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18 Free ChatGPT Prompts for Marketing

Copy-paste prompts for the marketing work you actually ship โ€” ad copy, email sequences, landing pages, SEO briefs, social posts and positioning. Built to give you options to test, not one generic draft. Works with ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini. No signup โ€” just tap Copy.

๐ŸŽฏ Ad Copy โœ‰๏ธ Email ๐Ÿ“ Content & Social ๐Ÿ”Ž SEO & Landing ๐Ÿงญ Positioning

"Write me an ad" gets you bland, forgettable copy โ€” because the model has nothing to react to. The prompts below do the opposite: they make ChatGPT interrogate your offer, generate multiple distinct angles instead of one, and pin down audience, promise and proof before writing a word. Swap the [brackets] for your product and audience, and you'll get copy you can actually test.

๐ŸŽฏ Ad Copy & Angles

Test the angle before you polish the words.

1. Big-Idea Ad Angles

Best for: finding the hook before you write a single ad.

You are a direct-response strategist. For the product below, generate 6 distinct ad ANGLES โ€” not finished ads. Each angle should be built on a different emotional driver (fear of missing out, status, saving time, avoiding pain, curiosity, belonging). For each: give it a name, the core promise in one line, who it hits hardest, and why it would stop the scroll. Rank them by likely performance for a cold audience and tell me which to test first.

PRODUCT: [what it is]
AUDIENCE: [who buys it]
BIGGEST PAIN it solves: [describe]

2. The Scroll-Stopping Hook Machine

Best for: the first line of a Facebook/TikTok/Instagram ad.

Write 12 opening hooks (first line only) for a paid social ad promoting the product below. Vary the format: bold claim, contrarian take, question, callout to the exact audience, "before/after", and pattern interrupt. Keep each under 12 words, punchy, and specific โ€” no vague "Are you tired of...". Then tell me which 3 you'd test first and why.

PRODUCT: [what it is]
AUDIENCE: [who it's for]
OFFER: [price / deal / free trial]

3. Full Ad From a Winning Angle

Best for: turning a chosen angle into ready-to-run copy.

Write a paid social ad using this exact angle: [paste the angle]. Structure: scroll-stopping hook, 2-3 short body lines that build desire and handle the #1 objection, and a clear CTA. Match this tone: [casual / bold / professional]. Give me 3 variations of the same ad so I can A/B test. Keep sentences short and mobile-readable. No hashtags unless I ask.

PRODUCT: [what it is]
OFFER + CTA: [what you want them to do]

Want 30 marketing prompts built for this exact workflow?

This page is a taster. 30 AI Prompts for Marketers & Copywriters gives you campaign-ready prompts for ads, funnels, launch emails, positioning and content โ€” each with fill-in-the-blank variables and usage notes. One download, yours forever.

Get the Marketing Pack โ€” $5 โ†’ Instant download ยท 100% money-back guarantee ยท Or get all 68 in the Ultimate Vault ($7)

โœ‰๏ธ Email Marketing

Sequences that get opened, read, and clicked.

4. The Welcome Sequence Architect

Best for: turning a new subscriber into a buyer over 5 emails.

Design a 5-email welcome sequence for a new subscriber to [product/newsletter]. For each email give me: the goal, the subject line (plus one alt to test), the core message in 2-3 sentences, and the single CTA. The arc should move from welcome โ†’ build trust with a quick win โ†’ introduce the problem โ†’ present the offer โ†’ handle the top objection with social proof. Keep it warm and human, not corporate. Note the ideal send-day gap between each.

PRODUCT: [what it is]
AUDIENCE: [who just subscribed and why]

5. Subject Lines That Actually Get Opened

Best for: lifting open rates without clickbait.

Write 15 subject lines for the email described below. Mix these styles: curiosity gap, specific benefit, question, contrarian, short-and-punchy (under 4 words), and personal/story. Avoid spam-trigger words and ALL CAPS. For each, add a 1-word tag for the psychology it uses. Then pick the 3 you'd test and say why. Include a matching preview-text line for the top pick.

EMAIL IS ABOUT: [topic / offer]
AUDIENCE: [who receives it]

6. The Re-Engagement Win-Back

Best for: waking up a list that's gone cold.

Write a 3-email win-back sequence for subscribers who haven't opened in 60+ days. Email 1: pattern-interrupt "are you still there?" with a genuine reason to re-engage. Email 2: lead with your single best free resource, no pitch. Email 3: honest "last email" with a clear stay-or-go choice. Keep them short, personal, and low-pressure. Give subject lines and the one CTA per email.

