60 Free AI Prompts for MarketersCopy-Paste Ready
60 prompts engineered for real marketing work — not theory. Each one has specific placeholders so you get production-ready output in seconds. Organized by the 6 highest-leverage marketing channels.
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Email Marketing
Write emails that actually get opened, clicked, and acted on — from subject lines that beat the algorithm to sequences that convert.
Write a welcome email for new subscribers to [BRAND/NEWSLETTER NAME] in the [NICHE] space. The reader just opted in from: [OPT-IN SOURCE, e.g. a lead magnet about social media strategy] My brand voice: [DESCRIBE YOUR VOICE, e.g. direct, conversational, no fluff] The one thing I want them to do after reading: [DESIRED ACTION] Email requirements: - Subject line: Create curiosity without being clickbait (3 options) - Preview text: Complements the subject line - Body: Under 200 words, personal tone, delivers immediate value - CTA: One clear action, no more - P.S.: A personal note that builds connection
I'm writing a 5-email nurture sequence for [PRODUCT/SERVICE, e.g. a $47 email marketing course] targeting [AUDIENCE, e.g. freelancers who want to monetize their writing]. Sequence goal: Move subscribers from "I found this interesting" to "I'm ready to buy." Write all 5 emails: Email 1 (Day 1): Deliver value + build credibility Email 2 (Day 3): Identify the core problem with specifics Email 3 (Day 5): Introduce the solution (soft pitch) Email 4 (Day 7): Social proof + objection handling Email 5 (Day 10): Direct pitch with urgency For each email: subject line, preview text, full body, CTA.
Write 10 subject line variants for an email about [EMAIL TOPIC, e.g. how to write better cold emails].
Target audience: [AUDIENCE DESCRIPTION, e.g. sales reps and freelancers who struggle with outreach]
Give me one of each type:
1. Curiosity gap ("The ______ nobody talks about")
2. Direct benefit ("How to ______ in [X time]")
3. Counter-intuitive claim
4. Question
5. Social proof reference
6. List format ("5 ways to…")
7. Personalization hook
8. Fear/risk framing
9. Story hook
10. Command/call to action opener
Also tell me which 3 you'd actually A/B test first and why.My email list has [X] subscribers and my average open rate is [X%] and click rate is [X%]. Industry average for my niche ([NICHE]) is approximately [BENCHMARK]%. Diagnose what's likely happening and write a full email audit action plan: 1. What my metrics suggest about subject lines / content quality / list health 2. 5 specific tests I should run in the next 30 days 3. A re-engagement sequence for subscribers who haven't opened in 90+ days 4. Whether I should clean my list and how to do it without losing real subscribers 5. One quick win I can implement this week
Write a promotional email for [PRODUCT/OFFER, e.g. a limited-time 20% discount on an online course]. Details: - Product: [PRODUCT NAME AND BRIEF DESCRIPTION] - Offer: [WHAT THE OFFER IS] - Deadline: [DEADLINE] - Price: [PRICE] - Primary benefit: [TOP BENEFIT] Write the email with: - Subject line (3 options) - Preview text - Strong opening hook (not "We're excited to offer you…") - Product overview focused on outcomes, not features - Social proof element - Clear CTA button copy - Urgency element that doesn't feel fake - P.S. with a secondary CTA
I need a re-engagement email to send to subscribers who haven't opened my emails in [X] months. My list is [SIZE] and approximately [X%] of them are "cold." My brand is [BRAND DESCRIPTION]. Write a re-engagement email that: - Acknowledges the absence (briefly, without guilt) - Delivers real value immediately - Asks if they still want to be on the list - Gives them a clear yes/no option (stay vs. unsubscribe) - Is honest and human — not corporate Also write a follow-up email for those who don't respond to the first one after 7 days.
Write a post-purchase email sequence for customers who just bought [PRODUCT, e.g. a digital course on copywriting]. Sequence: 4 emails over 14 days Email 1 (Immediate): Confirmation + how to get started (make them feel great about the purchase) Email 2 (Day 3): First win — something simple they can do right now Email 3 (Day 7): Overcome the #1 obstacle your customers typically hit Email 4 (Day 14): Case study / social proof + invite to leave a review Goal: Reduce buyer's remorse, increase completion rates, and generate testimonials.
