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260 prompts

#001Strategic Writing Compass

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters, creators, newsletter authors, bloggers, ghostwriters, essayists, founders, educators, and communicators who feel scattered and need a strategic north star.

Define a clear writing direction by aligning audience, purpose, themes, strengths, constraints, and long-term creative ambition.

You are a writing strategy advisor. Help me build a clear writing compass that guides what I write, why I write it, who I write for, and what I should stop chasing. My context: Current writing type: [CURRENT WRITING TYPE] Topics I write about: [TOPICS] Audience I want to reach: [AUDIENCE] Current audience, if any: [CURRENT AUDIENCE] Why I want to write: [WHY] Writing goals: [GOALS] Strengths as a writer: [STRENGTHS] Weaknesses or blocks: [WEAKNESSES] Projects I am considering: [PROJECTS] Writers or styles I admire: [INSPIRATION] Platforms I use: [PLATFORMS] Time available: [TIME] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Build my writing compass: 1. Core direction Clarify: - what I should write about - who I should write for - what outcome my writing should create - what I should be known for - what themes should anchor my work - what I should avoid writing even if it is popular 2. Reader value Define the reader transformation: - before reading my work - after reading my work - what they should understand - what they should feel - what they should be able to do - why they should return 3. Creative principles Create 7 writing principles that guide: - topic selection - tone - depth - originality - honesty - usefulness - publishing decisions 4. Strategic boundaries Define: - topics to pursue - topics to ignore - formats to test - formats to avoid - platforms to prioritize - platforms to stop chasing - what not to copy from other writers 5. Direction statement Write a one-paragraph creative direction statement. Then create: - 1 sentence version - 3 bullet version - private writer manifesto version - public bio version Rules: - Do not make the direction generic. - Do not tell me to write about everything I like. - Do not optimize only for trends. - Make the compass useful enough to guide real writing decisions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#002Writer Identity Interview

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONPeople starting a writing practice, repositioning their voice, choosing a creative lane, or moving from random posting to intentional writing.

Discover what kind of writer, creator, or communicator the user wants to become through a structured self-interview and strategic synthesis.

Act as a writing identity interviewer. Interview me like a thoughtful editor who is trying to understand the writer I want to become, then synthesize my answers into a clear creative identity. Use this process: Step 1 - Ask me 12 questions Ask one question at a time or all at once, depending on my preference, about: - why I write - what I cannot stop thinking about - what readers I care about - what problems I want to illuminate - what I have lived through or learned - what I believe that others miss - what writing forms feel natural - what writing forms feel forced - what I envy in other writers - what I never want my writing to become - what success would look like - what I want to be known for in 3 years Step 2 - Analyze my answers Identify: - recurring themes - emotional drivers - natural authority zones - tension points - hidden creative ambition - audience clues - voice clues - project clues Step 3 - Build my writer identity Provide: - writer archetype - creative promise - primary themes - secondary themes - ideal reader - voice direction - writing formats that fit - formats that do not fit - likely creative traps Step 4 - Create identity statements Write: - private identity statement - public positioning statement - short bio - long bio - "I write for..." statement - "I do not write for..." statement Step 5 - Give me a 30-day action plan Include: - what to write first - what to test - what to stop doing - how to evaluate whether this identity fits Rules: - Do not reduce my identity to a niche label. - Do not force a personal brand if the goal is creative depth. - Do not flatter me without evidence from my answers. - Preserve nuance, contradictions, and creative tension. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#003Writing Project Purpose Brief

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONBooks, essays, newsletters, articles, scripts, landing pages, speeches, reports, personal essays, long-form posts, and creative writing projects.

Clarify the purpose, audience, outcome, format, scope, and success criteria for a specific writing project before drafting begins.

You are an editorial strategist. Create a project purpose brief for the writing project below so I understand exactly what this piece is supposed to accomplish before I write it. Project idea: [PROJECT IDEA] Working title: [TITLE] Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why I want to write it: [WHY] What prompted the idea: [ORIGIN] Main message: [MESSAGE] Desired reader reaction: [REACTION] Where it will be published: [PLATFORM] Length target: [LENGTH] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Concerns: [CONCERNS] Create a writing project brief with these sections: A. Project definition - what this project is - what this project is not - why it matters - why now - who it is for - who it is not for B. Reader outcome - what the reader should learn - what the reader should feel - what the reader should question - what the reader should do next - what misunderstanding should be corrected C. Creative promise Write the promise of the piece in: - 1 sentence - 3 bullets - headline form - subtitle form - editor note form D. Scope control Define: - must include - should include - optional - cut immediately - save for another piece E. Success criteria Create success criteria for: - clarity - originality - usefulness - emotional resonance - strategic impact - completion F. Drafting plan Create: - outline direction - research needed - examples needed - opening options - ending options - first draft checklist Rules: - Do not start drafting the full piece. - Do not let the project become too broad. - Do not confuse topic with purpose. - The brief should make writing easier and more focused. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#004Creative Priority Stack

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters with too many drafts, too many platforms, too many ideas, or unclear creative priorities.

Rank writing projects, ideas, platforms, and goals so the writer knows what to focus on first and what to ignore.

Act as a creative priority strategist. Help me decide what writing work deserves my attention right now. Inputs: Writing goals: [GOALS] Current projects: [PROJECTS] Drafts in progress: [DRAFTS] Ideas I want to write: [IDEAS] Platforms I am considering: [PLATFORMS] Audience I want: [AUDIENCE] Time available each week: [TIME] Energy level: [ENERGY] Deadlines: [DEADLINES] Revenue or career goals: [REVENUE / CAREER] Creative ambition: [AMBITION] Things distracting me: [DISTRACTIONS] Create my priority stack: 1. Score each project or idea Use these criteria: - strategic importance - reader value - originality - personal energy - ease of completion - potential reach - portfolio value - monetization value, if relevant - learning value - deadline pressure - opportunity cost 2. Sort into categories Place each item into: - write now - schedule next - develop slowly - combine with another idea - publish as a smaller piece - save for later - delete - not aligned 3. Identify false priorities Flag anything that appears important but is likely driven by: - comparison - trends - fear of missing out - perfectionism - avoidance - pressure from others - platform anxiety 4. Build the focus plan Create: - top 3 writing priorities for this month - one main project - one support project - one low-pressure experiment - what to stop working on - what to postpone intentionally 5. Create decision rules Write 10 rules I can use when a new writing idea appears. Rules: - Do not treat every idea as equally valuable. - Do not optimize only for audience growth. - Do not ignore creative energy. - Make the final priority list practical enough to act on this week. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#00590-Day Writing Roadmap

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters who want a structured plan for newsletters, essays, books, content systems, creative portfolios, or authority-building writing.

Build a realistic writing roadmap that connects long-term creative goals to weekly execution, milestones, drafts, publishing, learning, and review.

You are a writing roadmap planner. Build a 90-day writing roadmap that helps me make visible progress without overloading my schedule. My context: Writing goal for the next 90 days: [GOAL] Main project: [MAIN PROJECT] Secondary projects: [SECONDARY PROJECTS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Publishing platforms: [PLATFORMS] Current writing habit: [HABIT] Available time per week: [TIME] Skill I want to improve: [SKILL] Biggest obstacle: [OBSTACLE] Deadline or launch date: [DEADLINE] Success definition: [SUCCESS] Build the roadmap: Month 1 - Clarity and foundation Include: - direction decisions - idea selection - research - outline work - voice calibration - writing habit setup - first small publishable outputs Month 2 - Production and feedback Include: - drafting schedule - publishing schedule - feedback moments - revision windows - audience testing - topic refinement - portfolio building Month 3 - Completion and leverage Include: - finishing key pieces - repurposing - distribution - review - next project decision - lessons captured - system improvements For each week provide: - weekly objective - writing output - key task - publishing task - learning task - review question - risk to watch - minimum viable progress Also create: - daily writing rhythm options - weekly review template - backlog structure - milestone checklist - recovery plan if I fall behind Rules: - Do not create an unrealistic plan. - Do not assume I can write every day if my schedule does not allow it. - Do not make publishing the only success metric. - The roadmap must support both creative quality and execution. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#006Signature Themes Discovery System

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters who want a recognizable body of work, stronger creative direction, better topic selection, and deeper originality.

Identify the recurring themes, ideas, tensions, stories, questions, and perspectives that can become the writer's creative territory.

Act as a theme discovery editor. Help me find the signature themes that should anchor my writing over time. Use these inputs: Topics I keep returning to: [TOPICS] Questions I keep asking: [QUESTIONS] Problems I notice often: [PROBLEMS] Experiences that shaped me: [EXPERIENCES] People I want to help or reach: [PEOPLE] Ideas I disagree with: [DISAGREEMENTS] Books / writers / thinkers I admire: [INFLUENCES] My professional knowledge: [EXPERTISE] My personal interests: [INTERESTS] What I do not want to write about: [AVOID] Run the discovery process: A. Theme extraction Identify: - obvious themes - hidden themes - emotional themes - intellectual themes - practical themes - controversial themes - personal themes - audience-relevant themes B. Theme clustering Group themes into 3 to 6 creative territories. For each territory include: - name - core question - reader problem - why I am qualified to explore it - possible angles - possible recurring series - examples of article titles - risk of becoming generic C. Creative tension map Find tensions such as: - belief vs behavior - ambition vs fear - craft vs commerce - personal vs public - simplicity vs complexity - originality vs usefulness - expertise vs curiosity D. Theme priority Rank themes by: - personal energy - audience value - originality - longevity - depth - project potential E. Theme system Create: - primary themes - secondary themes - experimental themes - topics to avoid - 50 topic ideas organized by theme Rules: - Do not pick themes only because they are marketable. - Do not ignore the themes I am clearly drawn to. - Do not create generic categories like "productivity" without a sharper angle. - Make the themes specific enough to guide real writing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#007Reader Outcome Map

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONEducational writers, essayists, newsletter creators, thought leaders, marketers, authors, coaches, and anyone writing to influence or help readers.

Clarify what the writer wants readers to think, feel, understand, remember, and do after engaging with their work.

You are a reader experience strategist. Build a reader outcome map for my writing so every project has a clearer reason to exist. Writing context: Type of writing: [TYPE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current topics: [TOPICS] Reader problems: [PROBLEMS] Reader desires: [DESIRES] Reader sophistication level: [LEVEL] What I want to be known for: [KNOWN FOR] Main project or platform: [PROJECT / PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] Create the reader outcome map: 1. Reader before-state Describe: - what they believe - what they feel - what they struggle with - what they misunderstand - what they are trying to achieve - what language they use - what they are tired of hearing 2. Reader after-state Define: - what they should understand - what they should feel - what they should remember - what they should question - what they should be able to do - what they should trust me for 3. Outcome categories Map writing outcomes into: - clarity - confidence - action - emotional relief - strategic insight - new perspective - practical skill - identity shift - decision support - entertainment or beauty 4. Content implications For each outcome, recommend: - formats - article types - examples - stories - frameworks - depth level - CTA style 5. Misalignment check Identify writing that would fail the reader because it is: - too vague - too self-centered - too tactical - too abstract - too advanced - too basic - too trend-driven - too promotional Final output: - reader outcome statement - 10 writing promises - 20 piece ideas matched to reader outcomes - checklist for evaluating future drafts Rules: - Do not make the reader generic. - Do not assume the reader wants only tips. - Do not ignore emotional outcomes. - Every outcome should guide writing choices. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#008Writing Portfolio Strategy

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONFreelance writers, ghostwriters, essayists, content writers, creators, journalists, strategists, authors, and anyone using writing to earn trust or opportunities.

Design a strategic portfolio of writing pieces that shows range, authority, taste, depth, credibility, and creative direction.

Act as a writing portfolio strategist. Help me plan a portfolio that shows what I can do, what I care about, and why someone should trust my writing. My context: Type of writer I am or want to become: [WRITER TYPE] Audience or clients I want: [AUDIENCE / CLIENTS] Current portfolio pieces: [CURRENT PIECES] Topics I want to be known for: [TOPICS] Writing formats I can create: [FORMATS] Opportunities I want: [OPPORTUNITIES] Strengths to showcase: [STRENGTHS] Gaps I worry about: [GAPS] Platform or website: [PLATFORM] Time available: [TIME] Create the portfolio strategy: A. Portfolio role Define whether my portfolio should primarily: - attract clients - build authority - get hired - sell a service - grow an audience - show creative range - support a book or newsletter - document my thinking B. Portfolio architecture Recommend sections such as: - signature essays - practical guides - case-study-style pieces - opinion pieces - narrative pieces - client-style samples - experiments - about page - writing philosophy C. Piece selection Review my current pieces and classify each as: - keep - improve - reposition - hide - archive - rewrite - replace D. Missing pieces Suggest 10 portfolio pieces to create. For each include: - title - purpose - format - audience - skill demonstrated - strategic value - estimated difficulty - why it belongs E. Portfolio presentation Recommend: - homepage structure - piece descriptions - categories - order - call to action - bio positioning - proof elements Rules: - Do not include everything I have written. - Do not make the portfolio feel like a random archive. - Do not optimize only for volume. - The portfolio should make my direction obvious. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#009Creative Constraint System

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters who overthink, ramble, chase too many ideas, struggle to finish drafts, or need a stronger creative operating framework.

Create productive writing constraints that improve focus, originality, consistency, and completion without suffocating creativity.

You are a creative constraints designer. Build a constraint system that helps me write with more focus, originality, and momentum. Writing context: What I write: [WRITING TYPE] Main topics: [TOPICS] Current problem: [PROBLEM] Drafting style: [DRAFTING STYLE] Revision style: [REVISION STYLE] Publishing goal: [PUBLISHING GOAL] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Voice preference: [VOICE] Time limits: [TIME] Things I overdo: [OVERDO] Things I avoid: [AVOID] Design creative constraints in five layers: Layer 1 - Topic constraints Define: - allowed themes - banned topics - recurring questions - topic filters - minimum originality requirement Layer 2 - Format constraints Define: - length options - structure options - opening rules - ending rules - examples required - research requirements Layer 3 - Voice constraints Define: - words to use - words to avoid - tone range - level of vulnerability - level of authority - humor or seriousness boundaries Layer 4 - Process constraints Define: - time box - draft deadline - research limit - revision limit - publish threshold - feedback rule Layer 5 - Strategic constraints Define: - audience promise - platform fit - business or creative goal - what each piece must contribute to the body of work Then create: - 10 constraints for short posts - 10 constraints for essays - 10 constraints for newsletters - 10 constraints for long-form projects - a "constraint card" I can use before drafting Rules: - Do not make constraints punitive. - Do not remove creative surprise. - Do not recommend rigid formulas for every piece. - Constraints should make writing easier, sharper, and more finished. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#010Idea Selection Decision Tree

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters with large idea backlogs, messy notes, many unfinished drafts, or uncertainty about which idea to write next.

Choose which writing ideas deserve to be drafted, saved, combined, tested, or deleted using a clear decision tree.

Act as an editorial decision tree builder. Help me sort my writing ideas into a useful system so I stop carrying every idea as an obligation. My idea list: [PASTE IDEAS] Writing context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current direction: [DIRECTION] Primary goals: [GOALS] Publishing platform: [PLATFORM] Available time: [TIME] Preferred formats: [FORMATS] Topics to prioritize: [TOPICS] Topics to avoid: [AVOID] Build the decision tree: Start with each idea and ask: 1. Is this aligned with my current writing direction? 2. Does this serve a real reader need or creative purpose? 3. Do I have something specific to say? 4. Can this be written now with available knowledge? 5. Is this better as a short post, essay, newsletter, script, chapter, or note? 6. Does it repeat another idea? 7. Does it belong in a larger project? 8. Does it energize me enough to finish? 9. Would publishing it strengthen my body of work? 10. What is the cost of not writing it? Classify each idea as: - write this week - develop into outline - research first - combine with another idea - turn into short post - save for larger project - archive - delete For the top ideas, create: - working title - core angle - reader promise - best format - first paragraph direction - evidence or examples needed - completion difficulty - next action Rules: - Do not preserve weak ideas out of guilt. - Do not force every idea into long-form. - Do not select ideas only because they are easy. - Make the output decisive. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#011Writing Goals to Metrics Translator

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters who want progress without obsessing over vanity metrics, audience growth, or inconsistent motivation.

Convert vague writing ambitions into practical goals, measurable signals, review rituals, and meaningful success criteria.

You are a creative measurement strategist. Help me turn my writing goals into useful success metrics that encourage consistent progress without distorting the work. My writing ambition: [AMBITION] Current writing habit: [HABIT] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Audience size, if relevant: [AUDIENCE SIZE] Primary reason for writing: [REASON] Secondary goals: [SECONDARY GOALS] What I do not want to optimize for: [ANTI-GOALS] Time horizon: [TIME HORIZON] Current tracking method: [TRACKING] Emotional risks around metrics: [RISKS] Translate the goals: A. Goal clarification Separate my goals into: - creative goals - audience goals - skill goals - career goals - business goals - personal goals - learning goals B. Metric design For each goal create: - leading indicators - lagging indicators - qualitative signals - review frequency - healthy target - warning sign - what not to over-measure C. Anti-metrics Define metrics that could harm my writing if over-prioritized. Examples: - likes - impressions - daily streaks - word count - subscriber count - revenue - praise - speed Only include the ones relevant to my context. D. Review system Create: - weekly writing review - monthly creative review - quarterly direction review - project post-mortem - body-of-work review E. Scorecard Build a simple scorecard with: - output - consistency - quality - learning - reader response - creative energy - strategic alignment Rules: - Do not reduce writing success to numbers. - Do not ignore measurable progress. - Do not choose metrics that reward shallow output. - The system should help me keep writing better work. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#012Point-of-View Development Lab

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONThought leadership, essays, newsletters, books, LinkedIn posts, founder content, commentary, educational content, and expert writing.

Develop sharper opinions, theses, arguments, frameworks, and perspectives that make writing more distinctive and less generic.

You are a point-of-view editor. Help me turn a broad topic into a sharper argument that is worth reading. Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] My current belief: [BELIEF] Common advice in this space: [COMMON ADVICE] What I disagree with: [DISAGREEMENT] Evidence or experience I have: [EVIDENCE / EXPERIENCE] Tone preference: [TONE] Format: [FORMAT] Risk tolerance: [RISK TOLERANCE] Run the point-of-view lab: 1. Topic diagnosis Identify why this topic may currently be: - too broad - too obvious - too safe - too derivative - too tactical - too abstract - too unsupported 2. Thesis options Create 12 possible theses: - practical thesis - contrarian thesis - nuanced thesis - personal thesis - strategic thesis - cultural thesis - beginner-friendly thesis - expert-level thesis - skeptical thesis - optimistic thesis - warning thesis - framework thesis 3. Argument structure For the strongest 3 theses, create: - main claim - why readers should care - supporting points - examples needed - counterargument - nuance - risk of misinterpretation - best format 4. Originality check Evaluate each thesis for: - specificity - usefulness - surprise - credibility - emotional resonance - alignment with my writing direction 5. Final POV package Deliver: - best thesis - one-sentence version - paragraph version - headline options - outline - opening angle - closing angle - follow-up article ideas Rules: - Do not create hot takes without substance. - Do not make the argument extreme just to sound original. - Do not ignore counterarguments. - Strong writing should have a clear point of view and earned nuance. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#013Writer Positioning Map

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONFreelance writers, creators, consultants, ghostwriters, authors, educators, content strategists, newsletter writers, and personal brands.

Position the writer clearly in relation to audience, topic territory, credibility, personality, format, and market alternatives.

Act as a writer positioning strategist. Build a positioning map that helps readers or clients immediately understand why my writing matters and how it is different. Inputs: Who I am: [BACKGROUND] What I write about: [TOPICS] Who I write for: [AUDIENCE] What I help them understand or do: [OUTCOME] My credibility: [CREDIBILITY] My lived experience: [EXPERIENCE] My style: [STYLE] Writers or competitors in my space: [ALTERNATIVES] What I do differently: [DIFFERENCE] What I refuse to do: [REFUSAL] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Opportunities I want: [OPPORTUNITIES] Create the positioning map: A. Positioning ingredients Extract: - audience - problem - promise - perspective - proof - personality - format - category - differentiation B. Competitive contrast Compare me against: - generic creators - experts in my space - trend-driven writers - academic or formal voices - tactical advice writers - personal essay writers - service providers, if relevant C. Positioning angles Generate 8 possible positioning angles. For each include: - positioning statement - what it emphasizes - what it sacrifices - audience fit - credibility fit - content implications - risk D. Choose strongest direction Recommend the best positioning based on: - clarity - differentiation - credibility - longevity - audience demand - creative energy E. Messaging assets Write: - one-line bio - short bio - long bio - profile headline - website intro - newsletter description - "start here" page angle Rules: - Do not position me as an expert without evidence. - Do not make the positioning bland or overstuffed. - Do not copy competitor language. - The final positioning should be clear, credible, and memorable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#014Publishing Cadence Designer

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters publishing newsletters, articles, social posts, essays, scripts, personal updates, educational content, or long-form projects.

Create a publishing rhythm that balances consistency, quality, experimentation, audience building, and creative sustainability.

You are a publishing cadence designer. Build a publishing rhythm that I can sustain without lowering the quality of my writing. Context: Writing formats: [FORMATS] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Current cadence: [CURRENT CADENCE] Desired cadence: [DESIRED CADENCE] Time available: [TIME] Writing speed: [SPEED] Research needs: [RESEARCH] Revision needs: [REVISION] Audience expectations: [AUDIENCE EXPECTATIONS] Main goal: [GOAL] Burnout risk: [BURNOUT RISK] Design my cadence: 1. Format workload estimate Estimate the effort required for each format: - idea generation - research - drafting - editing - formatting - publishing - distribution - engagement - review 2. Cadence options Create 4 cadence models: - minimal sustainable cadence - growth-focused cadence - deep-work cadence - experiment cadence For each include: - weekly output - time required - risk - quality tradeoff - best fit - warning signs 3. Publishing calendar Create a 4-week calendar with: - drafting days - editing days - publishing days - idea capture - research - repurposing - rest - review 4. Content mix Recommend a mix of: - signature pieces - quick observations - educational posts - stories - experiments - audience prompts - repurposed assets - evergreen pieces 5. Cadence rules Create rules for: - when to publish - when to hold back - when to repurpose - when to skip - when to revise instead of create - when to lower scope Rules: - Do not maximize output at the cost of sustainability. - Do not assume daily publishing is necessary. - Do not ignore editing and recovery time. - The cadence should help me improve, not just appear active. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#015Creative Energy & Writing Execution Plan

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters who struggle with inconsistent output, burnout, procrastination, overthinking, or trying to force writing into the wrong times.

Build a writing plan around energy, attention, emotional resistance, idea maturity, drafting difficulty, and realistic creative capacity.

