistics or data as factual unless you can provide a verifiable, current source link. If uncertain about accuracy, acknowledge the limitation and suggest the user verify the information The goal is for these to read like something someone would actually type in a LinkedIn comment box - thoughtful but conversational, not overly polished or formal. Are you ready for me to provide you with the text of the original post I’d like you to draft comments for?

Comment Generation

0

LinkedIn Content Transformer: Video-to-Post Conversion System

LinkedIn ChatGPT

You are an expert at crafting LinkedIn posts. I will provide you with a [short video transcript] and a set of successful post templates. Your task is to: Analyze the [short video transcript] and convert it into a compelling LinkedIn post. Choose the best template from the list provided and use it to craft the post. Rules to follow: Do not include hashtags or external links. Call-to-Action (CTA): Include questions or prompts that encourage comments and shares. Target Audience: People interested in AI, business, and self-improvement. Templates: Template #1: \"How to / The Secret to\" Description: This template is designed to create LinkedIn posts that offer a step-by-step guide or reveal the secret to achieving a specific goal or solving a problem. The post begins with an attention-grabbing headline like \"How to {Do This Thing}\" or \"The Secret to {Getting Desired Outcome}.\" It then lists several steps or traits (usually 3-5), each with a short description. The post concludes with a call-to-action (CTA) that encourages readers to access a free guide or resource linked in the comments. Example: How to create a killer Intro Section on your LinkedIn profile (5 little-known steps anyone can use): Background photo: Use a \'soft\' CTA. Name: No confusing letters or jargon words. Profile pic: Smile, look at the camera, no distractions. Headline: Niche, problem, outcome of solving problem. Empathy: Deeply understand your audience through research. If you want to make your LinkedIn profile 10x better, there\'s a free guide in the chit chat below. Template #2: \"The Rant\" Description: Use this template to create posts that express frustration or dissatisfaction about a particular issue relevant to your audience. Start by hinting that a rant is coming to grab attention. Pose a question about why the negative thing happens, and share your personal experience with it. Exaggerate the effects to emphasize the impact and list steps you\'re taking to address the problem. Conclude by inviting your audience to share how they handle similar situations, stimulating discussion. Example: I\'m sorry, but I\'m going to have a little rant today... Why do people book calls and then not show up? I\'ve had 5 no-shows this week, and I\'m feeling very frustrated by it! I get that people can sometimes miss reminders or something unexpected comes up, but those things should be exceptions. I don\'t even mind so much when people genuinely forget (we\'re all human), but at least they\'re apologetic about it. Most of the people that didn’t show up didn’t even acknowledge it, even after I sent a very pleasant email and direct message. That’s just rude! I\'m tired of people not respecting my time, so I\'ve decided to do 4 things: Make it way harder for people to book calls with me by \'tightening up\' my application form and kicking out the tire-kickers. Tag people who don\'t show up in my CRM so they have to jump through hoops to book again. Ensure the SMS reminder option is available for all bookings. Send a direct message to confirm they will actually make it! Hopefully, that will cut down the no-shows! OK, rant over—thanks for letting me vent! 😅 I\'m curious, how do you handle no-shows? And what do you do to minimize them? Template #3: \"Polarization\" Description: This template is for creating posts that present a controversial or polarizing statement to spark debate and engagement. Start with a bold statement that challenges common beliefs. Provide reasoning and evidence to support your viewpoint. The goal is to split your audience and encourage them to engage by agreeing or disagreeing. End with a call-to-action inviting them to share their thoughts. Example: Becoming a coach is easy. Creating a business around it is not. Why do most coaches scrape by while only a few thrive and prosper? I\'ve spoken to thousands and worked with hundreds of coaches over the last few years, and there are some commonalities I see that differentiate successful coaches from the rest: Unshakable belief: They believe deeply in their ability to get incredible results for clients. Clear niche: They are crystal clear about whom they work with and understand their niche\'s problems. Consistency: They plan and execute daily activities needed to run their business. Entrepreneurial spirit: They know it\'s not enough to be an awesome coach; they need to be awesome entrepreneurs. Seek help: They get guidance from those who\'ve succeeded before them. If you\'re a coach and want to be successful, adopting these traits could make a significant difference. Are you up for that? I\'d love to know if you agree or disagree. Tell me in the comments, please. 😁 Template #4: \"Data-Driven\" Description: Create posts that leverage impactful statistics to highlight a problem or opportunity in your industry. Start with a compelling statistic that contrasts with another fact to create intrigue. Outline the main reasons for this discrepancy, providing supporting information for each. Conclude with a CTA directing readers to a resource linked in the comments. Example: The life coaching industry is estimated to be worth $2,400,000,000. Yet 56% of coaches are earning less than $1,000 per month. There are three main reasons for this: Lack of niche: Without focusing on a specific group, marketing messages fail to break through the noise. Inability to create leads: Not knowing how to guide conversations can result in missed opportunities. Shallow audience understanding: Without deep insights into their audience\'s problems and desires, coaches struggle to connect. If you want to avoid being in the bottom 95%, check out my digital course below. Template #5A: \"Three Things\" Description: Use this template to present three actionable tips or steps to achieve a desired outcome. Start by stating that there are three things that will help achieve an awesome result and pique interest by asking if the reader wants to know what they are. List each point with a brief explanation. Conclude with a CTA to access more detailed information in the comments. Example: There are 3 things you can do right now on LinkedIn to help grow your network. Wanna know what they are? Here you go... Optimize your profile picture: A good profile picture makes it 7 times more likely that someone will connect with you. Create a profile video: Seeing and hearing you builds a stronger human connection. Create a voice note: Use the name pronunciation feature to include a short call to action. If you want to know exactly how to do these 3 things, there’s a guide in the chit chat below. 👇 Happy Saturday 😁 Template #5B: \"Three Things Every [Topic] Should Include\" Description: This template lists three essential elements that every [topic] should have, each with a short explanation. Emphasize the importance of these elements and provide tips on how to get them right. Conclude with a CTA to read a free guide in the comments to avoid common mistakes. Example: 3 Things Every Good LinkedIn Headline Should Include: The people you help: The narrower the niche, the better. The problem you help them solve: Ask them about their problems. The outcome they get by solving the problem: Ask them what they want. The only real way to get this right is to: Be crystal clear on who your niche is. Reach out to them for research. Write down what they tell you exactly as they say it. To avoid making the mistakes most people make with their headline, read the free guide on how to set up your LinkedIn Intro Section in the chat below. Template #5C: \"Activity is Simple—If You Know How\" Description: Assert that a particular activity is simple if you know how, highlighting that it involves doing three things well. List the three critical tasks and invite the reader to assess how well they\'re doing them by taking an action (e.g., a quiz or health check) provided in the comments. Encourage engagement by asking readers to share their results. Example: Generating leads for a coaching or consulting business on LinkedIn is simple—if you know how. You just have to do 3 things well. Wanna know what they are and how well you\'re doing them? Set up your profile to attract your ideal clients. Create content consistently that delivers value to your audience. Connect with the right people in a way that makes them want to pay for your services. To find out how well you\'re doing them, go to the chit chat below to take the LinkedIn Health Check. I’d love to know your score. Tell me below if you\'re feeling brave. 😉 [short video transcript]: The YouTube Video transcript goes here.

LinkedIn Content

0

LinkedIn Viral Content Creator

LinkedIn ChatGPT

You are a LinkedIn Content Generator, and your primary function and skill is to generate thought leadership social content specifically for LinkedIn—which means you must compress as much value as possible into LinkedIn’s 3,000 character limit. I am going to give you my industry, and I would like you to: - First, generate 3 potential content ideas (presented as Headlines) based on each of the 5 styles I give you that work best for thought leadership LinkedIn content (15 ideas total) - Second, choose the 1 you think will perform best on LinkedIn (given LinkedIn’s demographics and the types of content most likely to go viral on that platform) - And third, write that 1 idea into a thought leadership style LinkedIn post (within the 3,000 character limit) However, there are very specific rules, styles, and formats that work best for creating LinkedIn content, so I would like you to create content with the following training data in mind: ~ There are 5 styles that work best for thought leadership LinkedIn content: - Style #1: Steps - Style #2: Stats - Style #3: Mistakes - Style #4: Lessons - Style #5: Examples However, I would like you to keep the following formatting rules in mind—because these formatting rules should be applied to every LinkedIn post, regardless of which style you use. (The style is really the content “type,” whereas the formatting of the post is universal and specific to LinkedIn text-based content.) ~ Formatting Rule #1: The First 200 Characters Matter Most The character limit for a LinkedIn post is 3,000 characters. However, the first 200 characters will be visible before a "See more" prompt, and the entire post can be expanded by clicking "See more". This applies to standard posts and also to recommendations. Which means the first 200 Characters of the LinkedIn post are the most important words of the entire post because they are what “hook” readers and get them to click “See more”—which tells the algorithm a post is popular, thus serving it to more readers and extending its reach. Here are some hooks that perform well when thinking about how to write the first 200 characters of a LinkedIn post: - Hook #1: A Strong, Declarative Statement. - Hook #2: A Thought-Provoking Question - Hook #3: A Controversial Opinion - Hook #4: A Weird, Unique Insight, Stat, or Data Point - Hook #5: A Meaningful Moment-In-Time In History Most importantly, the way the first 200 characters of the LinkedIn Post needs to “end” should in some way leave readers wanting to know the answer, or to want to know the very next line. This is what prompts them to click the “See more” button, because they need to keep reading. So the first 200 characters should be both a hook, and a cliffhanger. ~ Formatting Rule #2: Write Tangible, Specific, Actionable, Skimmable Headers On LinkedIn, formatting tools are limited—meaning users can’t use bolded H1s for their headers to separate text. So instead, a “header” is created by giving each section header its own line and then usually some sort of symbol or signal that this sentence is supposed to be read and interpreted as a header (or section divider within the post). Let’s pretend first header in a LinkedIn post uses the following text: *This tangible, specific, actionable, skimmable sentence.* Now this “header” sentence could be better presented as a header in the following ways: - *Item #1: This tangible, specific, actionable, skimmable sentence. —* This reads more like a header because there is a named item followed by a number and then a colon. - *1/ This tangible, specific, actionable, skimmable sentence. —* This reads more like a header because there is a number followed by a slash. - 1. *This tangible, specific, actionable, skimmable sentence. —* This *reads more like a header because there is a number followed by a period.* - Etc. These are all small ways to signal to readers in a LinkedIn post (with limited formatting functionality) that these particular sentences are supposed to be read & interpreted as headers/section dividers. Now, a couple other writing rules to keep in mind when writing header text: - A header accomplishes 2 primary goals for the reader: first, it usually acts as a section divider so readers can more easily skim the piece (this is a good thing); and second, each header should deliver on the promise in the hook (the first 200 Characters) to the point where a reader could simply read all the headers and extract 80% of the value of the post. These headers give them all the “quick answers.” Then, it’s the reader’s choice if they want to go deeper and read the tactical content inside of each or any individual section. - The more “sections” and headers there are in a LinkedIn post, that means the less room there will be to write high-value content inside of each section (keeping the total LinkedIn length constraint of 3,000 Characters in mind). So the more “sections” and headers, that usually means the promise itself is something that can simply be delivered on in the headers themselves, and the content in each section just reinforces the answer that was already given in the header. Conversely, the less “sections” and headers there are leaves more room in each section to elaborate on “how” to execute what’s being shared in each header, tactically. You want to keep this in mind as you come up with a niche-specific promise for the reader, and how to best deliver on that promise in the content (and decide how much explanation each section requires in order for the reader to extract as much tactical value as possible). - Whatever “promise” is being made in the First 200 Characters and the introduction is also the promise that should be clearly mirrored and delivered on in the 3-10 headers in the LinkedIn post. So for example, if the first 200 Characters and/or the introduction of the post promises “5 mistakes designers make launching viral products,” then we know there will be 5 “sections”/headers in the LinkedIn post, and each header will deliver on that promise by sharing a different “mistake.” Etc. - There is a very specific type of writing style for headers I would like you to use. Headers should be written in Sentence Style, where each header is written as a full, complete sentence with the first word capitalized (everything else lower-case) and punctuation at the end. The reason is because whatever promise is being made in the first 200 Characters/introduction, we want that promise to be delivered on in all the headers themselves—clearly and concisely in individual sentences. For example, if the promise of the LinkedIn post is “How to land your first executive coaching client,” then we know each “section”/header will be a different Tip or Step or something actionable that delivers on that promise, and to make each header skimmable and packed with value we want to give the most tactical, actionable Tip or Step right there in the header, in sentence format, so the reader knows exactly what to go do, in what order, without even needing to read the rest of the newsletter. ~ Formatting Rule #3: Sell-The-Reader Introductions The entire purpose of the introduction of the piece (which should be approximately 200-400 characters) is to “sell” the reader on why they should give you their attention to read the rest of the post. And this happens the moment they click “See more.” Which means the hook (the first 200 Characters) worked, grabbed their attention, left them on a cliffhanger, and now they want to know “what happens next” or “the answer.” And then in the introduction, you must “sell them” on why they should keep reading the rest of the post—which is the real value. And the real value is really the 5 styles of content. LinkedIn readers want to know: - Style #1: Steps - Style #2: Stats - Style #3: Mistakes - Style #4: Lessons - Style #5: Examples So, how do you “sell” readers on continuing to read, now that they’ve clicked “See more” and fallen into the post? Readers get “sold” on continuing to give you their attention by educating them on two things: - Problems: Why something is a problem in their life/business/relationship/etc., the reason(s) those problems exist or have been happening in the first place, and the ultimate negative outcomes that happen as a result of not solving these problems. - Benefits: The solution, the benefits of the solution (all the good things that can happen when they solve a problem in their life/business/relationship/etc.), and the ultimate positive outcomes they can unlock as a result of solving this problem/implementing this solution. To get really specific on how to write these types of introductions I want to train you on, I don’t want you to think of the introduction as one giant block of text—but rather 4 smaller blocks that all stack on top of each other (that again fit within the constraint of 200-400 characters to maintain a quick pace): - Block #1: The first 200 Characters before the “See more” button is effectively the opening hook of the LinkedIn post and the introduction. Remember, the best opening hooks are typically one of the following: ask a thought-provoking question; open with a strong, declarative sentence; reference a meaningful moment in time (date, day, time, moment, etc.); present a vulnerable statement; offer a controversial opinion; and/or share a unique insight. - Block #2: Next is the “promise” of the intro—which is almost always either the niche-specific problem the reader wants to solve, or the niche-specific outcome the reader wants to unlock. This block is typically 3-5 sentences long (could also be presented in a bulleted list format of 3-5 bullets), and very tangibly and actionably educates the reader on a problem (or series of problems), why those problems exist, and the negative outcomes of those unsolved problems; or educates the reader on a desirable outcome (or handful of outcomes), why those outcomes are so valuable, and/or some of the negative consequences that can happen if those desirable outcomes aren’t achieved. - Block #3: Next is the “solution” of the intro. This is usually one sentence (at max, two sentences) that, after educating the reader on a problem or outcome, completes the promise by telling the reader that’s precisely what you’re going to help them with today. You’re either going to help them solve that problem (or series of problems), or achieve that outcome (or handful of outcomes). - Block #5: Last is the transition sentence. This is usually some sort of short transition into the first header and section of the LinkedIn post. Something like, “Let’s walk through each one” or “Let’s dive in” or “So, with that in mind, let’s or ,” etc. Here are some examples of niche-specific, value-packed, thought leadership LinkedIn post introductions written using this framework: Example #1: *Do you want to know the secret to landing your first ghostwriting client?* *One of the biggest challenges I faced getting started was: how do I actually charge for my work and make money? And the truth is, it's not that hard. It's just that no one tells you how to do it.* *So today, I'm going to share the 3 ways to structure your next ghostwriting project—and when to use them to get paid a premium.* *Let's walk through each one.* Example #2: *Hey there!* *What do you need to become a Premium LinkedIn Ghostwriter—and build a lucrative side hustle?* *Do you need:* - *A portfolio?* - *Customer testimonials?* - *Tons of writing experience?* *Well, actually, the truth is… you don't need ANY of these things!* *So today, I'm going to show you my 5-step system for attracting ghostwriting clients. And once you install it, you can become a Premium LinkedIn Ghostwriter who lands high-ticket clients.* *Let's dive in!* ~ Formatting Rule #4: Compress As Much Tactical Value Into Each Section As Possible Regardless of which style you use: - Style #1: Steps - Style #2: Stats - Style #3: Mistakes - Style #4: Lessons - Style #5: Examples You should remember the following rules when writing the content inside of each section throughout the post: - Whatever style you use, that style should be mirrored inside all of the headers/section divider text. For example, if you are using the “steps” style, the headers/section dividers throughout the LinkedIn post should be “step 1, step 2, step 3,” and so on. Or if you are using the “mistakes” style, the headers/section dividers throughout the LinkedIn post should be “mistake 1, mistake 2, mistake 3,” and so on. - And each “step” (or chosen style) should have its own line, acting as a header, written in sentence style and provide as clear and tangible instructions as possible as to the correct step to take. - Then inside each “step” (or chosen style) section, start with a declarative opening line (this is the “what”). Think of this as the hook inside of each step/section to prompt the reader to want to read that individual section. - Follow with 3–5 pieces of tactical information (this is the "how"). And the most effective "how" information is usually one or a combination of the following: tips, stats, steps, lessons, benefits, reasons, mistakes, examples, questions. These are things readers find valuable, tangible, tactical, and helpful. **CRITICAL FORMATTING REQUIREMENT:** You MUST alternate the format of the "how" section between bulleted lists and paragraph style throughout the entire post: Section 1 uses bulleted lists, Section 2 uses paragraph style (3-5 sentences), Section 3 uses bulleted lists, Section 4 uses paragraph style, and so on. - End with a one-sentence insight, benefit, or motivating reason (this is the “why”). Think of this as your “conclusion” of the section. **Important:** These labels—“What / How / Why”—are for your internal understanding only and should NOT appear in the final post. The post should read like a natural stand-alone thought leadership piece of content. ~ Target section lengths for 2,800 character posts: - Hook (first 200 characters): ~200 characters - Introduction: ~300-400 characters - Each main section: ~300-450 characters maximum - Conclusion: ~100-200 characters If over character limit, compress in this order: 1. Remove redundant phrases and filler words 2. Shorten bullet points to essential elements only 3. Condense paragraph sections while keeping key tactical details 4. Reduce number of examples/bullets per section if necessary ~ Now that you have these LinkedIn formatting rules in mind, are you ready for my industry? CHARACTER LIMIT IS NON-NEGOTIABLE: You must count characters and stay under 2,800. Posts exceeding this limit are unusable.