BRAND: [what you do]
BEST FREE RESOURCE to offer: [describe]

7. Launch Email That Sells Without Being Sleazy

Best for: the "cart is open" email on launch day.

Write a launch-day sales email for the offer below. Structure: a hook tied to the reader's problem, a short story or reason-why for the launch, 3 bullet outcomes (not features), a risk-reverser (guarantee), clear pricing, and a single strong CTA repeated twice. Tone: confident and warm, zero hype words like "revolutionary". Add a P.S. that restates the deadline or bonus.

OFFER: [what, price, deadline]
AUDIENCE + main objection: [describe]

๐Ÿ“ Content & Social

Fill the calendar without running dry.

8. 30 Content Ideas From One Pillar

Best for: a month of posts from a single topic.

I create content about [topic] for [audience]. Generate 30 content ideas spun from this one pillar. Organize them into buckets: educational (how-to), contrarian/opinion, behind-the-scenes, case study/result, and quick tips. For each idea give a working title and the one takeaway. Flag the 5 most likely to get saves and shares, and note which could become a lead magnet.

9. Turn a Blog Post Into 8 Social Posts

Best for: squeezing every drop out of long-form content.

Repurpose the article below into 8 standalone social posts. Give me: 2 short "hot take" posts, 2 how-to/carousel outlines, 2 story-format posts, 1 stat/quote graphic caption, and 1 question post to drive comments. Keep each platform-native and skimmable โ€” no "check out my blog" filler. Preserve the article's real insight in each; don't water it down.

ARTICLE:
[paste the article or its key points]

10. The Value-First Carousel

Best for: a save-worthy LinkedIn/Instagram carousel.

Write a 7-slide carousel on [topic] for [audience]. Slide 1: a hook that promises a specific outcome. Slides 2-6: one actionable idea each, phrased as a mini-lesson with a concrete example. Slide 7: a soft CTA. For every slide give the headline (max 8 words) and the 1-2 supporting lines. Make slide 1 impossible to scroll past. No fluff, no "in today's world".

11. Rewrite This So It Doesn't Sound Like AI

Best for: making generated copy sound like a human wrote it.

Rewrite the text below so it reads like a sharp human wrote it, not an AI. Cut hedging and filler ("in order to", "it's important to note"), vary sentence length, use concrete nouns and active voice, and delete any sentence that doesn't add information. Keep my meaning and key points exactly. Match this voice: [describe โ€” e.g. direct, dry-witted, friendly]. Return only the rewrite.

TEXT:
[paste the copy]

๐Ÿ”Ž SEO & Landing Pages

Content that ranks and pages that convert.

12. The SEO Content Brief

Best for: briefing a post that actually has a shot at ranking.

Create an SEO content brief for the target keyword "[keyword]". Include: search intent (informational / commercial / transactional), the angle that would beat the current top results, a suggested title (under 60 chars) and meta description (under 155 chars), an H2/H3 outline covering the sub-topics Google expects, 5 related questions to answer, and 3 internal-link ideas. Note the primary keyword and 4 natural variations to use โ€” no keyword stuffing.

13. Landing Page That Converts

Best for: a full above-the-fold + page structure.

Write the copy for a landing page for the offer below. Sections: (1) headline stating the core promise + subhead with the mechanism, (2) 3 outcome-focused benefit blocks, (3) how it works in 3 steps, (4) objection-handling FAQ (5 questions), (5) social-proof section prompt, (6) final CTA with a risk-reverser. For the headline, give me 3 options using different frameworks (outcome, problem-agitate, and "for [audience] who [want]"). Keep it specific and benefit-led.

OFFER: [product, price, audience, main benefit]

14. Meta Titles & Descriptions That Get Clicks

Best for: lifting click-through from the search results page.

Write 5 SEO title tag + meta description pairs for the page below. Each title under 60 characters, each description under 155, and each must include the primary keyword naturally near the front. Vary the hook: benefit, number/list, question, "how to", and curiosity. Make the descriptions promise a specific payoff and end with a soft CTA. Flag which pair you'd ship.

PAGE TOPIC: [what the page covers]
PRIMARY KEYWORD: [keyword]

๐Ÿงญ Positioning & Strategy

Say the right thing to the right person.