I want to build an automated email sequence for [LEAD MAGNET TYPE, e.g. a free checklist about content planning] that converts subscribers into buyers of [PAID PRODUCT, e.g. a content strategy course at $97]. Map out the full nurture sequence: - How many emails and over what time period? - What's the psychological journey from "free resource user" to "paid customer"? - What objections do I need to overcome before they buy? - At what point should I introduce the product? Then write emails 1, 3, and 5 in full as examples.
I need to write a "referral ask" email to send to my most engaged subscribers. These are [X] subscribers who regularly open and click my emails. I'm launching [PRODUCT/PROGRAM/REFERRAL INITIATIVE]. The referral offer is: [WHAT THE REFERRER GETS, IF ANYTHING]. Write an email that: - Acknowledges them as a valued member of the community - Explains what I'm doing and why they'd want to share it - Makes the referral action simple (what to do, what to say) - Doesn't feel transactional or "pyramid scheme-y" - Has a clear, frictionless CTA
Audit this email I wrote and give me a detailed critique: [PASTE YOUR EMAIL DRAFT] Evaluate on: 1. Subject line — would you open it? 2. Preview text — does it add to or repeat the subject line? 3. Opening line — does it earn the next click? 4. Body — clarity, flow, scan-ability, value 5. CTA — how many, how clear, how strong 6. Tone — does it match the brand? 7. Length — is it too long? Where should I cut? Rewrite the weakest 3 elements and explain what you changed and why.
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SEO & Blog Writing
Build content that ranks in Google and converts readers into customers — from keyword research to full article outlines to meta tag optimization.
I'm creating a blog post targeting the keyword "[TARGET KEYWORD, e.g. best email marketing tools for small business]." The post should rank for this keyword and convert readers to [CONVERSION GOAL, e.g. sign up for a free trial / download a lead magnet]. Create a complete SEO blog post outline with: - Title (include keyword naturally, under 60 chars) - Meta description (150–160 chars, includes keyword, drives clicks) - H1, H2s, and H3s with logical structure - For each section: what to cover and why (3–5 bullet points) - Suggested word count per section - Internal linking opportunities - CTA placement strategy
Write the introduction for a blog post titled "[TITLE, e.g. The Complete Guide to Email Marketing for E-Commerce in 2024]." Requirements: - First sentence must earn the second sentence - Address the reader's situation, not the topic abstractly - Establish that this is worth their time in 30 words or less - Include the primary keyword naturally - No "In today's digital world…" or "Have you ever wondered…" - End the introduction with a clear statement of what they'll learn - Total length: 150–200 words
I want to do keyword research for my [BLOG/WEBSITE] in the [NICHE] space. My target audience is [AUDIENCE DESCRIPTION] and my domain authority is [LOW/MEDIUM/HIGH]. Help me build a keyword strategy: 1. Identify 5 "pillar" topics I should own 2. For each pillar, give me 5 long-tail keywords with low competition and real search intent 3. For each keyword, identify: search intent (informational/commercial/transactional), the type of content that should rank, and the likely CTA 4. Which keywords should I target first? (Easiest wins) 5. Which 3 keywords would have the highest impact if I ranked #1?
Rewrite this blog section to be more engaging, SEO-friendly, and scan-able: [PASTE YOUR DRAFT SECTION] Make it: - Easier to scan (break up walls of text, add structure) - More specific (replace vague claims with concrete examples/numbers) - More actionable (add a takeaway or "how to" element) - Naturally include the keyword "[KEYWORD]" if it's not already there - Remove any filler sentences that don't add value Show me the before and after with a brief explanation of each change.
