200 Free ChatGPT Prompts for Every Use Case (2026)

📅 March 14, 2026 · ⏱️ 45 min read · 🏷️ Prompts

You opened ChatGPT. You stared at the blank text box. You typed "help me with…" and then deleted it because you realized you had no idea what to ask.

You're not alone. The #1 reason people give up on ChatGPT isn't that it's bad — it's that they don't know what to say to it. They type vague requests, get vague responses, and conclude "AI is overhyped." Meanwhile, someone else typed a specific, well-structured prompt and got an answer that would have cost them $200 from a consultant.

The difference? The prompt.

This page is the prompt library I wish existed when I started. 200 prompts. 9 categories. Every major use case. Writing. Marketing. Business. Freelancing. Coding. Creative projects. Making money. Home and life. Data analysis. All free. All copy-paste ready. All tested on ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.

200 Free prompts. 9 categories. Zero signup required. Just copy, paste, and replace the [BRACKETS] with your details.

How to use this page: Every prompt has placeholders in [BRACKETS]. Replace those with your specific details and paste the whole thing into ChatGPT (or Claude, or Gemini — they all work). The more specific you fill in the brackets, the better the output. "Help me with marketing" gets generic slop. "Create a 30-day Instagram content calendar for a vegan bakery in Austin targeting health-conscious millennials" gets something you can actually use.

New to ChatGPT? Start with our complete beginner's guide first — it covers the fundamentals in 15 minutes. Already comfortable? Jump to whichever category matches your biggest need right now.

📝 30 Writing & Content
📈 30 Marketing & Biz
💼 25 Freelancing & Career
🎓 25 Learning & Research
💻 20 Coding & Tech
🎨 20 Creative & Fun
💰 20 Money & Hustles
🏠 15 Home & Life
📊 15 Data & Analysis

📋 Jump to a Category

📝 Writing & Content Creation (Prompts 1–30)

Whether you're writing blog posts, emails, social media captions, newsletters, or sales copy — these 30 prompts cover every type of content you'll ever need to create. They work for solopreneurs, marketers, freelance writers, and anyone who stares at a blank page longer than they'd like to admit.

#1 — Blog Post Draft

Write a 1,500-word blog post about [TOPIC]. The audience is [DESCRIBE YOUR READER — e.g., small business owners, beginner photographers]. Use a conversational tone. Include: - An attention-grabbing intro with a hook - 5-7 subheadings that break the topic into logical sections - At least 2 real-world examples or scenarios - A conclusion with a clear takeaway - A call to action at the end Avoid generic filler. Every paragraph should teach something specific or provide actionable advice.

#2 — Email Newsletter

Write a weekly newsletter email about [TOPIC/NEWS]. My newsletter goes to [AUDIENCE SIZE] [TYPE] subscribers who care about [WHAT THEY CARE ABOUT]. Structure: - Subject line (3 options — short, curiosity-driven, benefit-focused) - Preview text (the snippet that shows in inbox) - Opening hook (personal anecdote, surprising stat, or question) - Main content (the key insight, broken into scannable chunks) - One actionable takeaway they can use today - Sign-off with a question to encourage replies Keep it under 500 words. Tone: like a smart friend sharing something useful over coffee.

#3 — Social Media Caption

Write 5 social media captions for [PLATFORM: Instagram/LinkedIn/Twitter/Facebook] about [TOPIC]. My brand voice is [DESCRIBE: casual, professional, witty, inspirational]. Target audience: [WHO]. For each caption include: - The caption text (platform-appropriate length) - 2-3 relevant emoji placements - A call to action (comment, share, save, link in bio) - 5 hashtag suggestions Make them varied: one educational, one storytelling, one question-based, one controversial take, one behind-the-scenes.

#4 — Content Repurposer

Take this content and repurpose it into 5 different formats: 1. A Twitter/X thread (8-10 tweets, each under 280 characters) 2. A LinkedIn post (300 words, professional but not boring) 3. An Instagram carousel (8 slides — title slide, 6 content slides, CTA slide) 4. A YouTube video script outline (hook, intro, 3-5 key points, CTA) 5. A newsletter snippet (150 words summarizing the key insight) Here's the original content: [PASTE YOUR BLOG POST, ARTICLE, OR TRANSCRIPT] Adapt the tone and format for each platform — don't just copy-paste the same text.

#5 — Headline Generator

Generate 15 headline options for an article about [TOPIC] targeting [AUDIENCE]. Use these formulas: - 3 using numbers ("7 Ways to…", "The 5 Biggest…") - 3 using "How to" format - 3 using questions readers would actually search - 3 using power words (ultimate, proven, essential, complete) - 3 that are contrarian or surprising Rate each headline 1-10 for: - Click-worthiness (would someone actually click this?) - SEO potential (would someone search for this?) - Accuracy (does it deliver what it promises?) Star your top 3 recommendations and explain why.

#6 — Sales Page Copy

Write sales page copy for [PRODUCT/SERVICE NAME]. Details: - What it is: [DESCRIPTION] - Who it's for: [IDEAL CUSTOMER] - Price: [PRICE] - Key benefits: [LIST 3-5] - What makes it different: [UNIQUE SELLING POINT] Structure: 1. Headline that speaks to their biggest pain point 2. Opening that describes their current frustration (the "before") 3. Introduction of the solution (the "after") 4. 3-5 benefit blocks (benefit → how it works → proof/example) 5. Social proof section (format for testimonials I'll add) 6. FAQ section (anticipate 5 objections and answer them) 7. Final CTA with urgency Tone: confident, direct, zero fluff. Use "you" more than "we."

#7 — Email Welcome Sequence

Write a 5-email welcome sequence for new subscribers who signed up for [LEAD MAGNET/FREEBIE]. My business is [DESCRIBE]. The goal of the sequence is to [BUILD TRUST / SELL PRODUCT / EDUCATE]. Email 1 (Day 0): Welcome + deliver the freebie + set expectations Email 2 (Day 2): Share your best piece of content or biggest insight Email 3 (Day 4): Tell a story that builds credibility (your origin, a case study, a mistake you made) Email 4 (Day 6): Address their #1 objection or misconception Email 5 (Day 8): Soft pitch for [PRODUCT/SERVICE] with clear CTA Each email should be 200-350 words. Include subject lines for each. Tone: [DESCRIBE YOUR BRAND VOICE].

#8 — YouTube Script Writer

Write a YouTube script for a [LENGTH]-minute video about [TOPIC]. My channel covers [NICHE] and my viewers are [AUDIENCE]. Structure: - HOOK (first 15 seconds — pattern interrupt, surprising claim, or relatable problem) - INTRO (who you are, what they'll learn, why it matters — 30 seconds) - MAIN CONTENT (3-5 key points, each with examples and transitions) - B-ROLL NOTES [in brackets, suggest what to show on screen] - CTA (subscribe, comment a specific thing, check the link) Write it like someone's TALKING, not reading an essay. Short sentences. Conversational. Include pauses and emphasis notes where the speaker should slow down or get excited.

#9 — Product Description Writer

Write product descriptions for [PRODUCT NAME]. Details: - What it is: [BRIEF DESCRIPTION] - Target customer: [WHO BUYS THIS] - Key features: [LIST 3-5 FEATURES] - Price point: [PRICE] - Where it's sold: [WEBSITE / AMAZON / ETSY / SHOPIFY] Write 3 versions: 1. SHORT (50 words) — for product cards and listings 2. MEDIUM (150 words) — for the product page 3. LONG (300 words) — for email marketing or ads Focus on benefits over features. Use sensory language. Include a subtle urgency element. Avoid clichés like "game-changer" and "revolutionary."

#10 — Blog Intro Rewriter

Rewrite this blog post introduction to be more engaging. Here's my current version: [PASTE YOUR INTRO] Give me 3 rewrites using different hooks: 1. Start with a surprising statistic or counterintuitive fact 2. Start with a mini-story or scenario the reader can see themselves in 3. Start with a bold, slightly controversial statement Each should be under 100 words. Tone: [CONVERSATIONAL / PROFESSIONAL / WITTY]. The goal is to make someone who's scrolling stop and actually read.

#11 — Case Study Template

Write a case study based on these details: - Client/project: [NAME] - Their situation before: [PROBLEM/CHALLENGE] - What we did: [SOLUTION/APPROACH] - Results: [SPECIFIC METRICS AND OUTCOMES] - Timeline: [HOW LONG IT TOOK] Structure: Challenge → Approach → Results → Key Takeaway Include a quotable pull-quote (write one I can attribute to the client). About 600 words. Professional tone, but readable — not corporate jargon.

#12 — Content Calendar Generator

Create a 30-day content calendar for [PLATFORM] for a [TYPE OF BUSINESS]. My goal this month is [AWARENESS / ENGAGEMENT / SALES / LAUNCHES]. For each day provide: - Content type (educational, entertaining, promotional, behind-the-scenes, user-generated) - Topic/headline - Brief description of the post (1-2 sentences) - Best posting time for [PLATFORM] - Format (image, video, carousel, text, story, reel) Content mix: 40% educational, 25% entertaining, 20% behind-the-scenes, 15% promotional. Avoid posting the same type two days in a row.

#13 — SEO Meta Description Writer

Write 5 SEO meta descriptions for a page about [TOPIC]. The target keyword is [PRIMARY KEYWORD]. Requirements: - 150-160 characters each (strict — Google truncates longer ones) - Include the primary keyword naturally (don't stuff it) - Include a clear value proposition or benefit - End with a subtle CTA or curiosity hook - Each should take a different angle Also write the optimal SEO title tag (50-60 characters) — 3 variations.

#14 — Cold Email Writer

Write 3 versions of a cold email to [TARGET: e.g., potential clients, podcast hosts, collaboration partners]. Context: - Who I am: [YOUR NAME AND WHAT YOU DO] - Who I'm emailing: [THEIR ROLE/COMPANY] - What I want: [THE ASK — meeting, collaboration, pitch] - Why they should care: [WHAT'S IN IT FOR THEM] Version 1: Direct and concise (under 100 words) Version 2: Value-first approach (lead with something useful for them) Version 3: Mutual connection or shared interest angle Subject lines for each. No sleazy sales language. No "I hope this email finds you well."

#15 — Podcast Show Notes

Write podcast show notes for Episode [NUMBER] titled "[EPISODE TITLE]". The episode covers [BRIEF SUMMARY]. Include: 1. Episode description (150 words — compelling enough to make someone click play) 2. Key timestamps: [LIST 5-8 TOPICS AND APPROXIMATE TIMES] 3. Key takeaways (5 bullet points — the "TL;DL") 4. Resources/links mentioned (format as a clickable list) 5. Pull quote (one memorable thing said during the episode) 6. SEO-optimized title suggestion 7. Social media teaser (1-2 sentences to promote the episode)

#16 — Copywriting Formula Applier

Apply these 4 copywriting formulas to sell [PRODUCT/SERVICE] to [TARGET AUDIENCE]: 1. AIDA (Attention → Interest → Desire → Action) 2. PAS (Problem → Agitation → Solution) 3. BAB (Before → After → Bridge) 4. 4Ps (Promise → Picture → Proof → Push) For each formula, write a complete piece of copy (150-200 words). Then tell me which formula works best for my specific situation and why.

#17 — Testimonial Request Email

Write an email asking a satisfied customer for a testimonial. Context: - My business: [WHAT YOU DO] - Their experience: [WHAT YOU DID FOR THEM / WHAT THEY BOUGHT] - How long ago: [TIMEFRAME] The email should: - Be warm and personal (not template-y) - Explain why their feedback matters - Include 3-4 specific questions to guide their response (so I don't get "They were great!" with no detail) - Make it easy (suggest they can reply to the email directly) - Mention it'll take less than 5 minutes Keep it under 200 words. Don't be cringey about it.

#18 — Press Release Draft

Write a press release for [ANNOUNCEMENT: product launch, company milestone, partnership, event, funding round]. Details: - Company name: [NAME] - What's being announced: [DETAILS] - Why it matters: [SIGNIFICANCE] - Quote from: [PERSON, TITLE] - Website: [URL] - Contact: [NAME, EMAIL] Follow AP style. Include: headline, dateline, lead paragraph (who/what/when/where/why), 2-3 body paragraphs with details and quotes, boilerplate "About [Company]" section. Keep it under 500 words — editors delete anything longer.

#19 — FAQ Page Generator

Generate a comprehensive FAQ section for [PRODUCT/SERVICE/WEBSITE]. My business is [DESCRIBE] and my customers are [TARGET AUDIENCE]. Create 15 questions and answers covering: - Getting started (3 questions) - Pricing and payment (3 questions) - How it works / what's included (3 questions) - Troubleshooting / common issues (3 questions) - Comparisons to alternatives (3 questions) Each answer should be 2-4 sentences — concise but complete. Write the questions as actual customers would phrase them (casual language, not formal). Include internal linking suggestions where relevant.

#20 — About Page Writer

Write an "About" page for [BUSINESS/PERSONAL BRAND]. Details: - Who I am: [NAME, ROLE, BACKGROUND] - What I do: [SERVICES/PRODUCTS] - Who I serve: [TARGET AUDIENCE] - My origin story: [WHY YOU STARTED — keep it to 2-3 sentences] - What makes me different: [YOUR UNIQUE ANGLE] - Fun facts: [2-3 PERSONAL DETAILS THAT MAKE YOU HUMAN] Write it in first person. 400-500 words. Start with what the READER gets (not "Hi, my name is…"). Include a CTA at the end. Tone: authentic, not corporate. Nobody wants to read a LinkedIn bio disguised as an About page.

#21 — Article Outline Builder

Create a detailed article outline for a post about [TOPIC]. Target keyword: [KEYWORD]. Target audience: [WHO]. Word count goal: [NUMBER]. Include: - Title (SEO-optimized, compelling) - H2 subheadings (6-10 sections) - H3 sub-subheadings under each H2 - 1-2 sentence description of what each section should cover - Notes on where to include examples, stats, or visuals - Internal linking opportunities to related posts about [RELATED TOPICS] - Suggested CTA placement (where to naturally pitch [PRODUCT/SERVICE]) The outline should be detailed enough that someone could write the entire article without asking a single follow-up question.

#22 — Tweet Thread Writer

Write a Twitter/X thread (10-12 tweets) about [TOPIC]. My audience is [WHO] and I want this thread to [EDUCATE / GO VIRAL / DRIVE TRAFFIC TO A LINK]. Format: - Tweet 1: Hook — a bold statement, surprising stat, or "Here's what nobody tells you about…" - Tweets 2-10: One idea per tweet. Short sentences. Use line breaks for readability. - Tweet 11: Summary/recap of the key insight - Tweet 12: CTA (follow, retweet, check link) Each tweet must be under 280 characters. Use "↓" or "🧵" to indicate thread. No hashtags except in the last tweet. Make it flow like a conversation, not a listicle.

#23 — Landing Page Copy

Write copy for a landing page that converts visitors into [LEADS / BUYERS / SUBSCRIBERS]. The page promotes [PRODUCT/SERVICE/FREEBIE]. Sections needed: 1. Hero: Headline + subheadline + primary CTA button text 2. Problem: 3 pain points my audience [DESCRIBE AUDIENCE] faces 3. Solution: How [PRODUCT] solves those problems 4. Features → Benefits: 4-6 features translated into customer benefits 5. Social proof placeholder: Where testimonials should go + format suggestion 6. Objection handler: 3-4 common objections, each answered in one sentence 7. Final CTA: Urgency-driven closing with button text Keep it scannable. Use short paragraphs, bullets, and bold key phrases. No fluff.

#24 — Proofreader & Editor

Proofread and edit this text for clarity, grammar, flow, and impact: [PASTE YOUR TEXT] For each change you make: 1. Highlight what was changed 2. Explain why (e.g., "wordy," "passive voice," "unclear antecedent," "stronger verb available") After editing, rate the original text: - Clarity: X/10 - Grammar: X/10 - Engagement: X/10 - Conciseness: X/10 Then provide 3 suggestions for making the piece even stronger (structure, tone, or missing elements).

#25 — LinkedIn Article Writer

Write a LinkedIn article about [TOPIC]. I'm a [YOUR ROLE] in [YOUR INDUSTRY] and I want to establish thought leadership. Requirements: - 800-1,200 words - Start with a personal experience or observation (not a definition) - Include 3-4 actionable insights my connections can use - End with a question that encourages comments - Professional but human tone — no "delighted to announce" or "thought leadership" clichés - Use formatting LinkedIn supports: bold, lists, line breaks - Add [SECTION BREAK] markers where I should add a relevant image The article should make someone think "I should connect with this person."

#26 — Email Subject Line Generator

Generate 20 email subject lines for [TYPE OF EMAIL: newsletter, promotion, cart abandonment, welcome, re-engagement] about [TOPIC/PRODUCT]. Organize them by style: - Curiosity (5): Create intrigue without being clickbait - Benefit (5): Tell them exactly what they get - Urgency (5): Time-sensitive or scarcity-driven - Personal (5): Feel like they're from a friend, not a brand Keep each under 50 characters for mobile optimization. Star the 5 you'd A/B test first and explain why.

#27 — WhatsApp/Text Message Campaigns

Write 5 SMS/WhatsApp marketing messages for [BUSINESS TYPE] promoting [OFFER/EVENT/PRODUCT]. Max 160 characters each. Include: - Personalization token (use [NAME]) - Clear value or offer - Urgency element - CTA with a short link placeholder: [LINK] - Opt-out reminder on the last one Each message should feel like a text from someone they know, not a robot. No ALL CAPS. No exclamation point abuse. Keep it conversational.

#28 — Webinar Script Outline

Create a webinar script outline for a [LENGTH]-minute webinar titled "[WEBINAR TITLE]." The audience is [WHO] and the goal is [EDUCATE / SELL / BUILD LIST]. Structure: - Pre-show (5 min): Chat prompts, housekeeping - Hook (3 min): Why this topic matters right now - Content Block 1 (10 min): [TOPIC] — the "what" - Content Block 2 (10 min): [TOPIC] — the "how" - Content Block 3 (10 min): [TOPIC] — the "what if" (examples/case studies) - Transition to offer (5 min): Recap value, introduce solution - Q&A (10 min): Anticipated questions + answers - Close (2 min): Final CTA + bonuses Include engagement prompts ("Type YES in the chat if…") every 5 minutes to maintain attention.

#29 — Content Brief for Writers

Create a content brief I can hand to a freelance writer for an article about [TOPIC]. Include: - Working title - Target keyword + 5-7 secondary keywords - Search intent (informational, transactional, navigational) - Target word count - Target audience description (2-3 sentences) - Competitor URLs to reference (I'll fill these in): [URL 1], [URL 2], [URL 3] - Required sections/H2s (with notes on what to cover) - Tone and style guidelines - Internal links to include: [LIST EXISTING POSTS] - CTA to include and where - What NOT to do (common mistakes for this topic) - Deadline: [DATE] Make it thorough enough that the writer doesn't need to ask me questions.

#30 — Content Audit Analyzer

I'm auditing my content library. Here's a list of my existing blog posts with their topics: [PASTE YOUR LIST OF POST TITLES AND TOPICS] Analyze this content and tell me: 1. Topic gaps: What obvious topics am I missing that my audience ([DESCRIBE]) would search for? 2. Overlap: Which posts cover similar ground and could be consolidated? 3. Update opportunities: Which titles look outdated (based on wording/dates)? 4. Pillar/cluster suggestions: How should I organize these into topic clusters with pillar pages? 5. Internal linking map: Which posts should link to each other? 6. Next 10 posts I should write, ranked by potential impact

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📈 Marketing & Business (Prompts 31–60)

From social media strategy to SEO to paid ads to competitive analysis — these 30 prompts cover the marketing stack most businesses actually need. No MBA required. Whether you're running a one-person shop or managing a team, these will save you hours of brainstorming and research.

#31 — Customer Persona Builder

Create a detailed customer persona for [BUSINESS TYPE]. My product/service is [DESCRIBE] and it costs [PRICE RANGE]. Include: - Name, age, location, job title, income range - Goals (what they're trying to achieve) - Frustrations (what's stopping them) - Where they spend time online (platforms, communities, podcasts) - What they've already tried (and why it didn't work) - Buying triggers (what makes them finally pull the trigger) - Objections (why they might NOT buy) - How they describe their problem in their own words (this is gold for copywriting) Create 2 personas: your IDEAL customer and your MOST COMMON customer (they're often different).