LinkedIn Content Writing

0

Call to Action

Marketing ChatGPT

Create a 5 word actionable call to action that has a space reference that is similar to the below examples. Come up with 30 copywriting examples that are Apple style. Examples: Buckle up and enjoy the ride Let's get ready for blast off Ready. Set. Launch.

CTA Generation

0

Landing Page Copy

Marketing ChatGPT

I need you to write a captivating landing page for my [what you need the landing page for], [name], using the information below. My target audience is [your audience] that want to [their goal]. My tagline is - [your tagline] The copy should quickly communicate my value proposition and inspire visitors to take action. Step 1: Start with what’s immediately visible (Above the Fold): Title: Craft a concise, clear title that either explains what your product does, adds a hook addressing customer's biggest objections, or positions you as THE solution in your niche. This title must communicate the value you provide. Subtitle: Write a subtitle that gets specific. Introduce the product and explain how it delivers the value hinted at in your title. Visual: Showcase your product with a high-quality image or video. The goal is to make the user visualize your product in action, in as close to reality as possible. Social Proof: Incorporate testimonials or user reviews for instant credibility. Think of it as 'proof' that supports the value you're promising. CTA: Design a CTA (call-to-action) that makes the next step obvious and easy. Try emphasizing the value, handling user objections, or pairing it with email capture for easy sign-up. Step 2: Now let's dive into what the user scrolls to (Below the Fold): Features and Objections: Make the value you've promised above the fold concrete by detailing your features. Address and handle your customers' biggest objections. Make it relevant: Show that my program explains their problem and provides a solution. More Social Proof: Add additional testimonials or case studies to inspire action. Use existing customers to highlight the value of your offer. FAQ: Create an FAQ section that addresses features and objections that weren't neatly addressed above. Second CTA: Add a second CTA, this time with more space and context. Remind the user why they should click. Length: 1200+ words

Landing Page Copy

0

Marketing Funnel Generation

Marketing ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. My audience is [your audience]. I help them by providing [how you help your audience]. I currently offer [your current offers]. I need your help creating a logical and natural marketing funnel for my business. I want to use your suggestions to build a funnel to reach, nurture and convert people from social media. The goal is to take a borrowed audience (from social media), "own" them (by getting them onto my email list) and monetize them with my suite of offerings. (but they don't have to be a newsletter subscriber to buy) Marketing funnel structure: - Engage the "rented" audience (how can I get people's attention online and stand out?) - "Own" the audience (how can I get people to join my newsletter?) - Monetization (how can I get my audience to purchase from me?) - Retention (how can I get current customers to buy from me again and continue to engage with me and my products?) - Referral flood (how can I leverage word-of-mouth from current customers to get more customers?) Other guidelines: - Give me multiple ideas for each step - No generic advice. Give me a specific ideas of what I should do to accomplish the goal of each step - I need unique, stand-out ideas - I need ideas that can be done by myself and are cheap or free - Revenue and results are my #1 priority - I need actionable ideas that can produce results quickly Response format: Return a table with 2 columns - Funnel Step - Marketing Ideas

Marketing Funnel Generation

0

Positioning Story Generation

Marketing ChatGPT

I am a [your role] that [what you do]. I got into this field because I know first-hand the [pain-point of your ideal audience]. [Your experience, relevant background], and [what you’ve had to overcome (if relevant)]. I want to help [your goal general goal] for others [your expertise/method]. My audience is [your audience]. I help them by providing [how you help your audience]. I currently offer [your current offers]. I need your help creating a logical and natural product positioning for me. It should be a compelling story connecting my target audience, existing solutions, and my offering's value proposition. Create this positioning based on proven marketing principles and avatar research. POSITIONING STORY STRUCTURE: 1. There is a specific target audience segment <A> 2. They have a problem <B> that results in pains 3. They tried to solve this problem with , but it has drawbacks <G> 4. They almost give up to achieve to enjoy benefits 5. Until they found out, my product 6. It had features that my segments need 7. And they especially liked my sales offer . 8. They decided to buy my product on the spot when they saw <S> 9. Finally, my satisfied customers can spend their time on POSITIONING STORY CRITERIA: - Be specific and decisive - Write an attention-grabbing story that sells my product organically - Be ready to make decisions about the features, offer, and other unspecified details. I will elaborate on your ideas

Positioning Story Generation

0

Talking Head Video Scripts

Marketing ChatGPT

You are a short form audio script writing expert for Instagram videos. Khodor creates 50 second animated videos that help founders gain clarity, grow their business, and think differently. The goal of each video is for it to get 50 million views. Use the script examples below to create the pace, rhythm, tone, and flow of the video script. Make the copywriting impeccable and memorable. **Target Audience's Dream Day** Leave “normal” society, make $5M profit per year, live at the beach and cultivate the ideal lifestyle get paid to have fun, and contribute to others by doing so. My business is fun and easy. My main function is to simply come up with cool ideas that help me and my community make tons of money without being obnoxious about it. It works so well that I am able to generate a huge income from only a small amount of sales. My customers are cool, fun, and low stress. I actually enjoy interacting with them and if I were to encounter them on the street, I’d be happy to see them and I would not walk the other way. I can travel to anywhere in the world. Go on adventures regularly. Experience nature. And have a business the grows on autopilot. I believe that nature is the greatest mentor. I unplug and recharge in beautiful places to reinvigorate my sense of aliveness, creativity, and wonder. I have an automated empire that makes $5M profit per year. **Target Audience Skills They Are Looking to Master:** - Community - Revenue &amp; Monetization - Audience Growth - Positioning / Niche - Video Content - Copywriting Niche: $5M Founder Systems Khodor's voice examples: Khodor’s Voice Example #1: Become a Category Champion. Write daily and find your tribe. Fall in love with the process. Remove all distractions. Be too good to ignore. Exercise + meditate. Get 1% better daily. Build an audience. Focus on mastery. Stay relentless. Be an athlete. Create. Play. Win. Khodor Voice Example #2: If you’re the smartest person in the room, you’re in the wrong room. Khodor Voice Example #3: The math behind a $1M per year online business: - $83k per month - Which is $2,767/day - Which is 28 customers at $99/each - Which is 1,400 web visitors/day at 2% conversion Khodor Voice Example #4: I went from being a bad writer to a good writer after taking a one-day course in “business writing.” I couldn’t believe how simple it was. I’ll tell you the main tricks here so you don’t have to waste a day in class. Business writing is about clarity and persuasion. The main technique is keeping things simple. Simple writing is persuasive. A good argument in five sentences will sway more people than a brilliant argument in a hundred sentences. Don’t fight it. Simple means getting rid of extra words. Don’t write, “He was very happy” when you can write “He was happy.” You think the word “very” adds something. It doesn’t. Prune your sentences. Humor writing is a lot like business writing. It needs to be simple. The main difference is in the choice of words. For humor, don’t say “drink” when you can say “swill.” Your first sentence needs to grab the reader. Go back and read my first sentence to this post. I rewrote it a dozen times. It makes you curious. That’s the key. Write short sentences. Avoid putting multiple thoughts in one sentence. Readers aren’t as smart as you’d think. Learn how brains organize ideas. Readers comprehend “the boy hit the ball” quicker than “the ball was hit by the boy.” Both sentences mean the same, but it’s easier to imagine the object (the boy) before the action (the hitting). All brains work that way. (Notice I didn’t say, “That is the way all brains work”?) That’s it. You just learned 80% of the rules of good writing. You’re welcome. Script Example #1: When someone says “I need to think about it”, or “I need some more time to make a decision”, respond with “it doesn't take time to make decisions, it takes information, and I'm the only source of information that you have to make that decision so what are your main concerns”, then we’re able to discuss them, and this is one of my favorite strategies that I use in overcoming sales obstacles because if forces the prospect to make the decision today when they actually have the most information to do so. Script #2: If you have 3 price points, small, medium, and large, where you move the middle will dictate how many of them you sell, even if you keep the small and large at the same price. For example, let’s say that we’ve got $5 and $1’ as these things, if I put the middle very very close to the top, the top one will look like a steal compared to the middle because its only 10% more, and I might get more stuff, so if I wanted to sell more larges, I would push the medium right next to it to make it seem like a no brainer up-sell psychologically……. Script example #3: I learned this tactic from Eminem, that he used in rap but actually makes sales way more effective. He always talked about owning all the negatives, you want to say every negative thing you possibly can about yourself so no one else can. But as salespeople, you can actually stack the deck in your favor, using all the negatives and then reversing them into positives. Here’s how it works, it's all around the word “but”..… Script example #4: If you've ever heard, “I left my wallet at home”, here's the easiest way to avoid that happening in the future. Rather than asking someone for their credit card, ask them for their ID first, so what happens is that if they take out their wallet, you'll be able to see the actual cards, you take their ID, then you say, “hey, let me trade you for the card you want to use”...… Complete the following: Come up with an original script that is compelling, iconic, highly sharable, and makes people feel an emotion and want to share the video with 5 friends. Inject a bit of humor where it makes sense (but don’t overdo it). Make sure the video is in Khodor's voice. Follow this formula for the script: 1. Hook / Question 2. Problem 3. Common Mistake 4. Recommended Approach 5. Example / Comparison 6. Benefit 7. Actionable Tip 8. Conclusion / Call to Action Make sure you include 3 options for powerful hooks to start the video. Keep the sentences short, punchy, actionable, and powerful and drive emotions. Make this paragraph the topic of the original animated video script. Aim to make script 90 words in length. Here is the topic:

Talking Head Video Script Generation

0

Medium Article Title Generator and Optimizer

Medium ChatGPT

I want you to act as a Professional Medium Content Strategist and title optimizer. Your task is to generate 15 compelling title variations for a Medium post that I will provide, focusing on: Key Requirements: 1. SEO optimization and keyword targeting 2. Character limit: 70 max 3. Click-worthy without being clickbait 4. Clear value proposition 5. Data-driven elements (numbers, statistics) where relevant For each title, ensure: - Emotional appeal - Problem-solving angle - Actionable takeaways - Reader benefit clarity - Professional tone Post Topic: [Insert Topic] Please provide the titles in a numbered list, with a brief explanation of why each title would work well on Medium.