Write a "comparison" blog post outline for "[TOPIC, e.g. ConvertKit vs Mailchimp for bloggers]." The post should: - Rank for "[COMPARISON KEYWORD]" and related terms - Be genuinely useful — not just a fluff comparison - Recommend a winner (or suggest who each is right for) Include: - Title and H1 (multiple options) - Meta description - Full outline with H2s and H3s - What data or criteria to use for the comparison - How to handle affiliate disclaimers - A strong conclusion with a clear recommendation
I want to repurpose a blog post into 5 different content formats. Here's the post: [PASTE POST URL OR SUMMARY]. Create: 1. A LinkedIn post (300–500 words) with the key insight 2. A Twitter/X thread (10 tweets) 3. An email newsletter version (under 400 words with a CTA) 4. A YouTube video script outline (5-minute video) 5. An Instagram carousel (8 slides) For each, tell me what to emphasize, what to cut, and how to adapt the angle for that platform's audience.
Write a blog post FAQ section for an article about "[ARTICLE TOPIC, e.g. how to start email marketing for your small business]." Create 8 genuinely asked questions (use real search queries if possible) and answer each one in 75–100 words. Format the answers to potentially appear as Google featured snippets — clear, direct, structured. Mark which questions to add FAQPage schema markup to for SEO purposes.
I want to build a content cluster around the topic "[PILLAR TOPIC, e.g. email marketing]" to dominate search rankings in my niche ([NICHE]). Design the cluster: 1. The pillar page: topic, target keyword, word count, main sections 2. 8 supporting cluster posts: each with title, target keyword, how it connects to the pillar, and whether to build internal links to/from the pillar 3. How to interlink the cluster for maximum SEO impact 4. What "hub" page structure to use for the pillar 5. Publishing order (which to publish first for maximum momentum)
I need to update an old blog post that's ranking on page 2 for "[KEYWORD]." The post is: [PASTE OR DESCRIBE THE POST]. Create an optimization plan: 1. What's likely holding it back from page 1? 2. Which sections need to be rewritten or expanded? 3. What new information or data should I add? 4. Are there better header structures for the target keyword? 5. What internal and external links should I add? 6. Write the revised title, meta description, and first paragraph Goal: Move this from page 2 to top 5.
Write a "listicle" style blog post intro and full H2 structure for: "[TITLE, e.g. 11 Email Marketing Mistakes That Are Killing Your Open Rates]" Requirements: - 11 items total, not just obvious ones - Each H2 should be the mistake described as a specific behavior (not just "not segmenting your list" but "sending the same email to every subscriber regardless of what they clicked on") - For each mistake: what it looks like, why marketers do it, what to do instead (3–4 bullets) - Make it feel like advice from someone who's reviewed 1,000 email campaigns, not a blog post summarizing other blog posts
Ad Copywriting
Write ads that stop the scroll, earn the click, and convert — across Meta, Google, LinkedIn, and YouTube — without sounding like an ad.
Write 5 Facebook/Instagram ad variations for [PRODUCT/SERVICE, e.g. a $47 email marketing course for freelancers]. For each ad: - Primary text (2–3 sentences max, hook + value + CTA) - Headline (under 40 chars, benefit-focused) - Description (1 sentence supporting the headline) - CTA button (which one to use and why) Audience: [TARGET AUDIENCE, e.g. freelancers aged 25–40 who want to grow their income] Offer: [YOUR OFFER, e.g. $47, includes X hours of content, Y templates] Unique angle: [WHAT MAKES THIS DIFFERENT, e.g. built for service providers, not e-commerce] Create 5 different angle variations: problem-aware, solution-aware, social proof, curiosity, and direct response.