#32 — Competitor Analysis

Help me analyze my competitors. My business is [DESCRIBE YOUR BUSINESS]. My main competitors are [LIST 3-5 COMPETITORS WITH WEBSITES]. For each competitor, analyze: 1. Positioning: What's their main promise/value prop? 2. Pricing: How do they price compared to me ([YOUR PRICE])? 3. Strengths: What do they do better than most? 4. Weaknesses: Where do they fall short? (Check their 1-star reviews if available) 5. Content strategy: What topics do they blog/post about? 6. Gaps: What are they NOT doing that I could do? Then give me a competitive positioning statement: "Unlike [COMPETITOR], we [UNIQUE DIFFERENCE] for [TARGET AUDIENCE] who [SPECIFIC NEED]."

#33 — SEO Keyword Research

I need keyword ideas for [TOPIC/NICHE]. My website is about [DESCRIBE] and targets [AUDIENCE]. Generate: - 10 high-volume informational keywords (people searching to learn) - 10 buyer-intent keywords (people searching to purchase) - 10 long-tail keywords (specific phrases with less competition) - 5 question-based keywords (how to, what is, why does) - 5 comparison keywords ([X] vs [Y], best [X] for [Y]) For each keyword, estimate: - Search intent (informational, commercial, transactional) - Competition level (low, medium, high) - Content type that should rank (blog post, product page, video, listicle) Prioritize: Which 5 keywords should I target first if I'm starting from zero authority?

#34 — Google Ads Copy

Write Google Ads copy for [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. Details: - Target keyword: [KEYWORD] - Landing page URL: [URL] - Unique selling point: [WHAT MAKES YOU DIFFERENT] - Target audience: [WHO] - Budget level: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Create 3 responsive search ad variations with: - 5 headlines (max 30 characters each) - 4 descriptions (max 90 characters each) - 2 sitelink extensions with descriptions - 2 callout extensions Focus on the keyword in at least 2 headlines. Include a number or statistic where possible. No generic "Click Here" or "Learn More" — be specific about the benefit.

#35 — Facebook/Instagram Ad Copy

Write ad copy for a Facebook/Instagram ad campaign. Details: - Product/service: [DESCRIBE] - Target audience: [DEMOGRAPHICS + INTERESTS] - Campaign objective: [AWARENESS / TRAFFIC / CONVERSIONS / LEADS] - Budget: [DAILY BUDGET] - Offer: [DISCOUNT / FREE TRIAL / LEAD MAGNET] Create 3 ad variations: 1. Story-based (relatable scenario → solution → CTA) 2. Benefit-focused (list top 3 benefits → social proof → CTA) 3. Objection-buster (address biggest hesitation → proof it's solved → CTA) For each: primary text (125 words max), headline (5 words), link description, CTA button text. Also suggest the best ad format (single image, carousel, video) for each.

#36 — Marketing Funnel Builder

Design a complete marketing funnel for [PRODUCT/SERVICE] priced at [PRICE]. Target audience: [WHO]. Map out each stage: 1. AWARENESS: How do they first discover me? (3 channel recommendations + content types) 2. INTEREST: What makes them want to learn more? (Lead magnet idea + landing page hook) 3. CONSIDERATION: What convinces them I'm the right choice? (Email sequence outline + social proof strategy) 4. PURCHASE: What triggers the buy? (Offer structure + urgency tactics) 5. RETENTION: How do I keep them coming back? (Post-purchase email + upsell strategy) For each stage, include specific metrics to track and tools to use. Keep it realistic for someone with [SMALL / MEDIUM / LARGE] budget and [NO / SOME / DEDICATED] marketing team.

#37 — Brand Voice Guide

Create a brand voice guide for [BRAND NAME]. We're a [TYPE OF BUSINESS] that helps [AUDIENCE] achieve [GOAL]. Include: - Brand personality (3 adjectives that define us + 3 we're NOT) - Tone spectrum: Where we fall between formal↔casual, serious↔playful, authoritative↔approachable - Vocabulary: 10 words/phrases we USE and 10 we AVOID - Grammar rules: Contractions? Oxford comma? Emoji use? First person or third? - Example rewrites: Take 3 generic sentences and show them in our voice - Channel variations: How the voice adapts for website vs social media vs email vs customer support This should be clear enough that a new hire could write in our voice after reading it.

#38 — Influencer Outreach Template

Write 3 influencer outreach DM/email templates for [BRAND] reaching out to [TYPE OF INFLUENCER: micro, macro, niche] about [COLLABORATION TYPE: sponsored post, affiliate, product review, giveaway]. Template 1: Cold outreach (they've never heard of us) Template 2: Warm outreach (they've engaged with our content before) Template 3: Follow-up (they didn't respond to the first message) Each should: - Be under 150 words - Lead with genuine appreciation for THEIR specific content (not generic praise) - Clearly state what's in it for them - Include the specific ask - Make it easy to say yes (suggest next step) Also include: 5 red flags that an influencer isn't worth partnering with.

#39 — Social Media Strategy

Build a social media strategy for [BUSINESS] on [PLATFORM(S)]. Current followers: [NUMBER]. Goal: [GROW TO X / DRIVE TRAFFIC / GENERATE LEADS]. Include: 1. Content pillars (4-5 themes we'll consistently post about) 2. Posting frequency and best times for [PLATFORM] 3. Content mix ratios (educational/entertaining/promotional/engagement) 4. Growth tactics specific to [PLATFORM] in 2026 5. Engagement strategy (how to respond to comments, grow community) 6. Hashtag strategy (branded, niche, trending — 10 recommendations) 7. Monthly goals and KPIs to track 8. 5 post ideas for each content pillar (25 total) 9. Tools to use for scheduling, analytics, and content creation Make this actionable for someone spending [X HOURS PER WEEK] on social media.

#40 — A/B Test Idea Generator

Generate 10 A/B test ideas for [WEBSITE / EMAIL / ADS / LANDING PAGE]. My current conversion rate is approximately [X%] and I want to improve [SPECIFIC METRIC: signups, sales, clicks]. For each test: 1. What to test (the variable) 2. Hypothesis: "If we [CHANGE], then [METRIC] will [IMPROVE] because [REASONING]" 3. Expected impact (low, medium, high) 4. Difficulty to implement (easy, medium, hard) 5. How long to run the test for statistical significance Prioritize the list: which 3 tests should I run first based on highest expected impact + easiest implementation? Give me the quick wins first.

#41 — Customer Review Responder

Write professional responses to these customer reviews for [BUSINESS NAME]: Review 1 (5 stars): "[PASTE POSITIVE REVIEW]" Review 2 (3 stars): "[PASTE MIXED REVIEW]" Review 3 (1 star): "[PASTE NEGATIVE REVIEW]" For each response: - Thank them genuinely (don't be generic) - Address specific points they mentioned - For negative reviews: acknowledge the issue, explain what you're doing about it, offer to make it right (without being defensive) - Keep it under 100 words - Sign with a first name for a personal touch Tone: professional, empathetic, solution-oriented. Never argue. Never copy-paste the same response for different reviews.

#42 — Email Marketing Campaign

Plan a [LENGTH]-week email marketing campaign for [PRODUCT LAUNCH / SEASONAL SALE / RE-ENGAGEMENT / COURSE LAUNCH]. My list size is [NUMBER] and the goal is [SPECIFIC METRIC]. For each email in the sequence: - Send day and time - Subject line (2 options) - Email type (story, value, social proof, urgency, FAQ) - Key message in one sentence - CTA (what you want them to do) - Segment: Send to [ENTIRE LIST / ENGAGED ONLY / PAST BUYERS] Include pre-launch and post-launch emails. Map the emotional journey: curiosity → education → desire → urgency → last chance → post-purchase gratitude.

#43 — SWOT Analysis

Conduct a SWOT analysis for [BUSINESS/PROJECT]. Context: - Industry: [YOUR INDUSTRY] - Size: [SOLO / SMALL TEAM / GROWING COMPANY] - Stage: [STARTUP / GROWTH / ESTABLISHED] - Main product/service: [DESCRIBE] - Biggest competitor: [NAME] Analyze: - STRENGTHS (5): Internal advantages we can leverage - WEAKNESSES (5): Internal limitations holding us back - OPPORTUNITIES (5): External trends we can capitalize on - THREATS (5): External risks we need to prepare for For each item, add a one-sentence action item: "To leverage this strength, we should…" or "To mitigate this threat, we need to…" End with: The #1 strategic priority based on this analysis is [X] because [Y].

#44 — Product Launch Checklist

Create a comprehensive product launch checklist for [PRODUCT NAME]. Launch date: [DATE]. Product type: [DIGITAL / PHYSICAL / SaaS / SERVICE]. Price: [PRICE]. Organize by phase: PRE-LAUNCH (4 weeks before): - [ ] Marketing assets to create - [ ] Email sequences to write - [ ] Social media content to schedule - [ ] Partnerships/affiliates to reach out to LAUNCH WEEK: - [ ] Day-by-day posting schedule - [ ] Email sequence triggers - [ ] Live events or demos - [ ] PR and outreach POST-LAUNCH (2 weeks after): - [ ] Follow-up campaigns - [ ] Customer feedback collection - [ ] Performance review metrics - [ ] Iteration plan Include specific task descriptions, not just bullet points. I should be able to follow this like a recipe.

#45 — Referral Program Design

Design a referral program for [BUSINESS]. My product/service costs [PRICE] and my current customer base is [SIZE]. Include: 1. Incentive structure: What does the referrer get? What does the new customer get? 2. Mechanics: How does someone refer? (Link, code, email, social share?) 3. Messaging: Draft the referral email/message they'd send to friends 4. Landing page copy: What does the referred person see? 5. Terms: Basic rules (anti-fraud, limits, expiration) 6. Promotion plan: How to announce this to existing customers 7. Tracking: What metrics to monitor Give me 3 tier options: Budget-friendly, Standard, and Premium referral programs. Star your recommendation and explain why.

#46 — PR Pitch Email

Write a pitch email to [MEDIA OUTLET / JOURNALIST / PODCAST HOST] about [YOUR STORY/ANGLE]. Context: - My business: [DESCRIBE] - The story: [WHAT MAKES THIS NEWSWORTHY] - Target outlet: [NAME AND BEAT THEY COVER] - Timeliness: [WHY NOW — tie to a trend, season, or news event] The pitch should: - Have a compelling subject line (under 8 words) - Open with why their audience would care (not why I care) - Include the story angle in 2-3 sentences - Offer what I can provide (data, interview, demo, exclusive) - Be under 200 words total - End with a clear, easy next step Write 2 versions: one for a journalist and one for a podcast host.

#47 — Pricing Strategy Advisor

Help me price [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. Current details: - What it is: [DESCRIBE] - Cost to deliver/produce: [YOUR COSTS] - Competitor pricing: [LIST 3 COMPETITORS AND THEIR PRICES] - Target audience: [WHO] with [BUDGET RANGE] - Current price (if any): [PRICE] - Sales volume: [UNITS/MONTH] Analyze 3 pricing strategies: 1. Cost-plus pricing (your costs + margin) 2. Value-based pricing (based on what it's worth to the customer) 3. Competitive pricing (based on market rates) For each, calculate the recommended price and expected revenue at current volume. Then recommend which strategy I should use and whether I should offer tiers, bundles, or discounts.

#48 — TikTok Content Strategy

Create a TikTok content strategy for [BUSINESS/PERSONAL BRAND] in the [NICHE] space. Current followers: [NUMBER]. Goal: [GROW / SELL / AWARENESS]. Include: 1. Content pillars (3-4 themes that work on TikTok for this niche) 2. Video formats that perform well in 2026 (trending structures) 3. 10 specific video ideas with hook text (what to say in the first 2 seconds) 4. Hashtag strategy (mix of niche, trending, and discoverable) 5. Posting schedule (frequency + best times) 6. How to repurpose TikToks for Reels and Shorts 7. CTA strategy (how to drive traffic without "link in bio" spam) 8. Growth hacks specific to TikTok's current algorithm Focus on what works NOW, not generic advice from 2023.

#49 — Customer Feedback Survey

Design a customer feedback survey for [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. I want to learn about [SATISFACTION / FEATURE REQUESTS / WHY THEY BOUGHT / WHY THEY LEFT]. Create: - 10 survey questions (mix of multiple choice, rating scale, and open-ended) - Logical question flow (easy questions first, deeper ones later) - An email inviting customers to take the survey (under 100 words) - Subject line (3 options) - Incentive suggestion for participation Important: Make the survey completable in under 3 minutes. Nobody finishes long surveys. Every question should give me actionable data — no "How did you hear about us?" unless I'll actually use that info.

#50 — Local Business Marketing Plan

Create a local marketing plan for [BUSINESS TYPE] in [CITY/AREA]. Budget: [MONTHLY BUDGET]. Current online presence: [DESCRIBE — website, Google Business, social media]. Include: 1. Google Business Profile optimization checklist 2. Local SEO strategy (keywords, citations, reviews) 3. Community engagement ideas (5 offline tactics) 4. Local social media strategy (content that resonates locally) 5. Partnerships: 5 types of local businesses to partner with 6. Paid advertising: Best $[BUDGET]/month allocation across Google Local, Facebook, and Nextdoor 7. Review generation strategy (how to ethically get more Google reviews) 8. Monthly action plan for the first 3 months Prioritize tactics by: impact × ease of implementation. I'm a [SOLO / SMALL TEAM] operation.

#51 — Upsell/Cross-sell Strategy

Design an upsell and cross-sell strategy for [BUSINESS]. My products/services: [LIST YOUR PRODUCTS WITH PRICES] For each product, suggest: 1. Upsell: What's the natural "upgrade" and at what price point? 2. Cross-sell: What complementary product should be recommended? 3. Bundle: What 2-3 products could be grouped at a discount? 4. Timing: WHEN to offer each (pre-purchase, checkout, post-purchase, email follow-up) 5. Messaging: The one-sentence pitch for each recommendation Also calculate: If I add upsells with a [X%] acceptance rate, what's the projected increase in average order value?

#52 — Content Distribution Plan

I just published [CONTENT TYPE: blog post, video, podcast episode] about [TOPIC]. URL: [URL]. Create a distribution plan to maximize reach: - Day 1: Where to share + messaging for each platform - Day 2-3: Follow-up engagement tactics - Week 1: Repurposing into other formats - Week 2-4: Evergreen promotion tactics - Ongoing: SEO and backlink opportunities For each channel (Twitter, LinkedIn, Reddit, Facebook groups, newsletters, email list, Pinterest, Quora), write the specific post/message I should use — tailored to that platform's culture and format. Include specific subreddits or communities to share in (for my niche: [DESCRIBE NICHE]).

#53 — Quarterly Business Review

Help me prepare a quarterly business review. My numbers this quarter: - Revenue: [AMOUNT] (vs last quarter: [AMOUNT]) - Customers/clients: [NUMBER] (vs last quarter: [NUMBER]) - Top product/service: [NAME] — [REVENUE] - Biggest win: [DESCRIBE] - Biggest challenge: [DESCRIBE] - Marketing spend: [AMOUNT] - Key metrics: [LIST ANY RELEVANT KPIs] Analyze: 1. What's working and should be doubled down on? 2. What's underperforming and why? 3. 3 quick wins for next quarter 4. 1 big bet worth investing in 5. What should I STOP doing? 6. Next quarter's top 3 priorities with measurable goals

#54 — Partnership Proposal

Write a partnership proposal to [POTENTIAL PARTNER] from [MY BUSINESS]. The partnership idea: [DESCRIBE THE COLLABORATION — co-marketing, integration, affiliate, white-label, etc.]. Include: 1. Executive summary (why this partnership makes sense — 2 paragraphs) 2. The opportunity (market context, mutual benefit) 3. What we bring to the table 4. What we're asking from them 5. Proposed structure (timeline, responsibilities, revenue split if applicable) 6. Success metrics (how we'll measure if it's working) 7. Next steps (specific ask — meeting, call, trial period) Keep it under 1 page. Business-professional but not stiff. The tone should be "this is a smart idea for both of us" not "please partner with us."

#55 — Webinar Promotion Plan

Create a promotional plan for a webinar titled "[WEBINAR TITLE]" on [DATE]. Topic: [DESCRIBE]. Target attendance: [NUMBER]. Pre-webinar promotion (2 weeks out): - Social media posts (5 posts, each with different angle + copy) - 3-email sequence to my list ([SIZE] subscribers) - Landing page headline and bullet points - Paid ad copy (if running ads) - Partner/affiliate swipe copy Day-of: - Reminder emails (morning + 1 hour before) - Social media countdown posts Post-webinar: - Replay promotion plan - Follow-up email sequence for attendees and no-shows - How to convert webinar content into other formats

#56 — Google My Business Optimizer

Optimize my Google Business Profile for [BUSINESS NAME] — a [BUSINESS TYPE] in [CITY, STATE]. Write: 1. Business description (750 characters max — keyword-rich but natural) 2. 5 Google Business posts (offer, event, update, product, what's new) 3. Q&A section: 10 questions customers would ask + answers 4. 5 response templates for reviews (5-star, 4-star, 3-star, 2-star, 1-star) 5. Category recommendations (primary + secondary categories) 6. Photo list: What 10 types of photos should I upload? 7. Service/product descriptions for my top [NUMBER] offerings Keywords to target: [LIST 5 LOCAL KEYWORDS]

#57 — Sales Objection Handler

I sell [PRODUCT/SERVICE] at [PRICE] to [TARGET AUDIENCE]. Give me responses to these common sales objections: 1. "It's too expensive." 2. "I need to think about it." 3. "I'm not sure it'll work for me." 4. "I can find something cheaper." 5. "I don't have time right now." 6. "I need to ask my [spouse/partner/boss]." 7. "I tried something similar and it didn't work." 8. "Can you give me a discount?" For each objection, provide: - A 2-3 sentence response (empathetic, not pushy) - The underlying concern behind the objection - A question to ask that moves the conversation forward Tone: consultative, not aggressive. We're solving problems, not pressuring people.

#58 — Loyalty Program Design

Design a customer loyalty program for [BUSINESS]. Average order value: [AMOUNT]. Purchase frequency: [HOW OFTEN]. Customer lifetime value: [ESTIMATE]. Create a program that includes: 1. Points structure (how many points per dollar/purchase) 2. Reward tiers (3-4 levels with escalating perks) 3. Redemption options (what can they spend points on) 4. Surprise and delight moments (unexpected bonuses) 5. Referral integration (bonus points for referring friends) 6. Launch announcement email 7. Monthly loyalty status email template Make it simple enough for customers to understand in 10 seconds. Compare: points system vs. punch card vs. tier-based — which is best for my business type?

#59 — Seasonal Campaign Planner

Plan a marketing campaign for [SEASON/HOLIDAY: Black Friday, Valentine's Day, Back to School, New Year, etc.] for [BUSINESS TYPE]. Budget: [AMOUNT]. Timeline: - Teaser phase (2 weeks before): Building anticipation - Launch phase (event period): The main push - Extension phase (1 week after): Last chance For each phase: - Email copy (subject + preview + key message) - Social media posts (3 per phase) - Ad copy (if running paid) - Special offer structure (discount, bundle, gift with purchase, limited edition) - Landing page headline + CTA Theme: [DESCRIBE THE VIBE YOU WANT]. Make it feel different from every other brand running the same seasonal campaign.

#60 — Competitive Differentiation

Help me stand out from competitors. My business: [DESCRIBE]. My competitors: [LIST 3-5]. My current positioning: [HOW YOU DESCRIBE YOURSELF]. Analyze: 1. What are ALL my competitors saying? (Find the cliché messaging everyone uses) 2. What is NO ONE saying? (Find the whitespace) 3. Audience segments they're ignoring 4. Service/feature gaps I could fill 5. Positioning angles I could own Then create: - A unique value proposition (one sentence that only MY business could say) - An elevator pitch (30 seconds) - 3 key differentiators I should emphasize in all marketing - A tagline (5-7 words) The test: Could my competitor copy-paste this positioning? If yes, it's not differentiated enough.