Act as a creative execution coach. Build a writing plan that matches the way my energy actually works. My context: Best writing time: [BEST TIME] Worst writing time: [WORST TIME] Energy patterns: [ENERGY] Writing tasks I enjoy: [ENJOY] Writing tasks I avoid: [AVOID] Current projects: [PROJECTS] Deadlines: [DEADLINES] Emotional blocks: [BLOCKS] Available writing sessions per week: [SESSIONS] Environment: [ENVIRONMENT] Current problem: [PROBLEM] Create the execution plan: A. Energy-task match Match writing tasks to energy states: - high-energy thinking - medium-energy drafting - low-energy editing - anxious energy - tired energy - inspired energy - scattered energy - calm energy For each, suggest suitable writing actions. B. Session design Create session types: - idea capture session - outline session - messy draft session - deep draft session - revision session - polish session - publishing session - reflection session For each include: - duration - goal - setup - first action - completion marker - recovery step C. Weekly plan Create a realistic week with: - deep writing blocks - light writing blocks - editing windows - publishing windows - idea capture - rest - buffer time D. Resistance response Create scripts for: - I do not know what to say - I hate this draft - I am too tired - I need more research - this has been said before - I missed my writing day - I am afraid to publish E. Recovery protocol Create a plan for restarting after a bad writing week. Rules: - Do not shame low energy. - Do not tell me to rely on motivation. - Do not schedule only ideal conditions. - Make writing easier to return to. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#016Writing Experiment Lab

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters exploring a new niche, testing a newsletter, changing style, launching a series, experimenting with social content, or validating a bigger project.

Design writing experiments that test topics, formats, voice, platforms, reader response, and creative direction without overcommitting.

You are a writing experimentation strategist. Help me design small writing experiments that produce useful learning without turning every idea into a major project. Experiment context: Hypothesis or question: [HYPOTHESIS] Topic or format to test: [TOPIC / FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Current baseline: [BASELINE] Time available: [TIME] Risk level: [RISK] Success signal: [SUCCESS SIGNAL] What I want to learn: [LEARNING GOAL] Design the experiment: 1. Experiment statement Write: - what I am testing - why it matters - what I expect to happen - what would change my mind - what I will not conclude from this test 2. Experiment options Create 5 experiment designs: - small post test - newsletter test - essay test - series test - audience conversation test For each include: - output - timeframe - effort - metric - qualitative signal - risk - next step 3. Minimum viable test Choose the smallest credible test. Define: - exact piece to write - length - angle - CTA or question - publishing plan - review date 4. Learning capture Create a post-experiment review with: - what happened - what readers responded to - what surprised me - what felt energizing - what felt forced - what to repeat - what to stop - what to test next 5. Experiment backlog Create 10 future writing experiments based on my context. Rules: - Do not treat one experiment as final proof. - Do not overbuild the test. - Do not optimize only for metrics. - The goal is learning that improves creative direction. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#017Feedback Loop & Editorial Growth System

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters who want to improve craft, clarity, originality, confidence, structure, voice, and reader connection over time.

Build a feedback system that helps the writer improve through self-review, reader response, trusted editors, revision logs, and pattern tracking.

Act as an editorial growth systems designer. Create a feedback loop that helps me become a better writer without becoming dependent on approval. Writing context: Type of writing: [TYPE] Current skill level: [LEVEL] Areas I want to improve: [IMPROVEMENT AREAS] Current feedback sources: [FEEDBACK SOURCES] Reader response available: [READER RESPONSE] Drafting process: [PROCESS] Publishing cadence: [CADENCE] Sensitivity to criticism: [SENSITIVITY] Goals: [GOALS] Build the feedback system: A. Feedback sources Define how to use: - self-review - reader comments - analytics - trusted peers - editors - clients - audience questions - private notes - rereading after time passes B. Feedback categories Create categories for feedback on: - clarity - structure - voice - originality - usefulness - emotional impact - argument strength - pacing - examples - endings - reader fit C. Self-review rubric Create a scoring rubric from 1 to 5 for: - purpose - thesis - flow - specificity - depth - tension - memorability - usefulness - voice - completion quality D. Feedback processing Create rules for: - what to accept - what to ignore - what to test - what to ask more about - what to track over time - how to avoid overreacting E. Growth log Create a template for tracking: - piece published - what worked - what did not - feedback received - lesson learned - next craft focus - revision pattern Rules: - Do not chase every comment. - Do not let metrics replace craft judgment. - Do not use feedback only after publishing. - The system should build skill and confidence. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#018Body of Work Planner

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters, creators, authors, founders, educators, and experts who want their writing to compound instead of disappearing as isolated posts.

Plan a coherent long-term body of work made of themes, formats, flagship pieces, recurring series, experiments, and future projects.

You are a body-of-work strategist. Help me design a writing ecosystem where individual pieces connect into a larger creative direction. My context: Current writing archive: [ARCHIVE] Main themes: [THEMES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Long-term ambition: [AMBITION] Formats I use: [FORMATS] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Flagship ideas: [FLAGSHIP IDEAS] Projects I may want later: [FUTURE PROJECTS] Business or career connection: [BUSINESS / CAREER] What feels scattered: [SCATTERED] Build the body-of-work plan: 1. Creative territory Define: - central question - main promise - recurring conflict - reader transformation - long-term relevance 2. Work categories Organize my writing into: - flagship essays - recurring series - practical guides - personal reflections - opinion pieces - research-backed pieces - experiments - evergreen resources - future book or product seeds 3. Connection map Show how pieces can connect through: - shared themes - internal links - repeated frameworks - recurring language - audience journey - project ladders - archives - collections 4. Flagship plan Recommend 5 flagship pieces. For each include: - title - thesis - purpose - why it matters - supporting smaller pieces - future expansion - portfolio value 5. Compounding system Create: - archive structure - repurposing map - internal linking plan - recurring series ideas - quarterly review - future project extraction method Rules: - Do not treat writing as disposable content. - Do not force every piece into the same theme. - Do not ignore exploratory work. - Make the body of work coherent but alive. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#019Writing Opportunity Filter

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters evaluating guest posts, client work, collaborations, newsletters, books, speeches, platforms, ghostwriting, unpaid opportunities, or new content ideas.

Decide whether to accept, reject, postpone, or reshape writing opportunities based on alignment, audience, energy, credibility, compensation, and long-term direction.

Act as a writing opportunity advisor. Help me evaluate whether a writing opportunity is worth accepting and how it should be shaped. Opportunity: [OPPORTUNITY] Who is asking or offering: [SOURCE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Compensation or benefit: [BENEFIT] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Time required: [TIME REQUIRED] Creative fit: [CREATIVE FIT] Strategic fit: [STRATEGIC FIT] Risks: [RISKS] Current workload: [WORKLOAD] Long-term writing direction: [DIRECTION] Evaluate the opportunity: A. Fit analysis Score from 1 to 10: - audience alignment - topic alignment - creative energy - strategic value - reputation value - income value - learning value - portfolio value - relationship value - opportunity cost - deadline realism B. Hidden cost check Identify costs related to: - time - attention - emotional energy - brand dilution - missed priorities - unclear expectations - unpaid labor - rights or ownership - quality risk C. Decision options Recommend one of: - accept as is - accept with changes - negotiate scope - postpone - turn into a smaller version - redirect to another format - decline - archive for later D. Negotiation or response Write: - acceptance message - scope clarification message - negotiation message - postponement message - polite decline message E. If accepted Create: - brief - success criteria - timeline - first steps - boundary conditions Rules: - Do not accept every opportunity for exposure. - Do not reject opportunities only because they are uncomfortable. - Do not ignore ownership and scope. - The recommendation should protect long-term creative direction. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#020Full Writing Strategy & Creative Direction Audit

WRITING STRATEGY & CREATIVE DIRECTIONWriters, creators, founders, experts, newsletter authors, essayists, educators, and communicators doing a complete reset of their writing direction.

Audit and rebuild the full writing strategy across identity, goals, themes, audience, projects, voice, roadmap, publishing, feedback, portfolio, and long-term direction.

Act as an independent writing strategy and creative direction auditor. Review my current writing direction and identify what is clear, what is scattered, what has potential, and what should change. Inputs: Current writing type: [WRITING TYPE] Current topics: [TOPICS] Current audience: [AUDIENCE] Desired audience: [DESIRED AUDIENCE] Current platforms: [PLATFORMS] Current projects: [PROJECTS] Drafts or ideas: [DRAFTS / IDEAS] Writing goals: [GOALS] Long-term ambition: [AMBITION] Current bio or positioning: [BIO / POSITIONING] Writing samples or summaries: [SAMPLES] Writers I admire: [INSPIRATION] What feels unclear: [UNCLEAR] What feels energizing: [ENERGIZING] What feels forced: [FORCED] Available time: [TIME] Constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Audit across 20 dimensions: 1. Creative direction clarity 2. Writer identity 3. Audience definition 4. Reader outcome 5. Topic territory 6. Signature themes 7. Point of view 8. Voice direction 9. Project purpose 10. Project prioritization 11. Publishing cadence 12. Creative energy fit 13. Portfolio strategy 14. Feedback loop 15. Idea management 16. Roadmap realism 17. Platform fit 18. Differentiation 19. Body-of-work coherence 20. Long-term sustainability For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence used - missing evidence - risk if ignored - recommended fix - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 5 creative direction problems Rank by: - clarity impact - execution impact - audience impact - creative energy impact - ease of fixing B. Root cause analysis Identify whether the main issue is: - unclear audience - too many topics - weak point of view - vague goals - scattered platforms - no project hierarchy - unrealistic cadence - fear of choosing a lane - no feedback loop - no body-of-work strategy - over-optimization for metrics - lack of creative constraints C. Rebuilt writing strategy Create: - writing compass - audience statement - reader outcome map - signature themes - point-of-view direction - project priority stack - 90-day roadmap - publishing cadence - feedback system - portfolio plan - opportunity filter D. 30/60/90-day direction reset Create: - what to clarify first - what to stop writing - what to write next - what to publish - what to test - what to review - what to postpone - what to measure E. Stop / Start / Continue List what I should stop chasing, start building, and continue practicing. F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard writing strategy truth - the biggest source of creative confusion - the strongest direction available now - the highest-leverage project to start - the next action to take today Rules: - Do not flatter unclear direction. - Do not invent evidence. - Do not force a niche if the better move is a theme system. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Focus on clarity, creative depth, execution, and long-term body of work. AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCH

#021Target Reader Reality Map

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHWriters, newsletter creators, essayists, educators, founders, copywriters, content strategists, and anyone who wants writing to feel more relevant instead of generic.

Build a clear, usable profile of the real reader by identifying their situation, pressures, goals, fears, knowledge level, language, and reading context.

You are an audience research strategist for writers. Help me understand the real reader behind my writing topic so I can write with sharper relevance, empathy, and precision. My writing context: Writing topic: [TOPIC] Type of writing: [FORMAT] Audience I think I am writing for: [AUDIENCE] Current reader knowledge level: [KNOWLEDGE LEVEL] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desire: [DESIRE] Where this will be published: [PLATFORM] What I want the writing to accomplish: [GOAL] My current assumptions about the reader: [ASSUMPTIONS] Any reader comments, emails, reviews, or notes: [READER INPUT] Tone I want: [TONE] Build the target reader reality map: 1. Reader situation Describe the reader's current reality: - what they are dealing with - what feels urgent - what feels confusing - what they have already tried - what pressures shape their thinking - what they want but may not say directly - what they are tired of hearing 2. Reader knowledge level Clarify: - what they already understand - what they misunderstand - what they need explained simply - what they do not need explained - what assumptions they bring - what terminology they use - what terminology may alienate them 3. Emotional landscape Map: - fears - frustrations - hopes - doubts - hidden embarrassment - impatience - skepticism - motivation 4. Reading context Explain how the reader is likely encountering this piece: - casually browsing - actively searching - comparing options - trying to solve a problem - looking for reassurance - seeking inspiration - deciding whether to trust me 5. Writing implications Recommend: - opening angle - level of detail - examples to include - arguments to avoid - tone calibration - proof needed - best CTA or next step Final output: - reader profile - reader before-state - reader after-state - language to use - language to avoid - 15 reader-specific topic angles - checklist for testing whether the piece is reader-relevant Rules: - Do not create a generic persona. - Do not invent certainty when evidence is missing. - Mark assumptions as [ASSUMPTION]. - Make the output useful for actual writing decisions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#022Reader Pain Interview Simulator

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHWriters who need more emotional precision before writing persuasive essays, newsletters, articles, sales pages, scripts, or educational content.

Simulate a deep reader interview that reveals surface problems, deeper frustrations, emotional triggers, failed solutions, and language patterns.

Act as a skilled reader research interviewer. Help me uncover what my target reader actually feels, wants, resists, and says about the topic below. Topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Writing format: [FORMAT] What I want to understand: [RESEARCH GOAL] Known problem: [KNOWN PROBLEM] Known desire: [KNOWN DESIRE] Current hypothesis: [HYPOTHESIS] Reader evidence I have: [EVIDENCE] Run the interview simulation in four phases: Phase 1 - Interview questions Create 20 interview questions organized by: - current situation - desired outcome - pain and frustration - emotional stakes - failed attempts - objections - language and metaphors - decision triggers - trust signals - content expectations Phase 2 - Likely answer patterns For each question, generate likely answer patterns from the reader. Label each answer as: - [EVIDENCE-BASED] if supported by my input - [ASSUMPTION] if inferred - [NEEDS VALIDATION] if risky Phase 3 - Insight extraction Extract: - repeated pains - hidden fears - moments of urgency - emotional triggers - phrases worth using - objections to address - beliefs to shift - trust barriers - content angles Phase 4 - Writing translation Turn the insights into: - possible openings - headline angles - story angles - examples to include - sections needed - phrases to use - phrases to avoid - reader promises Final output: - interview guide - simulated answer patterns - research summary - writing angle recommendations - validation questions to ask real readers Rules: - Do not present simulated answers as fact. - Do not fabricate real quotes. - Keep emotional insights specific, not melodramatic. - The final insights must improve writing relevance. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#023Message-Market Fit Analyzer for Writing

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHArticles, newsletters, essays, landing pages, thought leadership posts, sales pages, video scripts, and educational content.

Test whether a writing idea, thesis, or message fits the reader's actual needs, intent, sophistication, objections, and emotional state.

You are a message-market fit editor. Evaluate whether my message will actually matter to the target reader and how to make it more relevant. Writing idea or message: [PASTE IDEA / THESIS / DRAFT MESSAGE] Context: Target reader: [READER] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desire: [DESIRE] Reader stage: [STAGE] Where the writing will appear: [PLATFORM] Goal of the piece: [GOAL] What I want the reader to believe: [BELIEF SHIFT] Reader objections: [OBJECTIONS] Proof or examples available: [PROOF / EXAMPLES] Analyze message fit: A. Relevance diagnosis Score from 1 to 10: - reader urgency - clarity - specificity - emotional resonance - practical value - credibility - novelty - timing - belief-shift strength - platform fit B. Reader reaction forecast Predict how the reader may respond: - what grabs them - what confuses them - what feels obvious - what feels useful - what feels risky - what feels unproven - where they may stop reading C. Gap analysis Identify gaps in: - reader understanding - emotional connection - proof - examples - specificity - stakes - differentiation - next step D. Message refinement Create 5 improved versions: 1. clearer version 2. more emotional version 3. more practical version 4. more contrarian version 5. more trustworthy version E. Recommended direction Choose the strongest version and explain: - why it fits the reader - what to emphasize - what to cut - what evidence to add - how to open the piece Rules: - Do not assume a message is strong because it sounds clever. - Do not make the message louder if it needs to be clearer. - Do not ignore reader stage. - Make the recommendation decisive. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#024Reader Language Mining Engine

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHWriters who want copy, essays, newsletters, and posts to sound closer to the reader's actual language.

Extract usable reader language, phrases, metaphors, objections, desires, and emotional patterns from comments, reviews, interviews, surveys, emails, or transcripts.

Act as a reader language analyst. Analyze the raw reader material below and extract the language patterns I should use to make my writing more specific, persuasive, and human. Raw reader material: [PASTE COMMENTS / REVIEWS / INTERVIEWS / SURVEYS / EMAILS / TRANSCRIPTS] Writing context: Topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Writing format: [FORMAT] Goal of the writing: [GOAL] Tone I want: [TONE] Language I want to avoid: [AVOID] Analyze the material: 1. Exact language bank Extract exact phrases for: - pains - desires - frustrations - objections - goals - fears - confusion - comparisons - metaphors - buying or reading triggers - trust signals 2. Pattern grouping Group the language into themes: - recurring problem - repeated emotion - repeated outcome - repeated objection - repeated misunderstanding - repeated phrase - repeated story 3. Message implications For each theme explain: - what it tells us about the reader - how strong the signal is - how it should affect the writing - where it should appear in the piece 4. Phrase transformation Turn reader language into: - headline options - opening lines - section headings - bullets - transitions - CTAs - social hooks - newsletter subject lines 5. Ethical usage rules Define: - what can be quoted directly - what should be paraphrased - what should not be used - what needs permission - what is too personal or sensitive Final output: - reader language bank - theme map - strongest phrases - weak phrases to avoid - 20 writing angles based on real language Rules: - Do not invent quotes. - Keep exact reader phrases in quotation marks. - Do not overgeneralize from one comment. - Separate evidence from interpretation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#025Reading Intent Decoder

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHSEO articles, newsletters, essays, tutorials, product content, educational posts, scripts, and persuasive writing.

Identify why a reader is approaching a topic and adapt the writing to match search intent, emotional intent, decision intent, curiosity intent, or transformation intent.

You are a reading intent strategist. Decode the likely intent behind the reader's interest in my topic and show me how to write for that intent. Topic or headline: [TOPIC / HEADLINE] Target reader: [READER] Publishing platform: [PLATFORM] Reader journey stage: [STAGE] Goal of the piece: [GOAL] Known reader problem: [PROBLEM] Known reader desire: [DESIRE] Competing content or alternatives: [COMPETING CONTENT] CTA or next step: [CTA] Decode reader intent: A. Intent types Analyze whether the reader is likely coming with: - informational intent - emotional reassurance intent - decision-making intent - comparison intent - problem-solving intent - inspiration intent - entertainment intent - identity-building intent - purchase intent - skepticism or fact-checking intent B. Intent hierarchy Rank the top 3 likely intents. For each include: - what the reader wants - what they do not want - what would satisfy them - what would disappoint them - what evidence or examples they need - what tone fits C. Content structure by intent Recommend: - best opening - best structure - depth level - examples - proof - pacing - CTA style - ending D. Misread intent risks Explain how the piece could fail if it: - teaches when the reader wants a decision - sells when the reader wants clarity - inspires when the reader wants steps - explains basics to an advanced reader - becomes too tactical when the reader wants meaning E. Final writing plan Create: - intent-matched outline - headline options - introduction angle - section order - reader satisfaction checklist Rules: - Do not treat every reader as ready to buy or act. - Do not ignore platform context. - Do not over-explain if the reader intent is narrow. - Match the writing to the real reason the reader is there. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#026Objection Discovery for Writers

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHPersuasive essays, product content, sales pages, opinion pieces, educational writing, newsletters, and thought leadership.

Identify reader doubts, resistance, skepticism, counterarguments, fatigue, and trust barriers before drafting.

Act as a reader objection analyst. Help me identify what could make my target reader reject, ignore, distrust, or misunderstand my writing. Writing idea: [IDEA] Thesis or claim: [THESIS] Target reader: [READER] Reader sophistication level: [LEVEL] Topic sensitivity: [SENSITIVITY] Desired belief shift: [BELIEF SHIFT] Proof available: [PROOF] Tone: [TONE] Where it will be published: [PLATFORM] Find the objections: 1. Immediate objections List what the reader may think in the first 10 seconds: - I already know this - this is not for me - this sounds unrealistic - this feels too basic - this feels too advanced - this sounds like hype - I do not trust the writer yet - I have tried this before - this ignores my constraints 2. Deeper resistance Identify: - emotional resistance - identity resistance - financial resistance - time resistance - credibility resistance - cultural resistance - category fatigue - fear of change - fear of being wrong 3. Counterargument map Create: - strongest counterargument - fair version of the counterargument - weak version to avoid attacking - how to respond with nuance - evidence needed - where to address it 4. Writing solutions Turn objections into: - opening caveats - proof blocks - examples - FAQs - section headings - transitions - analogies - story choices - ending notes 5. Trust repair language Write 15 sentences that acknowledge reader skepticism without sounding defensive. Rules: - Do not dismiss reader objections. - Do not create strawman counterarguments. - Do not over-apologize for having a point of view. - Use objections to make the writing stronger and more trustworthy. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#027Reader Segment Differentiator

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHWriters with a mixed audience, multi-topic newsletters, educational platforms, creator brands, B2B content, and expert writing.

Divide a broad audience into meaningful reader segments based on goals, sophistication, motivation, objections, and content needs.

You are a reader segmentation strategist. Help me divide my broad audience into practical reader segments so I can write more targeted, useful, and persuasive pieces. Broad audience: [BROAD AUDIENCE] Topic area: [TOPIC AREA] Writing formats: [FORMATS] Current readers: [CURRENT READERS] Reader goals: [GOALS] Reader problems: [PROBLEMS] Reader knowledge levels: [LEVELS] Business or creative goal: [MY GOAL] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Evidence available: [EVIDENCE] Create reader segments: A. Segmentation variables Analyze the audience by: - awareness level - knowledge level - urgency - desired outcome - role or identity - emotional state - budget or resources, if relevant - objections - preferred depth - preferred format - decision readiness B. Segment profiles Create 4 to 7 reader segments. For each include: - segment name - short description - main problem - desired outcome - current belief - key objection - emotional trigger - language patterns - topics they care about - topics they ignore - best formats - best CTA C. Segment priority Rank segments by: - fit with my writing goals - reader need - long-term value - ease of reaching - originality opportunity - content potential D. Message differences Show how the same topic should change for each segment: - headline - opening - depth - examples - proof - tone - CTA E. Writing plan Create a 20-piece idea list mapped to segments. Rules: - Do not create demographic-only segments. - Do not over-segment beyond what is useful. - Mark assumptions when evidence is weak. - Make segmentation actionable for writing decisions. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#028Core Message Distillation Lab

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHEssays, newsletters, speeches, landing pages, video scripts, thought leadership, books, and educational content.

Turn messy notes, scattered ideas, research, or draft fragments into one clear core message and supporting message architecture.

Act as a message distillation editor. Help me turn the messy material below into one clear core message that readers can understand and remember. Messy material: [PASTE NOTES / IDEAS / DRAFT FRAGMENTS / RESEARCH] Context: Target reader: [READER] Writing format: [FORMAT] Purpose of the piece: [PURPOSE] Topic area: [TOPIC] Desired reader takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Tone: [TONE] What I do not want to say: [AVOID] Distill the message: 1. Signal extraction Identify: - strongest idea - repeated idea - surprising idea - emotional idea - practical idea - controversial idea - unfinished idea - weak or distracting idea 2. Message candidates Create 10 possible core messages. For each include: - one-sentence message - what reader problem it addresses - what belief it shifts - why it matters - risk or weakness 3. Message test Evaluate each candidate for: - clarity - specificity - memorability - relevance - emotional pull - originality - support from material - fit with format 4. Final message architecture Create: - core message - supporting points - reader promise - proof needed - emotional angle - practical angle - counterargument - conclusion direction 5. Writing translation Provide: - headline options - opening options - outline - section titles - closing line options - short summary - social post version Rules: - Do not preserve every idea. - Do not make the core message vague. - Do not add claims unsupported by the material. - The final message should be simple enough to remember and strong enough to write around. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#029Emotional Trigger Map

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHPersuasive writing, newsletters, essays, speeches, campaigns, storytelling, fundraising, sales pages, advocacy writing, and founder content.

Identify the emotional drivers that make a reader pay attention, trust the writer, keep reading, share, act, or change their mind.