I'm running a Google Search campaign for [BUSINESS TYPE, e.g. a local SEO agency]. Target keywords: [LIST 3–5 TARGET KEYWORDS] Landing page: [DESCRIBE WHAT THE PAGE OFFERS] USP: [YOUR UNIQUE SELLING PROPOSITION] Write 3 Responsive Search Ads (RSAs) with: - 15 headline options (30 chars max each) - 4 description options (90 chars max each) - Mark which headlines/descriptions are "pinned" to position 1, 2, or 3 - Include at least 3 headlines with keyword insertion intent - Prioritize CTR-driving language over branding
Rewrite this underperforming ad. Current version: [PASTE YOUR CURRENT AD] Current metrics: CTR [X%], CPC [$X], Conversion rate [X%] What I think is wrong: [YOUR HYPOTHESIS, e.g. the headline is too product-focused / it doesn't address the objection / the CTA is weak] Give me: 1. Diagnosis of what's actually wrong (not just confirming my hypothesis) 2. 3 rewritten versions testing different angles 3. A/B test priority: which two should I test first and why 4. What metric to optimize for in the test (CTR vs. conversion rate vs. ROAS)
Write ad copy for a [RETARGETING/COLD TRAFFIC] campaign targeting [AUDIENCE SEGMENT, e.g. people who visited my pricing page but didn't convert]. What they know: [LEVEL OF AWARENESS, e.g. they know what the product does but haven't bought] Their likely objection: [PRIMARY OBJECTION, e.g. not sure it's worth $47 / don't have time / need to think about it] The offer: [WHAT I'M OFFERING, e.g. same product + limited bonus if they buy this week] Write 3 ads that: - Acknowledge where they are in the buying journey - Address the specific objection - Create urgency without sounding desperate - Match tone to where they are (warm retargeting ≠ cold ad)
I need to write LinkedIn ads targeting [JOB TITLE/AUDIENCE, e.g. VP of Marketing at B2B companies with 50–500 employees]. Product: [PRODUCT/SERVICE DESCRIPTION] Business problem it solves: [SPECIFIC BUSINESS PROBLEM] Proof point: [A STAT, CASE STUDY, OR SOCIAL PROOF ELEMENT] Write 3 ad variations: 1. Thought leadership angle (educate, then CTA) 2. Problem agitation angle (make the pain vivid, then offer relief) 3. Social proof angle (lead with a result, then explain how) For each: headline, ad body (150 words max), and CTA. LinkedIn B2B tone — professional but not stiff.
Write a YouTube pre-roll ad script for [PRODUCT/SERVICE, e.g. a productivity app for marketers]. The ad must work in two formats: 1. 6-second bumper version (every word counts) 2. 15–30 second skippable version (must earn attention in the first 5 seconds) Audience: [TARGET AUDIENCE] The one thing I want them to feel/do: [DESIRED RESPONSE] For the 30-second version, use this structure: - 0–5s: Pattern interrupt (don't start with "Hi, I'm…") - 5–15s: Problem + stakes - 15–25s: Solution + proof - 25–30s: CTA Write the full script with timing notes.
I want to test 5 completely different creative angles for advertising [PRODUCT, e.g. a B2B SaaS email tool]. For each angle, give me: - The core insight or emotion driving the angle - A sample headline and first line of copy - The visual concept (what the ad image/video should show) - Who this angle will resonate with most - The risk/downside of this angle Angles to test: 1. Problem-first (make the pain vivid) 2. Outcome-first (show the dream result) 3. Counter-intuitive (challenge a common belief) 4. Social proof (lead with someone else's result) 5. Comparison (us vs. alternative)
Write a Facebook ad creative brief for a campaign targeting [AUDIENCE] for [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. The brief should include: - Campaign objective - 3 audience segment hypotheses (who we think will convert and why) - Creative formats to test (static image, carousel, video, UGC, etc.) - 5 messaging angles - Visual direction for each angle - Copy variations (3 per angle) - Testing priority (which to run first and why) - Success metrics and expected benchmarks
I'm writing a long-form sales page for [PRODUCT, e.g. a $297 marketing course] and I need the ads to drive traffic to it. The sales page converts at approximately [X%] for warm traffic. Write 3 cold traffic ads designed to pre-qualify the visitor before they hit the page — so only genuinely interested buyers click through. Each ad should: - Immediately qualify or disqualify (not try to appeal to everyone) - Mention the price point to pre-qualify on price - Speak to the specific dream outcome, not features - Not give away so much that they don't need to click through
Analyze this winning ad from a competitor in my space: [DESCRIBE THE AD OR PASTE IT] Tell me: 1. What psychological principle is it using? 2. What's the hook strategy? 3. Who is the ideal audience for this specific ad? 4. What's the likely A/B test that produced this version? 5. How can I ethically "borrow" the structure without copying it? Then write a version for my brand [BRAND DESCRIPTION] targeting [MY AUDIENCE] that uses the same principle but with my unique positioning.
