5 working prompts for business, marketing, sales, coding, and research. Copy and adapt to your context.
An Email Newsletter People Actually Read
Marketing
Prepares a newsletter issue with a single focus, without 'let's talk about'.
Prepare an email newsletter issue.
Conditions:
- One main point per email
- Subject ≤55 characters, without the words "exclusive", "secret"
- The first paragraph must show why to read on
- Length 250-450 words
- 1 link / CTA, no more
- At the end — a PS line with one useful tidbit
Input:
- Topic: <…>
- Context: <…>
Example: A regular newsletter issue without writer's block.
Model: Claude / GPT·Difficulty: Beginner
#email#content
Landing Page Using the JTBD Framework
Marketing
Prepares the structure and a draft of the landing page copy.
Prepare the structure and a draft of a landing page.
Sections (in this order):
1. Hero: H1 (≤70 characters) + 1 subhero sentence + 1 CTA
2. Pain: 3 pain scenarios
3. What we do: 3 key capabilities, one line each
4. Social proof: what needs to be prepared (logos, numbers, quotes) — a list
5. How it works: 3-4 steps
6. Pricing: one sentence about the model
7. FAQ: 5 questions with answers
8. Final CTA
Banned: "transform your", "unlock your potential", "next-gen".
Example: A landing page draft that only needs fact-checking.
Model: Claude·Difficulty: Intermediate
#landing#copy
LinkedIn Post from Personal Experience
Marketing
Turns a note about a real case into a LinkedIn post without copywriter clichés.
Write a LinkedIn post in my voice.
Hard rules:
- Don't use "Here's what I learned", "And here's the kicker", "Pro tip:"
- Don't use emoji at the start of lines as bullets
- Don't break into one word per line
- Length: 700-1100 characters
- Ending: one question to the audience or one practical tip
- Style: my live voice, no hype
Input (a note about the situation):
<…>
Example: Turn a work case into a publication without burnout.
Model: Claude·Difficulty: Beginner
#linkedin#personal-brand
Positioning in One Table
Marketing
Helps fit product positioning into a 'for whom / against whom / why' matrix.
You are a product marketer. Help fit the positioning into a table.
Fill in:
- Who the target audience is (1-2 segments)
- What concrete task we solve
- Alternatives, including "do nothing"
- What our unique promise is
- The 3 main objections and how we close them
- What we deliberately do NOT do
If the input has little data — mark "[need to clarify with the founder]". Don't make up facts about the business.
Example: Once a quarter, run the product through this table.
Model: Claude·Difficulty: Intermediate
#positioning#founder
SEO Article Outline
Marketing
Prepares an SEO article outline from a query and the search results.
Generate an SEO article outline.
Input:
- Target query: <…>
- ICP: <…>
- What we want to sell at the end: <…>
Output:
1. H1 + 3 meta description variants (≤155 characters)
2. An H2/H3 tree (8-12 points)
3. Under each H2: 1 sentence about "what the reader should take away"
4. A list of facts/numbers to find and confirm (don't make them up)
5. A CTA at the end of the article
Style: editorial, no fluff and no epithets.
Example: Build the content plan: one prompt = one ready outline.