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60 ChatGPT & AI Prompts for Marketers in 2026

Posted on 7/15/2026, 1:53:07 PM

60 ready-to-use ChatGPT prompts for marketers in 2026 — covering content, social, email, SEO, ads, and strategy — built to get a usable first draft, not generic filler.

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TL;DR

Most marketers using ChatGPT are still typing one-line requests and getting generic, forgettable output back — the gap between a mediocre AI marketer and a genuinely fast one isn't the tool, it's the prompt. This post collects 60 ready-to-use prompts across content, social, email, SEO, ads, and strategy, each written to get you a usable first draft instead of something you have to completely rewrite. If prompting itself feels like a skill you're still building, a summary of AI Made Simple is a solid 15-minute primer on how these models actually work under the hood, which makes every prompt on this list easier to adapt on the fly.

Content and Blog Prompts

Generic prompts get generic blog posts. These are built to force specificity — audience, angle, and constraint — before the model writes a word.

  • Write 10 blog post title options for [topic] targeting [specific audience], each with a distinct angle (contrarian, data-driven, how-to, story-led).
  • Draft an outline for a 1,500-word article on [topic] that a beginner in [industry] could follow without prior context.
  • Take this rough paragraph and rewrite it in a more conversational, confident tone: [paste paragraph].
  • Suggest 5 real-world statistics or studies I should look up to strengthen an article about [topic] (list what to search for, not fabricated numbers).
  • Write an introduction for a blog post about [topic] that opens with a specific, relatable scenario instead of a generic statement.
  • Turn this list of bullet points into a flowing 300-word section: [paste bullets].
  • Suggest 3 alternative endings for this blog post that each drive toward a different call to action: [paste draft].
  • Identify the 3 weakest sentences in this paragraph and explain why: [paste paragraph].
  • Write a meta description under 155 characters for a post about [topic] that includes the keyword [keyword].
  • Suggest 5 internal linking opportunities for an article about [topic] within a website that also covers [related topics].

Social Media Prompts

Social copy needs to sound like a person, not a press release — these prompts are built to fight the "corporate AI voice" by forcing constraints like platform, tone, and length.

  • Write 5 Instagram captions for a post about [topic/product], each under 125 characters, in a witty but not try-hard tone.
  • Draft a LinkedIn post announcing [company news] that leads with a lesson or insight rather than the announcement itself.
  • Turn this blog post into a 5-tweet thread that stands on its own without needing the full article: [paste post].
  • Suggest 3 hook lines for a short-form video script about [topic] that would make someone stop scrolling in the first 2 seconds.
  • Write a carousel post outline (5 slides) explaining [concept] in the simplest possible terms.
  • Rewrite this caption to sound like it was written by a person, not a brand account: [paste caption].
  • Suggest 10 relevant, non-generic hashtags for a post about [topic] in the [industry] space.
  • Draft a community poll question about [topic] designed to spark comments, not just votes.
  • Write a response to this customer comment that's warm but doesn't sound scripted: [paste comment].
  • Suggest 5 content ideas based on a recent trend in [industry] that I could adapt for my brand within 24 hours.

Email Marketing Prompts

Inboxes are the most competitive real estate in marketing — these prompts focus on subject lines and openers, since that's where 90% of emails win or lose before anyone reads the body.

  • Write 8 subject line options for an email about [topic/offer], mixing curiosity-driven, benefit-driven, and urgency-driven angles.
  • Draft a welcome email for new subscribers to [brand] that sets expectations without overselling in the first message.
  • Rewrite this email opener so it doesn't start with "I hope this finds you well": [paste opener].
  • Draft a win-back email for users who haven't opened an email from us in 60 days, with a tone that's honest rather than guilt-tripping.
  • Suggest 3 different CTAs for this email that each imply a different level of commitment (low, medium, high): [paste email].
  • Write a short re-engagement sequence (3 emails) for someone who signed up for a free trial but never logged in.
  • Turn this product update into a customer-facing email that leads with the benefit, not the feature list: [paste update notes].
  • Suggest a P.S. line for this email that reinforces the CTA without repeating it word-for-word: [paste email].
  • Write an abandoned cart email that doesn't sound like every other abandoned cart email.
  • Draft a survey request email that explains why the feedback matters, not just that it's wanted.

SEO and Keyword Prompts

AI won't replace real keyword research tools, but it's genuinely useful for organizing findings and generating angles you wouldn't have thought of on your own.