You are an emotional relevance strategist. Map the emotional triggers connected to my reader and topic so the writing feels human without becoming manipulative. Topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Reader situation: [SITUATION] Reader pain: [PAIN] Reader desire: [DESIRE] Desired action or belief shift: [ACTION / BELIEF SHIFT] Tone boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Sensitivity level: [SENSITIVITY] Examples of reader language: [LANGUAGE] Build the emotional trigger map: A. Emotional inventory Identify relevant emotions: - frustration - fear - hope - relief - ambition - envy - guilt - pride - curiosity - urgency - skepticism - belonging - status - control - safety - possibility For each relevant emotion include: - why it appears - how strong it is - how to acknowledge it - how not to exploit it - writing angle B. Trigger moments Identify moments when the reader is most likely to care: - after failure - before a decision - during comparison - after embarrassment - when overwhelmed - when seeking validation - when trying to improve - when ready for change C. Ethical persuasion rules Define boundaries: - do not exaggerate pain - do not create false urgency - do not shame the reader - do not overpromise relief - do not use fear without a useful path forward D. Writing application Create: - 10 emotionally resonant openings - 10 section angles - 10 transition lines - 10 CTA lines - 10 endings E. Emotional balance Recommend how to balance: - empathy and authority - urgency and calm - pain and possibility - honesty and encouragement - vulnerability and usefulness Rules: - Do not manipulate fear. - Do not make the reader feel small. - Do not confuse emotion with drama. - Emotional relevance should deepen trust. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#030Reader Expectation Audit

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHEssays, newsletters, SEO articles, opinion pieces, guides, landing pages, social posts, speeches, and book chapters.

Identify what readers expect from a topic, format, platform, and writer, then decide which expectations to meet, exceed, subvert, or reject.

Act as a reader expectation auditor. Help me understand what readers will expect from my piece and how to create a better experience. Writing topic: [TOPIC] Working title: [TITLE] Format: [FORMAT] Platform: [PLATFORM] Target reader: [READER] Category or genre: [GENRE] Comparable pieces: [COMPARABLE PIECES] My intended angle: [ANGLE] Reader sophistication: [LEVEL] Goal of the piece: [GOAL] Audit expectations: 1. Expected content What the reader likely expects: - definitions - examples - steps - story - proof - counterarguments - templates - warnings - takeaways - emotional payoff 2. Expected structure What structure they may expect based on the format: - list - narrative - argument - tutorial - framework - case study - comparison - reflection - manifesto 3. Expected tone What tone may feel appropriate: - practical - personal - analytical - direct - warm - skeptical - inspiring - technical - literary 4. Expectation strategy For each expectation, decide: - meet it - exceed it - subvert it - delay it - reject it Explain why. 5. Differentiation opportunities Identify where the piece can surprise the reader through: - better example - sharper thesis - deeper honesty - simpler framework - stronger story - better structure - uncommon comparison - more useful ending 6. Final experience design Create: - recommended opening - promised payoff - section order - moments of surprise - trust-building moments - ending strategy Rules: - Do not ignore reader expectations just to be original. - Do not follow genre conventions blindly. - Do not promise an experience the piece cannot deliver. - Make the reader feel the piece was worth their attention. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#031Audience Awareness Ladder

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHEducational content, newsletters, content funnels, sales pages, product content, thought leadership, and creator-led marketing.

Map readers by awareness stage and create messages that move them from vague interest to understanding, trust, conviction, and action.

You are an audience awareness strategist. Build an awareness ladder for my topic so I can write messages that match where readers are instead of forcing one message on everyone. Topic or offer: [TOPIC / OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Current belief: [CURRENT BELIEF] Belief I want to create: [TARGET BELIEF] Writing formats: [FORMATS] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] CTA or next step: [CTA] Build the awareness ladder: Stage 1 - Unaware Reader does not yet see the problem clearly. Provide: - mindset - emotional state - message goal - best content type - headline examples - opening angle - CTA style Stage 2 - Problem aware Reader knows something is wrong. Provide the same elements. Stage 3 - Solution aware Reader is exploring approaches. Provide the same elements. Stage 4 - Method aware Reader understands the category or framework. Provide the same elements. Stage 5 - Trust aware Reader is deciding whether to trust this writer, product, or idea. Provide the same elements. Stage 6 - Action ready Reader is ready to apply, subscribe, buy, reply, share, or decide. Provide the same elements. Then create: - 30 content ideas mapped to stages - message bridge from one stage to the next - objections at each stage - proof needed at each stage - mistakes to avoid at each stage Rules: - Do not give advanced content to unaware readers. - Do not oversell to readers who need education first. - Do not repeat the same CTA at every stage. - The ladder should guide both content planning and individual drafts. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#032Reader Trust Signal Builder

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHExpert writing, thought leadership, sales pages, newsletters, advice content, educational articles, reviews, and persuasive essays.

Identify what a reader needs to trust the writer, claim, topic, offer, or idea, then build proof, tone, examples, and transparency into the writing.

Act as a reader trust strategist. Help me understand what my reader needs to see, feel, and verify before they trust my writing. Writing topic: [TOPIC] Claim or advice: [CLAIM] Target reader: [READER] Reader skepticism level: [SKEPTICISM] My credibility: [CREDIBILITY] Evidence available: [EVIDENCE] Examples available: [EXAMPLES] Possible risks if reader follows advice: [RISKS] Platform: [PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] Build the trust signal system: A. Trust barriers Identify what may make the reader doubt: - the writer - the claim - the example - the data - the advice - the motive - the CTA - the simplicity of the solution - the applicability to their situation B. Trust assets List available and missing trust signals: - lived experience - professional expertise - examples - data - case studies - transparent limits - counterarguments - references - process explanation - failures or lessons - reader empathy C. Trust placement Recommend where to place trust signals: - headline - opening - early caveat - body - proof section - transition - conclusion - CTA - author note D. Trust language Write: - 10 credibility lines - 10 caveat lines - 10 proof-introduction lines - 10 uncertainty lines - 10 confident-but-not-hype lines E. Trust checklist Create a checklist to confirm: - claims are supported - uncertainty is marked - examples are relevant - tone is not inflated - reader risk is respected - CTA is honest Rules: - Do not fake authority. - Do not overuse caveats until the writing loses confidence. - Do not make claims stronger than evidence. - Trust should come from clarity, proof, honesty, and usefulness. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#033Reader Journey Content Map

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHNewsletters, blogs, creator businesses, educational platforms, content marketing, personal brands, and writing-led funnels.

Connect reader needs across the full journey from first awareness to repeated engagement, trust, conversion, advocacy, or deeper learning.

You are a reader journey strategist. Create a content map that shows what my reader needs at each stage of their relationship with my writing. Reader: [READER] Topic area: [TOPIC AREA] Writing goal: [GOAL] Main platform: [PLATFORM] Secondary platforms: [SECONDARY PLATFORMS] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Offer or next step, if any: [OFFER / NEXT STEP] Current content: [CURRENT CONTENT] Known reader questions: [QUESTIONS] Map the reader journey: 1. First encounter Reader has just discovered me. Define: - what they need - what they fear - what they should read first - best formats - message goal - CTA - trust signal 2. Early engagement Reader has read a few pieces. Define the same elements. 3. Regular reader Reader recognizes my themes. Define the same elements. 4. High-trust reader Reader sees me as useful or credible. Define the same elements. 5. Action or conversion stage Reader may subscribe, buy, reply, share, book, or apply. Define the same elements. 6. Long-term relationship Reader may become advocate, client, repeat reader, or community member. Define the same elements. Then create: - content gaps - 40 content ideas by journey stage - message priorities by stage - internal linking or sequencing plan - newsletter sequence idea - trust-building sequence - reader retention ideas Rules: - Do not treat every reader as new. - Do not sell before trust is built. - Do not ignore long-term readers. - Make the map usable for planning future writing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#034Message Hierarchy for One Piece

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHEssays, articles, newsletters, speeches, scripts, landing pages, reports, book chapters, and persuasive posts.

Organize a single piece of writing around one main message, supporting points, proof, emotional beats, reader questions, and final takeaway.

Act as a message hierarchy editor. Build the message hierarchy for my piece so every section supports one clear reader takeaway. Piece idea: [PIECE IDEA] Working title: [TITLE] Target reader: [READER] Main claim: [CLAIM] Desired takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Reader questions: [QUESTIONS] Reader objections: [OBJECTIONS] Evidence or examples: [EVIDENCE] Format and length: [FORMAT / LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Create the message hierarchy: Level 1 - Core message Write: - one-sentence message - reader promise - belief shift - emotional payoff - practical payoff Level 2 - Supporting points Create 3 to 5 supporting points. For each include: - point - why it matters - reader question answered - example needed - evidence needed - possible section title Level 3 - Proof and examples Map each proof asset to: - claim supported - strength of evidence - where it belongs - what context is needed - what not to overclaim Level 4 - Emotional beats Identify where the piece should create: - recognition - tension - relief - curiosity - confidence - urgency - reflection Level 5 - Reader objections Place objections at the right points in the piece. Level 6 - Final takeaway Create: - closing thought - final sentence options - CTA options - memory hook Then provide: - outline - section order - weak section warnings - revision checklist Rules: - Do not let secondary ideas compete with the core message. - Do not add proof that does not support the claim. - Do not overload the piece with every possible point. - The hierarchy should make the piece easier to write and edit. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#035Reader Confusion Finder

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHRevising essays, guides, articles, newsletters, scripts, sales pages, tutorials, and educational writing.

Identify where a reader is likely to get confused, bored, skeptical, overwhelmed, or lost in a draft, outline, or idea.

You are a reader confusion auditor. Review my writing idea, outline, or draft and identify where the reader may lose clarity, trust, interest, or momentum. Text to review: [PASTE IDEA / OUTLINE / DRAFT] Context: Target reader: [READER] Reader knowledge level: [LEVEL] Goal of the piece: [GOAL] Platform: [PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] Desired action or takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Audit the reader experience: A. Confusion points Identify where the reader may ask: - what does this mean? - why should I care? - how does this connect? - is this true? - what should I do with this? - is this for me? - what changed from the previous section? - why is this example here? B. Momentum breaks Find places where the writing may become: - repetitive - too abstract - too detailed - too slow - too abrupt - too promotional - too self-focused - too unsupported C. Reader burden Identify where the reader must work too hard because of: - unclear terms - missing context - long sentences - weak transitions - buried thesis - too many ideas - no examples - no structure D. Fix plan For each issue provide: - problem - reader reaction - severity - recommended fix - example rewrite - whether to cut, clarify, move, prove, or simplify E. Final reader experience checklist Create a checklist for: - clarity - flow - trust - relevance - emotional connection - actionability - ending Rules: - Do not rewrite the entire piece unless asked. - Do not focus only on grammar. - Do not assume reader patience. - Prioritize fixes that improve understanding and momentum. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#036Persuasive Message Angle Generator

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHHeadlines, ads, essays, newsletters, sales pages, social posts, video scripts, and campaign messages.

Generate distinct persuasive angles for the same topic based on reader motivation, fear, aspiration, skepticism, identity, urgency, and proof.

Act as a persuasive angle strategist. Generate multiple message angles for my topic so I can choose the version most likely to resonate with my target reader. Topic or offer: [TOPIC / OFFER] Target reader: [READER] Reader pain: [PAIN] Reader desire: [DESIRE] Reader objection: [OBJECTION] Proof available: [PROOF] Desired action: [ACTION] Tone boundaries: [TONE BOUNDARIES] Platform: [PLATFORM] Create 12 distinct message angles: 1. Pain-aware angle 2. Outcome-led angle 3. Curiosity angle 4. Contrarian angle 5. Proof-led angle 6. Mistake-avoidance angle 7. Identity angle 8. Simplicity angle 9. Urgency angle 10. Empathy angle 11. Transformation angle 12. Behind-the-scenes angle For each angle include: - angle name - reader motivation it targets - one-sentence message - headline - opening line - supporting point - proof needed - CTA or next step - risk if overused Then evaluate all angles by: - reader fit - originality - trust - clarity - persuasive strength - platform fit Recommend: - best angle for first draft - best angle for headline - best angle for email - best angle for social - best angle to avoid and why Rules: - Do not create manipulative angles. - Do not use false urgency. - Do not make every angle sound like advertising. - Each angle must feel meaningfully different. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#037Audience-Specific Example Finder

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHEducational writing, essays, newsletters, tutorials, sales pages, thought leadership, scripts, and public speaking.

Identify the examples, scenarios, analogies, case references, and details that will make writing feel concrete and relevant to a specific reader.

You are an example selection editor. Help me choose examples that will make my writing more concrete, credible, and relevant to the target reader. Topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Reader background: [BACKGROUND] Reader sophistication: [LEVEL] Main point I need to explain: [POINT] Current examples I might use: [CURRENT EXAMPLES] Examples to avoid: [AVOID] Tone: [TONE] Format: [FORMAT] Build the example strategy: A. Example criteria Define what makes an example useful for this reader: - familiar context - emotional relevance - practical clarity - credibility - simplicity - novelty - proof value - memorability B. Example categories Generate examples from: - daily life - work context - customer situation - before / after - failure case - success case - analogy - contrast - mini story - data-backed scenario - step-by-step demonstration C. Example fit scoring For each example include: - what it explains - why reader will understand it - risk of confusion - risk of cliché - emotional effect - where to place it D. Analogy options Create 10 analogies that make the main point easier to understand. Rank them by clarity and originality. E. Example integration Show how to use the best examples in: - headline - opening - body section - transition - conclusion - CTA Rules: - Do not use examples that require more explanation than the point itself. - Do not choose examples only because they are clever. - Do not use irrelevant personal stories. - The best example should make the reader say, "That is exactly it." --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#038Reader Voice-of-Doubt Monologue

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHPersuasive writing, sales copy, opinion pieces, educational content, newsletter positioning, offers, and behavior-change writing.

Create a realistic internal monologue of the skeptical reader to reveal doubts, questions, hesitation, and trust barriers before writing.

Act as the skeptical but fair reader. Write the internal voice-of-doubt monologue my target reader may have when encountering my topic or message. Message or topic: [MESSAGE / TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Reader situation: [SITUATION] Reader prior experience: [PRIOR EXPERIENCE] Reader goals: [GOALS] Reader frustrations: [FRUSTRATIONS] What I want them to believe or do: [BELIEF / ACTION] Proof available: [PROOF] Tone I plan to use: [TONE] Create the voice-of-doubt analysis: 1. First reaction monologue Write what the reader may think in their own internal language when they first see the message. 2. Deeper hesitation Write what they may think after reading more: - this sounds good, but... - my situation is different because... - I have tried something like this and... - I do not trust this yet because... - I would need to see... - I am afraid that... 3. Trust requirements List what the reader needs before continuing: - evidence - empathy - specificity - examples - caveats - process - credibility - relevance 4. Message repair Suggest how to adjust: - opening - thesis - proof - examples - tone - CTA - structure 5. Revised message Rewrite the message in a way that addresses the doubts without becoming defensive. Rules: - Do not make the reader stupid or hostile. - Do not exaggerate objections. - Do not dismiss legitimate skepticism. - Use doubt to improve precision and trust. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#039Message Testing Survey Builder

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHWriters testing newsletter positioning, article ideas, landing page messages, course ideas, book theses, sales copy, and content themes.

Create a lightweight survey or feedback system to test reader resonance, clarity, trust, relevance, and intent before publishing or scaling a message.

You are a message testing researcher. Build a simple feedback system to test whether my message resonates with the intended reader before I invest more time. Message to test: [MESSAGE / HEADLINE / OUTLINE / POSITIONING] Context: Target reader: [READER] Where message will be used: [USE CASE] Decision this test supports: [DECISION] What I need to learn: [LEARNING GOAL] Audience access: [WHO CAN I ASK] Sample size available: [SAMPLE SIZE] Time available: [TIME] Design the test: A. Test objective Define what we are testing: - clarity - relevance - urgency - trust - emotional resonance - differentiation - desired action - objections - language fit B. Survey questions Create: - 5 quick rating questions - 5 open-ended questions - 5 forced-choice questions - 3 "what would make this stronger?" questions - 3 "what sounds off?" questions C. Interview questions Create a short 10-minute conversation guide. D. Feedback scoring Create a scoring system for: - message clarity - reader fit - belief shift - credibility - action intent - emotional resonance E. Interpretation guide Explain how to read results: - strong signal - weak signal - mixed signal - misleading signal - false positive - false negative F. Next actions Tell me what to do if results show: - high clarity, low urgency - high interest, low trust - high emotion, low action - low relevance - confused readers - strong niche fit Rules: - Do not ask leading questions. - Do not treat compliments as proof of resonance. - Do not overinterpret tiny samples. - The test should help me decide whether to write, revise, reposition, or abandon the message. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#040Full Audience, Reader & Message Research Audit

AUDIENCE, READER & MESSAGE RESEARCHWriters, creators, copywriters, newsletter authors, educators, founders, essayists, and strategists doing a full reader and message reset.

Audit reader understanding, message relevance, emotional triggers, objections, language, trust, intent, segmentation, and writing implications in one complete system.

Act as an independent audience, reader, and message research auditor. Review my current understanding of the reader and message, then identify what is clear, what is assumed, what is missing, and what should change. Inputs: Writing topic: [TOPIC] Writing format: [FORMAT] Target reader: [READER] Current audience notes: [AUDIENCE NOTES] Reader comments / emails / reviews / transcripts: [READER MATERIAL] Current message or thesis: [MESSAGE] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desire: [DESIRE] Reader objections: [OBJECTIONS] Reader language examples: [LANGUAGE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Writing goal: [GOAL] Proof or examples available: [PROOF / EXAMPLES] Competing content or alternative messages: [ALTERNATIVES] Current concerns: [CONCERNS] Audit across 20 dimensions: 1. Reader definition 2. Reader situation 3. Reader sophistication 4. Reader urgency 5. Reader desired outcome 6. Emotional triggers 7. Objections 8. Trust barriers 9. Reading intent 10. Language patterns 11. Message clarity 12. Message relevance 13. Message differentiation 14. Message credibility 15. Belief shift 16. Segment fit 17. Example fit 18. Proof fit 19. Platform fit 20. Reader next step For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence used - missing evidence - risk if ignored - recommended fix - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 5 reader research gaps Rank by: - impact on clarity - impact on persuasion - impact on trust - impact on completion - ease of fixing B. Assumption audit Separate: - what we know - what we infer - what we need to validate - what we should stop assuming C. Rebuilt reader and message system Create: - target reader profile - reader before-state - reader after-state - reader language bank - emotional trigger map - objection map - trust signal plan - reading intent analysis - core message - supporting points - best angle - best opening - best CTA D. 30-day research plan Create: - what to ask readers - where to collect language - what messages to test - what drafts to revise - what assumptions to validate - how to store insights E. Stop / Start / Continue List what I should stop assuming, start researching, and continue using. F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard reader truth - the strongest message opportunity - the biggest trust gap - the most useful reader language - the next research action to take today Rules: - Do not invent reader evidence. - Do not overgeneralize from weak data. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Focus on making the writing more relevant, persuasive, trustworthy, and reader-specific. IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENT

#041Original Idea Mining Map

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters, creators, newsletter authors, essayists, bloggers, educators, founders, and thought leaders who want more original ideas from their own thinking.

Mine original writing ideas from experience, observations, beliefs, questions, contradictions, conversations, and patterns instead of relying on generic topic lists.

You are an original idea mining editor. Help me find strong writing ideas hidden inside my experience, opinions, observations, questions, and unfinished thoughts. My context: Writing territory: [TERRITORY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Topics I often think about: [TOPICS] Experiences I can draw from: [EXPERIENCES] Problems I keep noticing: [PROBLEMS] Beliefs I hold strongly: [BELIEFS] Ideas I disagree with: [DISAGREEMENTS] Questions I keep returning to: [QUESTIONS] Conversations that stayed with me: [CONVERSATIONS] Notes or fragments: [NOTES] Writing goal: [GOAL] Preferred formats: [FORMATS] Mine ideas from these sources: 1. Experience mining Extract writing ideas from: - mistakes I made - lessons I learned - patterns I noticed - decisions I changed my mind about - moments of frustration - surprising wins - repeated client, reader, or personal situations - things I wish I knew earlier 2. Belief mining Find ideas from: - beliefs I want to defend - beliefs I want to challenge - beliefs I used to hold - beliefs my audience may hold incorrectly - beliefs that need nuance - beliefs that are useful but unpopular 3. Question mining Turn questions into writing concepts: - questions beginners ask - questions experts avoid - questions nobody phrases clearly - questions that reveal confusion - questions that lead to better decisions - questions with no simple answer 4. Pattern mining Identify recurring patterns across my context. For each pattern provide: - pattern name - why it matters - who cares - possible thesis - best format - example title - what makes it original 5. Idea shortlist Create 30 original writing ideas. For each include: - working title - core angle - source of originality - reader value - emotional pull - best format - difficulty level Rules: - Do not generate generic topics. - Do not invent fake experiences. - Mark assumptions as [ASSUMPTION]. - Prioritize ideas that could only come from my perspective, evidence, or pattern recognition. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#042Weak Topic Expansion Lab

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters who have a topic but no strong angle, headline, structure, thesis, or reason readers should care.

Turn a vague, boring, or overused topic into stronger writing concepts by adding specificity, tension, audience relevance, proof, stakes, and point of view.

Act as a topic development editor. I will give you a weak or vague topic. Your job is to expand it into multiple stronger writing concepts. Weak topic: [TOPIC] Context: Target reader: [READER] Writing format: [FORMAT] Why I want to write about it: [WHY] What I know about it: [KNOWLEDGE] What readers may already believe: [READER BELIEF] What I want readers to understand: [TAKEAWAY] Tone: [TONE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Develop the topic through this lab: A. Diagnosis Explain why the topic is currently weak. Check whether it is: - too broad - too familiar - too abstract - too tactical - too obvious - too trend-driven - too unsupported - missing reader stakes - missing tension - missing point of view B. Specificity expansion Create sharper versions by adding: - specific audience - specific situation - specific mistake - specific outcome - specific timeline - specific contradiction - specific consequence - specific example C. Tension expansion Create angles based on: - myth vs reality - easy advice vs hard truth - what people say vs what they do - old way vs new way - beginner view vs expert view - short-term gain vs long-term cost - popular tactic vs hidden tradeoff D. Format expansion Turn the topic into: - essay concept - newsletter issue - how-to guide - opinion piece - personal story - framework - list article - case study - social thread - speech or script E. Best concept selection Choose the strongest 5 concepts. For each provide: - title - thesis - reader promise - outline - proof needed - opening direction - ending direction Rules: - Do not keep the topic vague. - Do not make the topic more complex just to sound smart. - Do not create angles that cannot be supported. - The final concepts must feel more specific, useful, and worth reading. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#043Angle Diversifier Matrix

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters creating multiple posts, articles, newsletters, videos, scripts, or campaigns from one core topic.

Generate many distinct angles for one topic across emotional, practical, contrarian, narrative, analytical, beginner, expert, and persuasive lenses.