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Content Calendar Planning
Build a repeatable content system that ensures you always have something to publish — without burning out or publishing filler.
I'm a [ROLE, e.g. in-house content marketer] for a [COMPANY TYPE, e.g. Series B B2B SaaS startup] in the [INDUSTRY] space. I need to build a 90-day content marketing plan. Our goals: [GOALS, e.g. increase organic traffic by 30%, generate 50 MQLs/month] Current channels: [LIST CHANNELS] Team size: [X people, X hours/week for content] Budget: [$X/month] Create: 1. Channel priority and why 2. Content mix (educational / promotional / engagement — with percentages) 3. Publishing cadence per channel 4. A 12-week content calendar overview (themes by week) 5. The 3 content types we should create first and why
I want to create a "content batching" workflow so I can produce 1 month of content in 2 days of focused work. I create content for: [LIST YOUR CHANNELS] Content types: [BLOG POSTS / SOCIAL / EMAIL / VIDEO / etc.] My available days: [DAY 1 and DAY 2, e.g. first Monday and Tuesday of each month] Design a step-by-step batching workflow: Day 1 agenda: What to research, outline, and draft Day 2 agenda: What to write, record, edit, and schedule Tools to use: [SUGGEST TOOLS] Templates to create: [WHAT TEMPLATES WOULD SPEED THIS UP] What to outsource vs. do myself
Build a content calendar for [BRAND] for the month of [MONTH/YEAR] around the theme of [MONTHLY THEME, e.g. "Q4 planning for marketers"]. Calendar requirements: - [X] blog posts - [X] LinkedIn posts/week - [X] emails - [X] social media posts/week For each piece of content: - Title/headline - Platform - Publish date - Primary keyword or topic angle - CTA/goal - Whether it links to another piece in the cluster Make the content feel connected — one blog post feeds into a social series which feeds into an email.
I want to build a "content bank" — a repository of pre-written content I can pull from when I'm busy or blocked. Help me create a system: 1. What content types belong in a content bank? (evergreen vs. time-sensitive) 2. How should I organize the bank? (Notion/Airtable/folder structure) 3. Create 20 "seed topics" for [MY NICHE, e.g. B2B email marketing] I can write about anytime 4. For each seed topic, give me 3 angles I can write about the same topic in different ways 5. A tagging system so I can quickly find the right piece for the right moment
I need to plan content around [UPCOMING EVENT/LAUNCH/SEASON, e.g. a product launch happening in 6 weeks]. The launch: [DESCRIBE WHAT YOU'RE LAUNCHING AND THE DATE] Audience: [TARGET AUDIENCE] Goal: [LAUNCH GOAL — e.g. sell 100 units in week 1] Build a pre/during/post launch content plan: Pre-launch (6 weeks out to launch day): Build anticipation and warm the audience Launch week: Drive conversions Post-launch (2 weeks after): Social proof and long-tail sales For each phase: channel, content type, specific post ideas, and how they connect to the buying decision.
I'm creating a year-long editorial calendar for [PUBLICATION TYPE, e.g. a B2B marketing blog] on the topic of [MAIN TOPIC]. Plan 12 months of content with: - 1 overarching theme per month tied to business/seasonal relevance - 4 blog post ideas per month - 2 "pillar" pieces per quarter (long-form, high-effort, evergreen) - Tie each month's theme to a marketing funnel stage (awareness / consideration / decision) Then show me how to turn each pillar piece into 10 derivative content assets (social, email, podcast, video, etc.).
