AI Prompts for Marketers
Eight tested prompts for the marketing tasks you do weekly: subject lines, blog outlines, ad copy, repurposing, cold outreach, brand-voice extraction, customer pain-point synthesis. Each ships with rationale, an example output, and the common mistake to avoid.
8 prompts
for marketers
Last tested 2026-04-26
ready to copy, fill & paste
marketingcopywritingsocial-mediaemailcontentadvertising
Who this is for
Marketers, content leads, growth operators, and solo founders doing their own marketing - anyone who writes subject lines, blog outlines, ad copy, and social posts every week and is tired of AI output that sounds like every other AI output. If you ship copy that has to compete in someone's inbox, feed, or SERP, this pack is built for the prompts you'll actually paste daily.
Why this pack exists
Most 'ChatGPT prompts for marketers' lists give you 30 generic templates with no context. You read them, agree they look fine, paste two, get bland output, and never open the list again. This pack is eight prompts - because eight you actually use is more valuable than fifty you skim. Every prompt has the rationale, an example output you can hold the AI to, and the common mistake that wrecks the result. Built for the marketer who treats AI as a serious tool, not a novelty.
the 8 prompts in this pack
Tap any prompt to copy it now, or add all 8 to PromptPaste for one-tap access anywhere. Variables like {{language}} become fillable fields inside the app.
Act as a senior email marketer. Generate subject lines for the campaign below across three distinct strategic angles: curiosity, value, urgency. Produce 3-4 variations under each angle. After the variations, write one line per angle naming the click-driver (what specifically makes someone open).
Constraints:
- Each subject line under 50 characters.
- No emoji.
- No 'Last chance' / 'Don't miss out' / 'Hurry' unless the deadline is real.
- No exclamation marks.
The campaign:
{{campaign_description}}
Why it works: Subject lines fail when they describe the email instead of selling the open.
Example: Curiosity angle (3 lines): The Postgres trick we almost missed One graph changed how we price We were wrong about cold outreach Value angle (3 lines): 12 minutes saved per…
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Build a blog outline for the target keyword: {{target_keyword}}.
Produce, in this order:
1. The keyword's search intent (informational, commercial, navigational - and which way it leans).
2. Total target word count (between 1,200 and 2,500).
3. H2 sections with: section title, target word count, and a one-line rationale explaining why the section earns its place.
Constraints:
- 5-7 H2 sections, no more.
- One section must be extractable as a featured snippet (clear list, table, or definition).
- Last section must be opinionated ('what we'd do today,' a recommendation, a contrarian take) - not generic 'conclusion.'
My angle on the topic (one line, optional):
{{my_angle}}
Why it works: Blog outlines are the highest-leverage AI task in content marketing - the rest is execution.
Example: Target keyword: 'how to choose a database for a saas startup' Search intent: informational, leaning commercial (reader is shopping) Total target: 1,800 words H2: The wrong…
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Write three posts for the same idea, one per platform. Each post must be platform-native, not a copy with different lengths.
The idea:
{{idea}}
Constraints (apply to all three):
- Open with the strongest line, not a setup.
- No marketing verbs: leverage, unlock, empower, transform, revolutionize.
- No openings: 'In today's fast-paced world,' 'I'm thrilled to announce,' 'Excited to share.'
- No hashtags unless I ask.
- No exclamation marks.
Per-platform rules:
- **LinkedIn**: under 220 characters before any 'see more' break, line-broken for skim, personal-voice.
- **X / Twitter**: under 280 characters, single tweet, compression-first.
- **Instagram caption**: under 125 characters, hook in first 80 chars, one CTA at end.
Why it works: Generic 'write a LinkedIn post' prompts produce posts that sound like every other AI post on LinkedIn - which means they get skipped.
Example: LinkedIn (under 220 chars, hook-first): We almost shipped a feature nobody asked for.
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Write ad copy for {{product}} across four distinct strategic angles: pain, aspiration, proof, urgency. Per angle, produce one headline and one description.
Platform: {{platform}}
Follow the platform character limits exactly:
- Google Search: headline 30 chars, description 90 chars.
- Meta (Facebook/Instagram): headline 40 chars, primary text 125 chars.