You are an angle strategist. Take one topic and create a matrix of truly different angles so I can choose the strongest direction before writing. Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose of writing: [PURPOSE] Platform: [PLATFORM] My current opinion: [OPINION] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desire: [DESIRE] Proof or stories available: [PROOF / STORIES] Angles I want to avoid: [AVOID] Build the angle matrix: 1. Angle categories Create angles across these lenses: - practical how-to - mistake avoidance - contrarian argument - personal story - expert breakdown - beginner explanation - myth-busting - trend analysis - emotional reassurance - decision support - future prediction - behind-the-scenes - case study - checklist - framework - warning - comparison - manifesto - unpopular truth - tactical teardown 2. Angle card format For each angle include: - angle name - one-sentence thesis - reader motivation - opening hook - 3 supporting points - example needed - best format - CTA or takeaway - risk of sounding generic 3. Angle scoring Score each angle from 1 to 5 on: - freshness - usefulness - reader relevance - evidence fit - emotional pull - ease of writing - strategic value 4. Angle selection Recommend: - best angle for a short post - best angle for a long essay - best angle for a newsletter - best angle for a thread - best angle for a flagship piece - best angle to avoid 5. Angle combination Suggest 5 hybrid angles that combine two lenses in a fresh way. Rules: - Do not repeat the same idea with different wording. - Do not make every angle contrarian. - Do not choose cleverness over reader value. - Each angle must create a meaningfully different piece. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#044Contrarian-but-Credible Thesis Builder

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTThought leadership, essays, newsletters, LinkedIn posts, opinion pieces, speeches, and expert content.

Develop a strong contrarian thesis that challenges common advice without becoming shallow, hostile, exaggerated, or unsupported.

Act as a contrarian thesis editor. Help me develop a strong, credible point of view that challenges a common belief while staying nuanced and useful. Topic: [TOPIC] Common belief or advice: [COMMON BELIEF] My disagreement: [DISAGREEMENT] Target reader: [READER] Evidence or experience I have: [EVIDENCE] Where I agree with the common view: [AGREE] Where I think it fails: [FAILURE] Tone boundaries: [TONE] Writing format: [FORMAT] Build the contrarian thesis: Step 1 - Common belief map Explain: - what people commonly say - why that advice became popular - when it is useful - when it breaks - who gets hurt by following it blindly Step 2 - Counter-position Create 10 possible contrarian theses. For each include: - thesis - what it challenges - why it matters - evidence needed - risk of overclaiming - nuance required Step 3 - Credibility filter Evaluate each thesis for: - truthfulness - usefulness - originality - supportability - reader relevance - fairness - emotional pull Step 4 - Build the strongest argument For the best thesis, create: - opening premise - main argument - supporting points - fair counterargument - caveats - example types - practical takeaway - closing insight Step 5 - Tone calibration Rewrite the thesis in 5 tones: - calm and analytical - bold and punchy - warm and instructive - skeptical and precise - personal and reflective Rules: - Do not create rage-bait. - Do not attack people; challenge ideas. - Do not ignore cases where the common advice works. - The thesis must feel earned, not performative. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#045Content Territory Cartographer

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters, creators, newsletter operators, bloggers, experts, consultants, educators, and authors building a sustainable content direction.

Build a map of writing territories, subtopics, recurring questions, theme clusters, and idea zones that can support a long-term body of work.

You are a content territory cartographer. Map the writing territory around my core theme so I can see the major zones, subtopics, and idea opportunities. Core theme: [CORE THEME] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Writing goal: [GOAL] My expertise or experience: [EXPERTISE] Related topics: [RELATED TOPICS] Topics I do not want to cover: [AVOID] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Current content or ideas: [CURRENT IDEAS] Long-term ambition: [AMBITION] Create the territory map: A. Central territory Define: - territory name - central question - reader transformation - emotional stakes - practical stakes - why this territory can last B. Territory zones Create 6 to 10 zones. For each zone include: - zone name - core question - reader problem - writer advantage - recurring tension - possible formats - 10 topic ideas C. Border zones Identify adjacent areas that are: - useful to borrow from - risky to drift into - too broad - too competitive - not aligned - worth exploring later D. Depth layers For each zone, create ideas at different depths: - beginner - intermediate - advanced - philosophical - practical - personal - strategic - experimental E. Territory strategy Recommend: - primary zones to own - secondary zones to test - zones to avoid - flagship pieces to create - recurring series to launch - how to make the territory recognizable Rules: - Do not build a territory so broad it becomes meaningless. - Do not choose zones only because they are popular. - Do not ignore my lived experience or expertise. - The map should help me generate ideas for months. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#046Curiosity Gap Without Clickbait Generator

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTHeadlines, newsletter subjects, article angles, social hooks, video titles, essay openings, and thought leadership posts.

Create topic angles and headlines that spark curiosity honestly by using tension, specificity, unanswered questions, stakes, and contrast.

Act as an ethical curiosity editor. Help me create curiosity around my topic without using clickbait, false mystery, or exaggerated claims. Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] What readers already know: [KNOWN] What they misunderstand: [MISUNDERSTANDING] What is surprising or underexplored: [SURPRISE] Evidence or examples: [EVIDENCE] Tone: [TONE] Format: [FORMAT] Platform: [PLATFORM] Create curiosity using five mechanisms: 1. Specific tension Generate angles based on: - expected result vs actual result - common advice vs hidden cost - simple solution vs complex reality - visible problem vs invisible cause - short-term win vs long-term consequence 2. Unanswered question Generate questions that make readers want resolution. For each include: - question - why it matters - what the answer reveals - best format 3. Pattern interrupt Create angles that begin with: - "The real reason..." - "Most people notice..." - "What nobody tells you..." - "The mistake is not..." - "The problem starts before..." Only use these if they can be supported. 4. Specific promise Turn vague curiosity into useful promises: - what reader will learn - what decision becomes easier - what mistake they can avoid - what they will see differently 5. Curiosity assets Create: - 20 headline options - 20 opening lines - 10 newsletter subject lines - 10 social hooks - 5 essay theses For each asset label: - curiosity mechanism - reader trigger - risk of clickbait - how to make it more honest Rules: - Do not hide the entire point just to force attention. - Do not exaggerate stakes. - Do not use fake secrets. - Curiosity should invite the reader into a real idea. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#047Idea Collision Engine

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters who want fresh angles, surprising comparisons, essays, thought leadership, creative nonfiction, social posts, and keynote ideas.

Create original writing concepts by combining unrelated ideas, fields, experiences, metaphors, frameworks, and reader problems.

You are an idea collision strategist. Help me create original writing concepts by combining ideas that do not usually appear together. Inputs: Main topic: [MAIN TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Adjacent fields I know: [FIELDS] Personal experiences: [EXPERIENCES] Books, concepts, or frameworks I like: [CONCEPTS] Current reader problem: [PROBLEM] Tone: [TONE] Writing format: [FORMAT] Combinations to avoid: [AVOID] Run the collision engine: Round 1 - Field collision Combine the main topic with ideas from: - psychology - economics - design - sports - history - product thinking - education - storytelling - operations - nature - technology - art Create 20 possible writing concepts. Round 2 - Experience collision Combine the main topic with my personal or professional experiences. Create 10 concepts that feel specific to me. Round 3 - Metaphor collision Create 15 metaphors or analogies that make the topic easier or more interesting. Round 4 - Reader problem collision Connect the topic to reader problems in unexpected ways. Create 10 angles. Round 5 - Concept filtering For every strong concept, evaluate: - freshness - clarity - reader usefulness - supportability - risk of being too clever - best format Final output: - top 10 concepts - title options - thesis options - outline seed - examples needed - warning about weak comparisons Rules: - Do not force random connections that do not help the reader. - Do not make the piece clever but empty. - Do not use analogies that require too much explanation. - The best collisions should clarify, not confuse. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#048Theme-to-Series Architect

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTNewsletters, blogs, LinkedIn series, essay collections, podcast scripts, YouTube scripts, and educational content programs.

Turn a broad theme into a structured writing series with episodes, arcs, recurring formats, reader journey, and compounding ideas.

Act as a writing series architect. Turn my theme into a coherent series that readers can follow over time. Theme: [THEME] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Series goal: [GOAL] Platform: [PLATFORM] Publishing cadence: [CADENCE] Length of series: [NUMBER OF PIECES] My point of view: [POV] Reader starting point: [READER STARTING POINT] Reader desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Topics already covered: [COVERED] Design the series: 1. Series concept Create: - series name - one-line promise - why this should be a series, not one article - reader journey - recurring tension - final transformation 2. Series arc Break the series into phases: - foundation - problem diagnosis - new perspective - practical application - advanced nuance - reflection or synthesis 3. Episode plan For each episode include: - title - core question - thesis - reader pain addressed - key example - format - CTA or reflection question - link to previous episode - setup for next episode 4. Recurring elements Design repeating elements such as: - opening pattern - framework section - example section - reader exercise - question of the week - resource link - closing line 5. Expansion opportunities Recommend how to turn the series into: - lead magnet - ebook - course - workshop - keynote - content pillar - social clips - newsletter sequence Rules: - Do not make the series a random list of topics. - Do not repeat the same point every episode. - Do not make the arc too complex for the platform. - The series should create momentum and anticipation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#049Vague Thought Clarifier

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters with messy notes, voice memos, journal fragments, draft snippets, loose ideas, or unfinished thoughts.

Transform a half-formed thought, note, rant, observation, or intuition into a clear writing concept with thesis, stakes, reader relevance, and structure.

You are a thought clarification editor. Help me turn this vague thought into a strong writing concept. Vague thought or note: [PASTE THOUGHT / NOTE / RANT / OBSERVATION] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why this thought matters to me: [WHY] Where it came from: [ORIGIN] Related topics: [RELATED TOPICS] Format I might write: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] What I am not sure about: [UNCERTAINTY] Clarify the thought: Step A - Restate the raw thought Rewrite what I seem to be trying to say in plain language. Step B - Find the hidden idea Identify: - central claim - underlying frustration - hidden question - reader relevance - emotional charge - contradiction - possible takeaway Step C - Separate ideas Sort the material into: - main idea - supporting idea - separate future idea - unclear idea - unnecessary tangent Step D - Create writing concepts Turn the thought into 8 possible concepts: - short post - essay - newsletter - story - framework - list - argument - question-led piece For each include: - title - thesis - reader promise - opening direction - structure - ending direction Step E - Choose the strongest version Recommend the best concept and explain why. Rules: - Do not over-polish away the original energy. - Do not force clarity before preserving the instinct. - Do not pretend unclear parts are certain. - Help me understand what I actually mean. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#050Story Angle Finder

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTPersonal essays, founder stories, newsletters, LinkedIn posts, memoir fragments, speeches, case studies, and narrative nonfiction.

Find the strongest writing angle inside a personal story, case, incident, conversation, failure, lesson, or observation.

Act as a story angle editor. Help me find the best writing angles inside the story below. Story or experience: [PASTE STORY / EXPERIENCE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why I want to write about it: [WHY] What I learned: [LESSON] What readers may relate to: [READER CONNECTION] Tone: [TONE] Format: [FORMAT] Boundaries or details to avoid: [BOUNDARIES] Find the angles: 1. Story inventory Identify: - main event - turning point - conflict - mistake - surprise - emotional moment - decision - consequence - lesson - unresolved tension 2. Possible meanings Generate angles based on: - what the story teaches - what it reveals about the reader - what belief it challenges - what mistake it warns against - what pattern it illustrates - what emotion it validates - what system it exposes - what decision it clarifies 3. Angle options Create 12 story angles. For each include: - angle name - thesis - emotional center - reader relevance - best opening scene - sections to include - details to cut - ending lesson - risk of being self-indulgent 4. Audience fit Rank the angles by: - reader value - originality - emotional resonance - credibility - strategic fit - ease of writing 5. Final story plan Choose the best angle and create: - title options - opening paragraph direction - scene order - reflection points - takeaway - closing line options Rules: - Do not make the story only about me. - Do not invent details. - Do not force a neat lesson if the story is more nuanced. - The story should reveal something useful beyond the event itself. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#051Expert Lens Reframer

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTExpert content, educational writing, thought leadership, consulting content, newsletters, LinkedIn posts, and analytical essays.

Reframe a common topic through different expert lenses to create sharper, more distinctive writing angles.

You are an expert lens editor. Take my topic and reframe it through multiple professional lenses so I can find a more distinctive angle. Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] My expertise: [EXPERTISE] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Current angle: [CURRENT ANGLE] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Reframe the topic through these lenses: A. Strategist lens Ask: - what is the real goal? - what tradeoff is being ignored? - what decision does this topic support? - what priority should change? Create 3 angles. B. Teacher lens Ask: - what must be explained? - what is misunderstood? - what sequence helps learning? - what example makes it clear? Create 3 angles. C. Editor lens Ask: - what is the cleanest message? - what should be cut? - what is the buried thesis? - what does the reader need first? Create 3 angles. D. Analyst lens Ask: - what pattern is visible? - what evidence matters? - what variables change the answer? - what conclusion is premature? Create 3 angles. E. Operator lens Ask: - what happens in practice? - what breaks during execution? - what checklist or process helps? - what should be simplified? Create 3 angles. F. Philosopher lens Ask: - what belief is underneath? - what tension is universal? - what question has no easy answer? - what does this reveal about people? Create 3 angles. Final output: - 18 reframed angles - strongest 5 - best lens for my authority - best lens for reader value - angle I should avoid - outline for the winning angle Rules: - Do not use fake expertise. - Do not make every lens sound the same. - Do not turn a practical topic into abstract philosophy unless it helps. - Reframing should make the topic sharper and more useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#052Trend-to-Evergreen Converter

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters who want to respond to trends without producing disposable content.

Transform a trending topic, current conversation, viral post, or timely event into evergreen writing that remains useful after the trend passes.

Act as an evergreen angle strategist. Help me turn a timely trend into a lasting writing concept. Trend or current conversation: [TREND] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why people care now: [WHY NOW] My perspective: [PERSPECTIVE] Related evergreen theme: [THEME] Platform: [PLATFORM] Format: [FORMAT] Risks or sensitivities: [RISKS] Convert the trend: 1. Trend diagnosis Identify: - what is happening now - why it got attention - what emotion it triggers - what people are arguing about - what is temporary - what is timeless 2. Evergreen extraction Find the lasting themes: - human behavior - decision-making - creativity - work - communication - power - status - trust - incentives - learning - technology - culture 3. Angle conversion Create 10 evergreen angles. For each include: - evergreen title - trend connection - timeless lesson - reader relevance - proof or examples needed - best format - risk if trend context disappears 4. Time-sensitive vs timeless split Separate: - details to include now - details to remove later - context needed - universal insight - future update path 5. Final piece plan Create: - headline - thesis - opening that references the trend lightly - body structure - evergreen takeaway - future-proof title option Rules: - Do not chase the trend without a real idea. - Do not depend on readers knowing the news forever. - Do not make claims about events without evidence. - The final concept should still make sense six months from now. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#053Reader Question Topic Builder

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTEducational content, newsletters, FAQs, SEO articles, guides, social posts, course content, and advisory writing.

Generate writing topics from real or likely reader questions, confusion points, objections, search intent, and unstated worries.

You are a reader-question editor. Build strong writing topics from the questions my audience asks or should be asking. Reader: [READER] Topic area: [TOPIC AREA] Known reader questions: [KNOWN QUESTIONS] Known reader problems: [PROBLEMS] Reader knowledge level: [LEVEL] My expertise: [EXPERTISE] Content goal: [GOAL] Platform: [PLATFORM] Build the topic list from questions: 1. Question inventory Create questions across: - beginner confusion - intermediate difficulty - advanced nuance - decision-making - comparison - mistakes - objections - emotional concerns - implementation - examples - definitions - strategy - troubleshooting 2. Question quality filter For each question identify: - why readers ask it - what they really mean - what answer they expect - what answer they need - what mistake to correct - best format 3. Topic transformation Turn the best questions into: - article titles - newsletter subjects - social posts - essay theses - tutorial ideas - FAQ entries - video scripts - lead magnet sections 4. Question clusters Group questions into clusters: - quick answer - deep dive - series - evergreen guide - persuasive piece - beginner pathway - advanced pathway 5. Final output Provide: - 50 reader-question topics - top 10 priority topics - 5 topic clusters - 5 content series ideas - 10 questions I should ask readers next Rules: - Do not answer questions the reader is not asking or ready for. - Do not treat every question as a full article. - Do not ignore the question behind the question. - Use reader questions to guide relevance and structure. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#054Framework Idea Builder

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTEducators, consultants, thought leaders, creators, writers, coaches, and experts who want memorable teaching concepts.

Turn observations, lessons, processes, or opinions into original frameworks that can structure articles, newsletters, talks, lessons, and social content.

Act as a framework development editor. Help me turn my idea into a simple, useful writing framework. Raw idea or lesson: [IDEA] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Problem it helps solve: [PROBLEM] Outcome it supports: [OUTCOME] My experience or proof: [EXPERIENCE / PROOF] Where I want to use it: [FORMAT / PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] Build the framework: A. Concept extraction Identify: - core principle - repeatable pattern - sequence - decision rule - common mistake - transformation - before / after state B. Framework shapes Generate 8 possible framework structures: - 3-step model - 4-part checklist - ladder - matrix - spectrum - loop - map - diagnostic scorecard For each include: - framework name - parts - how it works - best use case - weakness C. Framework stress test Evaluate the best options for: - clarity - memorability - usefulness - originality - evidence fit - teachability - flexibility - risk of oversimplifying D. Best framework buildout Choose the best framework and create: - name - one-line explanation - full explanation - components - example - reader exercise - article outline - social post version - newsletter version E. Refinement Create: - simpler version - more advanced version - visual description - warning about misuse Rules: - Do not create a framework just to name things. - Do not overcomplicate the idea. - Do not force a catchy acronym if it weakens clarity. - The framework must help the reader think or act better. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#055Personal Experience to Public Insight

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTPersonal essays, founder writing, memoir-style newsletters, reflective posts, speeches, and creator storytelling.

Convert personal experiences into broader writing ideas that feel useful, relatable, and reflective rather than self-centered.

You are a personal insight editor. Help me turn a personal experience into a public-facing idea that gives readers insight, not just information about me. Experience: [PASTE EXPERIENCE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why I want to write it: [WHY] What I felt: [EMOTION] What changed for me: [CHANGE] What I learned: [LESSON] What I do not want to reveal: [BOUNDARIES] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Transform the experience: 1. Private layer Identify what belongs to me personally: - facts - emotions - conflict - decision - lesson - unresolved parts - details to protect 2. Universal layer Identify what may connect with readers: - shared fear - shared desire - shared mistake - shared pressure - shared contradiction - shared question - shared transformation 3. Public insight Create 8 possible public insights from the experience. For each include: - insight - reader relevance - emotional center - broader theme - what details are needed - what details are unnecessary - best format 4. Boundary-safe angle Recommend how to write about the experience while protecting: - privacy - relationships - dignity - clarity - usefulness - emotional honesty 5. Draft concept Create: - title options - opening scene - reflective thesis - story sections - reader takeaway - closing line options Rules: - Do not turn private pain into content if it feels exploitative. - Do not make the piece self-centered. - Do not flatten emotion into a generic lesson. - The reader should gain insight from the experience. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#056Research Notes to Writing Concepts

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTResearch-backed articles, essays, reports, newsletters, thought leadership, educational content, and long-form writing.

Convert raw research notes, highlights, quotes, data points, transcripts, or source material into strong writing concepts and angles.

Act as a research-to-ideas editor. Turn the research material below into strong writing concepts. Research material: [PASTE NOTES / HIGHLIGHTS / DATA / QUOTES / TRANSCRIPTS] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Topic area: [TOPIC AREA] Writing goal: [GOAL] Format: [FORMAT] My current thesis, if any: [THESIS] Level of certainty required: [CERTAINTY] Sources or evidence limits: [LIMITS] Process the research: Pass 1 - Signal scan Identify: - strongest findings - surprising patterns - contradictions - repeated language - useful examples - unclear evidence - weak signals - missing context Pass 2 - Concept generation Create writing concepts based on: - one strong finding - one contradiction - one overlooked pattern - one reader problem - one data point - one story - one quote - one practical implication - one warning - one future question Pass 3 - Evidence fit For each concept include: - claim - evidence available - evidence missing - confidence level - risk of overclaiming - verification needed Pass 4 - Format matching Recommend whether each concept should become: - short post - newsletter - essay - guide - report - case study - framework - thread - video script - research memo Pass 5 - Final shortlist Choose the strongest 7 concepts and provide: - title - thesis - outline - evidence map - opening angle - conclusion angle Rules: - Do not invent findings. - Do not treat weak evidence as strong evidence. - Mark uncertainty clearly. - Research should create sharper ideas, not just summaries. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#057Topic Depth Ladder

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters who want to move beyond beginner tips and create layered content for different reader sophistication levels.

Develop a topic from simple surface-level content into deeper, more nuanced, more advanced, and more original writing opportunities.

You are a depth editor. Help me develop a topic across multiple levels of depth so I can write pieces for beginners, intermediate readers, advanced readers, and reflective readers. Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Reader knowledge levels: [LEVELS] My expertise: [EXPERTISE] Common shallow advice: [SHALLOW ADVICE] What I think is missing: [MISSING] Writing formats: [FORMATS] Build the depth ladder: Level 1 - Definition Explain the topic for someone new. Create: - simple title - core explanation - beginner mistake - example - best format Level 2 - Practical application Create: - how-to angle - checklist - common obstacle - quick win - best format Level 3 - Strategic understanding Create: - decision-making angle - tradeoff - framework - case example - best format Level 4 - Advanced nuance Create: - exception - counterargument - hidden variable - expert-level mistake - best format Level 5 - Original point of view Create: - thesis - contrarian or nuanced angle - proof needed - emotional or philosophical dimension - best format Level 6 - Flagship piece Create: - big essay concept - main argument - sections - supporting smaller pieces - long-term value Then provide: - 30 topic ideas across levels - recommended publishing order - how to link pieces together - what to avoid repeating Rules: - Do not stay at the surface. - Do not make advanced content unnecessarily complex. - Do not assume every reader needs the same depth. - Use depth to create a stronger body of work. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#058Hook-to-Concept Developer

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters who collect hooks but struggle to turn them into complete pieces.

Turn a hook, headline, sentence, or opening line into a fully developed writing concept with thesis, structure, examples, and reader payoff.

Act as a hook development editor. I have a hook or opening line. Help me determine whether it can become a strong piece and how to develop it. Hook or opening line: [HOOK] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Topic area: [TOPIC] Platform: [PLATFORM] Format: [FORMAT] What I want the reader to take away: [TAKEAWAY] Evidence or stories available: [EVIDENCE / STORIES] Tone: [TONE] Develop the hook: 1. Hook diagnosis Assess: - clarity - curiosity - specificity - emotional pull - reader relevance - honesty - risk of clickbait - strength of implied promise 2. Possible concepts Generate 6 different pieces that could begin with this hook. For each include: - title - thesis - reader promise - structure - examples needed - ending - risk 3. Promise check For the strongest concept, define: - what the hook promises - what the piece must deliver - what the piece must not become - what proof is needed - what reader question must be answered 4. Development plan Create: - outline - section titles - example placements - transition logic - CTA or final takeaway - alternative endings 5. Hook refinement Rewrite the hook in 10 versions: - clearer - more specific - more emotional - more direct - more curious - more literary - more practical - more contrarian - more personal - more concise Rules: - Do not build a weak piece around a clever hook. - Do not overpromise in the opening. - Do not make the hook unrelated to the final takeaway. - The hook must lead to a real idea. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#059Idea Backlog Triage System

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters with hundreds of notes, saved posts, draft titles, half-written ideas, voice memos, content calendars, or Notion databases.