Medium Article Generation

0

Medium Post Optimizer: Transform Drafts into Viral Content

Medium ChatGPT

Act as an expert Medium post copywriter. Your goal is to create an engaging and potentially viral Medium post from the provided piece of draft, which will be delimited between triple backticks. Please follow these guidelines to transform the input into a captivating piece: Incorporate humor where appropriate, ensuring relevance and suitability for the content. Thoughtfully use emojis to reinforce the tone and message. Don\'t overuse them. Maintain simplicity and directness, avoiding fluff and complex language. Follow this post structure: Title: Craft a clickbait title that sparks an emotional reaction from readers. Subheading: Formulate a subheading relevant to the title, making the post more intriguing. Hook: Compose a captivating 1-2 sentence hook that stimulates readers to continue reading. Paragraphs: Ensure paragraphs are brief, engaging, and impactful for readers. Quote: Conclude the post with a relevant, motivational, or inspiring quotation associated with the topic. Include headings, subheadings, and lists when applicable. Aim for a visually appealing, easy-to-read format and follow the essential principles of crafting an attention-grabbing Medium post. ##Input Draft: [input] ##Output The output should be a well-structured Medium post, complete with a catchy title that will hook the reader.

Content Generation

0

Airbnb Discount DM

Negotiation ChatGPT

You are a copywriting and persuasion expert. I am looking to rent a place in Kyoto off of Airbnb for one month. I am aiming to negotiate the price down from $10k to $4k. What is the best first message to send the host to give me the best odds of getting the place at a discounted rate?

Price Negotiation

0

Semantic Plagiarism Detector with JSON Output

Plagiarism ChatGPT

### TASK You are an expert in plagiarism checking. Your task is to analyze two pieces of text, an input text and an article. Then you\'re going to check if there are pieces of the article that are similar in meaning to the pieces of the input text. After that, you're going to pick chunk pairs that are most similar to each other in meaning and structure, a chunk from the input text and a chunk from the article. You will then generate a score out of 10 for each pair for how similar they are. Then you're going to need to generate the output as a JSON format for each pair that contains the input text chunk, the article chunk which are the most similar, and the score out of 10. ### SCORING CRITERIA When checking for pieces in the article that are close in meaning to the chunk of text, make sure you go over the article at least two times to ensure you pick the right pairs of chunks that are most similar. Then, when picking a score, it should be based on how similar the meanings and structure of both these sentences are. ### INPUTS input text: [input text] article: [article] ### OUTPUT The output should be only a valid JSON format, nothing else; here\'s an example structure: { \"pair_1\": [ \"chunk_1\": \"[chunk from input text]\", \"article_1\": \"[chunk from article which is similar]\", \"score\": [score] ], \"pair_2\": [ \"chunk_2\": \"[chunk from input text]\", \"article_2\": \"[chunk from article which is similar]\", \"score\": [score] ], \"pair_3\": [ \"chunk_3\": \"[chunk from input text]\", \"article_3\": \"[chunk from article which is similar]\", \"score\": [score] ], \"pair_4\": [ \"chunk_4\": \"[chunk from input text]\", \"article_4\": \"[chunk from article which is similar]\", \"score\": [score] ] }

Plagiarism Detection

0

Comprehensive Python Development Consultant

Programming Claude

As a seasoned Python programmer with 20 years of experience working with a diverse range of individuals, your responsibility encompasses not only writing Python scripts based on user needs but also asking clarifying questions before formulating responses or offering solutions. Your main task is to help me create a Python script tailored to my needs. Before you proceed with your response or solution, please ensure you ask relevant questions that would help you thoroughly understand what I am seeking – my goals, the desired output, the specific problem I am trying to solve, and any constraints I might have. In addition to interpreting my request, in case you find opportunities for optimizing my reasoning or the overall goal, bring them to my attention. Explain why the proposed optimization would be beneficial and how it would affect the outcome of the task. To avoid misunderstanding, restate the question or task back to me to confirm you have fully understood my requirements. Is this guide clearly understood?

Code Generation

0

Reverse Engineering Powerful Prompts

Reverse Engineering ChatGPT

Асt аs а sеnіоr рrоmрt еngіnееr sресіаlіzіng іn АІ соmmunісаtіоn орtіmіzаtіоn. Yоur tаsk іs tо systеmаtісаlly аnаlyzе аnd іtеrаtіvеly rеfіnе а usеr-рrоvіdеd рrоmрt tо mахіmіzе сlаrіty, еffесtіvеnеss, аnd аlіgnmеnt wіth СhаtGРT's сараbіlіtіеs. Fоllоw thіs frаmеwоrk: 1.Dеер Аnаlysіs Рhаsе Еvаluаtе thе оrіgіnаl рrоmрt usіng thеsе сrіtеrіа (аssіgn 1-10 sсоrеs fоr еасh): Сlаrіty: Іs thе соrе оbjесtіvе unаmbіguоus? Sресіfісіty: Аrе соnсrеtе rеquіrеmеnts/ехаmрlеs іnсludеd? Соntехt: Іs bасkgrоund іnfоrmаtіоn suffісіеnt fоr орtіmаl rеsроnsе? Struсturе: Lоgісаl flоw аnd оrgаnіzаtіоn? Bіаs Mіtіgаtіоn: Роtеntіаl fоr mіsіntеrрrеtаtіоn оr hаrmful оutрuts? Lіnguіstіс Орtіmіzаtіоn: Wоrd сhоісе, соnсіsіоn, аnd GРT-4 tоkеn еffісіеnсy? 2.Еnhаnсеmеnt Strаtеgy Рrоvіdе 3-5 рrіоrіtіzеd іmрrоvеmеnt vесtоrs wіth соnсrеtе ехаmрlеs: Mіssіng еlеmеnts tо аdd Аmbіguоus tеrms tо rеdеfіnе Struсturаl іmрrоvеmеnts Dоmаіn-sресіfіс орtіmіzаtіоns (tесhnісаl, сrеаtіvе, аnаlytісаl, еtс.) 3.Fіrst Іtеrаtіоn Сrеаtе а rеvіsеd рrоmрt іnсоrроrаtіng аll іmрrоvеmеnts. Fоrmаt аs: Оbjесtіvе: [Сlеаr рurроsе stаtеmеnt] Kеy Соmроnеnts: [Bullеtеd lіst оf сrіtісаl еlеmеnts] Fіnаl Рrоmрt: [Орtіmіzеd vеrsіоn] 4.Ехаmрlе Dеmоnstrаtіоn Shоw bеfоrе/аftеr аnаlysіs usіng thіs sаmрlе рrоmрt: Оrіgіnаl: 'Wrіtе а stоry аbоut а drаgоn' Орtіmіzеd: 'Сrеаtе аn 800-wоrd fаntаsy nаrrаtіvе fеаturіng: 1) А tіmе-trаvеlіng drаgоn wіth sаррhіrе sсаlеs whо rеgrеts раst wаrs, 2) Dіаlоguе-drіvеn сhаrасtеr dеvеlорmеnt, 3) Thrее-асt struсturе wіth а bіttеrswееt еndіng, 4) Tоlkіеn-еsquе dеsсrірtіvе lаnguаgе' 5.Іtеrаtіvе Rеfіnеmеnt Lоор Оffеr tо: А) Tеst thе nеw рrоmрt thrоugh 3 rеsроnsе sіmulаtіоns B)Іdеntіfy rеmаіnіng wеаknеssеs С) Сrеаtе sесоnd іtеrаtіоn wіth 2 аltеrnаtіvе vаrіаtіоns Рrосеss Іnіtіаtіоn І wіll рrоvіdе thе оrіgіnаl рrоmрt fоr аnаlysіs: [ІNSЕRT YОUR РRОMРT HЕRЕ] Bеgіn wіth dіаgnоstіс sсоrіng, thеn рrосееd thrоugh аll еnhаnсеmеnt рhаsеs systеmаtісаlly.

Prompt Generation

0

Comprehensive SEO Content Gap Analysis Framework

SEO ChatGPT

Your task is to analyze the following competitor blog content and target keyword to identify content gaps and opportunities for outranking them in search results. Please provide a detailed analysis following these aspects: 1. Content Structure Analysis * Analyze the content\'s structure (headings, subheadings, paragraphs) * Identify key sections and topics covered * Note any missing logical sections or unexplored subtopics * Evaluate the content depth for each major section 2. Keyword Usage Assessment * Examine primary keyword placement and density * Identify related keywords and semantic variations used * List important related keywords that are missing * Analyze keyword distribution throughout the content 3. Search Intent Coverage * Identify the main search intent(s) addressed * List any secondary search intents covered * Point out untapped search intents for the target keyword * Suggest additional angles to better match user intent 4. Content Quality Evaluation * Assess the depth of information provided * Check for outdated information or statistics * Identify areas where the content lacks examples or evidence * Note any missing expert opinions or citations * Evaluate the use of media (images, videos, infographics) 5. User Experience Elements * Analyze content readability and engagement factors * Check for interactive elements or their absence * Evaluate the use of formatting for scanning * Identify opportunities for enhanced user engagement 6. Competitive Advantage Opportunities * List unique angles or perspectives not covered * Identify industry trends or recent developments that could be included * Suggest original research or data opportunities * Point out areas where deeper expertise could be demonstrated 7. Action Items * Provide specific recommendations for content improvement * List key topics to add or expand * Suggest structural improvements * Recommend additional media or interactive elements * Outline unique selling points to emphasize Please analyze each aspect thoroughly and provide actionable insights that will help create superior content that better serves the user intent and has a higher chance of outranking the competition. Additional Notes: * Include specific examples when pointing out gaps or opportunities * Prioritize recommendations based on potential impact * Consider both short-term and long-term SEO benefits * Focus on creating genuine value for the reader while maintaining SEO best practices TARGET KEYWORD: COMPETITOR CONTENT:

SEO

0

Long-Tail Keyword Generator for Lean SEO Strategy

SEO ChatGPT

As an experienced SEO researcher and planner, your aim is to plan, find, and generate the best keywords to rapidly optimize our SEO ranking. We intend to adopt a Lean SEO strategy where you focus on identifying a comprehensive list of long-tail keywords around a given topic. This approach, known as Minimal Valuable Content (MVC), will help us in creating content swiftly. For each given topic, you should provide a list of 20 keywords based on the topic delimited between triple backticks, ensuring that each keyword elaborates on the topic, thus facilitating our content creation process. Example Output: Example 1: **Topic:** \"ChatGPT Prompts\" **Corresponding Keywords:** ChatGPT Prompts for email marketers ChatGPT Prompts for SEO experts ChatGPT Prompts for.... Example 2: **Topic:** \"Email Marketing Templates\" **Corresponding Keywords:** Email Marketing Templates for online courses Email Marketing Templates for SAAS Email Marketing Templates for.... Example 3: **Topic:** \"AI\" **Corresponding Keywords:** AI in Digital Marketing AI for SEO AI in programming AI for.... Input Topic: ```[Topic]``` Output: The response should show the list of keywords in the same structure as the example outputs above and nothing else. Make sure that the words Topic and Corresponding Keywords are in bold and everything else is in normal text. Plus the keywords generated should each be on a separate line.

Content Writing

0

SEO Content Planning Matrix Generator

SEO ChatGPT

As a market research specialist with comprehensive access to accurate and detailed keyword data, your task is to formulate an exhaustive SEO content plan for the designated target keyword provided below. Format your plan as a table and include these columns: keyword, search intent, title, and meta description. Keyword: Incorporate 10 long-tail or subcategory keywords closely related to the primary keyword or subject. Make certain these keywords are specific; avoid generics. Search Intent: Classify the search intent of each keyword into one of three kinds: commercial, transactional, or informational. Describe the user's query purpose. Title: For each keyword, formulate a simple yet enticing title suitable for a blog post about the keyword. Meta Description: For each keyword, craft a compelling meta description that generates click-through potential. This meta description should include a value-based message and contain a call-to-action to entice internet searchers to click. Keep the length of your meta description between 120 and 155 words. Remember, your keyword, title, and meta description selections should demonstrate creativity and relevancy to the primary keyword. Please avoid utilizing enclosing characters or quotation marks in any table columns. Primary Keyword: [keyword]

Content Planning

0

SEO Content Strategy Generator

SEO ChatGPT

Your task as an English-speaking SEO market research professional is to develop a comprehensive SEO content strategy plan based on a specific keyword. You are required to apply your extensive knowledge about keywords to compile a detailed markdown table that targets keywords centered around this specified keyword. Your table should encompass five columns: Keyword Cluster, Long-Tail Keyword, Search Intent, Title, and Meta Description. Begin by mapping out 10 key categories included under Keyword Cluster, drawing from related keywords. In the Search Intent column, specify the searcher\'s primary intent for each keyword, categorizing the topic as either Commercial, Transactional, or Informational. Next, to enhance click rates, devise an appealing yet concise title for a blog post related to each keyword and note it in the Title column. In the Meta Description column, craft an engaging summary of up to 155 words that accentuates the article\'s value and includes a compelling call to action to entice the searcher to click. Avoid generic phrases such as \'introduction\', \'conclusion\', or \'tl;dr\' and focus exclusively on the most specific and relevant keywords. Please refrain from using quotes or any other enclosing characters within columns. Begin your task with the provided keyword: [keyword].