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💼 Freelancing & Career (Prompts 61–85)

Job hunting, freelancing, building a portfolio, negotiating raises, nailing interviews — these 25 prompts cover the career moves that actually matter. Whether you're climbing the corporate ladder or building your own thing, ChatGPT can be the career coach you never had.

#61 — Resume Rewriter

Rewrite my resume for a [JOB TITLE] position at [COMPANY/INDUSTRY]. Here's my current resume: [PASTE YOUR RESUME] Optimize it by: 1. Rewriting bullet points to start with strong action verbs 2. Adding quantifiable metrics wherever possible (even estimates) 3. Tailoring the language to match this job description: [PASTE JOB DESCRIPTION] 4. Removing outdated or irrelevant experience 5. Adding a compelling professional summary (3 lines max) Format it cleanly. Use the formula: [ACTION VERB] + [WHAT YOU DID] + [RESULT/IMPACT] for every bullet point. Flag anything that should be removed or moved.

#62 — Cover Letter Writer

Write a cover letter for [JOB TITLE] at [COMPANY]. My background: [2-3 SENTENCES ABOUT YOU]. The job posting says: [PASTE KEY REQUIREMENTS]. Requirements: - Under 300 words - Don't repeat the resume — add context and personality - Open with why THIS company (not "I'm writing to apply for…") - Show you understand their problem and can solve it - Include one specific example of relevant experience - End with a confident (not desperate) CTA - Tone: professional but human — the person reading this has read 50 generic cover letters today DON'T: Use "I believe," "I am passionate about," or "I think I would be a great fit." SHOW, don't tell.

#63 — Upwork/Fiverr Proposal Writer

Write a winning freelance proposal for this job posting: [PASTE THE JOB POSTING] My relevant experience: [DESCRIBE IN 2-3 SENTENCES] My portfolio links: [URLs] The proposal should: - Open by showing I actually read the posting (reference something specific) - Demonstrate understanding of their problem - Briefly explain my approach (how I'd tackle this project) - Include a relevant example of similar work I've done - Propose a timeline - End with a question that starts a conversation Keep it under 200 words. The client has 30 proposals to read — mine needs to stand out in the first 2 lines.

#64 — Interview Prep Coach

Help me prepare for a job interview for [JOB TITLE] at [COMPANY] in [INDUSTRY]. The interview is [PHONE / VIDEO / IN-PERSON / PANEL] and it's for [ROUND: initial screening, technical, final]. Give me: 1. 10 likely questions they'll ask (based on the role and industry) 2. For each question: a framework for how to answer (STAR method where applicable) 3. 5 questions I should ask THEM (that show I've done my homework) 4. 3 potential curveball questions and how to handle them 5. Red flags to watch for about the company/role 6. What to research about [COMPANY] before the interview 7. A 60-second "tell me about yourself" script based on this background: [YOUR BACKGROUND] Focus on answers that demonstrate impact, not just responsibilities.

#65 — LinkedIn Profile Optimizer

Optimize my LinkedIn profile for [GOAL: job hunting, freelance clients, thought leadership, networking]. My current role: [TITLE]. Industry: [INDUSTRY]. Target audience: [RECRUITERS / CLIENTS / PEERS]. Rewrite: 1. Headline (120 characters — NOT just your job title) 2. About/Summary (2,600 character limit — use all of it) 3. Experience section: Rewrite my current role description [PASTE CURRENT] 4. Skills: Suggest 10 skills to add (most endorsed by target audience) 5. Featured section: What 3 things should I pin? 6. Custom URL suggestion The headline should make someone want to click on my profile. The summary should make them want to connect. Follow the formula: Who I help + How I help them + What makes me different.

#66 — Salary Negotiation Script

Help me negotiate my salary. Situation: - Offered role: [JOB TITLE] - Offered salary: [AMOUNT] - I want: [TARGET AMOUNT] - My experience: [YEARS + RELEVANT HIGHLIGHTS] - Market rate for this role in [CITY]: [RANGE IF KNOWN] - Competing offers: [YES/NO — DETAILS IF YES] - My leverage: [WHAT MAKES YOU VALUABLE] Write: 1. An email response to the offer (professional, appreciative, firm) 2. A phone script for the negotiation call (what to say, how to respond to pushback) 3. 3 counter-arguments if they say "that's the max we can offer" 4. Non-salary items to negotiate if salary is truly capped (bonus, equity, PTO, remote work, title, start date, review timeline) Tone: confident and collaborative, not adversarial. I want the job — I just want fair compensation.

#67 — Freelance Rate Calculator

Help me set freelance rates for [TYPE OF WORK: writing, design, development, consulting, etc.]. My details: - Experience level: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / EXPERT] - Location: [CITY/COUNTRY] - Annual income goal: [AMOUNT] - Hours I want to work per week: [NUMBER] - Vacation weeks per year: [NUMBER] - Business expenses: [MONTHLY ESTIMATE] Calculate: 1. Minimum hourly rate to hit my income goal 2. Recommended hourly rate (with profit margin) 3. Project-based rate suggestions for common deliverables in my field 4. Retainer/monthly rate for ongoing clients 5. How to handle "what's your budget?" conversations 6. Rate increase strategy (when and how to raise prices) Show the math. Include a script for when clients say "that's too expensive."

#68 — Portfolio Case Study

Write a portfolio case study for [PROJECT NAME]. Details: - Client/context: [WHO AND WHAT THEY DO] - The problem: [WHAT WASN'T WORKING] - My role: [WHAT I DID] - The process: [KEY STEPS — BRIEF] - The result: [OUTCOMES — METRICS IF POSSIBLE] Structure: 1. One-sentence summary 2. The challenge (what the client was facing) 3. My approach (why I chose this strategy) 4. Key decisions (1-2 critical choices and the reasoning) 5. Results (hard numbers preferred, qualitative impact if not) 6. Testimonial placeholder 7. Lessons learned Write it in a way that demonstrates my thinking process, not just the output. 400-600 words. Include [IMAGE PLACEHOLDER] notes where screenshots or visuals should go.

#69 — Cold Outreach for Clients

Write cold outreach messages to find freelance clients for [MY SERVICE]. My ideal client is [DESCRIBE: industry, company size, role of decision-maker]. Create: 1. Cold email (under 150 words) 2. LinkedIn connection request message (under 300 characters) 3. LinkedIn follow-up message (if they accept but don't respond) 4. Twitter/X DM approach (casual, under 100 words) Each should: - Reference something specific about THEIR business (I'll customize) - Lead with value (what I noticed they could improve) - Include a soft CTA (not "hire me" — more like "would this be helpful?") - Not sound like every other freelancer in their inbox Also: 5 places to find potential clients beyond cold outreach.

#70 — Career Pivot Advisor

Help me plan a career pivot. Current situation: - Current role: [TITLE] in [INDUSTRY] - Years of experience: [NUMBER] - Skills I have: [LIST 5-10] - What I want to do: [TARGET ROLE/INDUSTRY] - Why: [MOTIVATION] - Timeline: [WHEN DO YOU WANT TO MAKE THE SWITCH] - Constraints: [FINANCIAL, FAMILY, GEOGRAPHIC, etc.] Provide: 1. Transferable skills analysis (which of my current skills apply to the new field) 2. Gap analysis (what I need to learn/develop) 3. 3-month transition plan with weekly milestones 4. Quick wins (things I can do THIS WEEK to start the pivot) 5. Network strategy (who to connect with, where) 6. How to position the pivot in interviews (framing the change as an asset) 7. Realistic timeline and potential salary trajectory

#71 — Thank You / Follow-Up Email

Write a follow-up email after [CONTEXT: job interview, networking event, sales meeting, client call]. Details: - Who I met: [NAME, TITLE] - What we discussed: [KEY TOPICS] - Something specific they mentioned: [DETAIL TO REFERENCE] - What I want next: [SECOND INTERVIEW / STAY IN TOUCH / PROPOSAL SENT] Requirements: - Send within 24 hours - Reference something specific from the conversation (proves I was listening) - Add value (share a relevant article, resource, or insight) - Include a clear but soft next step - Under 150 words - Tone: warm, professional, memorable Write 2 versions: one formal (corporate) and one casual (startup/creative).

#72 — Freelance Contract Template

Draft the key sections of a freelance contract for [TYPE OF PROJECT]. My role: [WHAT I'M DELIVERING]. Client: [TYPE OF CLIENT]. Include: 1. Scope of work (with specific deliverables) 2. Timeline and milestones 3. Payment terms (deposit, milestone payments, final payment) 4. Revision policy (how many rounds, what counts as a revision) 5. Intellectual property / ownership transfer clause 6. Kill fee / cancellation policy 7. Confidentiality clause 8. What happens if they ghost (payment for work completed) 9. Late payment policy Write in plain English — not legalese. Note: This is a starting template; I should have a lawyer review the final version. Flag any clauses that vary by jurisdiction.

#73 — Skill Gap Assessment

I want to become a [TARGET ROLE]. My current skills: [LIST YOUR SKILLS AND PROFICIENCY LEVEL 1-10]. Analyze: 1. Must-have skills for [TARGET ROLE] in 2026 — rate my current level vs. required level 2. Nice-to-have skills that would set me apart 3. Skills I have that are surprisingly relevant (hidden connections) 4. Priority learning order (what to learn first, second, third) 5. Best resources for each skill gap (courses, books, projects, communities) 6. Timeline: How long to become job-ready at each skill 7. Portfolio projects I could build to prove these skills Create a "skill radar" — a simple text-based visual showing where I am vs. where I need to be.

#74 — Performance Review Prep

Help me prepare for my performance review. My role: [TITLE] at [COMPANY]. Review period: [TIMEFRAME]. My accomplishments this period: [LIST YOUR WINS, PROJECTS, METRICS] My challenges: [LIST AREAS WHERE YOU STRUGGLED] Help me: 1. Rewrite my accomplishments with quantifiable impact (even estimates) 2. Frame my challenges as growth opportunities (honest but strategic) 3. Write 3-5 goals for next period (SMART framework) 4. Prepare a case for [RAISE / PROMOTION / NEW RESPONSIBILITIES] 5. Draft talking points for "Where do you see yourself in 1-2 years?" 6. Questions to ask my manager during the review Tone: confident and self-aware, not arrogant or self-deprecating.

#75 — Client Offboarding Email

Write a professional offboarding email for a client relationship that's ending. Situation: [REASON: project complete, contract ending, raising rates, bad fit, they're going in-house]. Include: - Appreciation for the working relationship - Summary of what was accomplished - Transition plan (handoff notes, files, access) - Open door for future collaboration - Referral ask (if appropriate) Write 2 versions: 1. Project completed successfully (positive ending) 2. Parting ways (neutral/professional ending — no burning bridges) Under 250 words each. The goal: leave them thinking "I'd work with them again" or at least "that was handled professionally."

#76 — Networking Conversation Starters

I'm attending [EVENT TYPE: conference, meetup, networking event, industry dinner] in [INDUSTRY]. My role: [WHAT I DO]. My goal: [MEET POTENTIAL CLIENTS / FIND A JOB / BUILD INDUSTRY CONNECTIONS / FIND COLLABORATORS]. Give me: 1. 10 conversation starters that aren't "So what do you do?" 2. 5 ways to transition from small talk to meaningful conversation 3. My "elevator pitch" in 3 versions: 10 seconds, 30 seconds, 60 seconds 4. How to gracefully exit a conversation 5. Follow-up message template (for the next day) 6. LinkedIn connection request message that references our conversation The conversations should feel natural — not like I'm working a room. I'm [INTROVERTED / EXTROVERTED / SOMEWHERE IN BETWEEN].

#77 — Side Project Validator

I'm thinking about starting [SIDE PROJECT IDEA] while working full-time as a [CURRENT ROLE]. Details: - The idea: [DESCRIBE] - Target audience: [WHO] - Revenue model: [HOW IT MAKES MONEY] - Time I can dedicate: [HOURS/WEEK] - Startup costs: [ESTIMATE] - My relevant skills: [LIST] - Skills I'd need to learn: [LIST] Honestly evaluate: 1. Is there real demand for this? (Who's already paying for something similar?) 2. Can this work with [X] hours/week? Be realistic. 3. Time to first revenue (best case, realistic case, worst case) 4. 3 biggest risks and how to mitigate them 5. MVP: What's the minimum version I could launch in 30 days? 6. Should I do this? Give me a straight answer.

#78 — Meeting Agenda Builder

Create a meeting agenda for [MEETING TYPE: team standup, client kickoff, strategy session, 1-on-1, board meeting]. Duration: [LENGTH]. Attendees: [WHO]. Include: - Meeting objective (what we're deciding/achieving) - Timed agenda items (allocate minutes to each) - Discussion questions for each item - Who's responsible for each section - Pre-meeting prep (what attendees should review beforehand) - Action items template (at the end) Also write: - The calendar invite description - A pre-meeting email reminder (send day before) Make it efficient. If this meeting could be an email, tell me. If it can't, make sure every minute counts.

#79 — Business Email Templates

Write professional email templates for these common situations: 1. Asking for a deadline extension 2. Declining a project/invitation politely 3. Following up on an unpaid invoice 4. Introducing two contacts who should know each other 5. Apologizing for a mistake (without over-apologizing) 6. Requesting a meeting with someone senior 7. Sharing bad news with a client Each template: under 150 words, professional but not stiff, with [PLACEHOLDERS] I can customize. Include subject lines. The tone should be direct and respectful — no "I hope this email finds you well" or "per my last email."

#80 — Portfolio Website Copy

Write copy for my portfolio website. I'm a [ROLE] specializing in [SPECIALTY]. My ideal clients are [WHO]. Sections: 1. Homepage hero: Headline + subheadline + CTA button text 2. Services page: [NUMBER] services with name, description (75 words each), and what's included 3. Process section: My working process in 3-5 steps (simple and clear) 4. About section: 200-word bio that's personal but professional 5. Testimonial prompts: 3 questions to ask past clients for great testimonials 6. Contact page: Headline + brief text + form fields I should include Make the copy sound like a confident expert, not a desperate freelancer. The visitor should feel: "This person knows what they're doing and I want to work with them."

#81 — Scope Creep Response

A client just asked me to do [ADDITIONAL WORK] that wasn't in the original scope. The original agreement was [DESCRIBE SCOPE]. They're expecting [THIS EXTRA WORK] to be included. Write: 1. A polite but firm email explaining this is outside the scope (with reference to the original agreement) 2. A "happy to help" option: how I can do this as an add-on (with additional cost and timeline) 3. A script for saying it verbally on a call The tone should be warm but clear. I'm not being difficult — I'm protecting both of our interests. Include the price/time estimate format I should use for the add-on. Help me set a boundary without damaging the relationship.

#82 — Personal Brand Strategy

Help me build a personal brand in [INDUSTRY/NICHE]. I'm a [ROLE] who wants to be known for [EXPERTISE/POINT OF VIEW]. Create: 1. Brand positioning: The one thing I want people to associate with my name 2. Content strategy: 3 core topics I should own (with 5 post ideas each) 3. Platform priority: Which 2 platforms to focus on first (and why) 4. Authority builders: 5 things to do in the next 90 days (podcast guesting, writing, speaking, etc.) 5. Network targets: Types of people to connect with (not specific names) 6. Brand assets: Bio (3 lengths), headshot guidelines, consistent visual elements 7. The "no" list: What I should deliberately NOT post about Timeline: What does month 1, month 3, and month 6 look like?

#83 — Client Onboarding Checklist

Create a client onboarding process for my [TYPE OF BUSINESS/SERVICE]. When a new client signs on, I need a smooth system. Build: 1. Welcome email template (warm, professional, sets expectations) 2. Onboarding questionnaire (10-15 questions to understand their needs) 3. Kickoff meeting agenda (30 minutes — covers goals, timeline, communication preferences) 4. Tool/access checklist (what I need from them to start work) 5. Timeline and milestone document template 6. Communication expectations (response times, preferred channels, meeting frequency) 7. "Here's how to get the most out of working with me" guide The goal: The client should feel confident they hired the right person before I've even started the work.

#84 — Resignation Letter

Write a resignation letter. Context: - My role: [CURRENT TITLE] at [COMPANY] - Last day: [DATE] (giving [X] weeks notice) - Reason: [BRIEF — new opportunity, career change, personal reasons] - Relationship with manager: [GOOD / NEUTRAL / COMPLICATED] - Want to keep the door open: [YES / NO] Write: 1. Formal resignation letter (for HR records — professional, brief) 2. Personal note to my manager (warmer, acknowledges what I learned) 3. Transition plan outline (what I'll hand off and how) 4. Goodbye message to the team (for Slack/email — gracious and brief) Under 200 words each. Don't burn bridges, even if the job was terrible. You never know who you'll work with again.

#85 — Freelance Income Diversification

I'm a freelance [ROLE] earning [MONTHLY INCOME] from [NUMBER] clients. I want to diversify my income so I'm not dependent on any single client. My skills: [LIST SKILLS] My audience/network: [DESCRIBE] Time available for new income streams: [HOURS/WEEK] Suggest: 1. 3 productized service ideas (package my services into fixed-price offerings) 2. 3 digital product ideas (courses, templates, guides I could create and sell) 3. 2 passive income opportunities (related to my expertise) 4. 1 community/membership model idea 5. Revenue projections for each (conservative estimate) 6. Priority order: What to build first based on time-to-revenue and effort Show me what my income could look like in 12 months if I execute on the top 3 recommendations.

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🎓 Learning & Research (Prompts 86–110)

Whether you're a student, a self-taught learner, or a professional who needs to get smart on a new topic fast — these 25 prompts turn ChatGPT into the best tutor, research assistant, and study partner you've ever had.

#86 — Explain Like I'm a Beginner

Explain [COMPLEX TOPIC] to me like I'm a smart adult with zero background in this field. Use: - A real-world analogy to introduce the concept - Simple language (no jargon — or define jargon immediately when you use it) - A concrete example showing how it works in practice - A "why should I care?" section explaining practical relevance - Common misconceptions people have about this topic - 3 follow-up questions I should explore next Test: If a curious 16-year-old couldn't understand your explanation, simplify it further.

#87 — Research Summary Generator

Summarize the current state of research on [TOPIC]. I need this for [CONTEXT: school paper, business decision, personal knowledge, professional development]. Cover: 1. The key question or debate in this field 2. What experts generally agree on (consensus) 3. What's still debated or uncertain (controversies) 4. The most important findings from the last 2-3 years 5. Practical implications (so what? what should someone DO with this knowledge?) 6. 5 key terms/concepts I should know 7. 3 researchers or institutions leading this field 8. Limitations: What should I be skeptical about? Note: Flag if any claims need verification — you may not have the latest data.

#88 — Study Plan Creator

Create a study plan for learning [SUBJECT/SKILL]. My details: - Current knowledge level: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / SPECIFIC GAPS] - Goal: [PASS AN EXAM / CAREER SWITCH / PERSONAL INTEREST / PROFESSIONAL SKILL] - Time available: [HOURS PER WEEK] - Deadline (if any): [DATE] - Learning style: [READING / VIDEOS / HANDS-ON / MIX] Build a week-by-week plan that includes: - Topics to cover in order (with dependencies noted) - Specific resources for each topic (free when possible) - Practice exercises or projects for each section - Review/test checkpoints to verify I'm retaining the material - How to know when I've "mastered" each topic Don't just list topics — tell me what to DO each study session.

#89 — Book Summary + Action Items

Give me a comprehensive summary of "[BOOK TITLE]" by [AUTHOR]. Include: 1. One-sentence thesis (what's the book's core argument?) 2. Chapter-by-chapter key ideas (3-5 bullet points per chapter, or section if non-fiction) 3. The 5 most important takeaways 4. Practical action items: 5 things I can DO after reading this summary 5. Who should read this book (and who shouldn't) 6. How it compares to similar books on this topic 7. Criticisms: What do detractors say about this book? 8. One quote that captures the book's essence Note: This is a summary to decide if I should read the full book, not a replacement for reading it.