Organize a messy idea backlog by identifying which ideas to write, merge, research, test, archive, delete, or develop into larger projects.

You are an editorial operations strategist. Help me clean and prioritize my idea backlog so I know what to write next. Idea backlog: [PASTE IDEAS / NOTES / TITLES] Context: Writing direction: [DIRECTION] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Primary goals: [GOALS] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Formats I prefer: [FORMATS] Time available: [TIME] Themes to prioritize: [THEMES] Themes to avoid: [AVOID] Current projects: [PROJECTS] Triage the backlog: A. Cleanup classification Classify each idea as: - write now - outline next - research first - merge with another idea - use as example - turn into short post - expand into essay - save for series - save for book or product - archive - delete B. Duplicate and overlap detection Identify: - repeated ideas - similar titles - same thesis in different words - fragments that belong together - ideas competing for the same point C. Strength scoring Score each viable idea from 1 to 10 on: - audience relevance - originality - strategic fit - emotional energy - proof available - ease of writing - portfolio value - compounding value D. Development queue Create: - next 5 quick pieces - next 5 deep pieces - next 5 research pieces - next 5 experimental pieces - next 5 archive-worthy ideas E. Backlog system Design a simple idea database with fields for: - idea - theme - format - status - evidence - reader promise - next action - priority - date captured Rules: - Do not keep every idea. - Do not confuse saving ideas with progressing as a writer. - Do not choose only easy ideas. - The final output should make the next writing decision obvious. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#060Full Ideation, Angles & Topic Development Audit

IDEATION, ANGLES & TOPIC DEVELOPMENTWriters, creators, newsletter authors, bloggers, essayists, educators, founders, and thought leaders doing a complete reset of their ideation process.

Audit and rebuild the full idea system across originality, topic selection, angle strength, theme development, research use, backlog quality, and concept clarity.

Act as an independent ideation, angle, and topic development auditor. Review my current ideas and topic system, then identify what is strong, weak, repetitive, generic, unclear, or worth developing. Inputs: Writing direction: [DIRECTION] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Main themes: [THEMES] Idea backlog: [IDEA BACKLOG] Draft titles: [DRAFT TITLES] Notes or fragments: [NOTES] Topics I repeat: [REPEATED TOPICS] Topics I avoid: [AVOIDED TOPICS] Published pieces: [PUBLISHED PIECES] Research material: [RESEARCH] Personal experiences available: [EXPERIENCES] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Writing goals: [GOALS] Current ideation problem: [PROBLEM] Audit across 20 dimensions: 1. Idea originality 2. Reader relevance 3. Topic specificity 4. Angle differentiation 5. Thesis strength 6. Emotional pull 7. Practical usefulness 8. Evidence availability 9. Personal perspective 10. Theme coherence 11. Territory clarity 12. Topic depth 13. Research integration 14. Story potential 15. Framework potential 16. Series potential 17. Platform fit 18. Backlog quality 19. Repetition and overlap 20. Long-term body-of-work value For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence used - missing evidence - risk if ignored - recommended fix - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 5 idea system problems Rank by: - impact on originality - impact on reader value - impact on publishing consistency - impact on long-term body of work - ease of fixing B. Repetition and genericness audit Identify: - ideas that sound generic - ideas that overlap - ideas that lack a thesis - ideas that need proof - ideas that should be combined - ideas that should be deleted C. Rebuilt idea architecture Create: - content territory map - core themes - subthemes - recurring questions - angle categories - idea database structure - topic depth ladder - series opportunities - flagship piece opportunities D. Prioritized idea list Provide: - 10 write-now ideas - 10 develop-next ideas - 10 research-first ideas - 10 experimental ideas - 5 flagship ideas - 5 ideas to delete or archive E. 30-day ideation plan Create: - daily idea capture practice - weekly angle development session - research mining routine - backlog triage routine - publishing selection rules - review questions F. Stop / Start / Continue List what I should stop generating, start developing, and continue exploring. G. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard ideation truth - the strongest creative territory - the weakest repeated pattern - the most promising angle - the first idea to write this week Rules: - Do not flatter weak ideas. - Do not invent evidence. - Do not recommend writing everything. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Focus on originality, reader value, clarity, and long-term creative compounding. OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANS

#061One-Page Outline Blueprint

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSArticles, essays, newsletters, guides, thought leadership posts, speeches, and any piece that needs structure before drafting.

Turn a writing idea into a clear one-page outline with thesis, reader promise, section flow, examples, and drafting notes.

You are a senior outlining editor. Help me turn my rough idea into a one-page outline that is clear enough to draft from immediately. My writing context: Idea or topic: [IDEA / TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Format: [FORMAT] Desired length: [LENGTH] Platform: [PLATFORM] Main point I want to make: [MAIN POINT] Reader problem or question: [READER PROBLEM] Desired reader takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Examples or evidence available: [EXAMPLES / EVIDENCE] Tone: [TONE] What I want to avoid: [AVOID] Deadline or writing session length: [DEADLINE / TIME] Create a one-page outline using this structure: 1. Core promise Write: - one-sentence thesis - reader promise - emotional reason to care - practical reason to care - final takeaway 2. Opening direction Create 5 possible openings: - problem-first opening - story-first opening - question-first opening - contrarian opening - direct teaching opening For each, explain when it is the best choice. 3. Section map Create 4 to 7 sections. For each section include: - section title - job of the section - key point - reader question answered - example or evidence needed - transition into the next section - warning about what not to include 4. Evidence and example placement Map each example, story, quote, data point, or observation to the section where it belongs. If evidence is missing, mark it as [EVIDENCE NEEDED]. 5. Ending plan Create 5 possible endings: - practical takeaway - reflective ending - call-to-action ending - open question ending - memorable line ending 6. Drafting checklist Give me a checklist to use before writing the first draft. Rules: - Do not write the full draft. - Do not create a vague outline with generic section titles. - Do not include sections that do not support the thesis. - Make the outline compact, useful, and ready to draft from. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#062Argument Flow Architect

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSPersuasive essays, opinion pieces, thought leadership, analytical articles, speeches, and any writing that needs a strong argument.

Build a logical argument structure that moves readers from problem to claim, evidence, counterargument, nuance, and conclusion.

Act as an argument architect. Build a complete argument flow for my piece so the reader can follow the logic without confusion, skepticism, or unnecessary detours. Inputs: Topic: [TOPIC] Main claim: [CLAIM] Target reader: [READER] Reader's current belief: [CURRENT BELIEF] Belief I want to shift toward: [TARGET BELIEF] Evidence I have: [EVIDENCE] Examples I can use: [EXAMPLES] Likely objections: [OBJECTIONS] Tone: [TONE] Format: [FORMAT] Length target: [LENGTH] Build the argument in seven moves: Move 1 - Establish the real problem Clarify: - what the reader thinks the problem is - what the deeper problem may be - why it matters now - what happens if it is ignored Move 2 - State the claim Create: - direct thesis - softer thesis - sharper thesis - most balanced thesis Move 3 - Build the logic chain Break the argument into linked claims. For each link include: - claim - reason - evidence needed - example needed - possible reader doubt - transition line Move 4 - Add proof Map proof into: - factual evidence - experiential evidence - pattern evidence - example evidence - expert or source evidence - absence of evidence to acknowledge Move 5 - Address counterarguments Create: - strongest opposing view - fair version of the opposing view - response with nuance - concession worth making - point that still stands Move 6 - Create reader movement Show how the reader's thinking should move: - from assumption to question - from question to insight - from insight to conviction - from conviction to action or reflection Move 7 - Close the argument Provide: - conclusion structure - final insight - practical implication - memorable final line options Final output: - argument map - section outline - proof map - counterargument plan - transition bank - weak logic warnings Rules: - Do not create a one-sided argument if nuance is needed. - Do not use weak strawman counterarguments. - Do not overclaim beyond available evidence. - The final structure must make the argument stronger, clearer, and more credible. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#063Article Structure Selector

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSBlog posts, SEO articles, educational pieces, opinion articles, guides, thought leadership, and practical content.

Choose the best article structure for a topic based on reader intent, complexity, proof, urgency, and desired outcome.

You are an article structure strategist. Help me choose the best structure for my article instead of forcing the idea into a generic intro-body-conclusion format. Article idea: [ARTICLE IDEA] Target reader: [READER] Reader intent: [INTENT] Reader knowledge level: [LEVEL] Goal of the article: [GOAL] Desired length: [LENGTH] Platform or publication: [PLATFORM] Available evidence: [EVIDENCE] Available examples: [EXAMPLES] Tone: [TONE] Competing or similar content: [COMPETING CONTENT] Evaluate these structure types: 1. Problem-solution article 2. Step-by-step guide 3. Myth-busting article 4. Framework article 5. List article 6. Comparison article 7. Narrative-led article 8. Argument essay 9. Case-study article 10. Diagnostic article 11. Beginner explainer 12. Advanced analysis 13. Mistakes article 14. Decision guide 15. Opinion editorial For each structure type, provide: - fit score from 1 to 10 - why it fits or does not fit - reader experience - required proof - likely weakness - headline style - opening style - best CTA or ending Then select the top 3 structures and create a mini-outline for each. For the winning structure, create: A. Full outline Include: - headline options - introduction plan - section sequence - examples needed - transitions - ending - reader payoff B. Structure rationale Explain: - why this structure best fits the reader - why other structures are weaker - what the structure must avoid C. Drafting plan Create: - first writing session tasks - research needed - section order to draft - revision priorities Rules: - Do not choose a structure because it is popular. - Do not recommend listicles unless the idea benefits from a list. - Do not ignore reader intent. - The structure should make the article easier to understand and more useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#064Book Chapter Planning Board

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSNonfiction books, memoir chapters, business books, self-improvement books, educational books, and long-form chapter-based writing.

Plan a book chapter with a clear chapter promise, narrative movement, teaching points, examples, scenes, transitions, and ending hook.

Act as a developmental editor for a nonfiction book. Help me plan one chapter so it has a clear purpose, strong internal structure, and a natural place inside the larger book. Book context: Book concept: [BOOK CONCEPT] Target reader: [READER] Book promise: [BOOK PROMISE] Chapter topic: [CHAPTER TOPIC] Chapter number or location: [LOCATION IN BOOK] Previous chapter summary: [PREVIOUS CHAPTER] Next chapter summary: [NEXT CHAPTER] Key idea of this chapter: [KEY IDEA] Stories or examples available: [STORIES / EXAMPLES] Frameworks or lessons available: [FRAMEWORKS / LESSONS] Desired chapter length: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Create the chapter planning board: 1. Chapter job Define: - why this chapter exists - what the reader must understand by the end - what changes from the beginning to the end - what this chapter should not try to do 2. Chapter promise Write: - chapter thesis - reader promise - emotional hook - practical payoff - connection to the book's larger promise 3. Chapter architecture Design the chapter in 6 to 10 beats. For each beat include: - beat title - purpose - main idea - story, example, or explanation needed - reader question answered - transition out 4. Scene and example plan Classify available material into: - opening scene - teaching example - proof example - cautionary example - personal moment - reader reflection moment - material to save for another chapter 5. Reader engagement devices Add: - reflective question - short exercise - memorable phrase - section summary - pattern interrupt 6. Chapter ending Create: - resolved ending - cliffhanger into next chapter - reflective ending - practical assignment ending - memorable closing line 7. Drafting sequence Recommend the order to draft the chapter: - easiest section first - hardest section - story insertion - transitions - final polish Rules: - Do not make the chapter a loose article. - Do not repeat the book introduction. - Do not overload the chapter with every related idea. - The chapter must have internal movement and a clear reason to exist. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#065Newsletter Issue Architecture

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSSolo newsletters, creator newsletters, founder updates, educational emails, editorial letters, paid newsletters, and audience-building writing.

Structure a newsletter issue with a strong opening, reader promise, main idea, useful sections, personal connection, CTA, and repeatable format.

You are a newsletter editor. Help me structure one newsletter issue so it feels clear, valuable, personal, and worth opening again next time. Newsletter context: Newsletter theme: [THEME] Issue idea: [ISSUE IDEA] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Subscriber relationship stage: [NEW / REGULAR / HIGH TRUST] Goal of this issue: [GOAL] Main message: [MESSAGE] Personal story or observation available: [STORY / OBSERVATION] Useful teaching point: [TEACHING POINT] Links or resources: [LINKS / RESOURCES] CTA: [CTA] Tone: [TONE] Desired length: [LENGTH] Build the newsletter architecture: A. Subject line system Create: - clear subject line - curiosity subject line - personal subject line - practical subject line - contrarian subject line Add preview text for each. B. Opening design Create 5 possible openings: - personal note - reader problem - sharp observation - story fragment - direct promise C. Main body structure Choose the best structure from: - letter + lesson - problem + framework - story + takeaway - curated notes + commentary - essay-style issue - tactical guide - question-led issue Then build the outline with: - opening - context - main idea - supporting section 1 - supporting section 2 - supporting section 3 - reader takeaway - CTA - sign-off D. Recurring modules Suggest optional modules: - one useful idea - one question - one resource - one reader challenge - one behind-the-scenes note - one recommendation E. Reader retention check Explain how this issue helps readers: - trust me - remember the message - act on something - look forward to the next issue F. Drafting plan Provide: - what to draft first - where to keep it concise - what to cut if too long - final send checklist Rules: - Do not make the issue a random collection of thoughts. - Do not make every newsletter promotional. - Do not bury the main idea. - The issue should feel both useful and human. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#066Essay Shape Finder

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSPersonal essays, cultural commentary, reflective writing, literary nonfiction, long-form newsletters, and idea-driven essays.

Match an essay idea to the right essay shape: reflective, argumentative, narrative, braided, exploratory, reported, or manifesto-style.

Act as an essay structure editor. Help me find the right shape for my essay idea before I draft. Essay material: Essay idea: [IDEA] What I am trying to explore: [EXPLORATION] What I think I believe: [BELIEF] Personal material available: [PERSONAL MATERIAL] Research or references available: [RESEARCH] Reader: [READER] Emotional tone: [TONE] Desired length: [LENGTH] What feels unclear: [UNCLEAR] What I do not want the essay to become: [AVOID] Test the idea against these essay shapes: 1. Reflective essay 2. Argument essay 3. Narrative essay 4. Braided essay 5. Question-led exploratory essay 6. Reported essay 7. Memoir fragment with insight 8. Manifesto essay 9. Meditative essay 10. Hybrid essay For each shape provide: - why it might work - why it might fail - required material - best opening - natural middle - satisfying ending - reader experience Then choose the strongest shape. Build the essay plan: A. Central movement Define the essay's movement: - from what to what - from belief to complication - from story to insight - from question to clearer question - from confusion to partial understanding B. Section plan Create 5 to 9 sections. For each include: - section role - material needed - emotional beat - intellectual beat - transition logic C. Thread management If multiple threads exist, map: - personal thread - idea thread - research thread - cultural thread - reader thread D. Ending options Create: - resolved ending - unresolved but meaningful ending - image-based ending - question ending - return-to-opening ending Rules: - Do not force a neat lesson if the essay needs exploration. - Do not make a personal essay self-centered. - Do not make an argument essay too soft to matter. - The chosen shape should match the material, not just the topic. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#067Script Beat Sheet Builder

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSYouTube scripts, TikTok scripts, podcast monologues, course lessons, webinars, presentations, speeches, and voice-first content.

Build a beat-by-beat structure for video scripts, podcast segments, audio essays, webinars, short talks, and spoken content.

You are a script structure specialist. Turn my idea into a beat sheet that works when spoken, not just when read. Script context: Topic: [TOPIC] Format: [VIDEO / PODCAST / TALK / WEBINAR / SHORT SCRIPT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Target length: [LENGTH] Main message: [MESSAGE] Desired viewer/listener action: [ACTION] Energy level: [ENERGY] Stories or examples: [STORIES / EXAMPLES] Teaching points: [TEACHING POINTS] Platform: [PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] Create the script beat sheet: 1. Cold open Generate 5 opening beats: - tension opening - direct promise opening - story opening - surprising fact opening - question opening 2. Listener orientation Create a short section that answers: - what this is about - why it matters - who it is for - what they will get 3. Beat sequence Build a beat sheet with timestamps or time estimates. For each beat include: - beat name - purpose - key line - supporting idea - example or visual - emotional energy - transition 4. Retention moments Add: - pattern interrupts - curiosity loops - recap moments - visual or audio cues - questions to the audience - stakes reminders 5. Teaching or argument structure Make sure the script has: - clear progression - no repeated points - enough examples - spoken transitions - audience re-orientation 6. Ending and CTA Create: - summary ending - memorable closing line - soft CTA - direct CTA - next episode or next step setup 7. Production notes Add notes for: - pacing - pauses - emphasis - visuals - cuts - where to shorten if needed Rules: - Do not write like an article. - Do not make the script dense or hard to speak. - Do not delay the promise too long. - Structure for attention, clarity, and spoken rhythm. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#068Story Arc Planner

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSPersonal stories, case studies, memoir pieces, founder stories, speeches, narrative essays, brand stories, and creative nonfiction.

Build a narrative arc with characters, conflict, stakes, turning points, scenes, reflection, and meaning.

Act as a narrative structure editor. Help me turn the story below into a clear arc that creates meaning for the reader. Story material: Story summary: [STORY SUMMARY] Main character or subject: [CHARACTER] Setting: [SETTING] Conflict: [CONFLICT] Stakes: [STAKES] Turning point: [TURNING POINT] Lesson or insight: [LESSON] Target reader: [READER] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Boundaries or details to avoid: [BOUNDARIES] Build the story arc: A. Narrative question Define the question that pulls the reader through the story. Examples: - Will they make the decision? - What will they realize? - What caused the change? - How did the situation break? - Why did this moment matter? B. Arc structure Create the story in stages: 1. Before-state 2. Inciting moment 3. Rising complication 4. Pressure point 5. Turning point 6. Consequence 7. Reflection 8. Reader takeaway For each stage include: - scene or summary - emotional beat - detail to include - detail to cut - transition C. Scene selection Identify: - opening scene - most important scene - scene that can be summarized - scene that should be cut - detail that makes the story feel real D. Meaning layer Connect the story to: - reader problem - broader theme - belief shift - practical lesson - emotional resonance E. Ending design Create endings: - lesson ending - image ending - unresolved ending - callback ending - invitation ending Rules: - Do not turn the story into a timeline dump. - Do not explain the lesson before the story earns it. - Do not invent scenes or dialogue. - The arc should make the story emotionally clear and useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#069Reverse Outline Auditor

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSDraft revision, essays, articles, newsletters, chapters, scripts, sales pages, reports, and long-form posts.

Analyze an existing draft by extracting its current structure, identifying weak sections, missing logic, repetition, misplaced ideas, and revision priorities.

You are a reverse-outline editor. Review my draft and show me the structure it currently has, then tell me how to improve it. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Target reader: [READER] Goal of the piece: [GOAL] Desired takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Format: [FORMAT] Length target: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Known concerns: [CONCERNS] Perform the reverse outline: 1. Current structure extraction Break the draft into sections. For each section include: - current section summary - job the section appears to do - main point - reader question answered - transition into next section - whether it belongs 2. Thesis and promise check Identify: - stated thesis - implied thesis - reader promise - whether the draft delivers on it - where the promise changes or becomes unclear 3. Structural problems Find: - repeated points - missing steps - weak opening - buried thesis - unsupported claims - misplaced examples - slow sections - abrupt transitions - irrelevant tangents - weak ending 4. Revision map Create a table with: - section - problem - severity - recommended action - cut / move / merge / expand / rewrite / keep 5. Improved outline Create a new outline that better serves the reader. Include: - revised section order - new section titles - what to keep - what to cut - what to add - where examples belong 6. Revision sequence Tell me the order to revise: - first structural fix - second structural fix - third structural fix - line-level polish later Rules: - Do not focus primarily on grammar. - Do not rewrite the full draft unless asked. - Do not preserve sections that do not serve the reader. - Be direct but constructive. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#070Modular Content Outline System

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSWriters repurposing one idea across formats or building modular content systems for recurring themes.

Create a flexible outline made of reusable modules that can be rearranged into articles, newsletters, posts, scripts, lead magnets, or lessons.

Act as a modular content architect. Turn my idea into reusable content modules that can be assembled into different writing formats. Core idea: [CORE IDEA] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Main message: [MESSAGE] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader outcome: [OUTCOME] Available examples: [EXAMPLES] Available research: [RESEARCH] Formats I want to create: [FORMATS] Tone: [TONE] Create the modular outline system: A. Core module bank Build modules for: - hook - context - problem - stakes - thesis - framework - story - example - proof - objection - practical steps - checklist - reflection - CTA - ending For each module include: - purpose - key content - length range - when to use - when to skip B. Format assemblies Show how to assemble the modules into: 1. Short social post 2. Long social post 3. Newsletter 4. Article 5. Video script 6. Lead magnet section 7. Email sequence segment 8. Workshop lesson For each format include: - module order - what to shorten - what to expand - reader payoff C. Variation plan Create 5 different versions of the same core idea: - tactical version - story version - opinion version - beginner version - advanced version D. Repurposing notes Explain: - what should stay consistent - what should change by platform - what should not be repeated word-for-word - how to keep the idea fresh Rules: - Do not create duplicate content disguised as repurposing. - Do not make every format use the same structure. - Do not overcomplicate the module bank. - Modules should make writing faster and more strategic. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#071Research-Backed Outline Builder

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSResearch-heavy writing, reports, analysis pieces, white papers, evidence-based newsletters, expert essays, and data-supported articles.

Structure research material into a coherent article, report, essay, or analysis with claims, evidence, caveats, and reader-friendly flow.

You are a research-backed writing editor. Help me organize my research into a strong outline that makes claims responsibly and keeps the reader engaged. Research material: [PASTE NOTES / DATA / QUOTES / SOURCE SUMMARIES] Context: Writing format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Main question: [QUESTION] Possible thesis: [THESIS] Desired reader takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Level of certainty required: [CERTAINTY] Source limitations: [LIMITATIONS] Tone: [TONE] Length target: [LENGTH] Build the research-backed outline: 1. Evidence inventory Classify research into: - strong evidence - medium evidence - weak signal - anecdote - quote - data point - contradiction - missing evidence - unclear material 2. Claim map Create possible claims. For each claim include: - claim - evidence supporting it - evidence against it - confidence level - caveat needed - where it belongs 3. Reader-first structure Create an outline that moves from: - reader problem or question - context - key finding - explanation - evidence - implication - nuance - action or conclusion 4. Evidence placement For each section specify: - evidence used - how to explain it - what not to overclaim - transition to next section 5. Caveat and uncertainty plan Add: - where to mark uncertainty - where to define terms - where to acknowledge limits - where to avoid causal claims 6. Final outline Provide: - headline options - introduction plan - section order - evidence map - conclusion - fact-check checklist Rules: - Do not invent research. - Do not turn correlation into causation. - Do not bury uncertainty. - The outline must be clear to readers and responsible with evidence. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#072Persuasive Page Structure Planner

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSWriters creating conversion-focused pages, service pages, lead magnet pages, product pages, course pages, and creator offer pages.

Build a persuasive structure for landing pages, sales pages, opt-in pages, service pages, or offer pages without sounding generic or manipulative.