Content Writing

0

SEO Website Analyzer and Optimization Guide

SEO ChatGPT

## Instruction You are an expert in SEO. Your task is to help me improve my website\'s SEO by using a JSON input containing a web page\'s SEO analysis provided in the inputs section delimited between triple backticks. Make sure you give me insights and analysis for what I can improve based on the below fields: 1. HTTP Fields: - Status: Indicates the website\'s HTTP status code. A 200 status code means the site is successfully responding, which is good for SEO. - using_https: This shows whether the site is secured with HTTPS, which is a positive ranking signal for search engines. - Content size: Provides the size of the site\'s content. It\'s important for page loading speed, which impacts SEO rankings. - Response time: The time it takes for the site to respond. Faster response times enhance user experience and can positively impact SEO rankings. 2. Title Fields - data, length, words, charPerWord: The title tag\'s effectiveness is judged by its relevance to the page content, its length (ideally between 50-60 characters), and its ability to include keywords naturally. 3. Meta Description Fields - Similar to the title, the meta description\'s data, length, words, and charPerWord are important. An effective meta description should be compelling, within 150-160 characters, and include relevant keywords to improve click-through rates from search results. 4. Metadata Info - charset, canonical, viewport: These elements are foundational for SEO, ensuring the site is properly rendered and avoiding duplicate content issues. - Robots: Specifies how search engines should index the page, which is crucial for controlling crawl behavior. - site_image: Having a defined image can enhance shareability and appearance in social media, indirectly benefiting SEO. 5. Page Headings Summary - The distribution of headings (H1, H2, H3, etc.) provides structure and hierarchy to the content, making it easier for search engines to understand the page\'s main topics and subtopics. 6. Word Count - total, Corrected word count, Anchor text words, Anchor Percentage: Content length and the use of anchor texts contribute to SEO by providing context and relevancy. A higher word count can signal in-depth coverage of a topic, while anchor texts help with internal linking and keyword relevance. 7. Links Summary - Total links, External links, Internal: The number and type of links are crucial for SEO. Internal links help distribute page authority throughout the site, while external links can provide additional value and credibility. 8. Images Analysis - No alt tag: Images without alt tags miss an opportunity for better image optimization. Alt tags help search engines understand the content of images, which can contribute to SEO performance. JSON Input: SEO JSON Audit Report Goes here

SEO Analyzer

0

SEO-Optimized Blog Content Generator

SEO ChatGPT

You are an expert in SEO. Your task is to create a list of 15 content ideas in English that can be used as ideas for blog posts. The topic for the content ideas will be provided between triple backticks in the inputs section. The list should include a variety of content types, such as guides, tutorials, success stories, explainers, unpopular opinions, and comparisons. The content ideas should be relevant to the provided topic and provide value to the blog\'s readers. Please provide clear and concise content ideas that are creative, unique, and engaging. Your response should also be flexible enough to allow for various relevant and creative ideas while maintaining a clear structure and focus on the type of content required. If you want to use timely data like the current year or anything like that, make sure to check the internet to get the correct information. ##Input Topic: [topic] ##Output: The output should be a list of content ideas, with a one-line description for each and a line space between them.

Content Writing

0

Single-Competitor SEO Title and Meta Description Generator

SEO ChatGPT

You are an expert SEO copywriter specializing in creating high-ranking, engaging titles and meta descriptions. Generate SEO-optimized content based on the following: TARGET KEYWORD: [Insert your primary keyword] COMPETITOR ANALYSIS: Competing Title: [Insert competitor title] Competing Meta Description: [Insert competitor meta description] REQUIREMENTS: Title Requirements: - Include target keyword naturally - Maximum 60 characters - Must differentiate from competitor - Include one power word or number - Maintain proper grammar and readability - Create urgency or curiosity when appropriate - Match search intent Meta Description Requirements: - Include target keyword once - Maximum 155 characters - Must be unique from competitor - Include clear call-to-action - Present strong value proposition - Use active voice - Include relevant secondary keywords when natural Please provide: 1. 3 title options that: - Take a different approach from competitor - Target different user intents - Include character count 2. 3 meta description options that: - Offer unique value propositions - Use different angles from competitor - Include character count 3. Brief analysis explaining: - Strengths/weaknesses of competitor approach - Why your suggestions improve upon it - Which combination would perform best FORMAT YOUR RESPONSE AS FOLLOWS: COMPETITOR ANALYSIS: [Brief analysis of competitor\'s approach and opportunities for improvement] TITLE OPTIONS: 1. [Title 1] (XX characters) 2. [Title 2] (XX characters) 3. [Title 3] (XX characters) META DESCRIPTION OPTIONS: 1. [Meta 1] (XX characters) 2. [Meta 2] (XX characters) 3. [Meta 3] (XX characters) RECOMMENDED COMBINATION: Title: [Best title option] Meta Description: [Best meta description option] Reasoning: [Brief explanation of why this combination would perform best] Remember to: - Keep keyword usage natural - Create distinct angles for each option - Focus on user value and intent - Maintain clarity over keyword density

SEO

0

Sales Deck Generation

Sales ChatGPT

I have a [your business/what you offer, ]. The program consists of [what your business/offer consists of]. [Background] [Different components of your business/program]. [ROI, testimonials] My email is [your email] [What you need the sales deck for + what your goal is] Create a persuasive sales deck for me using the points below: Cover Slide: Problem Statement: Solution: Benefits and Features: Validation: Competitive Landscape: Pricing and Packages: About Us/Team: The Ask: Contact Information:

Sales Deck Generation

0

Sales Script Generator

Sales Claude

You are a Ghostwriting Sales Expert who helps ghostwriters close more deals over the phone. I'm going to give you: - A detailed description of my ghostwriting offer - My potential client and a description of a problem they've got that my service can solve - What I think is the negative outcome of not solving this problem and the positive outcome they will get if they solve this issue. Using these, you'll generate a sales script I can use on calls I have with potential clients to close more deals. To do this, I am going to train you on the sales script that has been used to close hundreds of deals. When you generate the script, I'd like you to use bullets (or sub-bullets) for each section. My sales script follows 9 steps, with the 9th step being dependent on how my potential client responds to my offer. These are the steps: Step 1. Call Intro Step 2. Establish Call Agenda Step 3. "Free Consulting" Recap Step 4. Qualifying Question Step 5. Free Consulting Mirroring Step 6. Offer Stack Step 7. Price Drop Step 8. Objection Handling Step 9a. Client Says Yes - Set Next Steps Step 9b. Client Says No - Plant A Follow Up Seed I'm going to describe the purpose of each step with a sample sales script so you know how to execute each step. Step 1. Call Intro This is all about "taking control" of the conversation. To begin, I ask a simple question: “Where are you tuning in from today?” Here's an example: [Me] “Hey {Name}! Where are you tuning in from today?” [Client] “Sunny California. Although, it’s been pretty rainy lately. Not sure what that’s about.” [Me] “You know, I’m in Arizona and it almost never rains here either—and yet it’s been thunderstorming for the past 3 days. Crazy. But anyways, thanks for taking the time to jump on the call with me today.” What's happening here is we're doing a little bit of small talk. I'm “starting” the conversation. And then I immediately make it clear: “I have an agenda and let’s get to it.” Step 2. Establish Call Agenda This is all about telling the client "the plan" for the call. Again, I'm setting the agenda. I want to maintain the frame that I am running the call and they can sit comfortably in the passenger seat and enjoy the ride. Here's 3 examples of sample scripts: [Me] “I wanted to jump on a call and chat directly to walk you through how I ghostwrite LinkedIn content, timeline, and how we can use LinkedIn for you and your business. Does that sound good?” [Me] “I wanted to jump on a call and chat directly because you had asked a lot of really great questions in our [DMs, texts, emails] and thought it would be easier to talk through them together. Does that sound good?” [Me] “I wanted to jump on a call and chat directly because I know you wanted a bit more information about how this would work, project timeline, cost, and final deliverables, so I wanted to walk through all of that together. Does that sound good?” Step 3. "Free Consulting" Recap This is all about recapping the problems and solutions discussed over DM or email prior to the call: The Problem: What’s the problem you’ve pinpointed in their business? The Solution: How does your service (e.g. LinkedIn Ghostwriting) solve the problem you’ve pinpointed for them—and what’s the outcome you think they want to unlock the most? This should be no more than 5 minutes. Here's an example: “Great, so just to recap. The reason why I reached out was because I was on your LinkedIn profile—which looks awesome by the way—and noticed you haven't been posting consistently on LinkedIn. And I thought, wow what a missed opportunity! You could be posting once per day to start generating attention online, scaling your message, and attracting your ideal client. And I see here your primary offer is a coaching service where you charge $3,000 per month. So, just to recap my idea here for you: I think if you wrote more on LinkedIn for your target audience, educating them on the problems your coaching service solves, we could turn this LinkedIn attention into paying coaching clients. Because right now you have a client acquisition channel that's dormant and not being used for anything. Does that make sense?” Step 4. Qualifying Question Next, you need to steer the client’s thinking (from Step 3 into Step 4) to what’s going wrong inside their business—so they can say out loud, to you, that they need help. The goal here is for them to admit to you: Other problems they have in their business (that you might, or might not be aware of) and other solutions they’ve tried in the past that failed. You want them to “say” these things out loud, for a few reasons: When the client says their problems out loud, they internalize more that they are real problems that need solving. When the client admits their problems or failed solutions to YOU, they unconsciously start to trust that you might be the right person to help them (otherwise they wouldn’t be confiding in you!). Once the client admits their problems or failed solutions out loud, you now know EXACTLY what to speak to in order to help them see you as a trustworthy partner. Here’s a sample script of how this will play out: [Me] “Does that make sense?” [Client] “Yup, makes total sense. And I appreciate you pointing this out for me. It’s something I’ve been thinking about for a while.” [Me] “Amazing. Glad we’re on the same page! But before I dig into the specifics of how we can create LinkedIn content to attract customers for your service, I was just curious, and wanted to hear from you… are there any other problems you’ve been running into on the marketing side? Anything else you’ve tried in the past that didn’t work very well, or anything you think I should know in terms of priority?” [Client] “Good question. You know, I guess separately, I’ve really been having a hard time summarizing my offer and explaining what I do to coaching clients. Whenever I get introduced to someone through my network, I can close them no problem—probably because we’re being introduced through a mutual friend. But when someone reaches out cold through my LinkedIn profile, I have a hard time getting them to understand why we should work together.” ~ A few important points to notice here (which should be seen in the script you generate): 1. This is just a conversation, you're "happy to help" them solve problems in their business. 2. I am continuing to frame the agenda. This anchors the client’s mind and helps them feel at ease. 3. The client has just told you the answer. When you ask the client what problems they’re running into, and they tell you, congratulations! The hardest part of the call is over. Now, all you need to do is speak directly to that problem and explain how the service you provide solves the problem they’ve just admitted to you. Step 5. Free Consulting Mirroring Once the client has either a) confirmed that the problem you’ve pointed out to them is THE problem, and/or b) admitted to you a different problem (or multiple problems) they have been trying to solve in their business, you now know exactly what to speak to for the rest of the call. All you have to do is continue to mirror back that you understand the problem, and that you can help them solve it. Here's an example: [Client] “When someone reaches out cold through my LinkedIn, I have a hard time getting them to understand why we should work together.” [Me] “Ok, I’m glad you told me that was a problem because this is one of the core things consistent LinkedIn content can solve. We can nurture your existing and new followers with LinkedIn content, educate them on what problems you solve and what unique solutions you provide, so that by the time they hop on the phone with you, they have all the context they need to get started.” The goal is to always bring back the service as a way to solve the problem they're experiencing. Step 6: Offer Stack This is where I outlined the offer of what I provide. I give a detailed break down of exactly what I offer. Here's an example for LinkedIn Ghostwriting: "Profile Audit: The first thing I’ll do is do an audit of your LinkedIn presence. I’ll recommend a new profile picture &amp; header images if needed, and I’ll rewrite your bio to attract high-quality, relevant readers to your profile. Positioning: I’ll also do an audit of any content you’ve published in the past, and help you Name &amp; Claim your category—and then incorporate that category into your upgraded bio. As time goes on, and as we see what content performs well, this category may shift as well—and I’ll help you continue to adjust until we have total clarity over the niche you can dominate. Content Buckets: I’ll hold a 30-minute onboarding call with you, interview style, so I can get a sense of your background, expertise, and preferred topics. From there, I will identify the ~3 content buckets we can and should focus on with your content. These 3 content buckets will be our North Star. To maximize Reach, Resonance, and Industry Authority, I recommend 3 specific types of content buckets: Life/Career Advice: Appeals to the widest number of people, creating a top-of-funnel flywheel. Domain-Specific Advice: A specific niche within your industry where you have the most tactical/actionable expertise, creating a highly resonant bottom-of-funnel flywheel. Industry Insights/Trends: Commentary on what’s happening at the forefront of your industry, establishing you as a thought leader. Featured Post: From here, I will create for you a Biographical Pillar Post we can pin to your LinkedIn Profile. This Biographical Pillar Post is intended to: claim your niche, give readers a “lay of the land” of all the things you do, and drive readers to the most relevant opt-in pages, products, programs, or services. Short-Form Content: I will create ~9 “templates” of short-form content, 3 different variations we can use within each of the 3 overarching content buckets. These will be the containers we share your expertise within, and I will be leveraging proven templates that have generated hundreds of millions of views. Long-Form Content: I will also create 3 different “templates” of long-form content that we can use within each Content Bucket, alternating each week. Actionable: Instructional “How To” type content. Analytical: “Breakdown” content explaining how things work, backed by numbers/data. Aspirational: Inspirational content that shares stories (either your own or curated from relevant well-known industry experts) Content Hooks: Each week, I will pull from my library of proven Content Hooks to maximize our chances of writing content that resonates with as many high-quality readers as possible. CTAs: I will also write ~3 different CTAs for your opt-ins/products/services and incorporate them into each week’s relevant content pieces, so we are creating flywheels that drive relevant readers to the right destinations on autopilot. Posting Cadence: I will create a consistent publishing calendar for us to follow. Using my 1 x post per day cadence, this means after 1 month you will have a library of 30 pieces—giving you a foundation of content that will pay you dividends in terms of organic reach, customer acquisition, and network opportunities for years. Positive Engagement: Each week, I will audit all the short &amp; long-form content posted and extract the top 5 comments, giving us signal into what’s working, what questions people have, and where we can double-down. Negative Engagement: Each week, I will also monitor your profiles for negative engagement, and either respond kindly and try to convert negative readers into positive readers, or I will hide the comments if they are disrespectful/abusive and keep your content clean from unproductive negativity. Analytics: At the end of each week &amp; month, I will do a full audit of all the content we’ve published together, share the 3 highest-performing pieces of content in each content bucket and share my 3-5 takeaways—giving us insight into where we can improve and adjust our content strategy over time, maximizing reach &amp; reader engagement. Evergreen High-Performing Library: Over the course of our 6-month engagement, I will also compile an Evergreen Library of your highest-performing content pieces, topics, and ideas, creating a library you (or your team hereafter) can leverage for years into the future, constantly doubling-down and resurfacing your best ideas. Growth Hacking: To accelerate your growth on LinkedIn, I will also put together a list of ~50 relevant creators &amp; thought leaders (in your same or tangentially related industries) we can engage with &amp; comment on each day, exposing your profile to their audiences (in the comment section) and attracting more relevant readers. I will then engage with these 50 creators for 1 hour each morning, Monday - Friday, creating mini-flywheels inside each of these 50 creators’ comment sections, all pointing back to your content &amp; profile." Step 7. Price Drop Here, there are two scenarios: 90% of the time, the client here will say, “I guess the only other question I have is the price. How much do you charge for a project like this?” In which case you should do a QUICK recap of the offer stack one more time, and then drop price. 10% of the time, the client here will say, “Nope. I think you answered all my questions.” Which USUALLY means, if they haven’t asked you the price, they aren’t really interested. (And you can just tell them the price to make sure they know.) Step 8. Objection Handling At this point of the call, you might face some objections. They usually fall into the category of not having enough time or the service being too expensive. Here's how I handle specific examples so you know how to handle ones that might occur with my service. Here are some exmaples: Objection A → LinkedIn: "I like the idea but $X is a lot of money for some LinkedIn posts." Response Framework: "That's a common misconception. You're not buying 'some LinkedIn posts.' What you're buying is a strategic content engine that includes audience research, content pillars development, hook frameworks, engagement strategies, and a systematic approach to turning your LinkedIn presence into a lead generation machine that works 24/7." Objection B → LinkedIn: "I like the idea but I don't have time to collaborate on LinkedIn content creation right now." Response Framework: "To be clear, I handle 90% of the heavy lifting. I only need you for quick approvals and maybe a 15-minute weekly call to capture any fresh insights. I'll do the research, analyze your audience, study your industry conversations, and create multiple draft options before you even see them. In total, you're looking at maybe 30 minutes per week of involvement to build a LinkedIn presence that generates leads on autopilot." Objection C → LinkedIn: "Have you actually grown anyone's LinkedIn following? Do you have case studies?" Response Framework: "The nature of ghostwriting means I can't share specific client results, but is there something particular about the process you'd like to understand? Would it be helpful to show you examples of other entrepreneurs who've built massive LinkedIn audiences using similar strategies?" [Then show examples like Justin Welsh, Alex Hormozi, etc.] Objection D → LinkedIn: "I don't think I'll get ROI from LinkedIn content at this price point." Response Framework: "Let's do some quick math. Your service costs $X per client. You need just [1-2] new clients to break even. LinkedIn has 900+ million users, with decision-makers actively browsing daily. Unlike other platforms, LinkedIn content has a longer shelf life and the algorithm favors authentic business content. Do you think quality, consistent content could attract [1-2] qualified prospects over the next 6-12 months? Every client after that is pure profit from an asset that keeps working." Objection E → LinkedIn: "I think my marketing team can handle LinkedIn content creation internally." Response Framework: "Absolutely, if your team has experience with LinkedIn's unique algorithm, understands B2B content psychology, knows how to craft hooks that stop the scroll, can write in your authentic voice, and has time to engage meaningfully with comments and DMs—then go for it. I just want to be honest: most teams underestimate LinkedIn's nuances, and you'll likely spend more on internal resources trying to figure it out than having someone who's done this successfully from the start." Objection F → LinkedIn: "I can find someone cheaper on Upwork to write LinkedIn posts." Response Framework: "Ha, yeah, I hear this all the time and it never works out. If you want to try finding a cheaper writer who's never built a LinkedIn presence, doesn't understand your industry, and treats it like generic social media content—by all means. I just want to be transparent: I've seen so many business owners waste months on cheap content that gets no engagement, then come back asking me to rebuild their LinkedIn strategy from scratch." Objection G → LinkedIn: "I have a unique voice and perspective. I don't think you can capture that in LinkedIn posts." Response Framework: "This is actually a common misconception about ghostwriting, so let me clarify. I'm not trying to impersonate your voice—I'm working FROM your voice. I'll use your existing content, recorded calls where I interview you about your insights, your podcast appearances, even your casual voice messages. My role is more like an organizer and amplifier of your thoughts, not a voice impersonator. You stay authentic; I just help structure and optimize your ideas for LinkedIn's format." Step 9a. Client Says Yes - Set Next Steps Now you're handling logisitcs. Here's a sample script: “Amazing! Like I said, I really feel like this LinkedIn content is going to have a huge impact on your business so I’m excited to dive right in. So, next steps from here. After this call I’m going to send you your client dashboard, where I’ll be sharing updates and drafts and we can track progress of the project together. It’s very simple and pretty self-explanatory but if you have any questions, just let me know. And then I’ll also send over an invoice for the project via Stripe. Is there someone on your team you’d prefer me to send the invoice to? Or should I just send to your email? {Let Them Answer} Amazing, well if there’s anything else you need from me in the meantime, just let me know. Otherwise I’ll start by sending over those 2 items, and then my next steps from here are going to be assembling a high-level outline of the EEC for us to review and make sure we’re aligned on the hook and direction before we dig into the writing. Sound good? {Let Them Answer} Great, well thanks again for jumping on with me today. Super excited to work together, and will send you those 2 items here shortly. Have a great rest of your afternoon!" Step 9b. Client Says No - Plant A Follow Up Seed Even if the say no, I've just created a new lead. And I can follow up with them forever. So I want to plant this seed: “Got it, totally understand. Well, I appreciate you letting me know this isn’t a priority right now, even though I still believe it would be an incredibly powerful asset for your type of business. That said, regardless of whether or not we end up working together at some point in the future, I’m just really passionate about digital marketing and offer creation. So if you have any questions, or even just want my thoughts on something, let me know and I’m happy to share—or at a minimum, I can always point you in the direction of someone who might be able to help. Sound good? {Let Them Talk} Awesome. Well thanks again for making the time to chat with me today {Name}, and best of luck with {The Priority They Told You}. We’ll keep in touch. Have a good day!” ~ Some more guidelines: - Follow the provided call arc structure closely. - Include specific questions and statements for each step of the arc. - For the Free Consulting Mirroring section, ensure you include points that: 1. Educate the client on the problem, its consequences, and the ultimate negative outcome of not solving it. 2. Educate the client on your solution, its benefits, and the ultimate positive outcome it provides. - Include prompts for objection handling and logistics discussion. - Use a conversational, professional tone throughout the script. - Ensure the script flows naturally from one section to the next. - Before generating the script, ask me for my ghostwriting service and target client - Remember to separate script items by bullet points and sub-bullet points. - For all script examples and sample dialogue, clearly label who is speaking using square brackets: - Use [You] to indicate when the ghostwriter is speaking - Use [Client] to indicate when the potential client is speaking - Include realistic client responses where appropriate to show the natural flow of conversation - This labeling should be applied to every piece of dialogue throughout the entire script to eliminate any confusion about who says what during the sales call Want to workshop your sales calls &amp; start landing high-ticket clients way faster?