I want to repurpose one piece of content into a full month of social media posts. The original content is: [PASTE CONTENT OR DESCRIBE IT]. Create a repurposing plan: - 4 LinkedIn posts (different angles from the same content) - 8 Twitter/X posts (quotes, stats, insights, questions) - 3 Instagram captions - 2 email newsletter snippets - 1 YouTube Shorts or TikTok concept For each repurposed piece: what angle to use, what to emphasize, what to cut, and the CTA.
My content performance for the last quarter: [PASTE YOUR METRICS — top posts, average engagement, traffic, email opens, etc.] Analyze what worked and what didn't: 1. What content format/topic drove the most traffic/engagement? 2. What should I do more of? Less of? 3. What's a "hidden winner" I should double down on? 4. What content experiment should I run next quarter? 5. Build a Q[NEXT QUARTER] content strategy based on these learnings
I'm building a "content system" for a solo marketer or small team. The goal is to consistently publish quality content without burning out. Design the system: 1. Minimum viable content calendar (what's the least I can publish and still build momentum?) 2. The "assembly line" — how to go from idea to published in the least steps 3. An AI-assisted workflow for each content type I create ([LIST YOUR TYPES]) 4. How to decide what to publish vs. what to skip 5. A weekly content planning ritual (30-minute routine every Monday morning)
Write a content brief for a [BLOG POST/VIDEO/PODCAST EPISODE] about [TOPIC]. The brief should include: - Title (3 options) - Target keyword and secondary keywords - Target audience (who exactly is this for) - Goal (what do we want them to feel/do after consuming this) - Angle (what makes this take on the topic different) - Outline with section headers - Key points to cover in each section - Sources to reference or research - CTA - Estimated word count / length - Internal linking opportunities
Analytics & Reporting
Turn data into decisions — whether you're building a marketing dashboard, writing a performance report, or diagnosing why campaigns aren't working.
I'm building a monthly marketing performance report for [STAKEHOLDER, e.g. the CEO and board / the head of sales / the client]. The channels I manage: [LIST CHANNELS] My goals for the quarter: [LIST YOUR GOALS WITH TARGETS] This month's data: [PASTE YOUR RAW NUMBERS] Write a one-page executive summary that: - Leads with the headline result (hit / missed / trending toward goal) - Shows the 3 most important metrics in context (vs. last month, vs. goal, vs. benchmark) - Explains WHY the numbers look the way they do (not just what happened) - Identifies 1–2 clear next actions - Uses plain language, not marketing jargon
Help me build a marketing KPI framework for a [BUSINESS TYPE, e.g. B2B SaaS startup at Series A]. Business goal: [E.g. grow MRR by 30% in 12 months] Marketing channels: [LIST CHANNELS] For each channel, define: - The primary KPI (what one number matters most) - 2–3 supporting metrics - How to track it - What a "good" benchmark looks like - A red flag threshold that should trigger a strategy change Then build a simple dashboard structure I can replicate in [TOOL, e.g. Google Sheets / Notion / Looker].
My [CAMPAIGN/CHANNEL] performance is underperforming. Here are the metrics: [PASTE YOUR DATA — impressions, CTR, conversions, cost, etc.] Diagnose what's most likely wrong: 1. Where in the funnel is the drop-off happening? 2. Is this a volume problem, efficiency problem, or conversion problem? 3. What are the top 3 hypotheses for what's causing this? 4. What data would confirm or eliminate each hypothesis? 5. What are the top 3 actions I should take this week to turn it around? Don't just describe what the numbers say — tell me what they mean and what to do.
I want to run an A/B test on [ELEMENT, e.g. email subject lines / landing page headline / ad creative]. Current version (control): [DESCRIBE CURRENT VERSION] Hypothesis: [WHAT I THINK WILL IMPROVE PERFORMANCE AND WHY] Test version (variant): [DESCRIBE THE VARIANT] Design the A/B test: 1. What's the primary metric I should optimize for? 2. What sample size do I need for statistical significance? 3. How long should I run the test? 4. What's a "winner" threshold (% improvement that justifies switching)? 5. What's my null hypothesis (what would tell me the test was inconclusive)? 6. How do I avoid the most common A/B testing mistakes?