Act as a persuasive page structure strategist. Build the structure for a page that guides the reader from attention to understanding to trust to action. Page context: Offer or topic: [OFFER / TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Current awareness stage: [AWARENESS] Main objection: [OBJECTION] Proof available: [PROOF] Page goal: [GOAL] CTA: [CTA] Brand voice: [VOICE] What must not be exaggerated: [LIMITS] Create the persuasive page plan: A. Reader journey Map the reader's movement: - attention - recognition - curiosity - understanding - trust - desire - objection resolution - action B. Page sections Create the recommended section order. For each section include: - section name - reader question it answers - copy job - key message - proof or example needed - CTA placement - what to avoid C. Alternative structures Create 3 page structure options: 1. problem-first structure 2. outcome-first structure 3. proof-first structure Explain which is best and why. D. Objection placement Decide where to address: - price - trust - time - effort - fit - risk - comparison - skepticism E. CTA flow Create: - primary CTA placement - secondary CTA placement - soft CTA - final CTA - microcopy around CTA F. Drafting plan Provide: - section-by-section writing instructions - assets needed - copy checklist - trust checklist Rules: - Do not use manipulative scarcity or false urgency. - Do not make the page sound like every other sales page. - Do not hide important limitations. - Structure must create clarity before persuasion. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#073Educational Lesson Outline Builder

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSTutorials, course lessons, workshops, webinars, explainers, educational newsletters, training guides, and teaching scripts.

Turn a topic into a teachable lesson structure with learning objectives, concept sequence, examples, exercises, checks, and recap.

You are an instructional writing designer. Create a lesson outline that helps the reader or viewer understand, remember, and apply the topic. Lesson context: Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current skill level: [SKILL LEVEL] Learning goal: [LEARNING GOAL] Format: [FORMAT] Time or length: [TIME / LENGTH] Common misconceptions: [MISCONCEPTIONS] Examples available: [EXAMPLES] Exercise ideas: [EXERCISES] Tone: [TONE] Design the lesson: 1. Learning objective Define: - what learners should understand - what learners should be able to do - what misconception should be corrected - what success looks like 2. Concept sequence Arrange the lesson from: - prerequisite idea - simple explanation - example - deeper concept - application - common mistake - practice - recap 3. Lesson sections For each section include: - section title - teaching goal - explanation summary - example - learner question answered - activity or reflection - check for understanding 4. Cognitive load check Identify: - terms to define - ideas to delay - examples to simplify - concepts to separate - parts that may overwhelm learners 5. Practice design Create: - quick exercise - applied exercise - self-assessment - common error correction 6. Recap and next step Provide: - summary - memory hook - next action - recommended follow-up lesson Rules: - Do not teach advanced steps before foundations. - Do not include too many concepts in one lesson. - Do not make examples abstract. - The structure must help learning, not just organize information. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#074Comparison Structure Designer

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSComparison articles, decision guides, reviews, versus posts, analytical essays, buyer guides, and strategic writing.

Build a clear structure for comparing ideas, options, methods, products, strategies, books, frameworks, or decisions.

Act as a comparison structure editor. Help me build a fair, useful comparison that helps readers decide or understand differences. Comparison topic: Option A: [OPTION A] Option B: [OPTION B] Optional additional options: [OTHER OPTIONS] Target reader: [READER] Decision or question they have: [DECISION / QUESTION] Criteria that matter: [CRITERIA] My current opinion: [OPINION] Evidence or experience: [EVIDENCE / EXPERIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Build the comparison structure: A. Decision context Clarify: - why the comparison matters - who needs it - what decision it supports - what would make the wrong choice costly B. Comparison criteria Create criteria such as: - cost - complexity - speed - quality - fit - risk - learning curve - scalability - reliability - user type - constraints Choose the most relevant criteria for this reader. C. Structure options Create 3 possible structures: 1. criteria-by-criteria comparison 2. option-by-option comparison 3. scenario-based comparison Recommend the best one. D. Fair comparison table For each criterion include: - what matters - Option A strength - Option B strength - tradeoff - best fit - caveat E. Recommendation logic Create decision rules: - choose A if... - choose B if... - choose neither if... - choose a hybrid if... - reconsider if... F. Final outline Create: - opening - context - comparison sections - tradeoff section - decision rules - conclusion Rules: - Do not create a fake balanced comparison if evidence clearly favors one side. - Do not hide tradeoffs. - Do not compare irrelevant criteria. - The reader should leave with a clearer decision. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#075Narrative Nonfiction Structure Map

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSNarrative essays, long-form articles, reported stories, case narratives, profiles, founder stories, and documentary-style writing.

Structure a nonfiction piece that blends story, reporting, analysis, scenes, reflection, and a larger idea.

You are a narrative nonfiction editor. Help me structure a piece that uses story to carry an idea without losing clarity or momentum. Material: Central story or case: [STORY / CASE] Larger idea: [LARGER IDEA] Target reader: [READER] Characters or subjects: [CHARACTERS] Scenes available: [SCENES] Research available: [RESEARCH] Key conflict: [CONFLICT] Stakes: [STAKES] Desired takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Length: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Create the narrative nonfiction structure: 1. Story spine Identify: - beginning situation - disruption - complication - turning point - consequence - meaning 2. Idea spine Identify: - central question - thesis or emerging insight - concepts to explain - context needed - reader relevance 3. Weave plan Build a structure that alternates between: - scene - exposition - analysis - evidence - reflection - return to scene For each section include: - narrative purpose - idea purpose - scene or summary - research or explanation - transition 4. Pacing plan Decide where to: - slow down into scene - speed up through summary - pause for context - insert analysis - create suspense - reveal meaning 5. Ending strategy Create: - return-to-scene ending - consequence ending - reflective ending - broader implication ending - open-ended ending Rules: - Do not let research interrupt every scene. - Do not let story become decoration for a weak idea. - Do not invent narrative details. - The structure should make the reader care and understand. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#076Multi-Part Series Writing Plan

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSNewsletter series, article series, educational sequences, blog series, LinkedIn series, email courses, and book-to-content development.

Plan a multi-part series with sequence, reader journey, episode structure, recurring modules, internal links, and distribution strategy.

Act as a series planning editor. Help me turn a broad topic into a structured multi-part writing series that builds momentum over time. Series context: Series topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Series goal: [GOAL] Number of parts: [NUMBER] Platform: [PLATFORM] Publishing cadence: [CADENCE] Reader starting point: [STARTING POINT] Desired end state: [END STATE] My point of view: [POV] Available examples or research: [EXAMPLES / RESEARCH] CTA or business goal: [CTA / GOAL] Plan the series: A. Series promise Create: - series title - one-line promise - why this needs multiple parts - reader journey - final payoff B. Sequence logic Choose the best sequence type: - beginner to advanced - problem to solution - diagnosis to action - myth to reality - story arc - framework modules - decision journey - challenge format Explain why. C. Episode map For each part include: - title - core question - thesis - section outline - example needed - reader action - CTA - link to previous part - setup for next part D. Recurring structure Design recurring elements: - opening recap - main lesson - example - exercise - reflection question - next preview E. Compounding plan Show how to turn the series into: - pillar page - lead magnet - email sequence - workshop - ebook - social content - resource library Rules: - Do not make the series a random content calendar. - Do not repeat the same idea in every part. - Do not create more parts than the topic deserves. - Each part should stand alone and also build the whole. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#077Drafting Sprint Plan Generator

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSWriters who need execution structure for essays, newsletters, reports, scripts, chapters, articles, and long-form projects.

Create a practical writing plan that breaks a project into research, outlining, drafting, revising, editing, publishing, and review sessions.

You are a writing execution planner. Turn my writing project into a realistic drafting sprint with clear sessions, outputs, and checkpoints. Project context: Project type: [PROJECT TYPE] Topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Desired length: [LENGTH] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Time available per session: [SESSION LENGTH] Total sessions available: [SESSIONS] Current stage: [STAGE] Research needed: [RESEARCH] Outline status: [OUTLINE STATUS] Main obstacle: [OBSTACLE] Publishing requirements: [REQUIREMENTS] Create the sprint plan: 1. Project breakdown Separate the work into: - idea clarification - research - outline - messy draft - structural revision - evidence/examples - line edit - title/headline - formatting - publishing - review 2. Session plan For each session include: - session objective - time box - input needed - exact tasks - completion marker - what not to do during the session - fallback if stuck 3. Drafting order Recommend whether to draft: - opening first - easiest section first - hardest section first - body first - ending first - out of order Explain why. 4. Quality gates Create checkpoints for: - thesis clarity - outline logic - section completeness - examples - reader relevance - final polish 5. Recovery plan Create a plan for: - falling behind - weak first draft - missing evidence - too much material - low energy - missed deadline 6. Final publishing checklist Include: - title - intro - flow - examples - grammar - links - formatting - CTA - final read Rules: - Do not create an unrealistic writing schedule. - Do not assume I can finish everything in one sitting. - Do not mix drafting and polishing too early. - The plan should help me finish, not overthink. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#078Logic Gap and Transition Planner

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSAnalytical writing, essays, guides, arguments, newsletters, reports, scripts, and complex educational content.

Identify missing reasoning, weak transitions, unsupported jumps, confusing sequence, and unclear connections before drafting or revising.

Act as a logic and transition editor. Review my outline or idea and identify where the reader may need stronger connective tissue. Outline or rough structure: [PASTE OUTLINE / STRUCTURE / DRAFT NOTES] Context: Target reader: [READER] Main thesis: [THESIS] Reader knowledge level: [LEVEL] Goal of the piece: [GOAL] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Audit the logic: A. Sequence check For each section ask: - why does this section come here? - what must the reader know before this? - what does this section prove or explain? - what question does it create next? - does the next section answer that question? B. Logic gap detection Find gaps such as: - unsupported claim - unexplained term - missing example - missing cause - missing consequence - sudden topic shift - conclusion without setup - repeated idea - contradiction - vague transition C. Reader confusion forecast List moments where the reader may think: - wait, how did we get here? - why does this matter? - is this true? - what does this have to do with the thesis? - what should I do with this? D. Transition plan Write transition options between sections: - logical transition - contrast transition - question transition - summary transition - escalation transition - example transition E. Revised structure Provide: - improved section order - sections to merge - sections to cut - missing section to add - transition bank Rules: - Do not polish sentences before fixing logic. - Do not preserve a section just because it is interesting. - Do not use vague transitions like "another important point." - Make the reader's path through the piece feel inevitable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#079Section Card Outline Method

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSLong-form articles, essays, chapters, reports, guides, scripts, and complex drafts with many parts.

Build an outline as a set of movable section cards, each with a job, claim, evidence, reader question, transition, and drafting instructions.

You are a structural editor using the section card method. Help me create movable section cards so I can organize my piece before drafting. Project context: Topic: [TOPIC] Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Main message: [MESSAGE] Desired reader outcome: [OUTCOME] Potential sections or notes: [SECTIONS / NOTES] Evidence or examples: [EVIDENCE / EXAMPLES] Length target: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Create section cards: For each section card include: - card title - section job - key claim or idea - reader question answered - evidence or example needed - emotional beat - practical takeaway - opening sentence direction - transition in - transition out - keep / cut / combine recommendation Then organize the cards: A. Best sequence Arrange cards into the strongest order. Explain the sequence logic. B. Alternative sequences Create 2 alternative orders: - reader-friendly order - more dramatic order - more analytical order, if useful C. Missing cards Identify any missing cards needed for: - context - proof - counterargument - example - action - conclusion D. Overloaded cards Find cards that contain too many ideas and should be split. E. Drafting instructions For each card provide: - how long it should be - what to draft first - what to avoid - when the card is complete Rules: - Do not let one card do multiple unrelated jobs. - Do not create generic section titles. - Do not force a linear order if another order is stronger. - The card system should make the draft easier to assemble and revise. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#080Full Outlines, Structure & Writing Plans Audit

OUTLINES, STRUCTURE & WRITING PLANSWriters doing a complete structural reset on articles, essays, newsletters, scripts, chapters, reports, landing pages, or long-form writing projects.

Audit and rebuild the full structure of a writing project across thesis, outline, section order, argument flow, examples, transitions, reader journey, and drafting plan.

Act as an independent structural editor and writing plan auditor. Review my writing project and rebuild the outline, structure, and execution plan so it becomes easier to draft and stronger for the reader. Inputs: Project type: [PROJECT TYPE] Topic: [TOPIC] Working title: [TITLE] Target reader: [READER] Reader intent: [INTENT] Main thesis or message: [THESIS / MESSAGE] Desired takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Current outline: [OUTLINE] Draft notes or fragments: [NOTES / FRAGMENTS] Evidence or examples: [EVIDENCE / EXAMPLES] Reader objections: [OBJECTIONS] Desired length: [LENGTH] Platform: [PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Current concern: [CONCERN] Audit across 20 structural dimensions: 1. Project purpose 2. Reader promise 3. Thesis clarity 4. Opening strength 5. Section sequence 6. Argument flow 7. Narrative movement 8. Reader journey 9. Evidence placement 10. Example fit 11. Counterargument handling 12. Logic gaps 13. Transition quality 14. Section titles 15. Pacing 16. Depth balance 17. Redundancy 18. Ending strength 19. Format fit 20. Drafting feasibility For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence used - missing evidence - structural risk if ignored - recommended fix - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 5 structural problems Rank by: - reader confusion risk - impact on persuasion or clarity - ease of fixing - effect on drafting speed - importance to final quality B. Structure decision Recommend the best structure type: - problem-solution - argument essay - narrative arc - framework guide - step-by-step tutorial - comparison - research-backed analysis - newsletter issue - script beat sheet - chapter structure - hybrid structure Explain why. C. Rebuilt outline Create a full improved outline with: - headline options - opening direction - section titles - section jobs - key points - evidence placement - examples - objections - transitions - ending D. Writing plan Create: - research tasks - drafting sessions - revision sequence - quality gates - publishing checklist - fallback plan if time is short E. Cut / Keep / Add / Move List: - what to cut - what to keep - what to add - what to move - what to save for another piece F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard structural truth - the strongest part of the current idea - the weakest structural point - the best outline direction - the first drafting action to take today Rules: - Do not write the full draft. - Do not invent evidence. - Do not preserve weak structure out of politeness. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Focus on clarity, reader movement, logic, structure, and drafting momentum. STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTH

#081Story Seed Excavator

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHPersonal essays, newsletters, memoir fragments, founder stories, creator posts, speeches, long-form articles, and reflective writing.

Turn a rough memory, incident, observation, failure, lesson, or emotional moment into a clear story seed with narrative potential.

You are a story development editor. Help me excavate a strong story from the raw material below without forcing a fake lesson or over-polishing the emotional truth. Raw story material: [PASTE MEMORY / INCIDENT / OBSERVATION / LESSON / MOMENT] Context: Target reader: [READER] Writing format: [FORMAT] Why I want to tell this story: [WHY] What I think the story means: [MEANING] What I felt at the time: [EMOTION] What changed afterward: [CHANGE] Details I want to protect or avoid: [BOUNDARIES] Tone: [TONE] Desired reader takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Excavate the story: 1. Story core Identify: - the actual event - the emotional center - the turning point - the visible conflict - the hidden conflict - the decision or realization - the consequence - the unfinished tension 2. Narrative potential Find 5 possible story directions: - personal growth angle - mistake / lesson angle - transformation angle - tension / conflict angle - universal insight angle For each include: - what the story is really about - why the reader would care - what details matter - what details should be cut - possible title - best opening moment 3. Reader connection Map how this story connects to the reader: - shared fear - shared desire - shared confusion - shared pressure - shared mistake - shared hope - shared question 4. Story seed card Create a final story card with: - working title - one-sentence story premise - emotional promise - reader promise - main scene - supporting scenes - key reflection - closing insight Rules: - Do not invent details. - Do not make the story inspirational if the truth is more complicated. - Do not make the story only about me. - Preserve emotional honesty and turn it into something useful for the reader. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#082Narrative Conflict Finder

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHEssays, personal stories, memoir writing, founder stories, case studies, speeches, fiction scenes, and narrative nonfiction.

Identify the conflict, friction, obstacle, tradeoff, pressure, contradiction, or unanswered question that makes a story worth reading.

Act as a narrative conflict editor. Review my story idea and find the strongest conflict that can carry the reader through the piece. Story idea: [STORY IDEA] Context: Main character or narrator: [CHARACTER / NARRATOR] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Setting: [SETTING] What happens: [EVENTS] What changes: [CHANGE] Message or theme: [THEME] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Find the conflict in five layers: Layer 1 - External conflict What visible problem, obstacle, deadline, person, system, or situation creates pressure? Layer 2 - Internal conflict What does the narrator or character want but struggle to admit, choose, accept, or understand? Layer 3 - Relational conflict What tension exists between people, expectations, roles, promises, or identities? Layer 4 - Philosophical conflict What larger question does the story raise? Examples: - control vs uncertainty - ambition vs peace - loyalty vs honesty - safety vs growth - image vs reality - speed vs depth Layer 5 - Reader conflict What conflict inside the reader does this story activate? Then create: - 10 possible conflict statements - the strongest central conflict - secondary conflicts to support it - false conflicts to avoid - scenes that reveal the conflict - lines that could make the conflict visible - outline built around rising conflict Rules: - Do not add melodrama where none exists. - Do not mistake inconvenience for conflict. - Do not make every conflict external. - The final conflict should create curiosity, emotional stakes, and momentum. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#083Scene from Summary Builder

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHWriters whose drafts feel too abstract, explanatory, distant, essay-like, or emotionally flat.

Convert abstract summary, explanation, or reflection into vivid scenes with setting, action, sensory detail, character behavior, and emotional movement.

You are a scene-building editor. Turn my abstract summary into concrete scenes that readers can see, feel, and remember. Abstract summary: [PASTE SUMMARY / EXPLANATION / REFLECTION] Writing context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Story type: [STORY TYPE] Desired emotion: [EMOTION] Narrator or character: [NARRATOR / CHARACTER] Setting, if known: [SETTING] Tone: [TONE] Length target: [LENGTH] Details that must remain true: [TRUE DETAILS] Details to avoid: [AVOID] Build scenes from the summary: A. Scene opportunities Identify which parts of the summary could become: - opening scene - turning point scene - conflict scene - realization scene - contrast scene - quiet emotional scene - ending scene B. Scene ingredients For each possible scene define: - where we are - who is present - what is happening physically - what is said or not said - what the narrator notices - what the reader should infer - what emotional shift occurs C. Show / tell balance Separate: - what should be shown in scene - what should be summarized - what should be reflected on afterward - what should be cut D. Scene drafts Write 3 scene openings in different styles: - cinematic - intimate - sparse - tense - reflective E. Final scene plan Create a scene sequence with: - scene title - purpose - conflict - sensory anchor - emotional beat - transition into next section Rules: - Do not invent major facts. - Mark optional invented details as [OPTIONAL DETAIL]. - Do not overload scenes with description. - Every scene must reveal something the summary alone cannot. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#084Emotional Arc Designer

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHPersonal essays, speeches, memoirs, newsletters, stories, scripts, brand narratives, and emotional thought leadership.

Design the emotional journey of a piece from first feeling to tension, complication, recognition, release, and final resonance.

Act as an emotional arc designer. Help me shape the emotional movement of my story so it does not stay flat, rushed, or overly dramatic. Story or topic: [STORY / TOPIC] Context: Reader: [READER] Narrator or character: [NARRATOR / CHARACTER] Starting emotion: [STARTING EMOTION] Desired final emotion: [FINAL EMOTION] Central conflict: [CONFLICT] Key events: [EVENTS] Theme: [THEME] Tone boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Format: [FORMAT] Design the emotional arc: 1. Emotional starting point Describe: - what the narrator feels first - what the reader should feel first - what is unsaid - what tension is already present 2. Emotional progression Create an arc with 7 beats: - recognition - discomfort - complication - vulnerability - realization - release - resonance For each beat include: - emotional function - scene or section - language style - pacing - risk if mishandled 3. Emotional contrast Identify where to use contrast: - humor after tension - quiet after intensity - certainty after confusion - action after reflection - detail after abstraction 4. Emotional restraint Flag where the writing may become: - too sentimental - too cold - too explanatory - too dramatic - too self-protective - too neat 5. Final emotional blueprint Provide: - arc summary - beat-by-beat outline - emotional transition lines - ending emotion - revision checklist Rules: - Do not force catharsis if the story is unresolved. - Do not tell the reader what to feel. - Do not confuse emotional depth with dramatic language. - Let emotion emerge from concrete moments, tension, and honest reflection. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#085Character Moment Revealer

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHFiction, memoir, personal essays, founder stories, profiles, case studies, speeches, and narrative nonfiction.

Create moments that reveal character through behavior, choices, dialogue, contradictions, silence, habits, and pressure instead of direct description.

You are a character revelation editor. Help me reveal a person in my story through moments rather than labels. Character or person: [CHARACTER / PERSON] Story context: Role in story: [ROLE] Relationship to narrator: [RELATIONSHIP] Setting: [SETTING] Conflict or pressure: [CONFLICT] What I want readers to understand about them: [TRAIT / INSIGHT] What I want to avoid saying directly: [AVOID] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Build character-revealing moments: 1. Character truth Clarify: - what this person wants - what they fear - what they protect - what they avoid - what they repeat - what they reveal under pressure - what they would never say directly 2. Reveal through action Create 10 small actions that could reveal character. For each include: - action - what it implies - emotional effect - where it could appear - risk of cliché 3. Reveal through dialogue Create: - 5 direct lines - 5 indirect lines - 5 lines with subtext - 5 silences or avoided answers 4. Reveal through contrast Show the person in contrast with: - another character - their past self - public image - private behavior - expectation - setting 5. Character scene plan Create: - opening character moment - pressure moment - contradiction moment - tenderness or vulnerability moment - final impression Rules: - Do not flatten the person into one trait. - Do not create cruel caricature. - Do not invent private motives as fact. - Use [INTERPRETATION] when reading meaning into behavior. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#086Transformation Story Architect

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHPersonal growth stories, founder stories, case studies, customer stories, memoir pieces, speeches, and persuasive narratives.

Build a strong before-and-after transformation story that shows change through events, decisions, setbacks, realizations, and evidence.

Act as a transformation story architect. Help me build a believable transformation narrative that does not feel exaggerated, fake, or too neat. Transformation: Before: [BEFORE STATE] After: [AFTER STATE] Who changed: [PERSON / GROUP] Timeframe: [TIMEFRAME] Catalyst: [CATALYST] Key events: [EVENTS] Setbacks: [SETBACKS] What did not change: [UNCHANGED] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Tone: [TONE] Build the transformation story: A. Before-state anatomy Define: - visible situation - emotional state - limiting belief - repeated behavior - cost of staying the same - what the person did not yet understand B. Change mechanism Identify: - catalyst - first small shift - resistance - turning point - new behavior - proof of change - unresolved challenge C. After-state proof Show change through: - different decisions - different language - different relationships - different standards - different results - different emotional posture D. Transformation structure Create 3 possible structures: 1. linear before-to-after 2. non-linear opening with result, then backstory 3. reflective transformation with present-day meaning For each include: - outline - best opening - strongest emotional beat - risk E. Final narrative plan Create: - title options - story spine - scene list - reflection points - evidence needed - ending options Rules: - Do not exaggerate transformation. - Do not erase setbacks. - Do not imply change was easy if it was not. - Make the transformation credible through specific moments. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#087Vulnerability Calibration Tool

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHPersonal essays, memoirs, newsletters, founder content, mental reflections, speeches, and relationship-based storytelling.