#90 — Concept Connector

I'm studying [SUBJECT] and I don't understand how [CONCEPT A] relates to [CONCEPT B]. I understand [WHAT YOU DO UNDERSTAND] but I'm stuck on [WHERE YOU'RE CONFUSED]. Help me by: 1. Explaining each concept separately (brief recap) 2. Showing exactly how they connect (the bridge I'm missing) 3. Using an analogy that links both concepts 4. Drawing a simple text diagram showing the relationship 5. Giving me a practice question that tests whether I truly understand the connection 6. Explaining a common mistake people make when confusing these two The moment I say "oh THAT'S how they're related" — that's the level of clarity I need.

#91 — Debate Both Sides

Present both sides of the debate on [CONTROVERSIAL OR COMPLEX TOPIC]. FOR the position: - 5 strongest arguments with evidence/reasoning - Who holds this view and why - Best real-world examples supporting this side AGAINST the position: - 5 strongest arguments with evidence/reasoning - Who holds this view and why - Best real-world examples supporting this side Then: - Common ground: Where do both sides actually agree? - Steelman: What's the strongest version of each argument? - My job: What questions should I ask to form my OWN informed opinion? Be genuinely balanced — don't strawman either side. Present each argument as its strongest advocate would.

#92 — Flashcard Generator

Create 30 flashcards for studying [SUBJECT/TOPIC]. I'm preparing for [EXAM / INTERVIEW / CERTIFICATION / PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE]. Format each card: - FRONT: Question or term (concise) - BACK: Answer (clear, memorable — use mnemonics where helpful) - DIFFICULTY: Easy / Medium / Hard Organize by sub-topic. Include: - 10 definition/concept cards (what is X?) - 10 application cards (when would you use X? how does X work in practice?) - 10 comparison/connection cards (how does X differ from Y? how do A and B relate?) Make the wrong-answer alternatives plausible — I want to test real understanding, not just recognition.

#93 — Exam Question Predictor

I have an exam on [SUBJECT] covering [TOPICS COVERED]. The exam format is [MULTIPLE CHOICE / SHORT ANSWER / ESSAY / MIX]. The professor/instructor tends to focus on [ANY PATTERNS YOU'VE NOTICED]. Generate: 1. 10 most likely exam questions (based on common exam patterns for this subject) 2. Model answers for each (concise but complete) 3. 5 "curveball" questions that test deep understanding 4. 3 essay prompts with outlines for each 5. Common mistakes students make on this material 6. Last-minute review: The 10 things most worth memorizing Help me study smart, not just study hard. What would I regret NOT reviewing?

#94 — Research Paper Outline

Help me outline a research paper on [TOPIC]. Requirements: - Length: [WORD COUNT] - Style: [APA / MLA / CHICAGO / OTHER] - Level: [UNDERGRADUATE / GRADUATE / PROFESSIONAL] - Due date: [DATE] - My thesis/argument: [YOUR MAIN CLAIM — OR ASK ME TO HELP DEVELOP ONE] Create: 1. Thesis statement (clear, arguable, specific) 2. Introduction outline (hook, context, thesis, roadmap) 3. Body section outlines (each with topic sentence, supporting points, evidence types needed) 4. Counter-argument section (strongest objection + my rebuttal) 5. Conclusion outline (restate thesis, implications, future research) 6. Research strategy: What types of sources to look for and where 7. Citation reminders: Key formatting rules for [STYLE] Flag: What claims will need the strongest evidence?

#95 — Language Learning Partner

I'm learning [LANGUAGE]. My level: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / ADVANCED]. I want to practice [CONVERSATION / GRAMMAR / VOCABULARY / READING / ALL]. Act as my language tutor: 1. Start a conversation with me in [LANGUAGE] about [TOPIC] 2. After each of my responses: - Correct any errors (show the correction + explain the rule briefly) - Suggest a more natural way to say what I meant (if applicable) - Introduce 1-2 new vocabulary words related to the conversation 3. Adjust difficulty based on my responses 4. Mix in grammar drills naturally (don't just quiz me — weave them in) Also give me: - 5 phrases I should memorize this week - 1 cultural note related to how native speakers actually talk (vs textbook language)

#96 — Socratic Questioning Coach

I want to deeply understand [TOPIC]. Instead of just explaining it, use the Socratic method: 1. Ask me questions that guide me to discover the answers myself 2. When I answer, probe deeper: "Why do you think that?", "What would happen if…?", "How does that connect to…?" 3. If I'm stuck, give a hint (not the answer) 4. If I'm wrong, ask a question that reveals the flaw in my reasoning 5. When I arrive at an insight, confirm it and extend: "Yes, and what does that imply about…?" Start with: What do I already know about [TOPIC]? Then guide me from there. The goal is understanding, not just memorization. Challenge my assumptions.

#97 — Textbook Chapter Explainer

I just read Chapter [NUMBER] of "[TEXTBOOK TITLE]" about [TOPIC]. Here's what I think I understood: [PASTE YOUR SUMMARY/NOTES — even if rough] Help me: 1. Check my understanding: Am I right about the key concepts? 2. Fill gaps: What important ideas did I miss or misunderstand? 3. Simplify: Explain the hardest concept in simpler terms 4. Connect: How does this chapter relate to the previous one? 5. Apply: Give me 2 real-world examples of these concepts in action 6. Test me: 5 questions to check if I really understand (not just memorized)

#98 — Source Evaluator

Help me evaluate whether this source is reliable for my [PAPER / ARTICLE / RESEARCH]: Source: [TITLE, AUTHOR, PUBLICATION, DATE, URL] Analyze: 1. Authority: Who wrote this? What are their credentials? 2. Accuracy: Are claims supported by evidence? Are there citations? 3. Bias: Does the author or publication have a known perspective? 4. Currency: Is this information still relevant (given the date)? 5. Purpose: Is this informational, persuasive, or commercial? 6. Peer review: Is this from a peer-reviewed journal, reputable outlet, or random blog? 7. Cross-reference: What should I check to verify the key claims? Verdict: Can I cite this in an academic paper? A blog post? A business presentation? Rate it 1-10 for reliability.

#99 — Mental Model Teacher

Teach me [NUMBER] mental models that are most useful for [CONTEXT: business decisions, personal life, problem-solving, investing, relationships, career growth]. For each mental model: 1. Name and origin 2. What it is (2-3 sentences) 3. A memorable example 4. When to use it (the trigger: "Use this when…") 5. When NOT to use it (common misapplications) 6. How it connects to other mental models Start with the 5 most universally useful ones, then give me 5 specialized for my context. I should be able to explain each one to a friend after reading your descriptions.

#100 — Speed Learning Protocol

I need to learn [TOPIC] quickly — I have [TIMEFRAME: 1 week, 3 days, this weekend]. This is for [PURPOSE: job interview, presentation, project, exam]. Create an intensive learning plan: 1. The 20% of [TOPIC] that gives me 80% of the practical knowledge (Pareto principle) 2. Learning order: What builds on what? 3. Hour-by-hour schedule for [TIMEFRAME] 4. Specific resources: 1 video, 1 article, 1 hands-on exercise per sub-topic 5. Quick tests after each section to verify I'm retaining it 6. Cheat sheet: A one-page reference I can keep handy 7. How to fake expertise I don't have (framing what I DO know confidently) I don't need to become an expert. I need to be competent and confident by [DEADLINE].

#101 — History Deep Dive

Give me a deep, engaging history of [HISTORICAL EVENT / PERIOD / PERSON / MOVEMENT]. Tell it like a story, not a textbook: - Set the scene: What was the world like at that time? - Key players: Who were the people involved? (Make them human — motivations, flaws, decisions) - The sequence of events (chronological narrative) - Turning points: Moments where things could have gone differently - Consequences: How did this shape the world we live in today? - Misconceptions: What do most people get wrong about this? - Parallels: Does this echo anything happening in the modern world? Length: thorough but engaging. If I'm bored, you're doing it wrong.

#102 — Critical Thinking Exercise

I read this claim: "[PASTE A CLAIM, ARTICLE EXCERPT, OR ARGUMENT]" Help me think critically about it: 1. What's the claim actually saying? (Restate it precisely) 2. What evidence is provided? (Is it sufficient?) 3. What assumptions is it built on? (Are those assumptions valid?) 4. Who benefits from this claim being believed? 5. What's the counter-argument? (Strongest version) 6. What additional information would I need to evaluate this properly? 7. Logical fallacies: Are there any in the reasoning? 8. Verdict: How confident should I be in this claim? (Scale: very confident → needs more evidence → probably wrong → can't determine) Don't just confirm my biases. Challenge the claim AND challenge my skepticism of it.

#103 — Math Concept Explainer

Explain [MATH CONCEPT] to me. I understand up to [YOUR CURRENT LEVEL: basic algebra, calculus, statistics, etc.] but I'm struggling with [SPECIFIC THING YOU DON'T GET]. Please: 1. Explain the concept in plain language first (no formulas yet) 2. Show me WHY this concept exists — what problem does it solve? 3. Walk through one example step by step (show every step, label what you're doing and why) 4. Give me a second example with just hints (let me try) 5. Show me the common mistakes people make 6. Connect it to something I already understand from [MY LEVEL] 7. When would I use this in real life? Don't skip steps. If you write "it's obvious that…" I will scream.

#104 — Academic Writing Improver

Improve my academic writing. Here's my draft paragraph/section: [PASTE YOUR ACADEMIC WRITING] Evaluate and rewrite for: 1. Clarity: Is the argument clear? Can each sentence stand on its own? 2. Academic tone: Remove informal language, contractions, first person (if required) 3. Evidence integration: Are citations properly introduced and analyzed (not just dropped in)? 4. Paragraph structure: Topic sentence → evidence → analysis → transition 5. Word choice: Replace vague words with precise academic vocabulary 6. Flow: Does each sentence logically follow the previous one? Show the original and improved version side by side. Explain each change. Don't make it sound like a robot — academic writing can still be engaging.

#105 — Teach Me Like a Podcast

Explain [TOPIC] in the style of an engaging podcast episode. Imagine I'm a curious listener who knows nothing about this. Format: - COLD OPEN: Start with a fascinating question, mystery, or surprising fact - CONTEXT: Set up why this topic matters - THE STORY: Walk through the main content with narrative structure (not just facts — tell me a story) - PLOT TWISTS: Include surprising findings or counterintuitive insights - EXPERT VOICES: Quote or reference real experts (as a podcast would) - WRAP-UP: What's the key takeaway? - CLIFFHANGER: Leave me with a question that makes me want to learn more Make it conversational. Make it interesting. If it reads like a Wikipedia article, you've failed.

#106 — Skill Tree Builder

Create a "skill tree" (like a video game) for mastering [SKILL/FIELD]. I'm currently at [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / ADVANCED]. Structure it as levels: - Level 1 (Foundations): Skills that everything else depends on - Level 2 (Core): The essential competencies - Level 3 (Intermediate): Expanding capabilities - Level 4 (Advanced): Specialization and mastery - Level 5 (Expert): Teaching, leading, innovating For each skill on the tree: - Name - Description (one sentence) - How to learn it (specific resource or exercise) - How to prove you've learned it (project, output, or test) - Dependencies (what you need to learn first) Show which skills can be learned in parallel and which are sequential. Mark the "critical path" to employable competence.

#107 — Analogy Machine

I need to explain [COMPLEX CONCEPT] to [AUDIENCE: 5-year-old, non-technical colleague, student, parent, investor, skeptic]. Give me 5 analogies, each from a different domain: 1. From everyday life (cooking, driving, shopping, etc.) 2. From sports or games 3. From nature or science 4. From relationships or social situations 5. From business or money For each analogy: - The analogy itself (1-2 sentences) - Where it's accurate (what maps well) - Where it breaks down (what doesn't map — every analogy has limits) - Best use case: "Use this analogy when talking to [TYPE OF PERSON]" Star the best one for my specific audience and explain why.

#108 — Current Events Analyzer

I just read about [NEWS EVENT/TREND/DEVELOPMENT]. Help me understand it deeply: 1. **Background**: What led to this? Give me the 3-minute version of the relevant history. 2. **Key players**: Who are the main people/organizations involved? What are their motivations? 3. **Multiple perspectives**: How do different groups (left/right, industry/consumer, domestic/international) view this? 4. **First-order effects**: What happens immediately? 5. **Second-order effects**: What are the less obvious consequences that most people won't think about? 6. **Historical parallels**: Has something similar happened before? What happened then? 7. **What to watch**: What signals should I follow to track how this develops? Be balanced. Don't tell me what to think — help me think better about it.

#109 — Learning Accountability Partner

I'm trying to learn [SKILL/SUBJECT] and I keep quitting. My pattern: [DESCRIBE — e.g., "I start strong then lose motivation after 2 weeks," "I get stuck and don't know how to get unstuck," "I keep jumping between resources"]. Be my accountability system: 1. Design a 30-day learning plan with micro-milestones (15-30 min/day) 2. For each day, give me: ONE specific thing to do + how to know I've done it + estimated time 3. Build in "stuck protocols" — what to do when I feel like quitting (specific actions, not "stay motivated") 4. Include 3 checkpoint assessments (Day 10, 20, 30) where I test myself 5. Add "reward triggers" — after completing each week, here's how to celebrate progress Design it for someone with [LOW/MEDIUM/HIGH] discipline. Make Day 1 embarrassingly easy to build momentum.

#110 — Wikipedia Article Decoder

This Wikipedia article (or dense article) is too complex for me. Rewrite it in three versions: **Version 1 — ELI5 (Explain Like I'm 5):** Use simple words, analogies to everyday things, zero jargon. A child should get the main idea. **Version 2 — Smart Friend:** Like a knowledgeable friend explaining it over coffee. Assumes basic intelligence but no domain expertise. Use real-world examples. **Version 3 — Key Facts Only:** Bullet-point the 10 most important things to know about this topic. Nothing else. Here's the text: [PASTE THE DENSE ARTICLE OR SECTION] After all three versions, highlight the 3 things most people get WRONG about this topic.

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💻 Coding & Tech (Prompts 111–130)

You don't need a CS degree to use ChatGPT for coding. Whether you're debugging your first HTML page, automating boring tasks at work, or building a side project — these 20 prompts turn ChatGPT into your personal dev team.

#111 — Debug My Code

This code isn't working. Help me fix it. **Language:** [LANGUAGE — Python, JavaScript, etc.] **What it should do:** [DESCRIBE THE EXPECTED BEHAVIOR] **What it actually does:** [DESCRIBE THE BUG — error message, wrong output, crashes, etc.] **Code:** ``` [PASTE YOUR CODE] ``` Please: 1. Identify the bug(s) — explain what's going wrong and WHY 2. Show the fixed code with comments on what you changed 3. Explain the fix like I'm a junior developer 4. Suggest one improvement beyond the bug fix (performance, readability, or best practice)

#112 — Build Me a [Thing]

Build me a [WHAT — e.g., "simple to-do list app," "web scraper," "landing page," "budget tracker"]. Requirements: - Language/framework: [SPECIFY — e.g., "Python," "React," "vanilla HTML/CSS/JS," "your recommendation"] - Skill level: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / ADVANCED] - Features: [LIST WHAT IT SHOULD DO] - Constraints: [ANY LIMITS — e.g., "no external APIs," "must work offline," "under 100 lines"] Give me: 1. The complete, working code with comments explaining each section 2. Setup instructions (how to run it — assume I've never done this before) 3. A list of potential improvements I could add next (ordered from easy to hard) Write production-quality code, not a tutorial snippet. It should actually work when I copy-paste it.

#113 — Explain This Code

Explain this code to me line by line. I'm a [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE] programmer. ``` [PASTE CODE] ``` For each section: 1. What it does (in plain English) 2. WHY it does it that way (the reasoning behind the approach) 3. Any "gotchas" or edge cases to watch out for 4. Is this good code? If not, what would a senior developer change? At the end, give me: - The "one-sentence summary" of what this entire program does - The 3 most important concepts I should Google to understand it better - A diagram or pseudocode version if the logic is complex

#114 — API Integration Guide

I want to integrate the [API NAME — e.g., Stripe, Twilio, OpenAI, Google Maps] API into my [PROJECT TYPE]. I'm using [LANGUAGE/FRAMEWORK]. Walk me through: 1. **Setup**: How to get API keys, install libraries, configure authentication 2. **Basic call**: Show me the simplest possible working example (hello world equivalent) 3. **Real use case**: Build a complete example that does [SPECIFIC THING I WANT] 4. **Error handling**: What errors will I hit and how to handle them gracefully 5. **Rate limits**: What are the limits and how to stay within them 6. **Security**: How to store API keys properly (not hardcoded) 7. **Cost**: Roughly how much will this cost at [SCALE — 100/day, 10K/day, etc.] Include the full code, not pseudocode. I want to copy-paste and run it.

#115 — Automate This Boring Task

I waste [TIME] every [FREQUENCY] doing this repetitive task: [DESCRIBE THE TASK IN DETAIL — e.g., "I download 20 CSV files, open each in Excel, copy column B, paste into a master sheet, then email the summary"] Automate it. My constraints: - Operating system: [WINDOWS / MAC / LINUX] - Programming experience: [NONE / BASIC / INTERMEDIATE] - Tools I already use: [LIST — e.g., Excel, Google Sheets, Outlook, Chrome] - Budget: [FREE ONLY / WILLING TO PAY $X/MO] Give me: 1. The quickest solution (even if janky — I want it automated TODAY) 2. The "proper" solution (maintainable, reliable) 3. Step-by-step setup instructions for someone who's never automated anything 4. Estimated time to set up each solution

#116 — Code Review

Review this code like a senior developer conducting a pull request review. ``` [PASTE YOUR CODE] ``` Check for: - **Bugs**: Anything that will break in production - **Security**: SQL injection, XSS, exposed secrets, auth issues - **Performance**: N+1 queries, unnecessary loops, memory leaks - **Readability**: Naming, structure, comments (or lack thereof) - **Best practices**: Design patterns, DRY violations, SOLID principles - **Edge cases**: What inputs would break this? Format your review as: 🔴 CRITICAL (must fix before shipping) 🟡 WARNING (should fix soon) 🟢 SUGGESTION (nice to have) 💡 PRAISE (what's done well — yes, include this) Be honest but constructive. Don't just point out problems — show me the fix.

#117 — Database Schema Designer

Design a database schema for [APPLICATION — e.g., "an e-commerce store," "a project management tool," "a social media app"]. Requirements: - [LIST FEATURES — e.g., "users can create accounts, list products, place orders, leave reviews"] - Database type: [SQL / NoSQL / your recommendation] - Scale: [SMALL: 100 users / MEDIUM: 10K users / LARGE: 1M+ users] Provide: 1. Entity-Relationship diagram (text-based) 2. Complete SQL CREATE TABLE statements (or document schemas for NoSQL) 3. Indexes you'd add and why 4. 5 common queries this app would run (with the SQL) 5. Normalization decisions — what you normalized and what you intentionally denormalized (and why) 6. Migration strategy if requirements change later

#118 — Regex Builder

I need a regular expression that matches: [DESCRIBE WHAT YOU WANT TO MATCH — e.g., "email addresses," "phone numbers in format (xxx) xxx-xxxx," "URLs with or without www"]. Give me: 1. The regex pattern 2. A plain-English explanation of each part (character by character) 3. 5 examples of strings it SHOULD match 4. 5 examples of strings it should NOT match 5. Common edge cases it handles (or doesn't) 6. The regex in [LANGUAGE — Python, JavaScript, etc.] with a working code snippet Also suggest a simpler alternative if the regex is too complex (sometimes a basic string method is better).

#119 — Tech Stack Advisor

I want to build [DESCRIBE YOUR PROJECT]. Help me choose the right tech stack. My constraints: - My coding experience: [LEVEL] - Timeline: [HOW LONG TO BUILD] - Budget: [HOSTING BUDGET] - Team: [SOLO / SMALL TEAM / HAVE DEVS] - Must-haves: [LIST REQUIREMENTS — e.g., "real-time updates," "mobile responsive," "user auth"] - Nice-to-haves: [LIST] For each recommendation, tell me: - What to use for frontend, backend, database, hosting, and auth - WHY you chose each (not just what's popular — what fits MY situation) - The biggest risk/tradeoff of this stack - How long it'll take me to learn (given my experience level) - One alternative stack if I wanted to go a different direction Don't recommend the most complex, enterprise-grade solution. Recommend what gets me to launch fastest.