- LinkedIn: headline 70 chars, intro text 150 chars.
Constraints:
- Lead with the buyer outcome, not the product feature.
- Urgency angle must reference a real deadline or constraint - never invent one.
- No exclamation marks.
- No marketing verbs (leverage, unlock, empower, transform, revolutionize).
Why it works: Ad copy fails when it leads with the product instead of the buyer outcome.
Example: Product: PromptPaste - your AI prompt clipboard.
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Read the source content below. Then:
1. Extract 4-6 distinct ideas (not summaries - actual standalone arguments). Number them.
2. Pick the strongest 3 ideas and write one short-format post per idea, in the formats I specified.
3. For each post, run a 'standalone test': would this make sense to a reader who has not read the original? If no, rewrite or drop it.
Formats to produce: {{formats}}
Source content:
{{source_content}}
Why it works: Repurposing is the highest-ROI move in content marketing - one well-researched piece can fuel a month of social.
Example: Source blog: 'Why we cut our pricing tiers from 4 to 2' Distinct ideas extracted: 1.
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Write a cold outreach email in exactly three lines:
1. One specific thing the recipient said, posted, shipped, or built (not a generic compliment).
2. One sentence connecting that to what I offer.
3. One question with a low-cost ask (15-min call, a quick reply, a single yes/no).
Banned phrases (do not use):
- 'I hope this email finds you well'
- 'I came across your profile'
- 'I wanted to reach out'
- 'quick question'
- 'no worries if not'
- 'circling back'
Subject line: under 40 characters, references something concrete from line 1.
The recipient:
{{recipient_context}}
What I offer:
{{offer}}
Why it works: Cold outreach fails 95% of the time because it leads with the sender, not the recipient.
Example: To: a head of marketing at a B2B SaaS company who just posted about cutting their content team.
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Read the raw customer input below (support messages, call notes, survey responses, reviews, or any direct customer voice).
Produce:
1. The top 5 themes, ranked by frequency (number of mentions).
2. Per theme, 2-3 verbatim quotes - exact words, not paraphrased.
3. One suggested next move based on what the data is actually telling you, not what's easy to fix.
If the input has fewer than 20 messages, say so and refuse to extract themes - 20 is the minimum for a real signal.
The raw input:
{{customer_input}}
Why it works: Pain-point research is the most under-done activity in marketing - everyone talks about 'voice of customer' and almost nobody does it systematically.
Example: Themes from 47 support messages, ranked by frequency: 1.
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Below are 3-5 examples of our brand voice in action (one channel only - blog OR landing pages OR newsletter, not mixed).
Produce a voice guide with:
- 5-8 specific moves you noticed (sentence length, banned words, openings, formatting habits, tone shifts).
- One short paragraph describing the overall feel.
- A one-line 'do not do' list of moves that would break the voice.
Keep the guide short enough that I can paste it as a prefix to any other prompt where I need writing in our voice.
Examples:
{{voice_examples}}
Why it works: Brand voice is the most reused asset in marketing work and the one most teams describe instead of capturing.
Example: Voice guide extracted from 4 PromptPaste blog posts: Specific moves: Sentences are short.
Read full prompt page →
Frequently asked questions
What is the AI Prompts for Marketers pack?
Eight tested prompts for the marketing tasks you do weekly: subject lines, blog outlines, ad copy, repurposing, cold outreach, brand-voice extraction, customer pain-point synthesis. Each ships with rationale, an example output, and the common mistake to avoid. Open the pack in PromptPaste and all 8 prompts import as a single folder you can use instantly.
What separates a good marketing prompt from a generic one?
Five things: a specific role (not 'a marketer' - 'a senior B2B brand strategist'), the audience defined precisely, the task with one verb, explicit constraints (length, banned words, must-haves), and a forced output format (number of variations, grouping rationale). The 2026 r/PromptEngineering comparison thread showed that prompts with all five produce dramatically different output than vague expertise prompts. Every prompt in this pack is built on that pattern, with variables you fill in once and reuse forever from your clipboard.
Does it work with chatgpt?
Yes. Prompts copy to your clipboard as plain text, so they work with chatgpt and every other AI tool you might use.
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Curated by Ivan Terechin