I need to present [MARKETING CHANNEL, e.g. content marketing / SEO / paid social] ROI to a skeptical CFO or executive who thinks marketing is a cost center. Here's my data: [PASTE YOUR PERFORMANCE DATA] Help me: 1. Translate marketing metrics into business outcomes (revenue, pipeline, CAC, LTV) 2. Build the ROI calculation showing marketing's contribution 3. Handle the objection "we can't attribute revenue to content" honestly 4. Create a 5-slide presentation structure that makes the business case 5. Write the opening 2 minutes of my presentation to establish credibility immediately
I want to create a marketing attribution model for [BUSINESS TYPE] where customers typically touch [X] channels before converting. Our channels: [LIST CHANNELS] Our average sales cycle: [LENGTH] Current attribution model: [FIRST TOUCH / LAST TOUCH / LINEAR / NONE] Explain: 1. Why [CURRENT MODEL] is probably misleading me 2. What attribution model is right for my business given our cycle 3. How to set it up in [GA4 / HubSpot / etc.] 4. The practical limitation I need to explain to stakeholders 5. What decisions I should change based on better attribution data
I'm reviewing the performance of [CONTENT TYPE, e.g. our blog] for the last 6 months. Here's the data: [PASTE TRAFFIC, ENGAGEMENT, CONVERSION DATA]. Give me: 1. A content audit — what to keep, update, delete, or consolidate 2. The top 5 performing pieces and why they work 3. The top 5 underperforming pieces — are they salvageable? 4. Which keywords I'm ranking for that I should double down on 5. A 90-day plan to improve content performance by [X%] based on these findings
Write a "metrics that matter" cheat sheet for a [ROLE, e.g. content marketer / performance marketer / email marketer]. For each metric I should track: - Metric name - What it actually measures (in plain English) - Why it matters - A "good" benchmark for my industry ([INDUSTRY]) - The most common mistake marketers make when interpreting it - What to do if it's below benchmark Include: [LIST 10–12 METRICS RELEVANT TO YOUR ROLE, or ask for AI to suggest them]
I need to write a quarterly business review (QBR) for my marketing team. We're presenting to [AUDIENCE, e.g. the leadership team]. This quarter's goals were: [GOALS] Results: [PASTE YOUR Q[X] RESULTS] Write the QBR deck outline and speaker notes: Slide 1: Quarter summary (what we set out to do) Slide 2: Results vs. goals (be honest about misses) Slide 3: What worked and why Slide 4: What didn't work and what we learned Slide 5: Q[NEXT] strategy and priorities Slide 6: Budget and resource ask (if any) Give me the key talking points for each slide, including how to handle the "what went wrong" slide without getting defensive.
I want to build a real-time marketing dashboard that gives me a clear picture of performance every Monday morning in under 10 minutes. My channels: [LIST CHANNELS] My key goals: [LIST GOALS] Tools I have: [GA4 / HubSpot / Meta Ads Manager / etc.] Design the dashboard: 1. What metrics to include (and what to exclude — most dashboards have too much) 2. How to structure the layout (daily / weekly / monthly views) 3. How to set up automated alerts for when something goes wrong 4. The "Monday morning ritual" — the 10-minute review process to run each week 5. How to connect the dashboard to decisions (when X happens, I do Y)
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Social Media Content
Create scroll-stopping content for any platform — from LinkedIn thought leadership to Instagram carousels to Twitter/X threads — without staring at a blank screen.
Write a [PLATFORM, e.g. LinkedIn] post announcing [ANNOUNCEMENT TYPE, e.g. a new product feature / a company milestone / a major client win]. The announcement: [WHAT YOU'RE ANNOUNCING] Why it matters to the audience: [THE BENEFIT OR SIGNIFICANCE] Rules: - Lead with the audience benefit, not the announcement itself - Don't bury the news in paragraph 3 - Avoid corporate speak ("We're thrilled to announce…") - Include social proof or context that makes this feel significant - End with a reason to engage (question, poll, or CTA)