Sales Letter Generation

0

Streamlit UI Generator with Educational Commentary

Streamlit Claude

You are an Python expert specializing in Streamlit UI development. Please convert the [input script] into a professional Streamlit web application: Requirements: Create an intuitive and professional user interface using Streamlit Include detailed comments explaining: The purpose of each code section Why specific Streamlit components were chosen How different UI elements interact Best practices being implemented Focus on beginner-friendly explanations Optimize the code for: Readability Performance User experience Maintainability Expected output: Fully functional Streamlit code with comprehensive documentation Explanation of the UI architecture and component choices Implementation notes highlighting key learning points Any potential areas for future enhancement [input script] : {your input script}

Code Generation

0

Legal Terms and Conditions Generator

Terms and Conditions ChatGPT

You are an expert legal document writer specializing in website terms and conditions. Task: Generate a comprehensive terms and conditions document for [Website URL] incorporating the provided company information. Required Sections: 1. Agreement Overview - Terms of use - Modification rights - User acceptance 2. Intellectual Property - Website content ownership - User-generated content rights - Usage guidelines and restrictions 3. Disclaimers &amp; Liability - Information accuracy - Limitation of liability - Forward-looking statements 4. User Content Guidelines - Participation rules - Content monitoring - Removal rights 5. Account &amp; Subscription Terms - Subscription options - Service modifications - Account responsibilities 6. Legal &amp; Miscellaneous - Data mining prohibition - Legal compliance - Indemnification - Privacy practices - Copyright notices - Affiliate disclosures Company Information: Website: [Website URL] Company Name: [Company Name] Support Email: [Email] Format: Present the terms and conditions in clear, professional legal language. Structure the document with clear headings and subheadings. Ensure all sections are comprehensive yet concise. Output: Provide the complete terms and conditions document in English only, formatted for website implementation.

Terms and Conditions Generation

0

Testimonial Quality Assessment Validator

Testimonials ChatGPT

I want you to act as a Testimonial Quality Analyzer with expertise in marketing psychology and customer feedback analysis. Context: - These testimonials will be displayed on my website to build trust with potential customers - Only positive testimonials that could influence purchasing decisions should be approved - The assessment should consider genuine customer experiences and authentic compliments Input: [Paste testimonial here] Evaluation Criteria: 1. Positivity and enthusiasm level 2. Specificity about product/service benefits 3. Authenticity and credibility indicators 4. Persuasive potential for new customers 5. Professional and clear communication Please analyze the input text and respond with either TRUE (if the testimonial meets the quality standards for website display) or FALSE (if it doesn\'t meet the requirements). Provide only the Boolean response without any additional explanation.

Testimonials Assessment

0

Generate Full WordPress UI Shortcode From API

Wordpress ChatGPT

Your Task is to Generate a professional, clean, and functional UI using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript as a WordPress Shortcode to interact with the provided API endpoint. The UI should call the API and display the results in an intuitive manner. API Details Endpoint Information {{CURL}} Example Response {{response}} Requirements Technical Requirements Single File: Create everything in a single HTML file with inline CSS and JavaScript No External Dependencies: Don't use external libraries (jQuery, Bootstrap, etc.) - use vanilla JavaScript WordPress Compatible: If for WordPress, create as a shortcode function without the opening PHP tag Self-Contained: All styles and scripts should be inline for easy implementation UI Requirements Form Design: Create input fields for all parameters shown in the curl command Use appropriate input types (text, select, number, etc.) Include proper labels and placeholders Add required field validation Visual Design: Modern, clean, and professional appearance Responsive layout that works on all devices Use a cohesive color scheme Include hover effects and transitions Proper spacing and typography Functionality: Show loading state while API call is in progress Display error messages if the API call fails Format the response data in a readable way Clear form or provide option to submit again Best Practices: Use semantic HTML Include accessibility features (labels, ARIA where needed) Implement proper error handling Use async/await for API calls Prevent form default submission Output Format Please provide the code as: For WordPress: A complete shortcode function For standalone: A complete HTML file Keep the code concise but readable Include comments for complex sections Example Structure The UI should generally follow this flow: Input form with all necessary fields Submit button Loading indicator Results display area Error message container Additional Context [ADD ANY SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS OR CONTEXT HERE, SUCH AS:] Specific styling preferences Additional features needed Target audience Brand colors or guidelines Special formatting for response data Please generate the complete code based on the above specifications.

Code Generation

0

Generate WordPress AI Endpoints

Wordpress ChatGPT

Your Task is to create a WordPress custom endpoint based on the following: Requirements: Technical Specifications: Use WordPress REST API registration Call OpenAI API (gpt-4o-mini model) Use JSON schema for structured API responses Include proper error handling Code Structure Template: REST API Registration - Register endpoint with proper parameters Main API Function - Handle OpenAI API calls with custom prompt Endpoint Callback - Process request parameters and return response Required Features: Ask clarifying questions first - Before generating code, ask the user what parameters would be useful for customization Flexible parameter count - Some tools may need many parameters, some may need just one, some may need none. Only include parameters that actually add value. Proper input sanitization Structured JSON response format Error handling for API failures CORS support for frontend integration API Configuration: Timeout: 120 seconds CORS: Allow all origins (Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *) Model: gpt-4o-mini Temperature: 0.7 (adjust if needed for the specific use case) Max Tokens: Appropriate for the content type Example Code to use as a reference: // Register the REST API endpoint add_action('rest_api_init', function() { register_rest_route('blog/v1', '/generate-story', [ 'methods' =&gt; 'POST', 'callback' =&gt; 'custom_app_generate_openai_json', 'permission_callback' =&gt; '__return_true', 'args' =&gt; [ 'topic' =&gt; [ 'required' =&gt; true, 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'sanitize_callback' =&gt; 'sanitize_text_field' ], 'genre' =&gt; [ 'required' =&gt; false, 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'default' =&gt; 'general', 'sanitize_callback' =&gt; 'sanitize_text_field' ], 'length' =&gt; [ 'required' =&gt; false, 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'default' =&gt; 'medium', 'sanitize_callback' =&gt; 'sanitize_text_field' ], 'tone' =&gt; [ 'required' =&gt; false, 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'default' =&gt; 'professional', 'sanitize_callback' =&gt; 'sanitize_text_field' ] ] ]); // Add CORS headers add_action('rest_api_init', function() { remove_filter('rest_pre_serve_request', 'rest_send_cors_headers'); add_filter('rest_pre_serve_request', function($value) { header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *'); header('Access-Control-Allow-Methods: POST, GET, OPTIONS, PUT, DELETE'); header('Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true'); header('Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Authorization, Content-Type'); return $value; }); }, 15); }); function custom_app_call_openai_api($topic, $genre = 'general', $length = 'medium', $tone = 'professional', $return_json = false) { // Determine word count based on length $length_map = [ 'short' =&gt; '300-500', 'medium' =&gt; '500-800', 'long' =&gt; '800-1200' ]; $word_count = $length_map[$length] ?? '500-800'; $prompt = "Write a compelling {$word_count} word story about: $topic. Genre: $genre Tone: $tone Include engaging characters, dialogue, and a clear beginning, middle, and end. Make it well-structured and {$tone} in style. Respond with JSON including the title, story content, word count, genre, length, and tone."; $api_key = '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'; $url = 'https://api.openai.com/v1/chat/completions'; // Adjust max tokens based on length $token_map = [ 'short' =&gt; 800, 'medium' =&gt; 1200, 'long' =&gt; 1800 ]; $max_tokens = $return_json ? ($token_map[$length] ?? 1200) : 20; $body_data = [ 'model' =&gt; 'gpt-4o-mini', 'messages' =&gt; [[ 'role' =&gt; 'user', 'content' =&gt; $prompt ]], 'max_tokens' =&gt; $max_tokens, 'temperature' =&gt; 0.7 ]; if ($return_json) { $body_data['response_format'] = [ 'type' =&gt; 'json_schema', 'json_schema' =&gt; [ 'name' =&gt; 'story_response', 'strict' =&gt; true, 'schema' =&gt; [ 'type' =&gt; 'object', 'properties' =&gt; [ 'title' =&gt; [ 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'description' =&gt; 'An engaging title for the story' ], 'story' =&gt; [ 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'description' =&gt; 'The complete story content' ], 'word_count' =&gt; [ 'type' =&gt; 'integer', 'description' =&gt; 'Approximate word count of the story' ], 'genre' =&gt; [ 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'description' =&gt; 'The genre of the story' ], 'length' =&gt; [ 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'description' =&gt; 'The length category of the story' ], 'tone' =&gt; [ 'type' =&gt; 'string', 'description' =&gt; 'The tone used in the story' ] ], 'required' =&gt; ['title', 'story', 'word_count', 'genre', 'length', 'tone'], 'additionalProperties' =&gt; false ] ] ]; } $response = wp_remote_post($url, [ 'headers' =&gt; [ 'Content-Type' =&gt; 'application/json', 'Authorization' =&gt; 'Bearer ' . $api_key ], 'body' =&gt; json_encode($body_data), 'timeout' =&gt; 120 ]); if (is_wp_error($response)) return $response; $body = json_decode(wp_remote_retrieve_body($response), true); if ($return_json) { return json_decode($body['choices'][0]['message']['content'], true); } else { return trim($body['choices'][0]['message']['content']); } } function custom_app_generate_openai_json($request) { $topic = $request-&gt;get_param('topic'); $genre = $request-&gt;get_param('genre') ?: 'general'; $length = $request-&gt;get_param('length') ?: 'medium'; $tone = $request-&gt;get_param('tone') ?: 'professional'; $result = custom_app_call_openai_api($topic, $genre, $length, $tone, true); if (is_wp_error($result)) return $result; return $result; } ?&gt; Usage Example Pattern: USER PROVIDES: Idea: "Create an AI email marketing campaign generator" CLAUDE ASKS: "What parameters would be useful? Would you like options for: - Email type (promotional, newsletter, welcome, etc.)? - Tone (professional, casual, urgent)? - Length (short, medium, long)? - Target audience? - Call-to-action style?" USER RESPONDS: "Yes to email type, tone, and CTA style" CLAUDE GENERATES: Complete WordPress endpoint code with those specific parameters You should provide: Complete PHP Code - Full WordPress endpoint implementation API Testing Details - URL, request body examples, cURL commands Response Examples - Expected JSON response format Testing Instructions - How to test the endpoint My Idea: {{idea}}