#120 — Command Line Crash Course

Teach me the [NUMBER] most useful command-line commands for [OS: Mac/Linux/Windows PowerShell] as a [ROLE — developer, data analyst, sysadmin, designer who touched the terminal once]. For each command: - What it does (one sentence) - The actual command with a real example (not placeholder) - Common flags/options I'll actually use - When I'd use this in real life (specific scenario) - The "oh crap" mistake to avoid Group them by task: 1. Navigation & file management 2. Searching & finding things 3. Process management 4. Network & connectivity 5. Power moves (the ones that make you look like a wizard) Assume I know NOTHING. Start from "what is a terminal."

#121 — Git Workflow Guide

I'm a [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE] with Git. My situation: [DESCRIBE — e.g., "working solo on a project," "joining a team for the first time," "I keep messing up merges"]. Give me: 1. The daily workflow I should follow (step by step, with actual commands) 2. How to handle: branching, committing, pushing, pull requests, merges 3. The 5 Git commands I'll use 90% of the time (with examples) 4. How to fix the 3 most common disasters: - "I committed to the wrong branch" - "I need to undo my last commit" - "I have merge conflicts and I'm panicking" 5. A .gitignore template for [MY PROJECT TYPE] 6. Commit message format I should follow (with examples) Write it as a cheat sheet I can print and keep next to my keyboard.

#122 — Web Scraping Template

Build me a web scraper that extracts [WHAT DATA] from [WEBSITE OR TYPE OF WEBSITE]. Specs: - Language: [PYTHON / JAVASCRIPT / your recommendation] - Data I need: [LIST SPECIFIC FIELDS — name, price, URL, rating, etc.] - Output format: [CSV / JSON / DATABASE] - Scale: [ONE PAGE / PAGINATED / HUNDREDS OF PAGES] - Rate limiting: [RESPECT THE SITE — add delays] Include: 1. Complete working code with comments 2. How to install dependencies (pip install / npm install) 3. Error handling (what if the site changes layout, blocks you, is down) 4. How to schedule it to run automatically (daily/weekly) 5. Legal/ethical note: Is scraping this site likely OK? Make it robust — don't just parse the HTML naively. Handle real-world messiness.

#123 — Dockerfile Builder

Create a Dockerfile for my [APPLICATION TYPE] project. My setup: - Language/framework: [SPECIFY] - Needs these services: [DATABASE, REDIS, etc.] - Environment variables: [LIST THEM] - Build step: [HOW TO BUILD — npm build, pip install, etc.] - Production vs development differences: [LIST] Give me: 1. Multi-stage Dockerfile (build + production) 2. docker-compose.yml for local development (with all services) 3. .dockerignore file 4. Comments explaining every instruction 5. Security best practices (non-root user, minimal base image, etc.) 6. How to build and run it (the exact commands) Optimize for image size and build speed. No 2GB Node.js images.

#124 — Performance Optimizer

My [WEBSITE / APP / SCRIPT] is slow. Help me fix it. The problem: [DESCRIBE — "page takes 8 seconds to load," "API responds in 3 seconds," "script takes 2 hours to process 100K rows"] Here's the relevant code/config: ``` [PASTE CODE OR DESCRIBE ARCHITECTURE] ``` Analyze it and give me: 1. Where the bottleneck is (explain how you identified it) 2. Quick wins (changes I can make in 15 minutes for immediate improvement) 3. Medium fixes (1-2 hours of work for significant improvement) 4. Architecture-level changes (if the problem is fundamental) 5. Benchmarks: what performance should I EXPECT after each fix? 6. How to measure the improvement (specific tools or techniques) Prioritize fixes by effort-to-impact ratio. I want the biggest improvement for the least work first.

#125 — Testing Strategy

Write tests for this code: ``` [PASTE YOUR CODE] ``` I want: 1. **Unit tests**: Test individual functions in isolation (5-10 tests) 2. **Edge cases**: What inputs would break this? Test those specifically 3. **Integration test**: If this code calls other services/APIs/database, mock them 4. **Happy path**: The normal use case works correctly 5. **Sad path**: Errors are handled gracefully Use [TESTING FRAMEWORK — Jest, pytest, etc.]. Include: - Test file with all tests - How to run the tests (the command) - Code coverage expectations (what % should I aim for?) - Which tests to run in CI vs locally Make the test names descriptive — "should_return_empty_array_when_no_results_found" not "test1".

#126 — Security Audit

Audit this code/system for security vulnerabilities: ``` [PASTE CODE OR DESCRIBE YOUR SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE] ``` Check for: - OWASP Top 10 (injection, broken auth, XSS, CSRF, etc.) - Secrets management (hardcoded keys, .env exposure) - Authentication & authorization flaws - Data exposure (what an attacker could access) - Dependencies with known vulnerabilities - Configuration issues For each finding: - **Severity**: 🔴 Critical / 🟡 Medium / 🟢 Low - **What**: The specific vulnerability - **Where**: Exact location in the code - **Impact**: What could an attacker do with this - **Fix**: The exact code change to fix it - **Prevention**: How to prevent this category of bug in the future

#127 — README Generator

Write a professional README.md for my project. Project details: - Name: [PROJECT NAME] - What it does: [ONE-SENTENCE DESCRIPTION] - Why it exists: [THE PROBLEM IT SOLVES] - Tech stack: [LANGUAGES, FRAMEWORKS, TOOLS] - Who it's for: [TARGET USERS] Generate a complete README with: - Badges (build status, license, version — use shields.io format) - Clear one-line description - Screenshot/demo section (placeholder) - Features list - Installation instructions (step by step) - Usage examples with code - Configuration/environment variables - API reference (if applicable) - Contributing guidelines - License - Acknowledgements Make it look as professional as a top GitHub repository. No "TODO" placeholders — write the actual content.

#128 — No-Code Automation Builder

I want to automate this workflow WITHOUT writing code: [DESCRIBE YOUR WORKFLOW — e.g., "When someone fills out my form, add them to my email list, send them a welcome email, and notify me on Slack"] My tools: [LIST WHAT YOU USE — Google Sheets, Notion, Gmail, Slack, etc.] Budget: [FREE / UP TO $20/MO / UP TO $50/MO] Give me: 1. The best no-code tool for this (Zapier, Make.com, n8n, IFTTT, etc.) and why 2. Step-by-step setup instructions with screenshots-level detail 3. The exact "trigger → action" chain (numbered steps) 4. Error handling: what happens if a step fails? 5. Cost breakdown for my expected volume 6. Limitations: what this automation CAN'T do (so I don't expect magic) Include the alternative DIY approach (what I'd need to code if I wanted to avoid paying for automation tools).

#129 — Learn [Language] in 30 Days

Create a 30-day learning plan for [PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE]. I currently know [OTHER LANGUAGES / "nothing — I'm brand new to programming"]. My goal: [WHAT I WANT TO BUILD — e.g., "a web app," "data analysis scripts," "automate my job," "get a job"] Structure each day as: - **Concept** (what I'm learning — 15 min read/watch) - **Exercise** (practice problem — 20 min hands-on) - **Mini-project** (every 5 days — something I can show someone) Week 1: Foundations (the absolute basics) Week 2: Core skills (the 20% that handles 80% of tasks) Week 3: Real-world application (build something useful) Week 4: Portfolio project (something I can put on GitHub) For resources, recommend SPECIFIC free tutorials/docs (not just "check YouTube"). Include the exact URL or search term. Mark each day as 🟢 Easy, 🟡 Medium, or 🔴 Hard so I know when to budget extra time.

#130 — System Design Interview

Walk me through how to design [SYSTEM — e.g., "a URL shortener like bit.ly," "a chat app like Slack," "a social media feed like Instagram," "a ride-sharing service like Uber"]. Structure the answer as a system design interview: 1. **Requirements clarification**: What questions should I ask? (list 5) 2. **Capacity estimation**: Users, storage, bandwidth, QPS 3. **High-level design**: The main components and how they connect 4. **Database design**: Schema, SQL vs NoSQL decision, sharding strategy 5. **API design**: Key endpoints with request/response format 6. **Detailed design**: Dive deep into the 2 most interesting components 7. **Scaling**: How this breaks at 10x, 100x, 1000x traffic — and how to fix it 8. **Trade-offs**: What you sacrificed and why Draw the architecture diagram in ASCII art. Be specific — real technologies, real numbers, real decisions.

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🎨 Creative & Fun (Prompts 131–150)

ChatGPT isn't just for productivity. It's a brainstorming partner, a fiction co-writer, a worldbuilding engine, a game designer, and a creative collaborator that never sleeps. These 20 prompts unlock the fun side of AI.

#131 — Short Story Generator

Write a [LENGTH — flash fiction (500 words), short story (2,000 words)] in the [GENRE — sci-fi, horror, romance, mystery, literary fiction] genre. Requirements: - Setting: [WHERE AND WHEN] - Main character: [BRIEF DESCRIPTION — age, personality trait, what they want] - Conflict: [THE CENTRAL PROBLEM] - Tone: [DARK / HOPEFUL / HUMOROUS / SUSPENSEFUL / LITERARY] Writing quality standards: - Show, don't tell — use sensory details, not descriptions of emotions - The first line should hook me instantly - Dialogue should sound like real humans talking - The ending should be surprising but inevitable (not a twist for twist's sake) - No clichés — "her heart raced," "little did he know," etc. are banned This should read like it could be published in a literary magazine, not a ChatGPT output.

#132 — Worldbuilding Bible

Build a detailed fictional world for my [NOVEL / GAME / D&D CAMPAIGN / SCREENPLAY]. Genre: [FANTASY / SCI-FI / POST-APOCALYPTIC / ALTERNATE HISTORY / etc.] Tone: [GRITTY REALISM / WHIMSICAL / EPIC / NOIR] Inspiration: [SIMILAR TO — e.g., "Lord of the Rings meets Game of Thrones" or "Blade Runner but underwater"] Create: 1. **Geography**: Map description, 3-5 major regions with distinct characteristics 2. **History**: Timeline of the 5 most important events that shaped this world 3. **Magic/Technology system**: Rules, limitations, cost of using it 4. **Political structure**: Who has power, how it's maintained, current tensions 5. **Economy**: What people value, trade, work for 6. **Culture**: Languages, religions, customs, taboos 7. **Factions**: 3-4 groups with competing interests 8. **Secrets**: 2-3 things about this world that most inhabitants don't know (great for plot reveals) Make it internally consistent. The geography should affect the culture, which should affect the politics.

#133 — Character Creator

Create a deep, complex character for my [NOVEL / SCREENPLAY / GAME / D&D]. Starting point: [GIVE ME A SEED — e.g., "a retired assassin who runs a bakery," "a teenage hacker with synesthesia," or just a genre + role] Build out: - **Name** (with meaning/origin) - **Physical description** (distinctive features, not generic beauty) - **Voice** (how they talk — write 3 sample lines of dialogue) - **Backstory** (the wound that shaped them — be specific, not vague trauma) - **Want** (what they think they want) vs **Need** (what they actually need to grow) - **Fatal flaw** (the thing that will almost destroy them) - **Contradiction** (the trait that makes them feel REAL — a brave person who's terrified of rejection) - **Relationships** (3 key people and how those dynamics work) - **Arc**: How they should change from beginning to end of the story - **Fun detail**: One weird, specific habit or preference that makes them memorable

#134 — Poetry Generator

Write a poem about [TOPIC/FEELING/IMAGE]. Specs: - Style: [FREE VERSE / SONNET / HAIKU / SLAM POETRY / SPOKEN WORD / VILLANELLE / your recommendation] - Tone: [MELANCHOLIC / FIERCE / QUIET / ECSTATIC / BITTER / TENDER] - Length: [SHORT (8-12 lines) / MEDIUM (20-30 lines) / LONG (40+ lines)] - Audience: [LITERARY JOURNAL / INSTAGRAM / PERFORMANCE / PERSONAL] Requirements: - At least 2 unexpected metaphors (not "love is a rose" territory) - Concrete sensory images (I should smell, taste, feel something) - A volta (turn/shift) somewhere — the poem should surprise itself - If rhyming, make it subtle (not greeting card AABB) - The last line should land like a punch or a whisper — not a summary Write 3 versions: one raw and emotional, one polished and crafted, one experimental.

#135 — Plot Hole Finder

I'm writing a [NOVEL / SCREENPLAY / SHORT STORY]. Here's my plot outline: [PASTE YOUR OUTLINE OR SYNOPSIS] Find every plot hole, logical inconsistency, and "wait, but why didn't they just…" moment. Check for: - Timeline contradictions (things that can't happen in that order) - Character motivation gaps (why would they DO that?) - Convenient coincidences that feel unearned - Rules you established but then broke - Chekhov's guns that never fire (things you set up but never paid off) - Deus ex machina moments (problems solved too easily) - "Why didn't they just call the police?" — obvious solutions characters ignore For each issue, suggest a fix that makes the story BETTER (not just patched).

#136 — D&D Adventure Generator

Create a one-shot D&D adventure for [NUMBER] players at level [LEVEL]. Theme: [DUNGEON CRAWL / MYSTERY / POLITICAL INTRIGUE / HORROR / HEIST] Setting: [DESCRIBE OR SAY "YOUR CHOICE"] Estimated length: [2-3 HOURS / 4-6 HOURS] Include: 1. **Hook**: How the party gets involved (not "you meet in a tavern") 2. **Key NPCs**: Name, personality, secret motivation, voice/speech pattern 3. **3-act structure**: Setup → Confrontation → Resolution 4. **3 encounters**: 1 combat, 1 social/roleplay, 1 puzzle 5. **Combat encounters**: Full stat blocks or CR references, terrain features, tactics 6. **The twist**: Something that reframes the adventure mid-way 7. **Multiple endings**: Based on player choices (at least 3 outcomes) 8. **Loot/rewards**: Appropriate for level, at least 1 interesting magic item with flavor text 9. **Read-aloud text**: For key moments (arrival, climax, resolution) Make it replayable — include optional side quests and branching decisions.

#137 — Dialogue Polisher

Rewrite this dialogue to sound like real humans talking: [PASTE YOUR DIALOGUE] Character profiles: - Character A: [NAME, AGE, PERSONALITY, EDUCATION LEVEL, SPEAKING STYLE] - Character B: [NAME, AGE, PERSONALITY, EDUCATION LEVEL, SPEAKING STYLE] Make the dialogue: - Distinct: I should know who's talking without dialogue tags - Subtext-rich: Characters rarely say exactly what they mean - Interrupted: Real people cut each other off, trail off, change subjects - Rhythmic: Vary sentence lengths (staccato tension → flowing calm) - Purposeful: Every line should either reveal character, advance plot, or both Show before/after and explain what you changed and why. Include action beats (what they're DOING while talking — people don't stand motionless while having conversations).

#138 — Creative Writing Prompt Generator

Give me 10 creative writing prompts that are actually interesting (not "write about a time you felt brave"). I write [GENRE]. My style tends toward [DESCRIBE — minimalist, lyrical, dark, comedic, etc.]. Each prompt should include: - The premise (2-3 sentences, specific enough to spark ideas) - A constraint (something that forces creative decisions — POV restriction, time limit, word count, structural rule) - A "wildcard" element to make it weird (an unusual detail that prevents generic writing) Rate each prompt: ⚡ Energy level (is this prompt exciting or contemplative?) ⏱️ Time investment (flash fiction, short story, or novel-length idea?) 🎯 Difficulty (beginner-friendly or literary-magazine-level?) Make at least 3 prompts that combine genres in unexpected ways.

#139 — Song Lyric Writer

Write song lyrics about [TOPIC/FEELING/STORY]. Genre: [POP / ROCK / HIP-HOP / COUNTRY / R&B / INDIE / FOLK] Mood: [UPBEAT / MELANCHOLIC / ANGRY / ROMANTIC / NOSTALGIC / ANTHEMIC] Structure: [VERSE-CHORUS-VERSE-CHORUS-BRIDGE-CHORUS / or suggest the best structure] Requirements: - Chorus should be catchy and repeatable (could I sing it after hearing it once?) - Verses should tell a story or build emotion (not just repeat the chorus theme) - Bridge should shift perspective or escalate intensity - Include internal rhymes, not just end rhymes - Avoid clichés: no "fire/desire," "heart/apart," "rain/pain" unless used in a genuinely clever way - Suggest where the melody should rise and fall Write it so it could actually be performed — mark sections, suggest tempo, note where harmonies or vocal effects might work.

#140 — Movie/Book Recommendation Engine

I loved these [MOVIES / BOOKS / TV SHOWS]: [LIST 3-5 FAVORITES WITH WHAT YOU LOVED ABOUT EACH] I hated or was bored by: [LIST 1-3 THINGS YOU DIDN'T ENJOY] Recommend 10 [MOVIES / BOOKS / TV SHOWS] I'd love. For each: - Title, year, creator/author - Why I'd like it (connected to my specific tastes, not generic praise) - The "if you liked X, this scratches the same itch" comparison - One-sentence pitch that would make me start it tonight - Content warnings (if relevant) Don't recommend anything in my "loved" list. Prioritize hidden gems over obvious suggestions — I've probably already seen the mainstream picks. At least 3 should be things most people haven't heard of.

#141 — Name Generator

I need names for [WHAT — a business, a baby, a character, a band, a product, a pet, a fantasy kingdom]. Context: [DESCRIBE THE VIBE, PURPOSE, OR WORLD] Constraints: [ANY REQUIREMENTS — e.g., "must sound modern," "needs to work in English and Spanish," "domain must be available"] Generate 20 names in 4 categories: 1. **Safe but solid** (5 names — professional, clearly communicates what it is) 2. **Creative and catchy** (5 names — memorable, slightly unexpected) 3. **Bold and weird** (5 names — would make someone pause and think) 4. **Metaphorical** (5 names — derives meaning from analogy, mythology, or wordplay) For each name: - The name - Meaning/origin/reasoning - Potential issues (negative connotations, existing trademarks, pronunciation problems) - Best use case

#142 — Screenwriting Scene Builder

Write a screenplay scene: **Setup:** [DESCRIBE THE SITUATION — who's there, what just happened, what's at stake] **Location:** [WHERE — be specific about the environment] **Characters:** [LIST WITH BRIEF DESCRIPTIONS] **Emotional arc:** [STARTS AT ___ ENDS AT ___ — e.g., "starts tense, ends devastating"] **Length:** [1 PAGE / 3 PAGES / 5 PAGES] Use proper screenplay format: - SLUG LINE (INT./EXT. LOCATION - TIME) - Action lines (present tense, vivid, cinematic — what the CAMERA sees) - Dialogue with character names - Parentheticals ONLY when absolutely necessary The scene should be filmable. No "she thinks about her childhood" — show it through behavior. Include at least one visual detail that would make a cinematographer excited.