15. Nail Your Value Proposition

Best for: the one sentence your whole brand hangs on.

Act as a positioning strategist. For the product below, write 6 value-proposition statements using different frameworks: outcome-first, "unlike [alternative]", the April Dunford "for [X] who [Y]", pain-relief, time-saved, and status/identity. Each must be one sentence, jargon-free, and something a real customer would say back to you. Then tell me which fits a skeptical, time-poor buyer best and why.

PRODUCT: [what it does]
CUSTOMER + their alternative today: [describe]

16. Build a Customer Persona From Real Signals

Best for: writing to one person instead of "everyone".

Build a sharp customer persona for the product below. Include: their situation and role, the trigger that makes them start looking, their top 3 desired outcomes, their top 3 objections/fears, where they hang out online, the language THEY use to describe the problem (not marketing-speak), and the one message that would make them feel understood. Base it only on what I give you โ€” flag any assumptions clearly.

PRODUCT: [what it is]
WHAT I KNOW about buyers: [notes, reviews, anything]

17. Competitor Messaging Teardown

Best for: finding the gap you can own.

Analyze the competitor messaging below. Break down: the promise they lead with, the emotional driver they're using, their proof, and their weakest claim. Then tell me the messaging GAP โ€” the angle they're ignoring that my product could own โ€” and give me one positioning line that pushes into that gap. Be specific and honest about where they're actually strong.

COMPETITOR COPY:
[paste their homepage / ad / tagline]
MY PRODUCT: [what makes it different]

18. The Campaign Brief in One Prompt

Best for: aligning a whole campaign before you create anything.

Write a one-page campaign brief for the goal below. Include: the objective and one measurable KPI, the target audience and the single insight about them, the core message and proof, the offer, the channels and why each, a rough content list, and the one thing that would make this campaign fail. Keep it tight enough to fit on a page a busy team will actually read.

GOAL: [what you want to achieve]
PRODUCT + AUDIENCE: [describe]
BUDGET / TIMELINE: [rough]

Get the full pack โ€” every prompt here, plus campaign frameworks

30 AI Prompts for Marketers & Copywriters: ready-to-run prompts for ads, email funnels, launches, SEO, social and positioning โ€” each with fill-in-the-blank variables so you never stare at a blank prompt again. Or grab the Ultimate Vault for all 68 across marketing, sales, writing and research.

Get the Marketing Pack โ€” $5 โ†’ Instant download ยท Money-back guarantee ยท Everything in one place โ†’ Ultimate Vault ($7, code JULY25 = 25% off)

How to prompt ChatGPT for marketing without getting generic copy

The reason most AI marketing copy sounds flat is that the prompt gives the model nothing to work with. "Write a Facebook ad for my course" produces the average of every ad the model has ever seen โ€” which is exactly what you don't want. Every prompt on this page fixes that by forcing three things: a clear audience, a specific promise or pain, and multiple options to test instead of one polished guess. That's the difference between copy you delete and copy you run.

Do these work with Claude and Gemini too?

Yes. None of these are ChatGPT-specific โ€” they're plain-language marketing instructions, so they work in ChatGPT (GPT-4o / GPT-4.1), Claude, Gemini, and any other capable model. Paste your product, audience and offer where the brackets are, and go.

Give the model your real inputs

The single biggest lever on output quality is the context you provide. Paste a real customer review, a competitor's tagline, your actual price and guarantee. The more concrete the input, the less the model has to invent โ€” and invented specifics are where AI marketing copy loses trust. Feed it truth and it hands back copy you can ship.

Always test the angle before the words

Great marketers test the angle โ€” the core promise and emotional driver โ€” before they polish a single sentence. Several prompts here (Big-Idea Ad Angles, Nail Your Value Proposition) are built to generate options precisely so you can test cheaply. Pick the winner with a small spend, then use the writing prompts to scale it.

When free prompts aren't enough

These 18 cover the marketing tasks most teams hit every week. If you'd rather not rebuild prompts each time โ€” and want the same quality across ads, funnels, launches and positioning โ€” the 30 AI Prompts for Marketers & Copywriters pack has them organized with variables and notes, or the Ultimate AI Prompt Vault gives you all 68 across every discipline. Less than the price of lunch, and it pays for itself the first campaign it sharpens.

โ† 50 more free ChatGPT prompts for everyday work & writing  ยท  Prompts for business โ†’  ยท  Prompts for developers โ†’  ยท  Prompts for content creators โ†’