Table of Contents
- 10 AI Prompts Every Marketer Should Try for Higher Engagement
- 1. Craft Buyer Personas in Seconds with an AI Prompt
- 2. Brainstorm Viral Social Media Hooks Automatically
- 3. Generate SEO-Optimised Blog Titles Fast
- 4. Write Click-Worthy Email Subject Lines with AI
- 5. Produce Long-Form Content Outlines That Rank
- 6. Create Persuasive Ad Copy Tailored to Each Audience
- 7. Ideate Lead-Magnet Topics Backed by Data
- 8. Personalise Landing-Page Headlines in One Shot
- 9. Draft Customer-Journey Nurture Sequences Effortlessly
- 10. Analyse Competitor Messaging with a Single Prompt
- Conclusion: Turn These AI Prompts into Daily Workflow Wins
10 ChatGPT Prompts Every Marketer Should Try
Unlock faster copy, better ads, and higher conversions with 10 proven AI prompts. Save time, beat deadlines, boost results.
10 AI Prompts Every Marketer Should Try for Higher Engagement
Deadlines pile up, budgets shrink, and social-media rules change overnight. Yet your boss still wants another campaign tomorrow. You need ads that sell, emails people open, and blog posts that rank— all before the coffee goes cold. I've felt that stress.
I used to juggle keywords, chase designers, and watch rivals launch twice as fast. What finally helped wasn't a new tool or a fancy workflow. It was a short list of AI prompts that do the boring parts for me, so I can focus on strategy. In this post I'll share the ten prompts that saved my sanity and lifted our key numbers. Let's get your content moving again.
1. Craft Buyer Personas in Seconds with an AI Prompt
Sixteen buyer interviews, three focus groups, and a pile of sticky notes—that's how I built my first persona back in 2016. It worked, but it swallowed three weeks I'll never see again. Today I open Merlin AI or Chatgpt and drop:
Prompt Act like a veteran market researcher. Build a detailed buyer persona for a B2B CRM that fixes [main pain]. Include age range, job title, daily frustrations, favorite metrics, personal goal, purchasing authority, and a one-sentence quote that sums up their worldview.
In under a minute the model coughs up "Data-Driven Dana," a sales-ops manager who worships pipeline clarity and hates spreadsheet sprawl. Is it perfect? No. Is it 80% ready before my coffee cools? Yes—and that's priceless. I compare the draft to real CRM usage numbers, adjust the salary band, and move on.
Bonus move: ask the AI to produce two conflicting personas—price-sensitive versus premium-seeker—so your ad budget can target each camp separately.
2. Brainstorm Viral Social Media Hooks Automatically
Hooks are tiny grenades: throw one, watch feed-scrollers stop mid-thumb. The manual approach—scribbling twenty openers on a legal pad—works until your eyes glaze over. Instead, try:
Prompt You are a social strategist for [industry]. Give me ten hook sentences for a LinkedIn post that teases [offer or insight]. Each hook must spark curiosity, use no more than twelve words, and avoid clickbait buzzwords like 'shocking' or 'secret.'
The AI spits lines such as "Stop pitching—diagnose the pain first." I run every line through a gut-check: Does it feel like something I'd actually say? Could it survive a comment thread? Then I schedule two hooks per post and let the algorithm decide. Since switching to this method our average engagement jumped 25%—and, more importantly, my evenings returned.
3. Generate SEO-Optimised Blog Titles Fast
Nothing torpedoes organic traffic faster than a boring title. When my brain flatlines, I paste:
Prompt Create fifteen blog titles that target the keyword 'AI prompts for marketers.' Mix listicles, how-tos, and case-study angles. Each title must stay under sixty characters so Google shows the full thing.
The model delivers options like "Seven AI Prompts That Rescued My Q4 Pipeline." I copy the lot into a spreadsheet, score them with a headline analyzer, and pick two for A/B testing. If a human coworker rolls their eyes at a title, it's gone. The survivors routinely hit a 70-plus headline score—something I rarely achieved alone.
4. Write Click-Worthy Email Subject Lines with AI
Email still prints money, but only if the subject lines dodge spam folders and inbox fatigue. My go-to:
Prompt Write ten email subject lines announcing [campaign/promo] to [audience]. Each line must stay under forty-five characters, include one sensory power word, and skip spammy punctuation.
The AI's shortest output—"Meet your next growth lever"—beat five human lines in an A/B test by two percentage points. Two percent sounds tiny until you remember that a six-figure deal was hiding inside one of those clicks. I keep every winning line in a spreadsheet dubbed "Subject Gold" and recycle wording whenever it still feels fresh.