#143 — Board Game Designer

Design a tabletop board game concept. Theme: [DESCRIBE — or say "surprise me"] Players: [NUMBER RANGE — e.g., 2-4 players] Length: [15 min / 30 min / 60 min / 2+ hours] Complexity: [CASUAL / MEDIUM / HEAVY] Inspiration: [SIMILAR TO ___ BUT ___ — or "completely original"] Create: 1. **Name** and 2-sentence elevator pitch 2. **Core mechanic**: The main thing players DO (deck building, worker placement, area control, etc.) 3. **Win condition**: How someone wins 4. **Turn structure**: What happens on a turn (step by step) 5. **Components list**: Cards, tokens, dice, board — everything needed 6. **Player interaction**: How players affect each other (competitive, cooperative, both?) 7. **Catch-up mechanic**: How losing players can still win 8. **Theme integration**: How the mechanics connect to the theme (not just pasted-on art) 9. **Sample turn**: Walk through 2 rounds of play so I can visualize it 10. **Playtesting notes**: 3 things that might be unbalanced (to watch during testing)

#144 — Art Prompt Engineer

I want to generate images using AI (DALL-E, Midjourney, Stable Diffusion). Help me create killer prompts. What I want to create: [DESCRIBE THE IMAGE — be specific about subject, mood, composition] Tool: [DALL-E / MIDJOURNEY / STABLE DIFFUSION / ALL THREE] Style: [PHOTOREALISTIC / ILLUSTRATION / OIL PAINTING / ANIME / ABSTRACT / SPECIFY] Give me: 1. 5 prompts, each with a different approach to the same concept 2. For Midjourney: include aspect ratios, style parameters, quality settings 3. For DALL-E: optimized for DALL-E 3's natural language understanding 4. For Stable Diffusion: include negative prompts, sampling method suggestions For each prompt, explain: - Why you chose those specific words (what each part contributes) - What to adjust if the result isn't right (which words to swap) - Common mistakes that produce bad results for this type of image

#145 — Comedy Writer

Write [FORMAT — stand-up bit, sketch, satirical article, sitcom cold open, roast jokes] about [TOPIC]. Tone: [OBSERVATIONAL / ABSURD / DRY / DARK / SLAPSTICK / SATIRICAL] Audience: [GENERAL / COMEDY CLUB / CORPORATE EVENT / SOCIAL MEDIA] Length: [3 MIN BIT / 5 MIN SET / FULL SKETCH / 10 JOKES] Requirements: - Every joke needs a setup and a punchline (not just funny observations) - At least 2 callback jokes (reference an earlier joke later) - Include misdirection — lead the audience one way, then snap to the unexpected - Tag lines after big punchlines (secondary jokes that pile on) - If it's a bit: have a clear premise that escalates Rate each joke on a scale: 😐 Mild chuckle, 😄 Solid laugh, 🤣 Potential killer. Be honest — I'd rather have 3 great jokes than 10 mediocre ones.

#146 — Alternate History Scenario

What if [HISTORICAL EVENT] had gone differently? Specifically: [DESCRIBE THE CHANGE — e.g., "the Library of Alexandria was never destroyed," "the internet was invented in 1920," "Rome never fell"]. Trace the consequences through time: 1. **Immediate effects** (first 1-5 years) 2. **Medium-term** (25-50 years) 3. **Long-term** (100+ years) 4. **Present day** (what would 2026 look like?) For each time period: - Political consequences - Technological development - Cultural changes - Who gains power? Who loses it? - What inventions/events that DID happen wouldn't have? What new ones emerge? Be rigorous — don't just flip everything to utopia or dystopia. History is messy. Some things get better, others get worse, and most consequences are unintended.

#147 — Dream Journal Interpreter

I had this dream last night: [DESCRIBE YOUR DREAM IN DETAIL — settings, characters, feelings, events, symbols, anything you remember] Analyze it from multiple angles: 1. **Psychological** (Jungian archetypes, shadow work, recurring symbols) 2. **Emotional processing** (what current life situations might this relate to?) 3. **Creative** (if this dream were a movie or story, what's the theme?) 4. **Pattern recognition** (common dream symbols and what they typically represent) 5. **Practical** (is your subconscious trying to tell you something actionable?) Be thoughtful, not mystical. Don't claim dreams "predict the future." Focus on what they might reveal about current emotional states, unprocessed experiences, or creative impulses. End with: "If I were your therapist, I'd ask you about ___" (one probing question based on the dream content).

#148 — Improv Scene Partner

Let's do an improv scene together. You'll play one character, I'll play the other. Setup: - Location: [WHERE — e.g., "a dentist's office," "Mars colony," "1800s saloon"] - Your character: [DESCRIBE WHO YOU WANT THE AI TO PLAY] - My character: [DESCRIBE WHO I'LL PLAY] - The situation: [WHAT'S HAPPENING — e.g., "one of us has a secret the other is about to discover"] Rules: - Use "Yes, and" — build on whatever I say, never negate it - Stay in character (don't break to explain things) - Add physical actions in *asterisks* to make the scene visual - Escalate the situation naturally (each exchange should raise the stakes slightly) - Keep your responses to 2-3 sentences (like real improv — no monologues) Start the scene. I'll respond in character.

#149 — Philosophical Thought Experiment

Present me with an original thought experiment about [TOPIC — free will, consciousness, morality, identity, AI rights, time travel, justice]. Structure: 1. **The scenario** (vivid, specific, and impossible to answer easily) 2. **The intuitive answer** (what most people would say) 3. **The counterargument** (why the intuitive answer might be wrong) 4. **The philosophical frameworks** (what would a utilitarian say? A deontologist? A virtue ethicist?) 5. **Real-world implications** (how this thought experiment connects to actual decisions we face today) 6. **The uncomfortable conclusion** (the answer that's probably right but makes people squirm) Make it genuinely difficult — if there's an obvious answer, it's not a good thought experiment. I should still be thinking about this a week from now.

#150 — Meme Caption Generator

Generate meme captions for [CONTEXT — my brand, this trend, this situation, just for fun]. My audience: [DESCRIBE — Gen Z, corporate workers, parents, developers, fitness people, etc.] Tone: [RELATABLE / ABSURD / SARCASTIC / WHOLESOME / EDGY-BUT-NOT-OFFENSIVE] Platform: [TWITTER / INSTAGRAM / TIKTOK / LINKEDIN / REDDIT] Give me: 1. 10 text-only captions/tweets (no image needed) 2. 5 image macro suggestions (describe the image + top text/bottom text) 3. 3 trending meme format adaptations (use a current format and apply it to my topic) For each: rate it 🔥 (fire), 😄 (solid), or 🤷 (risky — could hit or miss). Mark which ones I should definitely NOT post if I have a professional brand. The best memes feel like you stole someone's internal monologue. Make these feel authentic, not "how do you do, fellow kids."

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💰 Money & Side Hustles (Prompts 151–170)

ChatGPT won't make you rich while you sleep. But it WILL compress weeks of work into hours — product ideas, financial planning, pricing strategies, pitch decks, sales copy. These 20 prompts are for people who want to make money, not just talk about it.

#151 — Side Hustle Validator

I'm considering this side hustle: [DESCRIBE YOUR IDEA]. My situation: - Available time: [HOURS PER WEEK] - Starting budget: [$AMOUNT] - Skills I have: [LIST] - Risk tolerance: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Evaluate it honestly: 1. **Market validation**: Is there demand? How do you know? (Show evidence, not assumptions) 2. **Revenue math**: What's the realistic revenue at month 1, 3, 6, 12? (Show your math) 3. **Competition check**: Who's already doing this? What's their pricing? 4. **Time-to-first-dollar**: How many hours/weeks until I make my first $1? 5. **Scalability**: Can this grow beyond trading time for money? 6. **Kill criteria**: At what point should I quit this if it's not working? 7. **Verdict**: Score it 1-10 for MY situation (not in general) If you'd recommend a DIFFERENT side hustle based on my skills/constraints, say so. I want honesty, not encouragement.

#152 — Pricing Strategy Advisor

Help me price [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. Details: - What it is: [DESCRIBE] - Who buys it: [IDEAL CUSTOMER — income level, how badly they need it] - My costs: [COST TO PRODUCE/DELIVER] - Competitors: [WHO AND THEIR PRICES — if known] - Current price: [WHAT I CHARGE NOW, OR "NOT LAUNCHED YET"] Analyze using: 1. **Cost-plus**: Minimum viable price (costs + margin) 2. **Value-based**: What's it WORTH to the buyer? (savings, time, revenue generated) 3. **Competitive**: Where do I fit in the market? 4. **Psychology**: Price anchoring, charm pricing, tiering strategies 5. **Tiering recommendation**: Good/Better/Best options with what to include at each level Give me 3 pricing options: "safe," "confident," and "bold" — with the reasoning behind each. Which one would you launch with and why?

#153 — Business Model Canvas

Fill out a Business Model Canvas for [BUSINESS IDEA]. Complete all 9 blocks with specific, actionable content (not generic): 1. **Customer Segments**: Who exactly pays? (Be specific — "women 25-35" is lazy. "Female fitness influencers with 10-50K followers who sell coaching programs" is useful.) 2. **Value Propositions**: What pain do you solve? What gain do you create? 3. **Channels**: How do customers find you and buy? 4. **Customer Relationships**: How do you acquire, retain, and grow? 5. **Revenue Streams**: How do you make money? (Subscription, one-time, freemium, ads, etc.) 6. **Key Resources**: What do you need to make this work? (Tech, people, content, IP) 7. **Key Activities**: The 3 things you must do brilliantly 8. **Key Partnerships**: Who do you need that you can't do yourself? 9. **Cost Structure**: What are the major costs? Fixed vs variable? Then add: - **Unfair advantage**: What do you have that competitors can't easily copy? - **Key metric**: The ONE number you should track obsessively - **Biggest risk**: What's most likely to kill this?

#154 — Digital Product Idea Generator

Generate digital product ideas I can create and sell online. About me: - My expertise/knowledge: [WHAT YOU KNOW WELL] - My skills: [WRITING / DESIGN / CODING / TEACHING / etc.] - Time available: [HOURS TO CREATE THE PRODUCT] - Target price range: [$5-20 / $20-50 / $50-200] - Preferred format: [EBOOK / COURSE / TEMPLATE / TOOLKIT / SOFTWARE / YOUR RECOMMENDATION] Give me 10 ideas, each with: - Product name and one-line description - Target buyer (who specifically would pay for this?) - Price point and reasoning - Estimated creation time - Marketing angle (how I'd sell it in one sentence) - Competition level: 🟢 Low, 🟡 Medium, 🔴 High - First-month revenue estimate (realistic, not fantasy) Rank them by "ease of creation × revenue potential" score. I want to launch the highest-impact, lowest-effort product first.

#155 — Pitch Deck Writer

Write a pitch deck script for [BUSINESS/IDEA] targeting [INVESTORS / PARTNERS / CLIENTS]. Slide-by-slide: 1. **Title slide**: Company name + tagline + your name 2. **Problem**: The painful problem (make them FEEL it) 3. **Solution**: Your product/service (demo moment) 4. **Market size**: TAM → SAM → SOM with sources 5. **Business model**: How you make money (simple) 6. **Traction**: Numbers, growth, proof (or milestones if pre-revenue) 7. **Competition**: Positioning matrix (NOT "we have no competitors") 8. **Team**: Why YOU are the ones to build this 9. **Financials**: Revenue projections, unit economics, burn rate 10. **The ask**: What you want (money, partnerships, etc.) and what they get For each slide: - The headline (what goes in big text) - The talking points (what you SAY — 30 seconds max per slide) - Speaker notes (your script) - Design suggestions (what visuals to include) Total pitch should be 10-12 minutes. Make slide 2 (Problem) emotionally compelling — that's where you win or lose the audience.

#156 — Passive Income Roadmap

Build me a realistic passive income roadmap. No "just buy rental properties" generic advice. My situation: - Starting capital: [$AMOUNT] - Skills: [LIST] - Time to invest upfront: [HOURS PER WEEK FOR HOW LONG] - Risk tolerance: [CONSERVATIVE / MODERATE / AGGRESSIVE] - Income goal: [$X/MONTH PASSIVE] Give me: 1. **3 income streams** that match MY situation (not generic suggestions) 2. For each stream: - What it is and how it works - Upfront time/money investment - Time to first dollar - Realistic monthly income at month 6, 12, 24 - Ongoing maintenance required (be honest — "passive" is a spectrum) - What could go wrong (biggest risk) 3. **Stacking strategy**: In what ORDER should I build these? (Don't say "all at once") 4. **Reality check**: What does "passive income" actually look like? (It's never truly passive) Show the math. If you say "you could make $2K/month from X," show me how you calculated that with specific assumptions.

#157 — Etsy/Gumroad Product Listing

Write a product listing for [PRODUCT] on [ETSY / GUMROAD / SHOPIFY / AMAZON]. Product details: - What it is: [DESCRIBE] - What's included: [LIST FILES/ITEMS] - Who it's for: [IDEAL BUYER] - Price: [$AMOUNT] - Category: [DIGITAL DOWNLOAD / TEMPLATE / PHYSICAL / etc.] Write: 1. **Title** (SEO-optimized, uses keywords buyers actually search) 2. **Description** (structured: hook → what you get → how to use → who it's for → FAQ) 3. **Tags/keywords** (13 for Etsy, or relevant tags for other platforms) 4. **Bullet points** (5 benefit-focused, scannable) 5. **FAQ section** (5 questions that overcome purchase objections) Make the description sell without being salesy. Focus on the TRANSFORMATION — what their life/work looks like AFTER they buy this. Include formatting (bold, line breaks) that works on the platform.

#158 — Financial Health Check

Give me a financial health check based on these numbers: - Monthly income: [$] - Monthly expenses: [$] (break down: housing, food, transport, subscriptions, debt payments, other) - Savings: [$] - Debt: [$] (list type and interest rates) - Investments: [$] (if any) - Financial goal: [WHAT AND BY WHEN] Analyze: 1. **Emergency fund status**: How many months of expenses do I have? Target: 3-6 months. 2. **Savings rate**: Am I saving enough? What should I aim for? 3. **Debt strategy**: Should I avalanche (highest interest first) or snowball (smallest balance first)? 4. **Expense audit**: Which expenses seem too high relative to my income? 5. **Action plan**: Top 3 things I should do THIS MONTH to improve my finances 6. **12-month projection**: If I follow your plan, where will I be? Be direct. If I'm living beyond my means, say so. If my spending on [X] is fine, say that too. No judgment — just math and strategy.

#159 — Email Sales Sequence

Write a 7-email sales sequence to sell [PRODUCT/SERVICE] to [AUDIENCE]. Product: [WHAT IT IS, PRICE, KEY BENEFITS] Audience pain point: [WHAT KEEPS THEM UP AT NIGHT] Conversion goal: [BUY / BOOK A CALL / SIGN UP] Sequence: - Email 1 (Day 1): Story that hooks — establish the problem - Email 2 (Day 3): Agitate — show what happens if they DON'T solve it - Email 3 (Day 5): Social proof — case study or testimonial - Email 4 (Day 7): The solution — introduce your product (soft pitch) - Email 5 (Day 9): Objection crusher — handle the #1 reason people don't buy - Email 6 (Day 11): Scarcity/urgency — deadline, limited spots, price increase - Email 7 (Day 13): Last chance — final call with recap of everything Each email needs: Subject line (3 options), preview text, body (200-400 words), CTA button text. Write in [BRAND VOICE — casual, professional, bold, etc.].

#160 — Freelance Proposal Template

Write a freelance proposal for this job: Job posting: [PASTE THE JOB DESCRIPTION OR DESCRIBE IT] My relevant experience: [WHAT I'VE DONE THAT'S SIMILAR] My rate: [$X/HOUR OR PROJECT] Platform: [UPWORK / FIVERR / DIRECT EMAIL / OTHER] Write a proposal that: 1. Opens with something specific about THEIR project (not a generic intro) 2. Shows I understand the REAL problem behind their request 3. Briefly mentions relevant experience (proof, not bragging) 4. Outlines my approach in 3-4 clear steps 5. Addresses a potential concern before they raise it 6. Ends with a clear next step (not "let me know if you're interested") Keep it under 200 words for Upwork (nobody reads novels). Write 3 versions: - Version A: Confident expert - Version B: Enthusiastic collaborator - Version C: Results-focused (lead with outcomes) Mark which version you'd recommend for THIS specific job and why.

#161 — Landing Page Copy

Write landing page copy for [PRODUCT/SERVICE/EVENT]. Details: - What it is: [DESCRIPTION] - Who it's for: [SPECIFIC TARGET] - Price: [$ OR FREE] - Goal: [SALES / SIGNUPS / DOWNLOADS / BOOKINGS] - Unique value: [WHY CHOOSE THIS OVER ALTERNATIVES] Write each section: 1. **Hero**: Headline + subheadline + CTA button text 2. **Problem**: 3 pain points with emotional language 3. **Solution**: How your product solves each pain point 4. **Features/Benefits**: 6 features reframed as benefits (not "includes X" but "you get to Y") 5. **Social proof**: Testimonial format + where to place them 6. **How it works**: 3-step process (simple, visual) 7. **FAQ**: 5 objection-handling questions 8. **Final CTA**: Urgency + recap + button Write two versions of the hero section — one emotional, one logical. Let me test both. The page should read in under 3 minutes. If someone skims just the headlines, they should understand the full value proposition.

#162 — Affiliate Marketing Strategy

Build me an affiliate marketing strategy for my [BLOG / YOUTUBE / NEWSLETTER / SOCIAL MEDIA]. My niche: [TOPIC] My audience size: [NUMBERS AND PLATFORM] My content type: [WHAT I CREATE] Current income from affiliate: [$0 / $AMOUNT] Strategy should include: 1. **Product selection**: 5 specific affiliate programs I should join (with commission rates and why they fit my audience) 2. **Content plan**: 5 pieces of content designed to drive affiliate conversions (not just "write a review") 3. **Integration**: How to mention products naturally without being salesy 4. **Tracking**: How to set up and monitor affiliate links 5. **Compliance**: FTC disclosure requirements (exact language to use) 6. **Income projection**: Realistic monthly income at 1K, 5K, 10K visitors The key insight most people miss: affiliate income isn't about having the most links — it's about recommending the RIGHT product at the RIGHT moment in someone's decision journey. Show me how to do that.

#163 — Invoice & Proposal Template

Create a professional [INVOICE / PROPOSAL / SOW (Statement of Work)] for my freelance business. My business: [NAME AND WHAT YOU DO] Client: [CLIENT NAME OR TYPE] Project: [DESCRIBE THE WORK] Rate: [HOURLY / PROJECT / RETAINER — $AMOUNT] Payment terms: [NET 15 / NET 30 / 50% UPFRONT / etc.] Include: 1. Professional formatting (sections, line items, totals) 2. Scope of work (specific deliverables — protect yourself from scope creep) 3. Timeline with milestones 4. Revision policy (how many rounds? What counts as a revision?) 5. What's NOT included (the "this would be a separate project" section) 6. Late payment terms 7. Kill fee / cancellation policy Format it so I can copy it into Google Docs or Notion. Use clean, professional language — not legalese, but not casual either.

#164 — Market Research Report

Create a market research report for [INDUSTRY/NICHE/PRODUCT IDEA]. I need to understand: 1. **Market size**: What's the TAM (total addressable market)? Is it growing? 2. **Customer segments**: Who buys this? Create 3 buyer personas with demographics, psychographics, and buying behavior 3. **Competitors**: Map the top 5-10 competitors (name, pricing, positioning, strengths, weaknesses) 4. **Pricing landscape**: What are people paying? What are they willing to pay? 5. **Distribution channels**: Where do customers find and buy? 6. **Trends**: What's changing in this market? (Growing, shrinking, shifting) 7. **Gaps**: What are customers complaining about that nobody's solving? 8. **Entry barriers**: What makes it hard to compete? (And what makes it possible) Present findings with specific numbers, percentages, and sources where possible. End with a "go/no-go" recommendation based on the data.

#165 — Social Media Monetization Plan

Create a monetization plan for my social media presence. My accounts: - Platform(s): [LIST WITH FOLLOWER COUNTS] - Niche: [TOPIC] - Engagement rate: [IF KNOWN — or "average" / "high" / "low"] - Current income from social: [$0 / $AMOUNT] Build a monetization stack: 1. **Tier 1 — Easy money** (implementable this week): Brand deals, affiliate links, tips/donations 2. **Tier 2 — Medium effort** (implementable this month): Digital products, memberships, courses 3. **Tier 3 — High effort** (implementable this quarter): Services, consulting, physical products For each income stream: - Realistic monthly income at MY follower count - How to set it up (specific steps) - Content strategy to support it (what to post) - Platform-specific tips (algorithm behavior, best practices) Include a "rate card" I can send to brands — what to charge for posts, stories, reels, etc. at my size.