Decide how much personal vulnerability to include so the writing feels honest, useful, and safe without becoming oversharing or emotionally manipulative.

You are a vulnerability calibration editor. Help me decide what to reveal, what to protect, and how to make vulnerability serve the reader and the story. Personal material: [PASTE PERSONAL MATERIAL / STORY / TOPIC] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Purpose of sharing: [PURPOSE] Emotional sensitivity: [SENSITIVITY] People involved: [PEOPLE INVOLVED] Privacy boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Desired reader outcome: [OUTCOME] Tone: [TONE] Calibrate the vulnerability: 1. Sharing motive check Identify whether the material is being shared to: - create connection - teach a lesson - process publicly - seek validation - build trust - persuade - warn - explain a decision - entertain - heal Flag any risky motives. 2. Reveal / protect / transform Classify details into: - reveal as written - reveal with less specificity - anonymize - compress - turn into general insight - save for private writing - remove 3. Reader value check For each vulnerable detail, explain: - what it helps the reader understand - whether it increases trust - whether it distracts - whether it burdens the reader - whether it creates unnecessary risk 4. Emotional tone options Rewrite the same vulnerable moment in 5 modes: - direct - restrained - reflective - warm - matter-of-fact 5. Final boundary-safe plan Create: - safe angle - details to include - details to omit - emotional line not to cross - reader-facing insight - closing note Rules: - Do not pressure me to reveal more. - Do not turn pain into performance. - Do not make vulnerability the whole point unless it truly is. - Protect privacy, dignity, and reader trust. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#088Narrative Hook Workshop

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHEssays, newsletters, memoirs, speeches, scripts, social posts, founder stories, and long-form articles.

Create memorable narrative hooks that open with scene, tension, question, contradiction, image, confession, or movement.

Act as a narrative hook editor. Help me find the strongest opening for my story or narrative piece. Story concept: [STORY CONCEPT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] Main emotion: [EMOTION] Central tension: [TENSION] Theme: [THEME] Ending or takeaway: [ENDING / TAKEAWAY] Tone: [TONE] Openings I dislike: [DISLIKE] Create hooks using different narrative entry points: 1. Scene-first hook Open with a concrete moment. 2. Conflict-first hook Open with pressure, obstacle, or contradiction. 3. Question-first hook Open with a question the story will answer. 4. Confession-first hook Open with a personal admission. 5. Image-first hook Open with a visual detail. 6. Dialogue-first hook Open with something said or unsaid. 7. Time-jump hook Open after the consequence, then move backward. 8. Pattern-break hook Open by challenging what the reader expects. For each hook provide: - opening paragraph - what it promises - reader emotion it creates - risk - best next paragraph direction Then recommend: - strongest hook - safest hook - boldest hook - most emotional hook - hook to avoid Rules: - Do not use clickbait. - Do not overpromise drama. - Do not open with abstract explanation if a concrete moment is stronger. - The hook must lead naturally into the story. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#089Tension Ladder Builder

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHStories, essays, memoir chapters, speeches, scripts, fiction scenes, case studies, and narrative nonfiction.

Build rising tension across a narrative by controlling stakes, uncertainty, obstacles, reveals, pacing, and emotional pressure.

You are a tension architect. Help me build a tension ladder that keeps readers engaged from beginning to end. Narrative idea: [IDEA / STORY / OUTLINE] Context: Main character or narrator: [CHARACTER] Goal or desire: [GOAL] Obstacle: [OBSTACLE] Stakes: [STAKES] Key events: [EVENTS] Reader takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Build the tension ladder: Step 1 - Baseline Define the normal situation before tension rises. Step 2 - Disturbance Identify the first disruption. Step 3 - Complication Add the factor that makes the problem harder. Step 4 - Choice point Find the moment where someone must decide. Step 5 - Cost Clarify what could be lost. Step 6 - Reveal Identify what new information changes meaning. Step 7 - Crisis Define the peak pressure point. Step 8 - Release Show what changes after the peak. Step 9 - Aftermath Explain what remains unresolved or newly understood. For each step include: - scene or section - emotional state - reader question - pacing note - sentence-level tactic - risk of flattening tension Final output: - tension ladder table - revised outline - missing stakes - places to slow down - places to speed up - best reveal placement Rules: - Do not make tension artificial. - Do not add conflict unrelated to the theme. - Do not resolve tension too early. - Let tension come from desire, uncertainty, cost, and meaning. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#090Dialogue and Subtext Builder

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHFiction, memoir, scripts, narrative essays, speeches with scenes, profiles, case studies, and personal storytelling.

Create or improve dialogue that reveals character, conflict, emotion, power dynamics, and subtext without sounding stiff or overly expositional.

Act as a dialogue and subtext editor. Help me develop dialogue that sounds natural and reveals more than it says. Scene context: [SCENE CONTEXT] Characters or people involved: [CHARACTERS] What each person wants: [WANTS] What cannot be said directly: [UNSAID] Emotional state: [EMOTION] Story purpose of the scene: [PURPOSE] Tone: [TONE] Boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Build the dialogue: A. Conversation objective Define: - surface topic - hidden topic - power dynamic - emotional risk - what changes by the end B. Subtext map For each person identify: - what they say - what they mean - what they avoid - what they reveal accidentally - what they misunderstand C. Dialogue options Write 3 versions: 1. restrained and realistic 2. tense and clipped 3. warm but layered D. Dialogue cleanup Flag and remove: - exposition dumps - unnatural speeches - repeated emotional labels - lines that say the subtext directly - dialogue that exists only to inform the reader E. Scene integration Add: - gestures - pauses - interruptions - physical details - silence - after-dialogue reflection Rules: - Do not invent life-changing lines unless the scene supports them. - Do not make everyone speak with the same voice. - Do not explain every emotion. - The best dialogue should reveal conflict, character, and emotional truth. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#091Sensory Detail and Atmosphere Enricher

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHScene writing, memoir, fiction, essays, travel writing, speeches, scripts, brand storytelling, and narrative nonfiction.

Add sensory detail, atmosphere, physical specificity, and mood to a story without cluttering the prose or slowing the narrative.

You are a sensory detail editor. Help me make this scene feel vivid and atmospheric while keeping the writing clean and purposeful. Scene: [PASTE SCENE / SUMMARY] Context: Setting: [SETTING] Mood: [MOOD] Narrator viewpoint: [VIEWPOINT] Emotion under the scene: [EMOTION] Story purpose: [PURPOSE] Tone: [TONE] Details that must stay accurate: [ACCURATE DETAILS] Details to avoid: [AVOID] Enrich the scene: 1. Sensory inventory Generate detail options for: - sight - sound - touch - smell - taste - temperature - light - movement - spatial feeling - texture 2. Emotional atmosphere Identify which details should support: - unease - nostalgia - grief - hope - tension - intimacy - isolation - wonder - urgency - calm 3. Detail selection Choose the strongest 8 details. For each include: - sensory category - emotional effect - where it belongs - why it matters - risk if overused 4. Before / after enrichment Rewrite one paragraph in 3 levels: - light detail - medium detail - rich detail 5. Atmosphere rules Create a rule set for this piece: - details to repeat - details to avoid - mood words to avoid - concrete substitutes - pacing notes Rules: - Do not decorate the scene randomly. - Do not use cliché sensory details. - Do not slow action with excessive description. - Every detail should reveal mood, place, character, or meaning. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#092Story Spine Architect

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHPersonal narratives, memoir chapters, founder stories, speeches, case studies, fiction scenes, and narrative essays.

Build a clean story spine that connects setup, desire, obstacle, escalation, turning point, consequence, reflection, and reader meaning.

Act as a story spine architect. Build the structural backbone of my story so it has momentum, clarity, and emotional payoff. Story material: [PASTE STORY MATERIAL] Context: Main narrator or character: [NARRATOR / CHARACTER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Theme: [THEME] Desired takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Format: [FORMAT] Length: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Create the story spine: 1. Once there was... Describe the starting situation. 2. Every day... Show the pattern, routine, belief, or normal condition. 3. Until one day... Identify the disruption. 4. Because of that... Show the first consequence. 5. Because of that... Show the escalation. 6. Until finally... Identify the turning point or peak moment. 7. And after that... Show the immediate result. 8. Ever since then... Explain what changed or what remains unresolved. 9. The meaning is not... Clarify what the story is not saying. 10. The meaning is... Clarify the deeper insight. Then provide: - spine in one paragraph - spine as bullet outline - missing beat diagnosis - strongest scene for each beat - possible opening and ending - revision questions Rules: - Do not force a perfect ending. - Do not skip the "every day" pattern. - Do not make reflection replace action. - The story spine should be simple enough to guide drafting. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#093Emotional Truth vs Performance Filter

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHPersonal essays, memoirs, vulnerable newsletters, speeches, brand stories, founder stories, and reflective writing.

Identify where a story feels emotionally true, overly polished, exaggerated, self-protective, manipulative, or performative.

You are an emotional truth editor. Review my story or draft and tell me where it feels honest, where it feels performed, and how to make it more grounded. Draft or story: [PASTE DRAFT / STORY] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Tone I want: [TONE] Emotional truth I want to preserve: [TRUTH] Boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] What I worry about: [WORRY] Audit emotional authenticity: A. Honest moments Identify passages that feel: - specific - grounded - restrained - emotionally earned - surprising - vulnerable without oversharing Explain why. B. Performative moments Identify passages that may feel: - too polished - too dramatic - too self-aware - too inspirational - too neat - too vague - too calculated - too dependent on audience approval C. Protection patterns Flag where I may be: - hiding behind jokes - hiding behind analysis - rushing past pain - making myself look too good - blaming too cleanly - avoiding the real conflict D. Repair options For each weak passage, suggest: - cut - simplify - make more concrete - add scene - add uncertainty - remove moralizing - reduce emotional labeling - add a sharper truth E. Rewrite samples Rewrite 5 selected lines in a more emotionally honest style. Rules: - Do not push for more disclosure. - Do not confuse rawness with quality. - Do not shame the writer. - Make the story more truthful, not more dramatic. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#094Anecdote-to-Insight Converter

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHNewsletter intros, essays, speeches, social posts, memoir fragments, educational content, and thought leadership.

Transform a small anecdote into a meaningful insight, argument, lesson, or emotional reflection that matters beyond the event.

Act as an anecdote-to-insight editor. Help me turn this small anecdote into a broader idea readers can use, remember, or feel. Anecdote: [PASTE ANECDOTE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Topic area: [TOPIC] Why I noticed this moment: [WHY] Possible lesson: [LESSON] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Desired reader reaction: [REACTION] Convert the anecdote: 1. Literal level Summarize what happened without interpretation. 2. Pattern level Identify what pattern the anecdote reveals. 3. Emotional level Identify what feeling the anecdote carries. 4. Reader level Explain why the reader might care. 5. Idea level Create 10 possible insights from the anecdote. For each include: - insight - reader relevance - emotional resonance - possible title - best format - risk of overclaiming 6. Expansion options Turn the anecdote into: - short post - essay opening - newsletter intro - speech moment - teaching example - reflective ending - case-style mini story 7. Final recommendation Choose the strongest insight and create: - thesis - outline - transition from story to idea - ending line Rules: - Do not pretend one anecdote proves everything. - Do not over-explain a simple moment. - Do not bury the anecdote under analysis. - The insight should feel earned by the story. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#095Memory Compression Editor

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHMemoir, personal essays, speeches, newsletters, life stories, founder stories, and reflective chapters.

Compress a large, complex, or emotionally crowded memory into a focused narrative moment that can carry a piece of writing.

You are a memory compression editor. Help me reduce a large memory into the strongest narrative version without losing its emotional truth. Large memory or life period: [PASTE MEMORY / PERIOD / EXPERIENCE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose of writing: [PURPOSE] Main emotion: [EMOTION] Theme: [THEME] People involved: [PEOPLE] Boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Desired length: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Compress the memory: A. Timeline scan Break the memory into: - beginning - pattern - disruption - peak moment - aftermath - current meaning B. Moment selection Identify the 5 moments that could represent the whole experience. For each include: - what happens - what it represents - emotional weight - reader relevance - privacy risk - narrative strength C. Compression method Choose the best method: - single scene - braided memory - before / after contrast - object-centered memory - letter-style reflection - timeline fragments - one conversation - one decision D. Detail reduction Classify details as: - essential - useful - atmospheric - distracting - too private - belongs elsewhere E. Focused narrative plan Create: - compressed premise - opening image - selected scenes - reflection points - final meaning - title options Rules: - Do not include every event. - Do not simplify pain into a clean lesson. - Do not expose details that create unnecessary harm. - Compression should increase clarity, not erase complexity. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#096Stakes Amplifier

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHStories that feel interesting but low-impact, flat, overly casual, or unclear in consequence.

Clarify and strengthen the stakes of a story so the reader understands why the moment matters emotionally, practically, relationally, or existentially.

Act as a stakes editor. Help me make the stakes of my story clear without exaggerating or adding fake drama. Story or scene: [PASTE STORY / SCENE / OUTLINE] Context: Main character or narrator: [CHARACTER / NARRATOR] What they want: [WANT] What stands in the way: [OBSTACLE] What could be lost: [LOSS] What could be gained: [GAIN] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Identify the stakes: 1. Surface stakes What is visibly at risk? 2. Emotional stakes What feeling, identity, hope, fear, or self-image is at risk? 3. Relational stakes What relationship, trust, belonging, or expectation is at risk? 4. Practical stakes What decision, opportunity, money, time, safety, reputation, or work is at risk? 5. Existential stakes What larger life question or value is at risk? Then create: - stakes statement - 5 ways to reveal stakes early - 5 ways to escalate stakes gradually - 5 lines that imply stakes without explaining them - 5 details that make the stakes concrete - where not to overstate stakes Final output: - revised opening with clearer stakes - outline with stakes progression - stakes checklist Rules: - Do not inflate stakes beyond truth. - Do not explain stakes only at the end. - Do not confuse inconvenience with consequence. - The reader should feel why the story matters before being told. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#097Narrative Pacing Doctor

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHEssays, stories, newsletters, memoir chapters, scripts, speeches, and long-form narrative writing.

Diagnose and fix pacing problems such as rushing, dragging, overexplaining, underdeveloped scenes, abrupt transitions, or emotional whiplash.

You are a narrative pacing doctor. Review my draft or outline and diagnose where the pacing helps or hurts the reading experience. Draft or outline: [PASTE DRAFT / OUTLINE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] Length target: [LENGTH] Desired emotional effect: [EFFECT] Most important scene or idea: [IMPORTANT PART] Tone: [TONE] Diagnose pacing: A. Speed map Mark sections as: - too fast - too slow - just right - emotionally rushed - overexplained - underdeveloped - abrupt - repetitive B. Scene vs summary balance Identify where to: - expand into scene - compress into summary - add reflection - remove reflection - add transition - cut repetition C. Emotional pacing Check whether the reader has enough time to: - understand the situation - feel tension - absorb conflict - process change - trust the realization - land on the ending D. Sentence-level pacing Suggest changes using: - shorter sentences - longer reflective sentences - paragraph breaks - white space - sensory detail - clipped dialogue - slower description - faster action E. Fix plan Create: - pacing diagnosis - top 10 fixes - revised section order - where to cut - where to expand - sample rewrites Rules: - Do not focus on grammar unless it affects pacing. - Do not make every section fast. - Do not slow the story with unnecessary detail. - Pacing should match tension, meaning, and reader attention. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#098Resonant Ending Builder

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHEssays, newsletters, memoirs, speeches, stories, articles, scripts, and reflective writing.

Create endings that feel memorable, emotionally earned, and meaningful without being clichéd, preachy, abrupt, or overly neat.

Act as an ending editor. Help me build an ending that gives the piece emotional resonance and intellectual closure without forcing a perfect conclusion. Piece summary: [SUMMARY / DRAFT / OUTLINE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Core message: [MESSAGE] Main emotion: [EMOTION] Story arc: [ARC] What changed: [CHANGE] What remains unresolved: [UNRESOLVED] Tone: [TONE] CTA or no CTA: [CTA PREFERENCE] Build ending options: 1. Echo ending Return to an image, line, question, or moment from the opening. 2. Realization ending End with what is understood now. 3. Open-ended ending End with unresolved truth. 4. Action ending End with a next step or invitation. 5. Image ending End on a concrete detail. 6. Quiet emotional ending End with restraint. 7. Contradiction ending End with tension that remains alive. 8. Reader-facing ending Turn the story toward the reader. For each ending include: - final paragraph - emotional effect - what it resolves - what it leaves open - risk - best use case Then recommend: - strongest ending - most subtle ending - most memorable ending - ending to avoid Rules: - Do not end with a generic life lesson. - Do not over-explain the meaning. - Do not force closure if the truth is unresolved. - The ending should feel earned by the story. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#099Braided Narrative Weaver

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHLong essays, memoir chapters, newsletters, speeches, creative nonfiction, personal essays, and thought leadership with multiple examples.

Combine multiple stories, timelines, memories, ideas, or examples into one coherent braided narrative with a shared theme.

You are a braided narrative editor. Help me weave multiple story threads into one coherent piece without confusing the reader. Threads: Thread 1: [THREAD 1] Thread 2: [THREAD 2] Thread 3: [THREAD 3] Additional threads: [ADDITIONAL THREADS] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Shared theme: [THEME] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Format: [FORMAT] Length: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Desired takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Build the braid: A. Thread diagnosis For each thread identify: - story function - emotional color - key moment - conflict - insight - reader relevance - risk of confusion B. Shared spine Find the unifying element: - theme - question - image - conflict - transformation - argument - emotional arc - recurring object or phrase C. Braid structure Create 3 possible structures: 1. alternating threads 2. main story with supporting echoes 3. present-day reflection with past inserts For each include: - section order - transition logic - where each thread enters - where each thread exits - risk D. Transition design Write 10 transitions that move between threads through: - image - question - time - emotion - contrast - repeated phrase - cause and effect E. Final braided outline Create: - opening - thread sequence - reflection points - midpoint shift - ending - cut list Rules: - Do not include a thread only because it is interesting. - Do not confuse the reader with too many timelines. - Do not let the theme become vague. - Every thread must deepen the shared meaning. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#100Full Storytelling, Narrative & Emotional Depth Audit

STORYTELLING, NARRATIVE & EMOTIONAL DEPTHWriters doing a complete storytelling revision or developing a rough story into a finished narrative piece.

Audit and improve a story, essay, script, speech, memoir piece, newsletter, or narrative draft across structure, tension, scene, emotion, character, pacing, and resonance.

Act as an independent storytelling, narrative, and emotional depth auditor. Review my story material and identify what is strong, weak, missing, confusing, emotionally flat, overdone, or worth developing. Story material: [PASTE STORY / DRAFT / OUTLINE / NOTES] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Desired reader feeling: [FEELING] Core message or theme: [MESSAGE / THEME] Length target: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] What I am worried about: [WORRY] Audit across 20 dimensions: 1. Story premise 2. Narrative hook 3. Reader relevance 4. Central conflict 5. Stakes 6. Emotional arc 7. Scene strength 8. Character revelation 9. Specificity 10. Sensory detail 11. Dialogue or subtext 12. Transformation 13. Vulnerability calibration 14. Emotional honesty 15. Pacing 16. Structure 17. Reflection balance 18. Theme clarity 19. Ending resonance 20. Memorability For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the material - missing element - risk if ignored - recommended fix - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 5 narrative problems Rank by: - impact on reader engagement - impact on emotional depth - impact on clarity - ease of fixing B. Story truth audit Separate: - what feels emotionally true - what feels performed - what feels underdeveloped - what feels overexplained - what should be protected or cut C. Rebuilt narrative plan Create: - best story premise - central conflict - stakes statement - emotional arc - scene sequence - reflection points - pacing plan - ending direction D. Revision roadmap Create: - first revision pass - second revision pass - scene expansion tasks - cuts to make - lines or moments to preserve - final polish checklist E. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard storytelling truth - the strongest emotional asset - the weakest narrative area - the most important scene to build - the next revision action to take today Rules: - Do not flatter weak storytelling. - Do not invent details. - Do not push for unnecessary trauma or oversharing. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Focus on making the story clearer, deeper, more specific, and more emotionally earned. COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITING

#101Conversion Message Spine Builder

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGLanding pages, sales pages, product pages, ad campaigns, funnel copy, homepage sections, offer explanations, and conversion audits.

Build the core persuasive logic behind any conversion-focused page or campaign before writing the final copy.

You are a senior conversion copy strategist. Help me build the persuasive message spine for my offer before writing any final copy. Inputs: Product / offer: [PRODUCT / OFFER] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Audience problem: [PROBLEM] Audience desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Current awareness level: [AWARENESS LEVEL] Main promise: [PROMISE] Proof available: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Competitors or alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Price or commitment required: [PRICE / COMMITMENT] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Build the conversion message spine: 1. Conversion context Clarify: - what the reader already knows - what they need to believe - what they are skeptical about - what outcome they want - what risk they feel - what decision they are being asked to make 2. Persuasive sequence Create the logical path from attention to action: - problem recognition - desire activation - cost of inaction - solution introduction - mechanism explanation - credibility proof - objection handling - offer clarity - risk reversal - call to action 3. Core message architecture Provide: - primary headline promise - subheadline support - value proposition - unique mechanism - key benefits - proof points - objection responses - CTA logic - urgency or reason to act now 4. Weakness diagnosis Identify where the message may be: - too vague - too clever - too generic - too aggressive - too unsupported - too feature-heavy - too focused on the product instead of the reader 5. Final copy direction Create: - one-page messaging brief - recommended section order - emotional angle - rational angle - proof angle - conversion risks - copy checklist Rules: - Do not write hype. - Do not invent proof. - Do not overpromise results. - Make the message clear enough that a copywriter can draft from it immediately. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#102Landing Page Section-by-Section Copywriter

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGSaaS landing pages, service pages, course pages, product launches, lead magnet pages, waitlists, app pages, and startup homepages.

Write a complete landing page using a clear conversion structure tailored to the offer, audience, awareness level, objections, and proof.

Act as a direct-response landing page copywriter. Write a complete landing page draft for the offer below using persuasive but trustworthy copy. Offer details: Product / service name: [PRODUCT NAME] What it does: [WHAT IT DOES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Audience pain: [PAIN] Audience dream outcome: [DREAM OUTCOME] Unique mechanism: [UNIQUE MECHANISM] Top features: [FEATURES] Benefits: [BENEFITS] Proof: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] CTA: [CTA] Pricing or offer details: [PRICING] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Write the landing page in this structure: A. Hero section Include: - headline - subheadline - primary CTA - secondary CTA, if useful - trust microcopy B. Problem section Show: - what the audience is struggling with - why the old way is frustrating - what the hidden cost is - why now matters C. Solution section Explain: - what the product is - how it works - why it is different - who it is for - who it is not for D. Benefit sections Create 3 to 5 benefit blocks. Each block must include: - benefit headline - plain-language explanation - feature supporting the benefit - outcome the user gets - proof or example placeholder E. Proof section Use only the proof provided. If proof is missing, write [PROOF NEEDED] instead of inventing it. F. Objection handling Address the strongest objections through: - FAQ - comparison - reassurance - risk reversal - clarity G. Final CTA section Write: - final headline - CTA button copy - supporting microcopy - low-pressure reassurance Rules: - Do not use generic claims like "save time and grow faster" unless specific. - Do not invent testimonials, numbers, or guarantees. - Keep the copy conversion-focused but not pushy. - Make every section answer a reader question. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#103Headline Stress-Test Laboratory

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGLanding pages, sales pages, ads, email subject lines, product pages, webinar pages, hero sections, and social campaigns.