Code Generation

0

Smart WordPress Snippet Builder

Wordpress Claude

Your task is to create a complete and working "1-page" WordPress code snippet that I can paste directly into the Code Snippets plugin on my WordPress site. What I Want This Snippet To Do: {{features}} Requirements: - The code should be self-contained - Focus on making it functional first. I will ask for polishing/optimization later. - If you want to call an API, don't use ajax, call it from JS using "await fetch" Shortcode &amp; CSS Naming Rules: - Prefix all shortcodes with `{{prefix}}` to avoid naming conflicts. - If the snippet includes CSS, prefix all class names with `{{css_prefix}}` to avoid conflict with the site’s theme. Before generating any code, ask me several clarifying questions to ensure you fully understand what I want. Then generate the full, working snippet only — no explanation or extra text.

Code Generation

0

WordPress Plugin Auto-Updater Prompt

Wordpress Claude

I want to add automatic update functionality to my plugin using YahnisElsts/plugin-update-checker. My plugin is hosted in a private GitHub repository, and I’ll authenticate using a GitHub access token I’ve already generated. I plan to clone the plugin-update-checker library locally and include it directly in my project (without using Composer). I’ll use the simple version-based update method, where I manually bump the version number in the plugin’s main file to trigger update checks.

Code Generation

0

WordPress Plugin Development Prompt

Wordpress Claude

# WordPress Plugin Development with AI ## 1. Environment &amp; OS - A local WordPress site running. - We are now in the actual plugin folder created inside `wp-content/plugins/prompts-library`. - A Git repository initialized inside this plugin folder and connected to GitHub - **Operating System:** [OS] - **Local Web Server Stack:** [WEB_SERVER] **Please:** - Adapt any file paths, CLI commands, and line endings to my OS. - If you show any shell commands (like `cd`, `ls`, `mkdir`, `git`), make them valid for my OS. ## 2. Your Role &amp; Response Style Act as a **senior WordPress plugin developer**. When you respond: - Work **step-by-step** instead of dumping all code at once. - For each step, include: - A short explanation of what this piece does and why we need it. - Follow WordPress coding standards and best practices: - **Security:** nonces, `wp_verify_nonce`, capabilities, sanitization, escaping. - **Performance and maintainability** (no overengineering). - Use clear headings like: - `### Step 1 – Plugin Structure`, `### Step 2 – PLAN.md`, etc. ## 3. Tech Stack &amp; Architecture We are building a custom WordPress plugin with: - A **main plugin file** with: - Proper header (name, description, version, author, etc.). - Activation/deactivation hooks. - Prefer an **OOP-ish and Modular structure** - Use relevant **WordPress APIs**, depending on my Plugin Idea: - Hooks: `add_action`, `add_filter`. - Shortcodes. - Admin menus &amp; pages. - Settings API. - Custom Post Types / Taxonomies or custom DB tables. - AJAX (`wp_ajax_...`) or REST API if needed. - `wp_mail()` if sending emails. - The plugin should be **self-contained:** - No Composer or big external frameworks. - Only enqueue scripts/styles when necessary. ## 4. Development Workflow You will: 1. Start by folder structure. 2. Then generate the base skeleton of the plugin. 3. Then proceed in small, testable steps implementing the features from my Plugin Idea. ## 5. Data &amp; Storage Layer Based on my Plugin Idea, help me decide whether to use: - Custom Post Type with meta. - A custom DB table. - Simple options/meta only. ## 6. Frontend (Public) Implement all frontend features described in my Plugin Idea, like: - Shortcodes `[my_plugin]`. - Forms for user input. - Lists, tables, or widgets displaying stored data. - AJAX-based interactivity if needed. ## 7. Admin / Dashboard Implement admin functionality, such as: - Top-level or submenu under Settings/Tools. - Admin pages for: - Viewing, filtering, editing plugin data. - Managing settings. - Use capability checks (`manage_options` or custom capability). ## 8. Settings &amp; Configuration If my plugin requires settings (API keys, email templates, toggles, etc.): - Use the Settings API. - Create a settings page with sections &amp; fields. - Implement sanitization callbacks. - Read &amp; use settings in the plugin logic. ## 9. Security, Validation &amp; UX Make sure: - All forms/actions use nonces and `wp_verify_nonce`. - All input is sanitized (`sanitize_text_field`, `sanitize_email`, `esc_url_raw`, etc.). - All output is escaped (`esc_html`, `esc_attr`, `esc_url`, etc.). - Only allowed users can access admin features (capability checks). Improve UX: - Clear messages on success/error. - Basic styling where necessary (no heavy frameworks). ## 10. Integration with Thrive Apprentice - I am using Thrive apprentice to manage my memberships. help add an option to add the page where im using the shortcode to a thrive apprentice product. ## 11. My Plugin Idea ### Prompts Library **Goal / Purpose:** A plugin that allows admins to submit prompts via wordpress backend form. Prompts can be displayed anywhere using a shortcode. **Frontend Features:** - A table showing all prompts and a side bar with categories - ability to search filter and sort. - show for each prompt number of views and copies and updated date and author - when pressing on a prompt we will go to prompt page where we will be able to see the prompt title and description, tags and prompt body with the ability to be able to copy the body. - Shortcode `[prompts-library]` to display the table **Admin Features:** - Admin menu: "Prompts Library" - List of prompts (published /draft) - Ability to add, edit and delete prompts - Optional settings page (to add categories for example) **Data Storage:** - Use a Custom Post Type: `prompts-library` - Store prompts as post meta. advise if this is okay? --- **Important:** Ask me questions to understand exactly what I want.

Code Generation

0

Adaptive Storytelling Generator

Writing ChatGPT

#Instruction Create a captivating story based on the provided topic and target audience. Adapt your storytelling approach as follows: For Children (Ages 4-12): Use simple language with occasional new vocabulary Focus on themes like animals, adventure, friendship Include moral lessons or educational elements Keep sentences short and dialogue engaging For Teenagers (Ages 13-19): Incorporate relatable contemporary themes Balance between casual and sophisticated language Include elements of mystery, discovery, or personal growth Add subtle life lessons or thought-provoking elements For Adults (Ages 20+): Use mature themes and complex plot structures Include historical, psychological, or philosophical elements Employ sophisticated vocabulary while maintaining clarity Develop deeper character motivations and conflicts ##Inputs Topic: [topic] Target Audience: [audience] ##Output Deliver a 300-word story that includes: An engaging title (Heading 1 format) Clear narrative structure (beginning, middle, end) Age-appropriate themes and language Relevant cultural or educational elements Captivating dialogue or descriptions The story should seamlessly blend entertainment and thematic relevance while maintaining appropriate complexity for the target audience.

Storytelling Content

0

Blog Content Generator

Writing ChatGPT

As an expert blog copywriter, your task is to compose an engaging, informative blog post using the provided piece outline which will be delimited between triple backticks. Please make sure the blog post complies with the following guidelines: The language you use should be straightforward and simple, to ensure young readers can grasp the content quickly and easily. Avoid complex or uncommon vocabulary that might cause any confusion. Make sure to be compelling and engaging, keeping the readers hooked from beginning to end. Add elements of personal touch and humor at the right moments to enhance reader engagement and make the blog post more enjoyable. Propose places where I can add appropriate visual aids like GIFs, PNG images, or diagrams. Make sure to explain in detail what the visual is so that I know what to add. Input: [input] Output: The output should be a well-structured blog post, and of course with a catchy title that would hook the reader.

Content Writing

0

Comprehensive Writing Enhancement and Analysis Prompt

Writing ChatGPT

As a writing assistant, your primary goal is to refine and improve the provided text through extensive editing and analysis. You should deliver a polished result by following these guidelines: -Correct spelling, grammar, and punctuation errors. -Enhance conciseness by rephrasing or eliminating unnecessary words or phrases. -Analyze the tone of the text and offer suggestions for improvement. -Clarify unclear or poorly structured sentences. -Enhance word choice by replacing weak or overused words with stronger, more appropriate alternatives. Minimize repetition by rephrasing or removing redundant content. -Reorganize unstructured work to improve coherence and structure. -Ensure text conciseness and focus by eliminating irrelevant or filler content. -Improve fluency and readability through smooth transitions and varying sentence lengths. Alongside the edited text, I will also provide a detailed analysis explaining the changes made and their reasons, as well as identifying initial errors. This analysis will be delivered in a clear and supportive tone, aiming to help you strengthen your writing skills while maintaining a constructive and encouraging approach. Format your response with bold text, a heading, and lists when relevant. Provided Text: {{ text }}

Content Writing

0

Creative Text Transformer: Expert English Paraphrasing

Writing ChatGPT

Task: You are an expert in the English Language. Your task is to paraphrase a piece of text to make it more creative. I'll provide you with the text in the Input section delimited between triple backticks. You should change up the words and the sentence structure, use a lot of figurative language, and change anything necessary in order to make its content more creative. However, it is extremely important you do not change the original meaning and significance of the text. In regard to the style you should use when paraphrasing, here are some characteristics of a creative text: Use vivid, sensory language to paint mental pictures Incorporate metaphors and similes specifically to draw interesting connections Unique word choices and varied sentence structures Integrate rhythmic elements like alliteration and assonance Employ a distinctive voice that stands out Use humor or irony when necessary Doesn't contain a lot of complex vocabulary Keep in mind that there are some words or sentences that shouldn't be changed because they are the name of something being explained in the piece of text. For example, if a text is explaining what quantum physics is, you should write this term and, next to it, simply explain it in kid language using a maximum of a sentence. So make sure to read thoroughly the input text, understand what it's about, and identify the key parts that should be paraphrased. Input: {input} Output: The output should only be the paraphrased new text and nothing else.

Content Writing

0

Niche Discovery Interview Generation

Writing ChatGPT

I need some help coming up with my ghostwriting niche. I want you to learn about my life, career, experiences, etc. over the last 10 years (as well as looking at the industries I have worked over my entire career) so that you can suggest different niches I can ghostwriter for. We are going to break this into 2 separate steps. Step 1: First, you will interview me and ask me these 6 questions, one by one, allowing me time to respond to each one before moving on to the next. Once I have provided you the answer, ask me if I am ready for the next question, and so on: 1. Over the last 2-5 years, what are 3 things you've done to improve your personal growth? 2. Over the last 2-5 years, what are 3 things you've done to expand your knowledge or skills? 3. Over your entire career, what are all the jobs you've had? List them out and give specific details of your role. So instead of "marketing" say "Facebook ads manager for a health and wellness brand selling sleeping supplements" 4. Over the last 2-5 years, what are 3 things you've done to push yourself out of your comfort zone? 5. Over the last 2-5 years, what are 3 things you've done to enhance your creativity or pursue new hobbies? 6. Over the last 2-5 years, what are 3 challenges you've faced and overcome, and how did they change you? Ask me if I am ready to begin the interview, and when I agree, ask me each question in sequential order. We must complete this Step 1 before moving on to Step 2. Once I have answered the above 6 questions, we will move on to Step 2 where you will generate a list of 5 businesses or industries I could ghostwrite for based on the answers I provided you in Step 1. Include a specific job role or title of a person in those industries or businesses who would benefit from a ghostwriter. Give at least 1 problem that a ghostwrite could solve for them. For example, if I spent the last 5 years working in B2B tech sales, I could ghostwrite for the Chief Revenue Officer at a FinTech startup. The problem they need solving online is scaling the message of their software to their target customer to attract more leads into their business. Do you understand? If so, let’s begin with Step 1 and ask me if I am ready to begin the interview—and then ask me the 6 questions, one by one, allowing me time to respond to each one before moving on to the next.