#166 — Tax Optimization Checklist

I'm a [FREELANCER / SMALL BUSINESS OWNER / SIDE HUSTLER / W-2 EMPLOYEE WITH SIDE INCOME] earning [$AMOUNT/YEAR]. My situation: [DESCRIBE — filing status, state, major expenses, business structure] Give me a tax optimization checklist: 1. **Deductions I'm probably missing** (be specific — not just "home office" but exactly what qualifies and how to calculate it) 2. **Business structure**: Should I be an LLC, S-Corp, or sole prop? At my income level, what saves the most? 3. **Quarterly taxes**: Do I need to pay them? How to calculate estimated payments 4. **Record-keeping**: What receipts/records do I need to keep and for how long? 5. **Retirement accounts**: SEP-IRA, Solo 401k, or Roth? Which saves me the most at my income? 6. **Common mistakes**: Tax errors that trigger audits for people in my situation 7. **Timeline**: Key dates I can't miss this year ⚠️ Disclaimer: This is educational information, not tax advice. Always confirm with a CPA for your specific situation.

#167 — Customer Avatar Builder

Build a detailed customer avatar for [MY PRODUCT/SERVICE/BUSINESS]. Go deep — I need to understand this person like a best friend: 1. **Demographics**: Age, gender, location, income, education, job title 2. **Psychographics**: Values, beliefs, fears, aspirations, identity 3. **Day in their life**: What does a typical Tuesday look like for them? (7 AM to 11 PM) 4. **Pain points**: Top 5 frustrations related to [YOUR NICHE] — in THEIR words (how they'd describe it to a friend) 5. **Goals**: What they're trying to achieve (stated goal vs. underlying desire) 6. **Objections**: Why they HAVEN'T bought a solution yet (top 5 hesitations) 7. **Information sources**: Where they learn, who they follow, what they read 8. **Buying behavior**: How they research purchases, what triggers a buy, what kills the sale 9. **Language**: 10 phrases or sentences they'd actually say about this problem 10. **The "aha" message**: The one sentence that would make them stop scrolling and say "that's exactly my problem" Give this avatar a name and photo description. Make them feel like a real person.

#168 — Online Course Outline

Design an online course about [TOPIC]. My expertise: [WHAT QUALIFIES ME TO TEACH THIS] Target student: [WHO AND THEIR CURRENT LEVEL] Course format: [VIDEO / TEXT / HYBRID / COHORT-BASED] Price target: [$29 / $99 / $199 / $499+] Length: [MINI-COURSE: 1-2 HRS / STANDARD: 4-8 HRS / COMPREHENSIVE: 10+ HRS] Create: 1. **Course title** (3 options — one benefit-focused, one curiosity-driven, one direct) 2. **Tagline** (the transformation in one sentence) 3. **Module breakdown** (5-8 modules, each with 3-5 lessons) 4. **For each lesson**: Title, learning objective, format (video/worksheet/quiz), estimated length 5. **Assignments/exercises**: Practical work after each module 6. **Bonus materials**: 3 bonuses that add value (templates, checklists, community access, live Q&A) 7. **Sales page outline**: What promises to make to justify the price 8. **Launch strategy**: How to get the first 50 students The course should be results-oriented — student should be able to [ACHIEVE SPECIFIC OUTCOME] by the end.

#169 — Negotiate Anything Script

I need to negotiate [WHAT — salary, freelance rate, vendor price, car purchase, rent, contract terms]. My situation: - What they're offering: [$X OR CURRENT TERMS] - What I want: [$Y OR DESIRED TERMS] - My leverage: [WHAT BARGAINING POWER DO I HAVE] - Their leverage: [WHAT THEY HOLD OVER ME] - Relationship: [ONE-TIME / ONGOING — how much do I need to preserve goodwill?] Give me: 1. **Opening statement** (exact words to start the negotiation) 2. **BATNA analysis** (my Best Alternative if this fails — knowing this gives confidence) 3. **3 negotiation tactics** relevant to THIS specific situation 4. **Response scripts**: What to say when they: - Say "that's our best offer" - Ask "what's your budget?" - Go silent after my ask - Counter with something lower 5. **Walk-away point**: When should I stop negotiating and leave? 6. **Closing move**: How to lock in the agreement Tone: [FIRM BUT RESPECTFUL / AGGRESSIVE / COLLABORATIVE]. Write it as a dialogue script I can practice.

#170 — Revenue Projection Model

Build a 12-month revenue projection for [BUSINESS/PRODUCT]. Current metrics: - Monthly revenue: [$X OR $0 IF PRE-LAUNCH] - Customers/users: [NUMBER] - Average order value: [$] - Customer acquisition cost: [$] - Churn rate: [% OR "DON'T KNOW"] - Growth rate: [% MONTH-OVER-MONTH OR "DON'T KNOW"] Build three scenarios: 1. **Conservative** (things go okay, no big wins) 2. **Realistic** (moderate growth with some wins and some setbacks) 3. **Optimistic** (everything goes right, best case) For each scenario, show monthly: - Revenue - Expenses (list major categories) - Net profit - Customer count - Key assumption driving that month's number Show the math. I want to see how changing ONE variable (price, conversion rate, traffic) impacts the whole model. Highlight the ONE lever that has the biggest impact on total revenue.

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🏠 Home & Life (Prompts 171–185)

AI isn't just for work. These 15 prompts help you cook better, plan trips, get fit, renovate your house, manage your time, and generally adult more effectively. Your daily life — optimized.

#171 — Weekly Meal Planner

Create a 7-day meal plan for [NUMBER] people. My constraints: - Dietary needs: [NONE / VEGETARIAN / KETO / GLUTEN-FREE / DAIRY-FREE / etc.] - Budget: [$50 / $75 / $100 / $150 PER WEEK] - Cooking skill: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / ADVANCED] - Time available: [15 MIN MEALS / 30 MIN / I HAVE TIME ON WEEKENDS] - Foods I hate: [LIST] - Kitchen equipment: [BASICS ONLY / INSTANT POT / AIR FRYER / FULL KITCHEN] For each day, give me: - Breakfast, lunch, dinner (+ snack if within budget) - Estimated cost per meal - Prep time and cook time - Leftovers strategy (cook once, eat twice) Plus: - Complete grocery list organized by store section (produce, dairy, pantry, meat) - Sunday prep plan (what to prep ahead for busy weekdays) - Total weekly cost estimate Make it realistic — no one wants to cook a gourmet meal every single night.

#172 — Travel Itinerary Builder

Plan a [NUMBER]-day trip to [DESTINATION]. My details: - Travel dates: [WHEN] - Budget: [$ PER PERSON — not including flights] - Travelers: [NUMBER, AGES, RELATIONSHIPS — solo, couple, family with kids, friend group] - Interests: [LIST — e.g., food, history, nightlife, nature, art, adventure, relaxation] - Pace: [PACKED SCHEDULE / MODERATE / RELAXED] - Already booked: [HOTEL, FLIGHTS — or need recommendations] For each day: - Morning, afternoon, evening activities - Specific restaurants (with what to order and price range) - Travel between locations (how to get there, how long) - One "hidden gem" that tourists usually miss - Budget tracking (running total) Include: - Packing list specific to this destination and time of year - Money-saving tips (free days at museums, happy hours, transit passes) - Common tourist traps to avoid - Emergency info (hospital, embassy, local emergency number) - Essential phrases if non-English-speaking country

#173 — Fitness & Workout Builder

Create a [4-WEEK / 8-WEEK / 12-WEEK] workout plan for me. My profile: - Goal: [LOSE WEIGHT / BUILD MUSCLE / GET STRONGER / GENERAL FITNESS / TRAIN FOR ___] - Current level: [SEDENTARY / BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / ADVANCED] - Available days: [NUMBER PER WEEK] - Session length: [30 MIN / 45 MIN / 60 MIN] - Equipment: [NONE (BODYWEIGHT) / DUMBBELLS / FULL GYM / HOME GYM] - Injuries/limitations: [LIST OR NONE] For each workout day: - Exercise name, sets, reps, rest time - Brief form note for each exercise (the ONE cue that matters most) - Warm-up (5 min) and cool-down (5 min) - Intensity guide (RPE or % of max) Include: - Progressive overload plan (how to make it harder each week) - Deload week schedule - What to do on rest days (active recovery suggestions) - Nutrition guidelines (general, not a full meal plan — unless requested) ⚠️ Consult a doctor before starting any new exercise program.

#174 — Home Renovation Budget Planner

I'm planning to renovate my [ROOM/AREA — kitchen, bathroom, basement, backyard, etc.]. Current situation: [DESCRIBE WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE NOW] Dream outcome: [DESCRIBE WHAT I WANT] Budget: [$AMOUNT] DIY vs. hire: [ALL DIY / HIRE FOR MAJOR WORK / ALL HIRED] Timeline: [NEED DONE BY DATE / FLEXIBLE] Give me: 1. **Budget breakdown**: Category-by-category (materials, labor, permits, contingency) 2. **Priority list**: If I can't afford everything, what to do first for maximum impact 3. **DIY vs. Pro**: Which tasks I can safely DIY and which NEED a professional (with cost difference) 4. **Material recommendations**: Specific products at my budget level (not just "get good countertops") 5. **Timeline**: Realistic week-by-week project schedule 6. **Hidden costs**: The expenses that surprise first-time renovators 7. **ROI**: Which improvements add the most resale value Include a 15-20% contingency buffer. Every renovation goes over budget — plan for it.

#175 — Morning/Evening Routine Designer

Design a [MORNING / EVENING / BOTH] routine for me. My situation: - Wake time: [TIME] - Sleep time: [TIME] - Commute: [LENGTH AND TYPE] - Goals: [WHAT I WANT FROM THIS ROUTINE — productivity, calm, fitness, focus, creativity] - Current routine: [DESCRIBE OR "NONE — I JUST WING IT"] - Hard constraints: [KIDS, SHARED BATHROOM, NOISY ROOMMATES, etc.] - Energy pattern: [MORNING PERSON / NIGHT OWL / VARIABLE] Design a routine that: 1. Is realistic for my ACTUAL life (not "wake up at 5 AM and journal for an hour" if I have a toddler) 2. Takes [15 / 30 / 60] minutes total 3. Includes specific activities with time allocations 4. Has a "minimum viable version" for bad days (the 5-minute version) 5. Has a "best day" version when I have extra time 6. Includes habit stacking (connect new habits to existing ones) 7. Has built-in flexibility (what to skip without guilt) Make it sticky — routines fail because they're too ambitious. Start smaller than I think I need to.

#176 — Party/Event Planner

Plan a [TYPE OF EVENT — birthday, dinner party, game night, holiday gathering, graduation, baby shower] for [NUMBER] guests. Details: - Date/time: [WHEN] - Location: [WHERE — home, park, restaurant, rented venue] - Budget: [$AMOUNT] - Vibe: [CASUAL / ELEGANT / THEMED / SURPRISE] - Dietary restrictions: [LIST — guests with allergies, vegans, etc.] - Ages: [RANGE — kids present?] Give me: 1. **Timeline**: Pre-event prep schedule (1 week out, 3 days out, day-of, hour-by-hour) 2. **Menu**: Specific recipes or catering options within budget 3. **Drinks**: Signature cocktail + 2 non-alcoholic options 4. **Decor**: Budget-friendly ideas specific to the theme 5. **Entertainment/activities**: What to do (icebreakers if needed, games, music playlist suggestions) 6. **Shopping list**: Everything I need to buy, organized by store 7. **Day-of checklist**: Hour-by-hour what needs to happen 8. **Contingency**: What if it rains? What if 5 extra people show up?

#177 — Declutter & Organize System

Help me declutter and organize my [SPACE — closet, garage, kitchen, home office, entire apartment]. Current state: [DESCRIBE THE CHAOS] Time available: [HOURS THIS WEEKEND / 30 MIN/DAY FOR A WEEK / A FULL DAY] My obstacles: [SENTIMENTAL ATTACHMENT / NO STORAGE / SHARED SPACE / OVERWHELMED BY WHERE TO START] Create: 1. **Decision framework**: How to decide what to keep, donate, trash, store (fast — no spending 10 minutes per item) 2. **Zone plan**: Break the space into 5-7 zones. Tackle one at a time. 3. **For each zone**: What to do (specific steps), time estimate, supplies needed 4. **Organization system**: How to organize what's left (specific containers, labels, arrangements) 5. **Maintenance plan**: 15-minute weekly habit to prevent re-cluttering 6. **Shopping list**: Storage solutions from [IKEA / DOLLAR STORE / AMAZON] at my budget level The most important rule: start with the EASIEST zone to build momentum. Not the worst drawer — the quick win.

#178 — Pet Care Guide

Create a complete care guide for my [PET TYPE AND BREED/SPECIES]. Pet details: - Age: [AGE] - Any health issues: [LIST OR NONE] - Living situation: [APARTMENT / HOUSE WITH YARD / etc.] - My experience: [FIRST-TIME OWNER / EXPERIENCED] Cover: 1. **Daily care**: Feeding schedule, exercise needs, grooming 2. **Health**: Vaccination schedule, common breed-specific health issues, when to see a vet (red flags) 3. **Training basics**: Top 5 commands/behaviors to teach first (with how-to) 4. **Nutrition**: Recommended food types, portion sizes, treats, toxic foods to avoid 5. **Enrichment**: How to keep them mentally stimulated and prevent destructive behavior 6. **Budget**: Monthly cost breakdown (food, vet, grooming, supplies, insurance) 7. **Emergency prep**: Pet first-aid basics, emergency contacts, what to have in a pet first-aid kit Write it as a "cheat sheet" I can keep on my fridge. Practical, not encyclopedic.

#179 — Gift Idea Generator

I need a gift for [RELATIONSHIP — partner, parent, friend, coworker, kid] who is [AGE] and [BRIEF DESCRIPTION]. They like: [INTERESTS, HOBBIES] They already have: [COMMON GIFTS THEY'VE RECEIVED] My budget: [$AMOUNT] Occasion: [BIRTHDAY / HOLIDAY / ANNIVERSARY / JUST BECAUSE / THANK YOU] Give me 15 gift ideas in 3 tiers: 1. **Under $25** (5 ideas — thoughtful, not cheap) 2. **$25-75** (5 ideas — the sweet spot) 3. **$75+** (5 ideas — splurge options) For each: - What it is and where to buy it - Why it fits THIS person specifically (not generic) - How to present it (packaging, pairing with a card/note, experience wrapping) Include at least 2 experience gifts (not physical items), 2 handmade/personal options, and 1 "they'd never buy this for themselves but would love it" wildcard. No gift cards — those are a last resort, not a recommendation.

#180 — Sleep Optimization Plan

Help me fix my sleep. Here's my situation: - Current sleep schedule: [BED TIME → WAKE TIME] - Sleep quality: [TERRIBLE / OKAY / INCONSISTENT] - Problems: [DESCRIBE — can't fall asleep, wake up at 3 AM, never feel rested, sleep too late on weekends, etc.] - Caffeine intake: [WHAT AND WHEN] - Screen habits: [DESCRIBE EVENING SCREEN USE] - Exercise: [WHEN AND HOW MUCH] - Stress level: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] - Sleep environment: [DESCRIBE — light, noise, temperature, bed quality] Create a 2-week sleep optimization plan: 1. **Environment fixes** (things to change in my bedroom — specific, not "make it dark") 2. **Behavior changes** (ranked by impact — start with the highest-leverage change) 3. **Evening routine** (timed, minute by minute, starting 90 minutes before bed) 4. **Supplements**: What actually has evidence (melatonin, magnesium, etc.) — dosage, timing, caveats 5. **What to STOP doing** (the habits that are secretly destroying my sleep) 6. **Tracking**: How to measure if it's working (simple, not lab-level) Start with the 3 changes that will have the BIGGEST impact for the LEAST effort. Don't overhaul everything at once.

#181 — Car Buying Research Assistant

I'm looking to buy a [NEW / USED] car. Help me research and decide. My requirements: - Budget: [$AMOUNT — total or monthly payment] - Type: [SEDAN / SUV / TRUCK / EV / HYBRID / etc.] - Must-haves: [LIST — e.g., AWD, good MPG, trunk space, safety ratings] - Nice-to-haves: [LIST] - Daily use: [COMMUTE MILES, FAMILY SIZE, CARGO NEEDS] - Climate: [WHERE I LIVE — affects EV range, AWD needs, etc.] Give me: 1. **Top 5 models** that fit my criteria (with starting MSRP / fair used price) 2. **Comparison table**: MPG/range, reliability rating, insurance cost, maintenance cost, resale value 3. **The question to ask the dealer** that they don't want me to ask 4. **True cost of ownership**: 5-year calculation (payment + gas + insurance + maintenance) 5. **Negotiation tips** for this specific type of purchase 6. **Red flags** when buying used (what to check, what VIN lookup to do) 7. **Recommendation**: Based on MY priorities, which one and why

#182 — Relationship Check-In Template

Create a structured relationship check-in template for [RELATIONSHIP TYPE — romantic partner, roommate, business partner, family member]. This is for: [DESCRIBE THE SITUATION — weekly date night conversation, quarterly life planning, resolving a recurring issue, or just generally improving communication] Structure the check-in as: 1. **Warm-up questions** (3 light, easy questions to start) 2. **Appreciation round** (prompts for expressing what you value about each other) 3. **How are we doing?** (framework for honest feedback without blame) 4. **Growth areas** (how to discuss what needs improvement constructively) 5. **Practical logistics** (schedule sync, task division, upcoming decisions) 6. **Fun planning** (what to look forward to together) 7. **Closing ritual** (how to end on a positive note) Include "conversation rules" — guidelines that keep it productive (no bringing up old fights, use "I feel" not "you always," equal talk time, etc.) Make it feel like a meaningful conversation, not a corporate meeting. This should bring people CLOSER, not stress them out.

#183 — Emergency Preparedness Plan

Create an emergency preparedness plan for my [HOUSEHOLD — solo, couple, family with kids, elderly parents]. My location: [CITY/REGION — determines relevant disasters] Home type: [APARTMENT / HOUSE / RURAL PROPERTY] Pets: [YES/NO, WHAT KIND] Cover: 1. **Most likely emergencies** for my area (ranked by probability) 2. **72-hour kit**: Exact items to have packed and ready (with quantities for my household size) 3. **Important documents**: What to copy/digitize, where to store them 4. **Communication plan**: How to reach family if phones are down 5. **Evacuation routes**: How to plan them (and practice) 6. **Financial prep**: Emergency fund target, cash on hand, insurance review 7. **Monthly check**: 5-minute checklist to keep everything current Include a shopping list with specific items (not just "get water" — how much water, what container, where to store it). Total budget estimate for getting fully prepared from zero.

#184 — Home Maintenance Calendar

Create a 12-month home maintenance calendar for my [HOME TYPE — apartment, condo, single-family, older home]. My climate: [REGION — affects seasonal tasks] My skill level: [CAN'T CHANGE A LIGHTBULB / BASIC DIY / HANDY / VERY SKILLED] Home age: [APPROXIMATE] For each month, list: - Tasks to do (with brief how-to or link-worthy description) - Estimated time per task - DIY or call a pro (with approximate cost for pro work) - Urgency level: 🔴 Do it or something breaks / 🟡 Should do / 🟢 Nice to do Include: - Seasonal deep cleans (spring and fall priorities) - System checks (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roof) - Money-saving maintenance (the $20 tasks that prevent $2,000 repairs) - First-time homeowner tips (the stuff nobody tells you) - "Am I being scammed?" guide for common contractor upsells Print-friendly format — this goes on the inside of a closet door.

#185 — Personal Development Plan

Create a 90-day personal development plan for me. Where I am now: - Career: [SITUATION] - Health: [SITUATION] - Relationships: [SITUATION] - Finances: [SITUATION] - Personal satisfaction: [1-10] Where I want to be in 90 days: - [LIST 3-5 SPECIFIC GOALS — not "be happier" but "establish a morning exercise routine and complete a 5K"] Design a plan with: 1. **3 keystone habits** (small habits that cascade into bigger changes) 2. **Weekly milestones** for each goal (12 weeks = 12 checkpoints) 3. **Daily minimum**: The absolute bare minimum to do each day (even on bad days) 4. **Weekly review template**: 5 questions to ask myself every Sunday 5. **Accountability system**: How to track progress without making it a chore 6. **Failure protocol**: What to do when I skip a day/week (not "start over" — that doesn't work) 7. **Environment design**: 3 changes to my physical space that support my goals The plan should be ambitious but achievable. If I follow it 80% of the time, I should still see meaningful results.