5. Produce Long-Form Content Outlines That Rank
Outlines aren't glamorous, but skipping them is like building a house with no blueprint: you might end with a roof in the basement. My fastest outline ever came from this:
Prompt Act as an SEO editor. Draft a detailed outline (H2–H4) for a 2,000-word post targeting 'how to use AI in content marketing.' Include FAQs, schema-friendly subheadings, and three suggested internal links to [your site].
Forty seconds later I had a skeleton better than my forty-minute manual version. That article reached page one in six weeks—half my usual timeline. I still add anecdotes, stats, and screenshots, but the structure stands firm because the AI handled the heavy framing.
6. Create Persuasive Ad Copy Tailored to Each Audience
Google Ads chew budgets faster than kids chew gum. Sharp copy is your only brake. Try:
Prompt You're a performance ad copywriter. Write three Google Responsive Search Ads for [product]. Brand tone: [tone guide]. Each headline ≤30 characters, each description ≤90. Spotlight the unique selling point: [USP].
Variety is gold because Google shuffles headlines and descriptions. Every time the model slips me a new angle—"From zero to dashboard in hours"—I test it. Sometimes AI copy outruns mine; sometimes it flops. Either way, the learning loop speeds up because I'm feeding the machine fresh data, not blank stares.
7. Ideate Lead-Magnet Topics Backed by Data
Lead magnets still convert if the topic slices a specific pain. When my well runs dry:
Prompt>Suggest ten lead-magnet ideas for [industry] that solve [pain point]. For each, provide: >1) title, >2) promised outcome, >3) ideal format (e-book, checklist, webinar), >4) one supporting stat with source.
The built-in stat keeps fluff out. I verify the citation, slap the best idea into a Figma mock-up, and ship it to design. My highest-converting magnet to date—"30-Day Revenue-Recovery Checklist"—came straight from this brainstorm, complete with a stat saying 62% of SMBs mis-forecast monthly cash flow. True? The source checked out, and the opt-in numbers made believers of us all.
8. Personalise Landing-Page Headlines in One Shot
A generic headline whispers; a personalized headline sings. Once the persona is ready, I feed:
Prompt Given this persona: [paste summary], write five landing-page headlines that promise a specific benefit. Each ≤12 words, active voice, must include 'product category'.
"Control your pipeline chaos with a smarter CRM" outperformed our control by 7%. Not earth-shaking, but on a landing page pulling five-figure traffic, seven percent feels like finding cash in an old jacket. I still tweak tone, but AI gives me the raw clay.
9. Draft Customer-Journey Nurture Sequences Effortlessly
Writing four nurture emails is easy. Writing seven that align with funnel stages? Cue the procrastination. My shortcut:
Prompt Design a seven-email nurture sequence for [persona] who downloaded [lead magnet]. Map each email to funnel stage (awareness, consideration, decision). Include subject, goal, and 120-word body copy per email.
I paste the draft into our ESP, fix brand voice quirks, and schedule. The sequence runs while I sleep, nudging leads at just the right moment. Result: pipeline velocity up, half-written Google Docs down.
10. Analyse Competitor Messaging with a Single Prompt
Competitive research can turn into a tab-hoarding nightmare. One prompt keeps me sane:
Prompt Compare homepage copy of [Competitor A] and [Competitor B]. Identify positioning statements, emotional triggers, and CTAs. Summarise differences in a table and suggest one gap we can own.
The AI scrapes text, spots angles I missed, and hands me a table in plain English. Last quarter that gap suggestion—"guaranteed data-migration support"—became our new headline and chewed into a rival's market share. Not bad for fifteen seconds of chat.
Conclusion: Turn These AI Prompts into Daily Workflow Wins
Tools don't replace strategy, but they do save sanity. Each prompt above started as a humble experiment on a foggy morning, got polished in real campaigns, and earned its place in my "works every Tuesday" folder. Your mileage will vary—that's the point. Copy these prompts, swap the placeholders, and run a seven-day sprint. Track the small wins: a bump in open rate here, a smoother outline there. Stack enough small wins, and the quarter-end numbers start to look downright cheeky. So brew another coffee, pop open your favorite AI chat window, and let the robot lift the heavy stuff while you focus on the human moves no algorithm can imitate—yet. Happy prompting!
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Hanika Saluja
Hey Reader, Have you met Hanika? 😎 She's the new cool kid on the block, making AI fun and easy to understand. Starting with catchy posts on social media, Hanika now also explores deep topics about tech and AI. When she's not busy writing, you can find her enjoying coffee ☕ in cozy cafes or hanging out with playful cats 🐱 in green parks. Want to see her fun take on tech? Follow her on LinkedIn!