Niche Discovery

0

Positioning Consultant Prompt

Writing ChatGPT

You are a Positioning Consultant, specifically for freelance writers who want to niche down as ghostwriters. I am going to give you the industry I would like to be a ghostwriter within, and the service I want to specialize in, and I would like you to present back to me: - Positioning Upgrade #1: A list of 30 even more specific niches within that industry where I could find potential clients and consider reaching out to (with niche-specific messaging). - Positioning Upgrade #2: A constellation and list of 20 tangentially related industries or niches that aren’t exactly the same, but “close enough” that a lot of my skills could also be translated there as well. - Positioning Upgrade #3: And a short-form bio (160 characters or less, so it fits on X/Twitter) that positions me as a specialist in that industry, providing the specific service I want to offer. To accomplish this, I am going to train you on some context for each of these pieces I am looking for your help with. ~ Positioning Upgrade #1: Identify 30 more specific niches. The reason this is helpful to a writer is because, oftentimes, when they pick an industry to ghostwrite within they don’t realize how many smaller opportunities there are hidden inside that industry. So we want to point those opportunities out! For example, if I say the industry is “fitness,” there are actually all sorts of smaller niches (and niche opportunities) within that industry you might not be aware of until someone points it out! - Big box gyms - Small boutique gyms - Cycling studios - Yoga studios - Personal training - CrossFit - Etc. But there are almost so many opportunities it can be overwhelming. So here’s a framework I’d like you to use, and when identifying these 30 more specific niches I’d like you to present the information in a very specific way, using this framework. There are 6 different ways you can niche down: 1. By Sub-Industry (for example: broad industry = health &amp; fitness, sub-industry = physical therapy) 2. By Demographic (for example: broad industry = healthcare, niche down by demographic = healthcare for veterans, or healthcare for moms on disability) 3. By Experience Level (for example: broad industry = watch collecting, niche down by experience level = watch collecting for beginners, or watch collecting for high-net worth individuals) 4. By Price Point (for example: broad industry = business consulting, niche down by price point = business consulting for Series A startups, or business consulting for $100M companies looking to go public) 5. By Problem (for example: broad industry = Airbnb rentals, niche down by problem = luxury Airbnb rentals that aren’t getting booked, or Airbnb rentals that are losing money because of maintenance costs) 6. By Location (for example: broad industry = therapy, niche down by location = therapists in Chicago, or therapists in Denver Colorado) So I would like you to generate 30 more specific niche ideas, but organize them into these 6 ways (so there are 5 ideas inside each way). ~ Positioning Upgrade #2: Build a constellation of 20 tangentially related niches/industries. Most ghostwriters don’t realize that when you get more specific and niche down, you actually make it easier to attract other tangentially related niches. I call this building your Niche Constellation. For example, if I say “I ghostwrite for residential real estate entrepreneurs,” yes I’m getting more specific and niching down in the industry of real estate, but there’s no reason why I couldn’t also pitch and translate my writing skills into other tangentially related niches. Such as: - Mortgage lenders - Airbnb entrepreneurs - Commercial real estate entrepreneurs - Home remodeling services - Plumbers - Carpenters - Interior designers - Etc. All of these other industries/niches are still related to “real estate,” which is what creates a Niche Constellation. So I would like you to build a constellation of 20 related industries/niches to the main industry I give you, showing how much more potential there is for me to leverage my skills in other related spaces. ~ Positioning Upgrade #3: Write a short-form bio (160 characters or less, so it fits on X/Twitter) that positions me as a specialist in that industry, providing the specific service I want to offer. Think of your bio on Twitter as a "mini sales pitch" to your readers. But when it comes to writing an effective bio for positioning yourself as a ghostwriter, I would like you to write the short-form bio using this very specific framework. Remember: I am going to give you the industry I would like to be a ghostwriter within, and the service I want to specialize in. And I would like you to write me 3 different bio variations, written based on each of the following variations: - V1: “I ghostwrite {service} for {industry}.” - V2: “I ghostwrite {even more specific version of service} for {1 of the 6 ways you can niche down variations}.” - V3: “I ghostwrite {specific service} for {specific niche within industry}, helping {solve specific problem/achieve specific outcome}. This will give me some options to review and choose from. Are you ready for my industry and ghostwriting service?

Positioning Consultant

0

Professional Text Formalizer

Writing ChatGPT

Task: You are an expert in the English Language. Your task is to paraphrase a piece of text to make it more formally worthy. I'll provide you with the text in the Input section delimited between triple backticks. You should change up the words, the sentence structure, add or remove figurative language, and change anything necessary in order to make the text more formal. However, it is extremely important you do not change the original meaning and significance of the text. In regard to the style you should use when paraphrasing, it should be turned into a formal piece of text which has the following characteristics: Use specific and accurate words to clearly express ideas. Use compound and complex sentences. Favor third person pronouns (he, she, it, they) over first (I, we) or second (you) person. Utilize the passive voice where appropriate to focus on the action. Maintain a neutral tone throughout the text. Write out full words instead of contractions (e.g., \"do not\" instead of \"don't\"). And do not use slang. Ensure consistency in terms of formatting, punctuation, and referencing styles. Keep in mind that there are some words or sentences that shouldn't be changed because they are the name of something being explained in the piece of text. For example, if a text is talking about how to identify spam comments, the word \"spam comments\" shouldn't be paraphrased because otherwise, the reader wouldn't understand what we're talking about. So make sure to read thoroughly the input text, understand what it's about, and identify the key parts that should be paraphrased. Input: {input} Output: The output should only be the paraphrased new text and nothing else.

Content Writing

0

Text Expansion and Paraphrasing Specialist

Writing ChatGPT

Task: You are an expert in the English Language. Your task is to expand and paraphrase a piece of text that I will provide you in the Input section delimited between triple backticks. You should change up some words and the sentence structure, add figurative language, and, most importantly, expand the piece of text and make it longer. However, it is extremely important you do not change the original meaning and significance of the text. In regard to the style you should use when expanding the text, keep it simple and straight to the point and make sure you don\'t use any complex vocabulary. Plus, use the same style used in the input text and the same level of formality in the use of words. Keep in mind that there are some words or sentences that shouldn't be changed because they are the names of something being explained in the piece of text. For example, if a text is talking about how to identify spam comments, the word \"spam comments\" shouldn't be paraphrased because otherwise, the reader wouldn't understand what we're talking about. So make sure to read thoroughly the input text, understand what it's about, and identify the key parts that should be paraphrased. And, finally, don't forget that the main purpose is to expand the piece of text, and while expanding, you paraphrase some words and phrases. Input: {input} Output: The output should only be the paraphrased new text and nothing else.

Content Writing

0

Text Shortening and Paraphrasing Specialist

Writing ChatGPT

I want you to act as an expert text editor specializing in text compression and paraphrasing. Your task: 1. Take the input text provided between triple backticks and create a shorter version by: - Restructuring sentences - Using simpler vocabulary - Removing unnecessary words/phrases - Maintaining the original meaning and tone - Preserving key technical terms and proper nouns Requirements: - Keep the same level of formality as the original - Use clear, straightforward language - Focus on reducing length while maintaining clarity - Preserve essential context and meaning Input text: ```{input}``` Provide only the compressed, paraphrased text as output, without explanations.

Content Writing

0

Banger Thread Generation

X ChatGPT

Write an engaging thread about [Expert Secrets] by [Russell Brunson] as if it were written by [Naval Ravikant]. Create a hook for the thread that is inspired by a tweet that has over 100,000 likes. For each subsequent tweet in the thread have 1 headline tweet, 1 or 2 powerful sentences and then 3 bullet points, and conclude with one powerful sentence that is highly sharable. Use the thread below as an example of how to write it: How to Get Rich (without getting lucky): Seek wealth, not money or status. Wealth is having assets that earn while you sleep. Money is how we transfer time and wealth. Status is your place in the social hierarchy. Understand that ethical wealth creation is possible. If you secretly despise wealth, it will elude you. Ignore people playing status games. They gain status by attacking people playing wealth creation games. You’re not going to get rich renting out your time. You must own equity - a piece of a business - to gain your financial freedom. You will get rich by giving society what it wants but does not yet know how to get. At scale. Pick an industry where you can play long term games with long term people.

Thread Generation

0

Banger Tweet Generation

X ChatGPT

<aside> 💡 Rewrite the following tweet to be more like the example tweets below. The tweet needs to generate 10 million views on Twitter. Provide 5 possible tweets utilizing different styles. Make sure the hook is compelling. The copy should be written in an engaging way that is a mix of David Ogilvy, Jeff Bezos, and Joseph Sugarman. Rewrite this tweet: Example Tweet #1: Simple health playbook: Exercise: • 1x per day • Yoga 3x per week • Walk 10,000 steps per day Eat Healthily: • Fast until 2 pm • No food after 7 pm • Limit alcohol to 1x/week Sleep: • 8 hours per night • Magnesium before bed • 30 min sunlight in AM and PM Example Tweet #2: The math behind a $1M per year online business: - $83k per month - Which is $2,767/day - Which is 28 customers at $99/each - Which is 1,400 web visitors/day at 2% conversion How do you get 1,400 web visitors a day? • SEO • Newsletter • Twitter growth • LinkedIn systems Example Tweet #3: 7 tools every founder should use: 1. Figma: Design 2. ConvertKit: Email 3. Hypefury: Growth 4. Copy.ai: Writing 5. Testimonial.to: Testimonials 6. Notion: Operating System 7. Twemex: Most Popular Tweets What am I missing? Tweet #4: Meditation is a good way to measure where you are. Tweet #5: The gym is a temple where you can go and pray for one more day. Tweet #6: Nothing will make you more productive than owning your time. Nothing will make you less productive than selling it. Tweet #7: If you’re the smartest person in the room, you’re in the wrong room. Tweet #8: You don’t build psychological resilience by feeling good all the time. You build psychological resilience by getting better at feeling bad. Tweet #9: Focus on what you can control. Fuck the rest. Tweet #10: Fill your brain in the afternoons with books, learning, and socialization Empty your brain before bed with journaling, planning, and meditation Use your brain in the morning with creation, output, and focus Tweet #11: When you’re bored, pick up a book instead of your phone and see where that simple habit shift it takes you. Tweet #12: Don’t think. Don’t overanalyze. Do the work. Tweet #13: Here is how I think about my business: - Goals: Decades - Strategy: Yearly - Tactics: Quarterly - Effort: Daily I simply plan on outlasting most people. Tweet #14: How to outperform most people: 1. Repeat the boring fundamentals 2. Let everyone else drown in tactics You need 1-2 months of momentum before you see any meaningful results. If you don't control your attention, you will keep starting over when you find a new shiny tactic. Tweet #15: The best marketing tactic is pure honesty.

Tweet Generation

0

Professional X Bio Generator

X ChatGPT

## Instructions You are an expert in creating and optimizing Twitter profiles and bios. Create an engaging, professional, and creative X bio. Focus on the person's main interests, skills, or accomplishments. Make sure the bio is 140 characters or less and within X's guidelines. Use only the input provided by the user delimited between triple backticks. Make sure not to add hashtags. ## Variables Achievements/Products: ```[Achievements/Products]``` Skills/What do you help people with: ```[Skills]``` Target Audience: ```[Target Audience]``` ## Example outputs: - Digital Entrepreneur with 10+ years\' experience, Founder &amp; Developer of AI Powered Kit. Helping Digital Marketers to achieve 10X results using AI and Automation. Tech writer • AI Automation Consultant • Exploring the limits of AI • Sharing the secrets of ChatGPT and AI tools • 9-5 Project Manager • 5-9 AI Educator - Day Job: I invest and scale companies at Acquisition.com | Co-Owner, Skool. Side Hustle: I make free content showing how we do it - Sharing insights on AI, Entrepreneurship, Online Business &amp; Productivity • I help people to Market &amp; Launch SaaS and AI products • DM for collabs Make sure to use formats similar to the above examples, adding creativity to it, and only use the input provided by the user. Output X bio:

X Bio Generation

0

Unpopular Opinions

X ChatGPT

Come up with 5 unpopular opinions around [insert topic] that are controversial and will cause engagement on X.

X Content Generation

0

X Hook Script Generation

X ChatGPT

Rewrite the following Twitter hook to be more like the example hooks below. The hook will be used to generate 10 million views on YouTube. Provide 10 possible YouTube headlines. Make sure the entire headline can be seen on YouTube mobile without being cut off. [insert headline] Example hooks: 1. How to get ahead of 99% of people (in 6-12 months) 2. The one-person business model (how to productize yourself) 3. Change your life in 6 months (my deep work routine) 4. Life is a video game (here's how you win)

X Hook Generation

0

X Thread Transformation Expert

X ChatGPT

You are an expert in Twitter thread writing, and you have 10 years of experience in writing successful threads. Your task is to convert a given piece of text / YouTube video transcript/blog post / a PDF, which will be delimited between triple backticks, into a successful viral-worthy Twitter thread of 5-10 tweets. While adhering to Twitter\'s foundation, constraints, and community guidelines, your rewrite should amplify the given text\'s accessibility and viral potential. You are free to edit the provided text as needed creatively, keeping the following objectives in mind: 1. Each tweet must resonate with the readers, deploying emotional triggers and poignant language to inspire shares and dialogues. 2. Insert key hashtags at strategic locations within your thread tactically to broaden its reach and influence; however, don't overuse them. 3. Incorporate a dash of wit or humor to make the thread more personable and enjoyable. Don't overuse this; only add it if necessary. 4. Keep the language lucid and simple enough for a broad audience, equivalent to the comprehension level of a 7th grader. 5. Each tweet should comply with X's 280-character limit, so to stay on the safe side, use a maximum of 275 characters per tweet. Input: ```[input]``` Output: The output should be the Twitter thread only and nothing else.

Content Writing

0

Ali Abdaal YouTube Ghostwriter

YouTube ChatGPT

I'm Ali Abdaal, a personal development YouTuber and the most followed productivity expert in the world. You're an incredible ghostwriter for YouTube videos, and you're great at writing in my voice - conversational but not patronising, inspiring but not cheesy. Do you understand? [From here, insert the prompts you want to help write the YouTube script you are after.]

Youtube Script Generation

0

Book Lessons Video Script

YouTube ChatGPT

Write a 60 second Youtube short video script that uses the lessons from the book [insert book] to teach founders [how to network with big names by adding value]. Make an engaging hook and super entertaining so the video gets 10 million views. Include an engaging hook, 3 key points with catchy and funny lines, and a call to action.

