13 prompts
Writing
Write a Blog Post That Ranks
Write a 1500-word SEO blog post about [topic] targeting the primary keyword [keyword]. Structure: an opening hook that is not a question, H2 subheadings every 300 words, a FAQ section at the end with three questions, and a conclusion with a clear CTA. Tone: conversational but authoritative. Do not use listicles as the main format. Do not use phrases like delve, in conclusion, or certainly. Write like a knowledgeable human, not an AI assistant.
Rewrite This to Sound Human
Rewrite the following text so it sounds completely human-written. Remove: passive voice, cliches, AI-typical phrases such as delve, certainly, moreover, and in conclusion, and overly formal language. Replace with: active voice, natural sentence rhythm, varied sentence lengths, and genuine personality. Keep all the original information and meaning. Show me the before and after and briefly explain the key changes. Original text: [paste here]
Generate 20 Unconventional Ideas
Generate 20 unconventional ideas for [problem or goal]. Rules: exclude the first ten things that come to mind, at least five ideas must be genuinely counterintuitive or surprising, every idea must be actionable not abstract. For each idea: one sentence describing what it is, and one sentence explaining why it might work. I want ideas that make me think I would not have come up with that on my own.
Write a Compelling Cover Letter
Write a cover letter for a [job title] position at [company]. My background: [brief description of relevant experience]. The key requirements of the role are: [list three to five requirements]. Do not use a generic template. Write it as a specific, confident case for why I am the right person for this exact role. Lead with something interesting, not with I am writing to apply. Under 300 words. No cliches.
Write a Persuasive Essay
Write a persuasive essay arguing that [position or claim]. Length: [X words]. Audience: [describe who will read this]. Structure: a compelling opening that establishes the stakes, three to four well-supported arguments with evidence or reasoning for each, a steelman of the opposing view followed by a rebuttal, and a strong conclusion that calls for a specific belief or action. Avoid emotional manipulation. Win on logic and evidence.
Three Opening Hooks
Write three different opening paragraphs for a piece about [topic]. Version 1 opens with a specific surprising statistic. Version 2 opens with a brief scene or story that illustrates the core idea. Version 3 opens with a direct and provocative claim. Each should be under 100 words and leave the reader with no choice but to keep reading.
10 Headline Variations
Write 10 headline variations for this content: [describe your content or paste the draft]. Requirements: include at least two with specific numbers, two that create curiosity without clickbait, two that make a direct bold claim, two addressing a specific pain point, and two promising a concrete outcome. Grade each from 1 to 10 for likely click-through rate and explain the reasoning in one sentence each.
Professional Email for Any Situation
Write a professional email for this situation: [describe the situation and context]. Desired tone: [formal, direct, or collaborative]. Goal of the email: [what you want to happen as a result]. Key points to include: [list them]. Constraints: under 200 words, a specific and informative subject line, and one clear next step as the CTA. Do not use filler openings like I hope this finds you well.
Cut This by 30 Percent
Edit the following text by cutting it by at least 30 percent without losing any of the key information. Rules: eliminate every redundant phrase, cut every sentence that does not add new information, replace wordy constructions with direct ones, and shorten or remove any examples that are not essential. Show me the edited version followed by a brief note on what was cut and why. Original: [paste here]
Short Story Opening Scene
Write the opening scene of a short story with this premise: [describe]. Requirements: start in the middle of the action, establish the character and setting within the first three paragraphs, create a specific and immediate conflict or tension, use showing not telling throughout, and end the scene on a beat that makes it impossible not to read the next part. Around 400 words.
Keynote Speech Draft
Write a [X]-minute keynote speech about [topic] for [audience]. Structure: an opening that does not begin with a self-introduction, a central thesis stated clearly within the first two minutes, three supporting points each anchored with a specific story or example, a transition that connects back to the opening, and a closing call to action or challenge. Write the full speech, not an outline. Aim for spoken language, not written language.
Weekly Newsletter Issue
Write a complete weekly newsletter issue for [brand or topic]. Sections: 1) A personal opener in two to three sentences that is conversational and specific, 2) One main piece of insight, analysis, or story around 300 words, 3) Three curated recommendations with a one-sentence reason for each, 4) A single question to prompt replies from readers. Write in the voice of a smart, direct friend sharing something they genuinely found useful this week.
Platform-Specific Content Repurpose
Take this content: [paste your article, video script, or post] and repurpose it for three different platforms. For LinkedIn: a professional insight post with a strong opening line, around 150 words. For Twitter: a 280-character punchy observation that stands alone. For Instagram: a caption with a hook first line, a concise message, and a closing question to drive comments. Maintain the core idea but adapt the tone and format for each platform.