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📊 Data & Analysis (Prompts 186–200)

Whether you're wrangling spreadsheets, making sense of survey results, building reports, or trying to figure out what your data actually means — these 15 prompts turn ChatGPT into a data analyst you don't have to pay $80K/year.

#186 — Excel/Sheets Formula Builder

I need an Excel/Google Sheets formula that does this: [DESCRIBE WHAT YOU WANT — e.g., "look up a value in column A, find the matching row in Sheet2, and return the value from column C"] My data: - Column A: [WHAT'S IN IT] - Column B: [WHAT'S IN IT] - Relevant sheets: [DESCRIBE YOUR SPREADSHEET STRUCTURE] Give me: 1. The formula (ready to paste) 2. Step-by-step explanation of how it works (each function, each argument) 3. Where to put it (which cell) 4. Common errors and how to fix them (#N/A, #REF!, #VALUE!, circular reference) 5. A simpler alternative if the formula is complex 6. Whether this would be easier as a pivot table instead

#187 — Survey Results Analyzer

Analyze these survey results for me: [PASTE YOUR DATA — or describe: "50 responses to a customer satisfaction survey with ratings 1-5 and open-ended comments"] Tell me: 1. **Key findings**: Top 3 insights (the "aha" moments) 2. **Statistical summary**: Mean, median, mode, distribution for numerical data 3. **Segmentation**: Are there meaningful differences between groups? 4. **Sentiment analysis**: What's the overall mood of open-ended responses? 5. **Themes**: Cluster the open-ended answers into 3-5 recurring themes 6. **Action items**: Based on this data, what should we DO? (3 specific recommendations) 7. **Presentation**: How to present this to [STAKEHOLDERS] in a 5-minute summary Highlight anything surprising or counterintuitive. If the sample size is too small to draw conclusions, say so instead of pretending the data is more meaningful than it is.

#188 — Dashboard Design Spec

Design a dashboard for [PURPOSE — sales tracking, marketing performance, project status, personal finance, etc.]. My data sources: [DESCRIBE — CRM, Google Analytics, spreadsheets, etc.] Audience: [WHO WILL LOOK AT THIS — CEO, marketing team, just me] Tool: [GOOGLE SHEETS / NOTION / EXCEL / TABLEAU / METABASE / YOUR RECOMMENDATION] Create: 1. **KPI selection**: The 5-7 metrics that actually matter (not 30 vanity metrics) 2. **Layout mockup**: Where each chart/number goes (describe visually — top row, sidebar, etc.) 3. **Chart types**: For each metric, the right visualization (don't use pie charts for everything) 4. **Filters/segments**: What the user should be able to filter by 5. **Data refresh**: How often each metric should update and how to automate it 6. **Alert thresholds**: When should this dashboard make someone worry? (red/yellow/green rules) 7. **Instructions**: If using Sheets/Excel, give me the formulas and chart setup steps Design principle: Someone should glance at this dashboard for 10 seconds and know if things are good or bad. If they need to study it, the design failed.

#189 — Data Cleaning Guide

My data is a mess. Help me clean it. Data description: [WHAT THE DATASET IS — customer list, sales records, survey responses, etc.] Format: [CSV / EXCEL / GOOGLE SHEETS / DATABASE] Size: [NUMBER OF ROWS AND COLUMNS] Known problems: [DESCRIBE — duplicates, missing values, inconsistent formatting, merged cells, etc.] Tool preference: [EXCEL / PYTHON / GOOGLE SHEETS / SQL] Give me a step-by-step cleaning protocol: 1. **Assessment**: What to check first (data profiling) 2. **Duplicates**: How to find and handle them (remove vs. merge) 3. **Missing values**: Strategy for each column (fill, remove, flag) 4. **Standardization**: Consistent formatting (dates, names, addresses, phone numbers) 5. **Outliers**: How to identify and decide what to do with them 6. **Validation**: Rules to catch bad data (impossible values, logical inconsistencies) 7. **Documentation**: How to log what you changed (for audit trail) Include the actual formulas/code for each step. If using Python, include the pandas code. If using Excel, include the functions.

#190 — A/B Test Designer

Help me design an A/B test for [WHAT — email subject line, landing page, pricing, feature, ad creative, etc.]. Current performance: - Metric I want to improve: [CONVERSION RATE / CLICK RATE / REVENUE / etc.] - Current value: [X%] - Goal: [Y% — or "any improvement"] - Traffic/sample size: [HOW MANY PEOPLE/EMAILS/VISITORS PER WEEK] Design the test: 1. **Hypothesis**: "If we change [X], then [Y] will improve because [Z]" 2. **Variations**: Control (A) vs. Treatment (B) — what EXACTLY changes 3. **Sample size needed**: Calculate minimum sample for statistical significance (use 95% confidence, 80% power) 4. **Duration**: How long to run the test 5. **Success criteria**: What number declares a winner? 6. **Segmentation**: Should I look at results by segment (mobile vs desktop, new vs returning, etc.)? 7. **Common mistakes**: What NOT to do (peeking too early, changing mid-test, too many variants) 8. **Post-test**: How to implement the winner and what to test NEXT If my sample size is too small for statistical significance, tell me honestly and suggest a qualitative alternative.

#191 — Report Writer

Write a [TYPE — weekly, monthly, quarterly, annual] [REPORT TYPE — performance, sales, marketing, project status] report. Data/metrics: [PASTE YOUR NUMBERS OR DESCRIBE THEM] Audience: [WHO READS THIS — my boss, the board, clients, my team] Tone: [FORMAL / CONVERSATIONAL / EXECUTIVE SUMMARY STYLE] Length: [1 PAGE / 3-5 PAGES / COMPREHENSIVE] Structure: 1. **Executive summary**: 3-sentence overview (what happened, why it matters, what we're doing about it) 2. **Key metrics**: Numbers with context (don't just report 15% — is that good? Compared to what?) 3. **Wins**: What went well and why 4. **Challenges**: What didn't work and what we learned 5. **Trends**: What's changing over time (getting better, getting worse, staying flat) 6. **Recommendations**: 3 specific actions for next period 7. **Appendix**: Supporting data tables Make the first paragraph so good that someone who reads ONLY that paragraph gets 80% of the value. Most executives will.

#192 — SQL Query Builder

Write a SQL query for me. My database: - Tables: [LIST TABLE NAMES AND KEY COLUMNS] - Database: [MySQL / PostgreSQL / SQLite / SQL Server] - Relationships: [HOW TABLES CONNECT — foreign keys] What I want to know: [DESCRIBE IN PLAIN ENGLISH — e.g., "show me the top 10 customers by total spending in the last 90 days, with their most recent order date and how many orders they've placed"] Give me: 1. The query (formatted and readable) 2. Line-by-line explanation 3. Expected output format (what columns and sample rows) 4. Performance note: Will this be fast or slow on a large table? How to optimize? 5. Common modifications I might need (different date range, additional filters, etc.) 6. The INDEX I should add if this query is slow

#193 — Spreadsheet Template Builder

Build me a [TYPE] spreadsheet template in [GOOGLE SHEETS / EXCEL]. Type: [BUDGET TRACKER / PROJECT PLAN / CRM / INVENTORY / GRADE BOOK / INVOICE / etc.] My needs: [DESCRIBE WHAT I WANT TO TRACK] Create: 1. **Sheet structure**: Tab names, column headers, data types 2. **Formulas**: All calculated fields (with the actual formula) 3. **Conditional formatting**: Color-coding rules (what turns red, yellow, green) 4. **Data validation**: Dropdown lists, date pickers, number ranges 5. **Dashboard tab**: Summary view with key metrics and charts 6. **Instructions tab**: How to use the spreadsheet (for me or anyone I share it with) Provide the complete setup instructions so I can recreate it exactly. If possible, tell me which functions to use and which cell to put each formula in. Design it so someone who's NOT a spreadsheet person can use it without training.

#194 — Data Visualization Advisor

I have this data and I need to visualize it effectively: [DESCRIBE YOUR DATA — what variables, how many data points, what story you want to tell] Audience: [WHO WILL SEE THIS — technical team, executives, general public, students] Tool: [EXCEL / GOOGLE SHEETS / TABLEAU / PYTHON (MATPLOTLIB/PLOTLY) / CANVA / POWERPOINT] For each visualization: 1. **Chart type recommendation** (and why — bar, line, scatter, treemap, sankey, etc.) 2. **What NOT to use** (common wrong chart choices for this data type) 3. **Design principles**: Colors, labels, legend placement, axis formatting 4. **The "so what"**: What annotation or callout should I add so the viewer immediately gets the point? 5. **Accessibility**: Color-blind-friendly palette, font sizes, alt text 6. **Step-by-step creation**: How to build it in my chosen tool The #1 rule: every chart should answer ONE question. If I need a paragraph to explain what the chart shows, the chart has failed.

#195 — Competitive Analysis Spreadsheet

Build a competitive analysis comparing [MY PRODUCT/SERVICE] against [3-5 COMPETITORS]. Analysis dimensions: - Pricing and plans - Features (specific feature comparison) - Target audience - Strengths and weaknesses - Market positioning - Customer sentiment (from reviews if available) - Technology/platform - Content/marketing strategy Create: 1. **Comparison matrix**: Feature-by-feature grid with ✅/❌/⚠️ ratings 2. **Positioning map**: Where each competitor sits on 2 key axes (e.g., price vs. features) 3. **SWOT for each competitor**: Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats 4. **Gap analysis**: What do customers want that NOBODY offers well? 5. **My competitive advantage**: Based on the analysis, where should I differentiate? 6. **Threat assessment**: Which competitor is most dangerous and why? Use real information where possible. Note where you're making assumptions vs. stating known facts.

#196 — KPI Framework Builder

Build a KPI framework for [MY BUSINESS/TEAM/DEPARTMENT]. Context: - Business type: [DESCRIBE] - Stage: [STARTUP / GROWTH / MATURE] - Team size: [NUMBER] - Current challenge: [WHAT'S NOT WORKING] Create: 1. **North Star metric**: The ONE number that best represents our success 2. **Leading indicators** (5): Metrics that predict future success (input metrics) 3. **Lagging indicators** (5): Metrics that confirm past success (output metrics) 4. **For each KPI**: - Definition (exactly how to calculate it) - Data source (where to get the number) - Frequency (how often to measure) - Target (what "good" looks like) - Red flag (when to panic) 5. **Anti-metrics**: Vanity metrics we should STOP tracking (and why they're misleading) 6. **Review cadence**: What to check daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly The framework should fit on one page. If we need more than 15 metrics, we're measuring too many things.

#197 — Python Data Analysis Script

Write a Python script to analyze [DESCRIBE YOUR DATASET]. Data details: - Format: [CSV / JSON / API / DATABASE] - Columns: [LIST KEY COLUMNS AND DATA TYPES] - Size: [NUMBER OF ROWS] - What I want to learn: [SPECIFIC QUESTIONS TO ANSWER] Script should: 1. Load and inspect the data (shape, types, missing values, duplicates) 2. Clean the data (handle nulls, fix types, remove outliers) 3. Exploratory analysis (descriptive stats, distributions, correlations) 4. Answer my specific questions with calculations 5. Create 3-5 visualizations (matplotlib or plotly) that tell the story 6. Export results (CSV summary + saved chart images) Use pandas, matplotlib/plotly, and numpy. Include comments explaining each step. Handle errors gracefully (what if the file doesn't exist? What if columns are missing?). Run with: `python analyze.py data.csv` — make it a proper CLI script.

#198 — Financial Model Builder

Build a financial model for [BUSINESS/PROJECT]. Inputs I know: - Revenue: [CURRENT OR PROJECTED] - Costs: [LIST MAJOR COST CATEGORIES] - Growth assumptions: [DESCRIBE] - Timeline: [12 MONTHS / 3 YEARS / 5 YEARS] Create: 1. **Revenue model**: How money comes in (subscription, one-time, usage-based — with formula) 2. **Cost model**: Fixed vs. variable costs, how they scale with revenue 3. **P&L projection**: Monthly for Year 1, quarterly for Years 2-3 4. **Cash flow**: When money actually hits the bank (not just revenue recognition) 5. **Break-even analysis**: When does revenue exceed costs? 6. **Scenario modeling**: Best case, expected case, worst case — with the key variable that changes between them 7. **Sensitivity table**: How changing price, volume, or churn by ±20% affects profitability Format as a spreadsheet layout I can recreate. Include the actual formulas for calculated cells. Highlight the 3 assumptions that have the biggest impact on the outcome.

#199 — Research Data Interpreter

Help me interpret these research results / statistics: [PASTE DATA, CHARTS, OR DESCRIBE THE FINDINGS — e.g., "p-value of 0.03, confidence interval 2.1-5.7, R-squared of 0.67, sample size 142"] Explain to me like I understand basic math but not advanced statistics: 1. **What the numbers mean** (in plain English, not formulas) 2. **Is this significant?** (statistically AND practically — they're different things) 3. **What can I conclude?** (what does this data actually PROVE vs. suggest vs. hint at) 4. **What can I NOT conclude?** (common misinterpretations of this type of data) 5. **Limitations**: Sample size issues, confounding variables, correlation vs. causation 6. **So what?**: The actionable takeaway in one sentence 7. **How to present this**: If I need to explain this to a non-technical audience, what do I say? Don't dumb it down to uselessness — but don't assume I remember what a p-value means either.

#200 — Automate My Reporting

I create the same report every [WEEK / MONTH / QUARTER] and it takes me [TIME]. Automate it. My current process: [DESCRIBE STEP BY STEP — e.g., "I download 3 CSV files from our CRM, open each in Excel, copy specific columns into a master sheet, create a pivot table, make 4 charts, paste into PowerPoint, and email it to my boss"] Tools I have access to: [LIST — Google Sheets, Excel, Python, Zapier, etc.] My coding ability: [NONE / BASIC / INTERMEDIATE] Build me an automation that: 1. **Data collection**: Auto-pull data from sources (or simplify the manual pull) 2. **Data processing**: Clean, transform, and calculate automatically 3. **Visualization**: Charts that update when data changes 4. **Report generation**: Template that fills itself 5. **Distribution**: Auto-email or auto-share when ready Give me: - The exact tools and setup needed - Step-by-step implementation instructions - The formulas/code/zaps required - Time estimate to set up vs. time saved per report - ROI calculation: "Setup takes X hours but saves Y hours per month" Even if I can only automate 70% of the process, that's still a massive win. Start there.

📊 Automate Your Entire Workflow

Data analysis prompts are just the start. Our AI Automation Toolkit includes complete workflow templates, n8n/Make.com recipes, spreadsheet formulas, and reporting automation guides that save hours every week.

AI Automation Toolkit — $34 SEO Blog Prompts — $24

🔥 Free Prompts vs. Premium Prompt Templates

You just scrolled through 200 free prompts. They're genuinely useful — we're not holding back the "good stuff" for the paid version. But there IS a difference between a single prompt and a professional workflow. Here's what that looks like:

Feature Free Prompts (This Page) Premium Packs ($19-$69)
Prompt count 200 standalone prompts 50-100+ per pack, organized by workflow
Format Single-shot prompts Multi-step sequences that build on each other
Customization Replace [BRACKETS] manually Pre-built for specific niches and industries
Organization One web page (bookmarkable) Notion templates with databases, tags, and search
System prompts Not included Custom GPT instructions that transform ChatGPT into a specialist
Updates Updated quarterly on this page Lifetime updates as AI models improve
Support Self-service Email support for prompt customization
Best for Trying AI for the first time, occasional use Daily professional use, building workflows, scaling output
💡 Think of it this way: Free prompts are like a Swiss Army knife — versatile, always useful. Premium packs are like a professional toolkit — purpose-built for specific jobs, organized for daily use, and designed to produce consistent, high-quality results.

🎯 Ready to Go Pro?

Start with the free 10-prompt sample. If you love it, grab the pack that matches your biggest need. Or save 60% with the All Access Bundle.

Free: 10 Best AI Prompts 100 ChatGPT Prompts — $19 All Access Bundle — $69

✍️ How to Write Your Own ChatGPT Prompts

These 200 prompts will get you far. But the real superpower is learning to write your own. Here's the framework — it takes 5 minutes to learn and works forever.

The CRAFT Framework

Every great prompt has five elements:

🎯 C — Context: Who are you? What's the situation?
🎯 R — Role: Who should ChatGPT be? (Expert, advisor, critic, teacher)
🎯 A — Action: What specifically should it DO?
🎯 F — Format: How should the output look? (List, essay, table, code)
🎯 T — Tone: How should it sound? (Professional, casual, technical, encouraging)

Bad Prompt vs. Good Prompt

❌ Bad: "Help me with marketing"

Why it fails: No context, no specifics, no format. ChatGPT will give you a generic 500-word essay about marketing.

✅ Good:

You are a digital marketing strategist specializing in B2B SaaS. I run a project management tool for remote teams (50-200 employees). We're at $15K MRR and want to reach $50K in 6 months. Our current channels: SEO blog (2K monthly visitors), LinkedIn (800 followers), cold email (2% reply rate). Create a 90-day marketing plan with: - Monthly milestones and KPIs - 3 new channels to test (with budget allocation) - Content topics that attract our ICP (engineering managers) - Paid strategy recommendation with expected CAC Format as a table with columns: Week | Channel | Action | Expected Result | Budget

See the difference? The good prompt gives ChatGPT everything it needs to give you something genuinely useful.

5 Pro Tips

  1. Be specific about what "good" looks like. Don't say "write well." Say "use short sentences, active voice, and include one example per paragraph."
  2. Tell it what NOT to do. "Don't use jargon." "Don't include a conclusion paragraph." "Don't be generic." These constraints force better output.
  3. Iterate, don't restart. If the first response is 70% right, say "Great start, but make the tone more casual and add specific dollar amounts." Don't retype the whole prompt.
  4. Use "act as" for expertise. "Act as a senior data analyst at a Fortune 500 company" gets dramatically different output than a generic request.
  5. Chain your prompts. Complex tasks work better as 3 simple prompts than 1 massive one. Research → Outline → Write beats trying to do all three in one shot.

Want to go deeper? Our complete prompt engineering guide covers advanced techniques like few-shot learning, chain-of-thought prompting, and system prompt design.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Are these prompts really free?

Yes. All 200 prompts on this page are free to copy, paste, and use however you want — personal use, commercial use, no credit required. They work with ChatGPT (free and Plus), Claude, Gemini, Copilot, and most other AI chatbots.

Do these prompts work with Claude and Gemini?

Yes. We call them "ChatGPT prompts" because it's the most recognizable name, but these prompts use clear instructions that work with any modern AI. Some complex prompts produce slightly better results with paid tiers (ChatGPT Plus, Claude Pro) due to stronger reasoning, but the free versions handle most prompts well.

How do I get the best results from these prompts?

Three things: (1) Fill in the brackets with specific details — "health-conscious millennials in Austin" beats "young people." (2) Start a new chat for each different topic. (3) Follow up — if the output is 80% right, tell ChatGPT what to fix instead of starting over.

What's the difference between free and premium prompts?

Free prompts are standalone — paste one in, get one output. Premium prompt packs include multi-step sequences (prompt chains that build on each other), industry-specific customization, Notion templates for organization, and system prompts that transform ChatGPT into a specialized expert. See the full comparison above.

How often is this list updated?

We update this page quarterly to add new prompts, improve existing ones, and reflect new AI capabilities. Current version: March 2026. Bookmark this page — it'll keep getting better.

Can I use these prompts for my business?

Absolutely. Use them for client work, internal operations, content creation, whatever you need. The prompts are free. The output ChatGPT generates belongs to you (check OpenAI's terms for details on AI-generated content in your jurisdiction).

🚀 You Made It Through 200 Prompts. Now What?

Bookmark this page. Share it with someone who keeps saying "I don't know what to ask AI." And if you want organized, workflow-ready prompt sequences — grab the bundle.

Start Free: 10 Best AI Prompts All Access Bundle — $69