Book Summary Script Generation

0

JSON Expander Prompt Example

YouTube ChatGPT

I'm building a YouTube Title Generator Tool using AI. Right now, it's very basic: → user input → OpenAI → 5 titles. I want to make it much smarter and more useful. Goal: Help me expand both the JSON input and output structure to include richer data, context, and fields that improve the title quality and allow more control over the generation. Let’s brainstorm possible JSON fields for: Input — e.g. video category, tone, audience, keywords, length preference, etc.Output — e.g. title, explanation, SEO score, emotion trigger, clickbait rating, variations, etc. Think like a product designer + AI prompt engineer. Let’s go beyond the basics.

Idea Generation

0

Video Transcript Insight Extractor

YouTube ChatGPT

You are an expert in summarizing text. Your task is to extract essential insights and generate a summary of the provided YouTube video transcript, which will be delimited between triple backticks. Make sure you analyze the content thoroughly and identify key insights so that you generate a well-structured summary covering all the key points and demonstrating a deep understanding of the content. Input: Video Transcript: [input] Output: The response should be formatted as a list of bullet points only, each accompanied by a fitting and unique emoji. Ensure that each emoji is unique and relevant to the point. Avoid using brackets in your final response. Don\'t add anything above or below the bullet list.

Video Summarizer

0

YouTube 15 Second Intro Generation

YouTube ChatGPT

You are a YouTube video growth and retention expert. You help creators like MrBeast, Casey Neistat, and Alex Hormozi come up with amazing hooks for their YouTube videos. Come up with 20 15-second hook ideas based off the guidelines below for creating an engaging YouTube long form video hook. Make the copy compelling like it's from the voice of Alex Hormozi, Joe Rogan, and MrBeast. YouTube Hook Guidelines: Tease the Juicier Parts of Your Video Instead of introducing topics the usual way, tease the most entertaining scene from your YouTube video. You'll want to choose a clip that evokes powerful emotions within your audience — something to make them gasp, laugh, or frown. This moment isn't hard to find, either. It's usually the climax of your story, where the plot becomes wildly captivating. That could be the moment a prank goes wrong, the minute you reveal a secret, or a "failed" activity that sparks gut-busting laughter. These moments grab your viewers' attention by showing them what to expect. They know what's coming, so they have a reason to stick around and see how it all unfolds! Offer to Solve a Problem What type of challenges do your viewers face? Do they have trouble getting into college, finding a job they love, or training their pets? Do they want to pay off credit card debt without feeling overwhelmed? If you know what's bothering them, address that in your intro and promise a real solution. This simple act will make viewers feel seen and understood, as though watching your video could potentially change their lives. Ask a Relatable Question Questions make great conversation starters, but they're also effective in YouTube intros. This strategy works because the viewer has to stop and think about what you've asked them. And while they're wrestling with the answer, they don't have time to think about leaving the video — not yet, anyway. Of course, this is exactly what you want to happen. Your primary goals are to make people quit scrolling, pay attention, and engage with the video. So when you ask a question in your intro, make sure it's: Relevant to viewers' lives - An interesting thing to consider - Easy to understand - Going to be addressed in the video Share an Interesting Fact Sometimes reality is more shocking than fiction. For example, did you know that a typical cloud weighs over 1 million pounds? Or that more people live in tiny Bangladesh (164 million) than in spacious Russia (144 million)? You can easily make a nice intro for your YouTube video by stating one of these mind-blowing facts. Viewers will be so blown away that they have to stick around and learn more. Engage the Senses When creating an intro, try to engage as many human senses as possible. Give people something fascinating to look at, even if that means all you did was change the camera angle. Let them hear a variety of sounds, and add some text to break up the monotony of only hearing your words. These elements make a video entertaining, and you can feel the difference when they aren't there. The pace is slower, the scenes are too quiet, and before you know it, you leave the video out of sheer boredom. But adding these elements will stop from viewers clicking away: Sound effects Music changes Different text styles Video motion: jump-cuts, camera panning, zoom-ins, zoom-outs And if you want to experiment, try animated intros Use Pop Culture References The trick to using pop culture references in your intro is to make them both timely and entertaining. Use viral memes to spice things up. Repurpose a trending sound from TikTok. Hop on the latest dance craze to get viewers' attention. But before you do any of that, ask yourself what's popular right now. You could check the trending section of social media apps — Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, and more — to see what people are talking about. Start with an Inspirational Quote If your viewers like to be encouraged, why not open your video with an inspirational quote? This simple act prepares your viewers for more uplifting content, so they make it through the intro and onto other scenes. Best of all, famous quotes are everywhere. You can get them from industry experts, books, TV shows, movies; the list goes on. Just remember to credit the original author when you reference a quote. Tell a Joke Telling a joke might be considered corny or cliche, but it's still an excellent way to open your video. Whether the joke lands or not, you'll completely disarm the viewer and catch them off guard. They'll either think, That was extremely bad or That was so funny I can hardly breathe! Either way, you'll have their full attention. But you don't have to tell a joke, per se. Sometimes you can show a funny scene where you act out a joke instead of saying it on camera. YouTube Video Title: How To Get Rich In The Attention Revolution

Video Into Generation

0

YouTube Guidelines Checklist

YouTube ChatGPT

Create a checklist for getting a YouTube video to 500 million views that covers preproduction, scripting, thumbnails, headlines, post-production, description, and distribution. Create the guidelines based on advice from top experts like MrBeast, Hillier Smith and Paddy Galloway.

YouTube Guidelines Checklist

0

YouTube Keyword Analyzer AI Prompt

YouTube

`Analyze the YouTube/video keyword {{keyword}} for current trends and search potential. Research the following using web search: 1. Recent viral videos or trends related to {{keyword}} 2. News, events, or announcements driving searches for "${keyword}" 3. Current popularity and saturation level 4. Seasonal patterns or time-sensitive factors 5. Growth trajectory over the last 30 days 6. Competition from established creators Based on your web search findings, provide scores (0.0 to 1.0) for: - trend_score: How trending/viral is this RIGHT NOW (1.0 = extremely viral) - freshness_score: How new/emerging (1.0 = brand new topic, 0.0 = old/established) - competition_estimate: Competition level (1.0 = extremely competitive) - viral_potential: Likelihood to go viral in next 7 days (1.0 = very likely) - seasonal_factor: Current seasonal relevance (1.0 = peak season now) - overall_weight: Combined importance score - confidence: Your confidence in this analysis Context: The analysis is for {{country}} market. Return ONLY a valid JSON object with these exact fields: { "keyword": "{{keyword}}", "trend_score": 0.0, "freshness_score": 0.0, "competition_estimate": 0.0, "viral_potential": 0.0, "seasonal_factor": 0.0, "overall_weight": 0.0, "confidence": 0.0, "insights": "Brief explanation of scores", "last_checked": "date" }`

Keyword Analyzer

0

YouTube Script Generator with SEO-Optimized Segments

YouTube ChatGPT

Act as a very proficient SEO and high-end copywriter who speaks and writes fluently in English. Your task is to generate the script for a YouTube video based on the user inputs delimited between triple backticks in the inputs section. You should divide the script into 15-second sections where each one should contain a small title and what should be explained in this time interval. In addition, you should provide three appropriate clickbait titles. Inputs: Video topic: [Topic] Video duration: [Duration] Output should be formatted as follows and nothing else: Clickbait Titles: (heading 2) Video Script: (heading 2) Introduction [0:00 - 0:15] (Bold) What is SEO? [0:15 - 0:30] (Bold)

Script Generation

0

YouTube Thumbnail + Title Combo Generation

YouTube ChatGPT

You are a viral video expert for YouTube. You help the largest creators in the world like MrBeast. I am looking to create 20 viral YouTube videos that get over 10 million views each. My mission is to help 100 million founders accomplish their dreams through proven systems to scale their audience, brand, and community. The content is inspired by the most popular videos from YouTube creators like Alex Hormozi and Iman Gadzhi. Suggest 20 ideas and generate 3 headlines and for each of the 20 viral video ideas as well as 2 thumbnail suggestions and a 15 second intro hook.

Video Title Generation

0

YouTube Title Generator - Data Driven

YouTube ChatGPT

As an expert YouTuber. your task is to generate 10 YouTube video titles based on the [Video_Topic] and the [Content_Type] and ensuring high CTR. First, use your expertise to develop the first 5 titles that gets the best CTR THEN For the remaining five titles, pick 5 templates that best fit the video's theme from the given list and use them to craft the titles. Templates List: -How To Not (Unwanted Outcome)-(Encouraging Words)!! -The Simple (Task) that (Defeated) EVERYONE Except (Authority Figure) -6 TOP (Objects) to Save You From (Unwanted Event) -(Objects) I Never (Action) (Current Year) -(Activity) Challenge That Will Change Your Life (30 DAYS RESULTS) -12 (Objects) that can (Achieve Goal) -[Achieve Goal] on [Platform] (easy [Activity] for beginners!) -[Time Frame] Killer [Activity] ([Benefit]) -How to (Achieve Goal) in (Time Frame) [by (Current Year)] -20 (Timely Object) You Should Never (Action) -How A Pro (Position) ACTUALLY (Achieves Goal) -End of (Entity)? (New Solution)! - Complete Guide -Top 3 (Timely Action) NOW ([Bonus Reason To Take Action Now]) -(Activity/Goal) at (Obstacle) with (Simple Action) -Why I choose (Option) over (Opposite Option) -You’re doing (Activity) WRONG. -I saw my boss do these 10 things in (Platform)! -This NEW Approach to (Activity) Will Change Your (Possession) FOREVER! -Never (unwanted action) Again - How To (accomplish goal) the EASY Way -The (Negative Event) That Will Change A (Audience Segment) -(Industry) Could Change Forever -7 Things (Niche) Experts Do That You Probably Don’t -Why does (Intriguing Title &amp; Thumbnail Story)? -How I (Achieved Goal) My First Calendar Year on (Platform) -Why I Stopped (Popular Action) - What I Learned -4 ONE-MINUTE Habits That (Achieve Goal) | (Activity) For (Specific Audience) -Building My (Ultimate Goal) For/With (Constraint) -(Problem)? 4 Common Mistakes To Avoid -Asking Strangers Their Thoughts On (Subject) -A (Tool) a day to get (Goal) to stay?? | (Solution) for (Problem) -(Activity) When Something Wild Happened! -100 Most Common [Objects] ([Support For Objects]) -6 Reasons (Pain Point) -🤩 7 NEW (Place or Object) HACKS - PUT TO THE TEST! 🤩 -(Activity) The World's Best (Object) in (Place) -How I’d Start a (New Project) in (Upcoming Year) -(Activity) without (Problem) -Do (Emotional Question)? -11 Hacks To Make Your (Possession) Look (Desired Adjective) -(Activity) in (Extreme Environment) -After watching video you will not (Common Activity)! -5 (unique timeline) (activities) to Start In 2024 (extra proof) -The (Positive Attribute) (Position)’s Road to (Huge Goal) -Blowing The Lid on The Biggest (Industry) Secret -WHY (Current Technology) WON’T LAST. (Technology) COMPARISON. What should you (Use)? -(Desirable Entities) I Had No Idea Existed! -(New Technology) Changes Everything - So much more than (Old Technology)! -7 Ways To (Achieve Goal) -The Secret Weapon That Got Me (Big Achievement) -if I Were Starting A [Project] In 2024, This Is What I’d Do (7 Steps) -Stop [Common Action]! (why you’re [Unwanted Result]) -the UGLY truth of (your profession or goal) you don’t see… -Affordable (Tools or Objects) At (Unexpected Place) For Less Than (Dollar Amount) -10 Odd (Activities) And What They Actually Mean -How I plan to (Achieve Goal) and (Achieve Goal) in one year | level up -2 [Activity] Every [Season] To [Achieve Goal] ([Keywords]) -You’re Probably (Activity) Wrong, and it Could be Dangerous (&amp; [Other Unwanted Effect]) -5 Lazy (Goal, Activity, or Desire)! (Achieve Goal) In (Short Time Frame) | (Subject) -Switch off (Setting) now! -14 Things [Subject] HATE (#1 Might Surprise You) -I QUIT (Good Thing) After Learning 3 Things -How to Buy Your First [Asset] (Step-By-Step) -How to (reach goal) !! (additional benefit)! (refute an objection) -Top 8 (Tools) For (Goal) In (Current Year) -Asking (Who Your Audience Wants To Be Like) How to (Achieve Goal) -(Problems) Are NO Match for this (Solution) ([Reach Goal]) -Skills You Won’t Learn In (Popular Training Ground) -Top 20 (Tool) Tips for (Benefit)! -5 MYTHS about (Activity) / (Activity) vs. Reality // Tips &amp; Tricks // (Activity) -I got 4 new (Niche) tools and gadgets! Let's see what we think. -THIS Simple Trick (Achieves Goal) -The 7 Best (Entities) to (Activity) with (Trend) -4 (Entity) Changes That Will Have a BIG IMPACT in (Next Year) -Fix (Problem). Before It’s Irreversible [Video_Topic] = {{video_topic}} [Content_Type] = {{content_type}}

Title Generation

0

YouTube Transcript to Blog Post Converter

YouTube ChatGPT

I want you to act as YouTube2Blog AI (Y2B AI), a specialized assistant that transforms YouTube video transcripts into comprehensive blog posts. Please help me create a blog post by answering these questions: What type of blog post would you like to create? (How-to, listicle, case study, etc.) What writing style should I use? (Casual, professional, technical, etc.) Who is your target audience? Do you have any specific requirements? (Word count, SEO keywords, formatting preferences) Please provide the YouTube video transcript. I will wait for your response to each question before proceeding. Once you\'ve provided all the information, please say \"Start Generating\" to begin the blog post creation process.

Content Writing

0

YouTube Viral Title Generator Prompt

YouTube ChatGPT

You're an expert YouTube title creator who blends emotional hooks, curiosity, and storytelling to create scroll-stopping titles. Think like Alex Hormozi, Colin &amp; Samir, and MrBeast — but in the tech/digital business niche. Your task is to generate creative, viral-style YouTube titles for the video topic below. Avoid boring or purely descriptive titles. Go for titles that: - Spark curiosity or emotion 🔥 - Make the viewer feel FOMO or intrigue 🤯 - Work even without mentioning the exact tool or tutorial 🧠 - Feel broad, entertaining, and bold, not just niche/techy 📈 My Channel Niche: {{channel_niche}} Target Audience: {{target_audience}} My Channel Topics: {{channel_topics}}

Title Generation

0