  • Suggest 15 long-tail keyword variations for the topic [main keyword] that reflect different search intents (informational, comparison, transactional).
  • Given this list of competitor article titles, suggest 5 angles they haven't covered on [topic]: [paste titles].
  • Write 3 H1 options for a page targeting [keyword] that read naturally, not keyword-stuffed.
  • Suggest a logical H2/H3 outline for an article that needs to rank for [keyword] while genuinely answering the reader's question.
  • Identify what search intent this keyword likely reflects and what content format would satisfy it: [keyword].
  • Draft FAQ-style questions and short answers for a page about [topic], based on what someone new to the topic would actually wonder.
  • Suggest 5 "people also ask"-style questions related to [topic] that I should verify and consider answering.
  • Rewrite this title tag to be under 60 characters while keeping the primary keyword near the front: [paste title].
  • Suggest alt text for this image that's descriptive and naturally includes relevant context: [describe image].
  • Identify any keyword cannibalization risk between these two article titles: [paste titles].

Ad Copy and Landing Page Prompts

Paid and landing page copy has less room for cleverness and more need for clarity — these prompts are built to force a single, sharp value proposition instead of a laundry list of features.

  • Write 5 headline options for a Facebook ad promoting [product/offer], each emphasizing a different benefit.
  • Draft 3 versions of a Google Search ad for [product], each within character limits, testing a different primary hook.
  • Rewrite this landing page headline to lead with the outcome, not the feature: [paste headline].
  • Suggest 3 objections a skeptical visitor might have about [product] and draft a one-sentence rebuttal for each.
  • Write a hero section (headline + subheadline + CTA) for a landing page selling [product] to [specific audience].
  • Draft 3 alternative CTA button copy options that are more specific than "Learn More" or "Sign Up."
  • Suggest a testimonial-style bullet format for turning this raw customer quote into landing page social proof: [paste quote].
  • Write a short comparison table outline contrasting [our product] with [generic alternative], focused on genuine differentiators.
  • Draft ad copy for a retargeting campaign aimed at users who visited the pricing page but didn't convert.
  • Suggest 3 urgency or scarcity angles for a limited-time offer that don't feel manipulative or overused.

Strategy, Brainstorming, and Customer Insight Prompts

These are less about generating final copy and more about using AI as a thinking partner — useful for the moments when you're stuck on direction rather than wording.

  • Act as a skeptical customer of [product/industry] and list 5 honest objections you'd have before buying.
  • Suggest 5 content pillars for a brand in [industry] targeting [audience], each with 2 example post ideas.
  • Given this customer feedback, summarize the 3 most common themes and suggest a response strategy: [paste feedback].
  • Suggest 3 partnership or collaboration ideas for a brand in [industry] that could reach a new but relevant audience.
  • Draft a simple 30-day content calendar structure (not full posts) for a brand focused on [goal].
  • Suggest 5 questions I should ask before choosing between running a giveaway vs. a discount campaign for [goal].
  • Given this competitor's positioning, suggest 3 ways we could differentiate ours: [paste competitor description].
  • Act as a first-time visitor to this website and describe what's confusing or unclear: [paste page description].
  • Suggest 3 low-budget experiment ideas to test whether [assumption] is actually true before committing more spend.
  • Summarize this data table in plain language and flag the one number most worth investigating further: [paste data].

How to Get More Out of Every Prompt on This List

The single biggest lever for better AI output isn't a cleverer prompt — it's specificity you supply upfront. "Write ad copy for my product" and "write ad copy for a $40/month project management tool aimed at freelance designers who hate spreadsheets" will produce wildly different quality from the same model, because the second version gives it something real to work with. Before running any prompt above, spend ten seconds filling in the bracketed placeholders with your actual audience, product, and constraint rather than leaving them vague.

The second lever is treating the first output as a draft, not a deliverable. Every prompt here is designed to get you 70% of the way there fast — the remaining 30% is where your judgment about your brand, your audience, and what actually sounds like you comes in. Marketers who get the most out of these tools tend to run a prompt, react to what's wrong with it, and follow up with a specific correction rather than starting over from scratch. That iterative loop is usually faster than trying to write the perfect prompt on the first attempt.

It's also worth remembering that AI tools are compressing the distance between "having an idea" and "having a usable draft," which is the same shift that's happened across a lot of knowledge work recently — managers helping teams stay focused increasingly means helping people use these compressed workflows well, not just protecting calendar time. If the pace of AI change in marketing specifically feels disorienting rather than exciting, that reaction is common enough that there's a whole body of work on managing the anxiety around it worth a look.

The Bottom Line

None of these 60 prompts are magic — they're structured starting points that save you the ten minutes most people spend re-typing a vague request three different ways before getting something usable. Save the ones that fit your workflow, adapt the brackets to your actual brand and audience, and treat the output as a first draft you get to shape rather than a finished asset you have to accept as-is. The marketers getting real leverage from AI in 2026 aren't the ones with the fanciest prompts — they're the ones running this loop daily until it's second nature.

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