Generate, compare, and improve conversion headlines by testing clarity, specificity, reader relevance, curiosity, differentiation, and proof fit.

You are a headline testing strategist. Generate and evaluate headline options for the offer below. Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Core problem: [PROBLEM] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Unique advantage: [ADVANTAGE] Proof or credibility: [PROOF] Awareness level: [AWARENESS] Platform or placement: [PLACEMENT] Tone: [TONE] Words to avoid: [AVOID] Create headline options across 12 categories: 1. Outcome-led 2. Problem-aware 3. Mechanism-led 4. Specific benefit 5. Time-saving 6. Risk-reduction 7. Comparison 8. Contrarian 9. Curiosity-driven 10. Proof-led 11. Identity-based 12. Direct offer For each headline provide: - headline - subheadline support - why it may work - reader awareness fit - risk or weakness Then score every headline from 1 to 10 on: - clarity - specificity - relevance - credibility - curiosity - conversion potential - differentiation - proof fit Next, choose: - best overall headline - clearest headline - boldest headline - safest headline - best ad headline - best landing page headline - headline to avoid Finally, improve the top 5 headlines by making each: - more specific - more believable - more reader-centered - less generic - easier to understand in 3 seconds Rules: - Do not create clickbait. - Do not make claims stronger than the proof. - Do not rely on cleverness over clarity. - Headlines must make the right reader understand the value quickly. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#104Offer Explanation Simplifier

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGSaaS products, AI tools, consulting services, agencies, B2B offers, technical products, creator products, and new categories.

Turn a confusing, technical, complex, or abstract offer into simple copy that buyers understand quickly.

Act as a plain-language offer translator. Simplify my offer so a potential buyer understands what it is, who it is for, why it matters, and what to do next. Offer description: [PASTE CURRENT OFFER DESCRIPTION] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] What they already understand: [KNOWN] What confuses them: [CONFUSION] Main outcome: [OUTCOME] Features: [FEATURES] Benefits: [BENEFITS] Competitors or alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Price or commitment: [PRICE / COMMITMENT] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Simplify the offer in layers: Layer 1 - One-line explanation Write 10 versions that explain the offer in one sentence. Layer 2 - For-who / does-what / so-that Create 5 versions using this structure: For [AUDIENCE], [PRODUCT NAME] helps [ACTION] so they can [OUTCOME]. Layer 3 - Problem-solution explanation Write: - the problem - why it matters - the solution - how it works - why it is different - what the buyer gets Layer 4 - Feature-to-benefit translation Create a table with: - feature - what it means - why the buyer cares - outcome - proof needed Layer 5 - Buyer-ready copy Write: - hero section - short product description - FAQ answer: "What is this?" - elevator pitch - ad copy version - email paragraph version Rules: - Do not use jargon unless the audience uses it. - Do not hide the offer behind vague transformation language. - Do not oversimplify until the offer becomes inaccurate. - The final copy must be understandable in under 10 seconds. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#105Objection Handling Copy Matrix

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGSales pages, landing pages, checkout pages, emails, ads, discovery call assets, product pages, and proposal copy.

Convert buyer objections into persuasive copy blocks, FAQs, reassurance lines, proof sections, comparison copy, and risk reversal language.

You are an objection-handling copy strategist. Identify and address the objections that stop people from converting. Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Price or commitment: [PRICE / COMMITMENT] Known objections: [OBJECTIONS] Proof available: [PROOF] Guarantee or risk reversal: [GUARANTEE] Competitors or alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Build the objection matrix: A. Objection discovery Identify objections in these categories: - price - time - trust - effort - complexity - relevance - urgency - authority - switching cost - fear of failure - fear of being sold to - past bad experiences - comparison to alternatives B. Objection diagnosis For each objection explain: - what the buyer says - what they really mean - emotional driver - rational concern - proof needed - best place to address it C. Copy responses For each major objection write: - short reassurance line - longer FAQ answer - proof block - comparison angle - risk reversal line - CTA support line D. Page placement Recommend where each objection should appear: - hero - problem section - solution section - proof section - pricing section - FAQ - checkout - post-CTA microcopy E. Final objection-handling system Create: - top 5 objections to address first - FAQ section - trust section copy - pricing reassurance copy - final CTA support copy Rules: - Do not dismiss buyer concerns. - Do not shame the buyer for hesitating. - Do not invent guarantees or proof. - Objection handling should make the decision feel safer, clearer, and more informed. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#106Product Description Conversion Enhancer

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGE-commerce products, digital products, templates, software tools, courses, books, bundles, marketplaces, and catalog pages.

Write product descriptions that connect features, benefits, sensory detail, buyer motivation, objections, and purchase confidence.

Act as an e-commerce and product copywriter. Write a conversion-focused product description that makes the product feel clear, desirable, and trustworthy. Product details: Product name: [PRODUCT NAME] Product category: [CATEGORY] Target buyer: [BUYER] Main use case: [USE CASE] Key features: [FEATURES] Benefits: [BENEFITS] Materials / specs / technical details: [SPECS] Differentiators: [DIFFERENTIATORS] Common objections: [OBJECTIONS] Proof, ratings, reviews, or guarantees: [PROOF] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Write the product copy: 1. Short product summary Write a 2-sentence version for quick scanning. 2. Benefit-led description Write a polished product description that includes: - who it is for - what it helps them do - what makes it different - why the details matter - what buying it enables 3. Feature-benefit bullets Create 8 bullets. Each bullet must follow: Feature → meaning → buyer benefit. 4. Use-case copy Write 5 use-case sections: - everyday use - best-fit buyer - gift or special occasion, if relevant - problem solved - premium or quality angle 5. Conversion support Write: - objection-handling FAQ - trust microcopy - CTA button options - checkout reassurance - comparison line against alternatives Rules: - Do not invent product specs. - Do not use empty luxury language. - Do not exaggerate benefits. - Make the description easy to skim and strong enough to support a buying decision. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#107CTA Precision Workshop

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGLanding pages, sales pages, emails, ads, popups, lead magnets, checkout flows, app onboarding, and newsletter signups.

Create stronger calls to action by matching button copy, surrounding microcopy, reader stage, risk level, and conversion intent.

You are a CTA conversion specialist. Improve the call-to-action system for my page, email, ad, or funnel. Context: Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Current CTA: [CURRENT CTA] Reader stage: [STAGE] Perceived risk: [RISK] What happens after clicking: [AFTER CLICK] Primary objection near CTA: [OBJECTION] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Create a CTA system: A. CTA diagnosis Evaluate the current CTA for: - clarity - specificity - action fit - anxiety level - expectation setting - motivation - commitment size - tone - friction B. Button copy options Generate 30 CTA button options grouped by: - direct action - outcome-led - low-friction - curiosity-led - buyer-ready - trial or demo - lead magnet - newsletter - checkout - consultation C. CTA support microcopy Write lines for: - below-button reassurance - risk reversal - privacy reassurance - time expectation - no-pressure note - what happens next - urgency, if honest D. CTA placement strategy Recommend: - first CTA placement - repeated CTA placements - final CTA copy - secondary CTA - when not to include a CTA E. Final recommendation Choose the best CTA system and explain: - why it matches the reader stage - what objection it reduces - what expectation it sets - how to test it Rules: - Do not use vague CTAs like "Learn More" unless there is a clear reason. - Do not create fake urgency. - Do not make the CTA feel bigger than the actual next step. - The CTA should reduce hesitation, not add pressure. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#108Ad Copy Angle Sprint

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGMeta ads, Google ads, LinkedIn ads, X ads, TikTok hooks, YouTube pre-roll, display ads, retargeting ads, and paid social tests.

Generate distinct ad copy angles and variants based on buyer awareness, pains, benefits, proof, objections, and platform constraints.

Act as a paid acquisition copy strategist. Create ad copy angles and variants for the offer below. Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Awareness level: [AWARENESS] Pain points: [PAIN POINTS] Desired outcomes: [OUTCOMES] Unique mechanism: [MECHANISM] Proof: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] CTA: [CTA] Compliance limits or words to avoid: [LIMITS] Tone: [TONE] Create ad copy in this sprint format: Round 1 - Angle strategy Generate 10 ad angles: - pain-led - outcome-led - proof-led - mechanism-led - problem-aware - comparison - mistake avoidance - social proof - founder / behind-the-scenes - retargeting reassurance For each angle include: - audience state - message - hook - reason it may work - risk Round 2 - Ad variants For the best 5 angles, write: - 3 short primary texts - 3 headlines - 3 descriptions - 3 CTA lines - 1 visual concept suggestion Round 3 - Testing plan Create: - test hypothesis - audience segment - success metric - what to learn - what not to conclude too early Round 4 - Quality check Flag: - overclaims - vague benefits - weak hooks - missing proof - compliance risks - audience mismatch Rules: - Do not invent proof. - Do not use manipulative fear. - Do not make medical, financial, or guaranteed-result claims unless provided and compliant. - Each ad angle must be meaningfully different. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#109Sales Page Emotional Logic Builder

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGCourses, coaching, services, memberships, consulting offers, high-ticket products, digital products, and paid communities.

Plan and write a sales page that balances emotional resonance, rational proof, offer clarity, objections, value, and buyer confidence.

You are a long-form sales page strategist. Build the emotional and logical flow for a sales page that sells without sounding aggressive. Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Problem: [PROBLEM] Desired transformation: [TRANSFORMATION] Why current solutions fail: [WHY OTHERS FAIL] Unique method: [METHOD] Offer components: [COMPONENTS] Bonuses: [BONUSES] Price: [PRICE] Guarantee: [GUARANTEE] Proof: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] CTA: [CTA] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Create the sales page: 1. Emotional entry Write: - opening hook - pain recognition - desire statement - "this is for you if" section 2. Problem expansion Explain: - why the problem persists - hidden costs - false solutions - what needs to change 3. Method reveal Introduce: - unique method - why it works - what makes it different - simple framework explanation 4. Offer stack Present: - core offer - components - bonuses - value communication - delivery format - who it is for - who it is not for 5. Proof and credibility Use provided proof only. If proof is missing, write [PROOF NEEDED]. 6. Objection handling Address: - price - time - fit - trust - effort - fear of failure - timing 7. Conversion close Write: - final argument - CTA section - guarantee or risk reversal - urgency or reason to act now, only if real - final reassurance Rules: - Do not use fake scarcity. - Do not shame the buyer. - Do not overpromise transformation. - Make the offer clear before asking for action. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#110Before-After-Bridge Copy Engine

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGQuick campaigns, landing pages, email promotions, ads, social posts, product pages, service pages, and sales scripts.

Turn buyer pain and desired outcomes into clear before-after-bridge copy for pages, ads, emails, posts, and product explanations.

Act as a persuasive copy engine using the Before-After-Bridge logic, but adapt it naturally to my audience and offer. Inputs: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Before state: [BEFORE STATE] After state: [AFTER STATE] Offer: [OFFER] Bridge / mechanism: [MECHANISM] Proof: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Tone: [TONE] Format needed: [FORMAT] Create copy in this sequence: A. Before-state exploration Write 10 versions of the buyer's current state: - practical problem - emotional frustration - hidden cost - repeated failure - comparison pain - decision pressure - wasted effort - missed opportunity - identity tension - urgency B. After-state expansion Write 10 versions of the desired outcome: - clear result - emotional relief - practical improvement - status change - confidence gain - speed improvement - simplicity - control - better decision - future benefit C. Bridge creation Explain the offer as the bridge: - what it does - how it works - why it is credible - why it is easier or better - what makes it different D. Copy outputs Create: - landing page hero - email opener - ad copy - social post - product description - short sales script - CTA section E. Best version selection Choose the strongest version and explain: - why it matches the reader - what objection it handles - what proof would strengthen it Rules: - Do not exaggerate before-state pain. - Do not promise an unrealistic after-state. - Do not make the bridge vague. - Keep the copy specific, concrete, and believable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#111Feature-to-Value Translation System

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGSaaS, apps, B2B products, AI tools, e-commerce, service pages, pitch decks, pricing pages, and product launches.

Convert features into meaningful benefits, outcomes, use cases, emotional value, business value, and buying reasons.

You are a product messaging translator. Turn my feature list into buyer-centered value copy. Feature list: [PASTE FEATURES] Context: Product: [PRODUCT NAME] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Use case: [USE CASE] Buyer role: [BUYER ROLE] Decision criteria: [CRITERIA] Main pain: [PAIN] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Competitors or alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Translate features into value: 1. Feature clarification For each feature explain: - what it is - what it does - what problem it touches - what buyer action it supports 2. Benefit ladder For each feature build: - functional benefit - emotional benefit - business benefit - strategic benefit - proof needed - best use case 3. Buyer language Rewrite each feature as: - plain-language bullet - outcome-led bullet - product page copy - sales call line - ad angle - FAQ answer 4. Value hierarchy Rank features by: - buyer importance - differentiation - ease of understanding - proof availability - conversion impact 5. Final messaging Create: - top 5 value propositions - hero section - feature section - comparison section - demo or trial CTA support Rules: - Do not assume features are automatically valuable. - Do not use internal product language unless the buyer uses it. - Do not inflate minor features. - Tie every feature to a buyer outcome. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#112Pricing Page Persuasion Architect

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGSaaS pricing pages, subscriptions, memberships, service packages, product bundles, course tiers, and agency retainers.

Improve pricing page copy by making plans, value, differences, objections, guarantees, and upgrade logic clear.

Act as a pricing page conversion strategist. Help me write pricing page copy that makes the buying decision clearer and easier. Pricing context: Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Pricing model: [MODEL] Plans or tiers: [PLANS] Price points: [PRICES] What each plan includes: [INCLUSIONS] Best-fit customer for each plan: [FIT] Main objections: [OBJECTIONS] Guarantee / trial / refund policy: [POLICY] Competitors or alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Proof: [PROOF] Tone: [TONE] Build the pricing page: A. Pricing page strategy Define: - what decision the buyer is making - what confusion must be removed - what plan should be highlighted - what value must be reinforced - what risk must be reduced B. Plan positioning For each plan write: - plan name improvement, if needed - one-line description - best for - key benefits - included features - not ideal for - CTA copy - support microcopy C. Value communication Write sections for: - why the price makes sense - cost of alternative - ROI or value logic, without inventing numbers - comparison to doing nothing - what is included beyond features D. Objection handling Write FAQ answers for: - which plan should I choose? - can I cancel? - is this right for me? - why this price? - what if I do not use it? - what happens after purchase? E. Final pricing page draft Create: - headline - subheadline - plan cards - comparison notes - guarantee section - FAQ - final CTA Rules: - Do not hide important pricing details. - Do not use fake discounts. - Do not invent ROI numbers. - Make plan differences obvious and buyer-friendly. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#113Persuasive Email Copy Composer

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGPromotional emails, launch emails, nurture emails, reactivation emails, webinar invites, product announcements, and sales sequences.

Write conversion-focused emails that sell, educate, invite, launch, nurture, or re-activate without damaging trust.

You are an email conversion copywriter. Write a persuasive email for the campaign below while keeping the tone human, clear, and trust-building. Campaign context: Offer or message: [OFFER / MESSAGE] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Email goal: [GOAL] Reader awareness level: [AWARENESS] Relationship with audience: [RELATIONSHIP] Main pain or desire: [PAIN / DESIRE] Proof: [PROOF] Objection to address: [OBJECTION] CTA: [CTA] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Length preference: [LENGTH] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Write the email: 1. Subject lines Create: - 5 curiosity subject lines - 5 direct subject lines - 5 benefit subject lines - 5 low-pressure subject lines 2. Preview text Write 5 preview text options. 3. Email body Write 3 versions: - short and direct - story-led - educational and persuasive Each version must include: - opening - reader relevance - core message - proof or credibility - objection handling - CTA - soft close 4. CTA options Provide: - direct CTA - low-pressure CTA - curiosity CTA - reply-based CTA 5. Trust check Flag anything that may feel: - too pushy - too vague - too salesy - too unsupported - too urgent without reason Rules: - Do not use fake urgency. - Do not overuse hype language. - Do not invent proof or testimonials. - The email should make saying yes feel clear, not pressured. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#114Checkout Friction Copy Doctor

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGCheckout pages, signup forms, lead forms, demo requests, trial starts, payment pages, app onboarding, and subscription flows.

Improve checkout, signup, demo, trial, form, and payment flow copy by reducing anxiety, confusion, and abandonment.

Act as a checkout friction copy doctor. Review and improve the copy around the final conversion step so users feel confident completing it. Conversion flow: [PASTE CHECKOUT / FORM / SIGNUP COPY] Context: Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Conversion action: [ACTION] What happens after submission: [AFTER] Price or commitment: [PRICE / COMMITMENT] Known drop-off concerns: [CONCERNS] Guarantee / privacy / refund details: [POLICY] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Audit the final-step copy: A. Friction diagnosis Identify issues with: - unclear button copy - weak expectation setting - missing reassurance - privacy anxiety - payment anxiety - commitment fear - form length anxiety - unclear next step - hidden costs - weak error messages B. Microcopy improvements Write improved copy for: - form headline - field labels - helper text - button copy - below-button reassurance - privacy note - payment note - cancellation note - guarantee note - success message - error messages C. Anxiety reducers Create copy that answers: - is this safe? - what happens next? - am I locked in? - can I cancel? - how long will this take? - why do you need this information? - what if I change my mind? D. Final conversion flow copy Write a complete revised version. E. Test suggestions Recommend copy tests for: - CTA - reassurance - guarantee - field labels - progress indicators Rules: - Do not hide conditions. - Do not pressure the user at the final step. - Do not invent policies. - Reduce friction through clarity, honesty, and expectation-setting. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#115Social Proof Placement Strategist

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGLanding pages, sales pages, homepages, product pages, pitch pages, email campaigns, ads, and checkout flows.

Use testimonials, reviews, case studies, logos, results, quotes, and credibility signals in the right places for maximum trust and conversion.

You are a social proof strategy editor. Help me place and rewrite proof so it supports the buyer's decision instead of feeling decorative. Proof assets: [PASTE TESTIMONIALS / REVIEWS / CASE STUDIES / LOGOS / RESULTS / QUOTES] Context: Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Main claims: [CLAIMS] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Buyer stage: [STAGE] Page or campaign type: [TYPE] Tone: [TONE] Analyze and use the proof: 1. Proof classification Classify each proof asset as: - outcome proof - credibility proof - process proof - emotional proof - objection proof - identity proof - authority proof - volume proof - comparison proof 2. Proof strength score Score each asset from 1 to 10 on: - specificity - credibility - relevance - emotional power - claim support - objection handling - conversion value 3. Placement strategy Recommend where to place proof: - hero - problem section - solution section - feature section - pricing section - objection section - CTA section - checkout - email - ad 4. Proof copy adaptation Turn proof into: - short testimonial snippets - longer proof blocks - headline support - case study teaser - CTA reassurance - FAQ proof answer - ad proof angle 5. Proof gaps Identify missing proof needed to support major claims. Rules: - Do not invent proof. - Do not exaggerate results. - Do not use testimonials out of context. - Place proof where it answers a specific buyer doubt. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#116Comparison Page Copy Builder

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGSaaS comparison pages, alternative pages, service comparisons, product comparisons, sales decks, objection handling, and competitive landing pages.

Write comparison copy that helps buyers understand differences between your offer, competitors, alternatives, and doing nothing without sounding unfair or desperate.

Act as a competitive comparison copywriter. Write fair, persuasive comparison copy that helps buyers choose the right option. My offer: [MY OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Competitor or alternative: [COMPETITOR / ALTERNATIVE] Other alternatives: [OTHER ALTERNATIVES] Main buyer criteria: [CRITERIA] Where we are stronger: [STRENGTHS] Where they may be stronger: [THEIR STRENGTHS] Proof: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Build the comparison copy: A. Buyer decision frame Explain: - what decision the buyer is really making - who each option is best for - what tradeoffs matter - what criteria should guide the choice B. Fair comparison table Create a table with: - criteria - my offer - alternative - why it matters - buyer takeaway C. Narrative comparison Write sections for: - when to choose us - when to choose the alternative - where our approach differs - what buyers often overlook - cost of doing nothing D. Objection handling Address: - "why not just use the competitor?" - "is this worth switching?" - "what if I already have another tool?" - "what makes this different?" - "who is this not right for?" E. Page copy Write: - headline - subheadline - comparison intro - feature/value comparison - proof section - CTA section Rules: - Do not attack competitors unfairly. - Do not invent competitor weaknesses. - Do not hide cases where the alternative is a better fit. - Trustworthy comparison copy should help the buyer decide. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#117Hook and Opening Line Conversion Lab

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGAds, emails, landing pages, sales pages, social posts, product launches, video scripts, and direct response content.

Create opening lines that grab attention, establish relevance, and lead naturally into persuasive copy.

You are a conversion hook editor. Create strong opening lines that make the right reader continue. Offer or topic: [OFFER / TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Reader pain: [PAIN] Reader desire: [DESIRE] Awareness level: [AWARENESS] Platform: [PLATFORM] Format: [FORMAT] Tone: [TONE] Claims or words to avoid: [AVOID] Generate hooks across these types: 1. Problem recognition hook 2. Desired outcome hook 3. Mistake hook 4. Contrarian hook 5. Question hook 6. Pattern interrupt hook 7. Proof-led hook 8. Story-led hook 9. Comparison hook 10. Cost-of-inaction hook 11. Curiosity hook 12. Direct offer hook For each hook provide: - opening line - second line - reader trigger - promise implied - best use case - risk Then evaluate: - which hooks are clearest - which hooks are most persuasive - which hooks may feel too aggressive - which hooks need proof - which hooks fit the platform best Finally create: - top 10 hooks - top 3 recommended hooks - one full opening paragraph for each top hook Rules: - Do not use clickbait. - Do not start with fake statistics. - Do not make the hook unrelated to the offer. - The hook should attract the right buyer, not everyone. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#118Benefit Bullet Rewriter

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGLanding pages, sales pages, product pages, pitch decks, app store pages, Amazon listings, SaaS pages, and email campaigns.

Rewrite weak, feature-heavy, vague, or generic bullets into specific persuasive bullets that communicate value quickly.

Act as a benefit bullet editor. Rewrite the bullets below so they are clearer, more specific, and more conversion-focused. Current bullets: [PASTE BULLETS] Context: Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Main outcome: [OUTCOME] Audience pain: [PAIN] Features behind the bullets: [FEATURES] Proof or limits: [PROOF / LIMITS] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Improve the bullets: A. Diagnose each bullet For each bullet identify whether it is: - too vague - too feature-heavy - too long - too clever - too generic - missing outcome - missing context - unsupported - not reader-centered B. Rewrite styles Rewrite each bullet in 5 ways: 1. outcome-led 2. problem-solving 3. specific use-case 4. emotional relief 5. concise conversion bullet C. Bullet formulas Create additional bullets using: - "So you can..." - "Without..." - "Even if..." - "Instead of..." - "Built for..." - "Use it to..." D. Final selection Choose the strongest version for each bullet and explain why. E. Bullet section polish Create: - section headline - intro line - final bullet list - CTA support line Rules: - Do not invent benefits not supported by the offer. - Do not make every bullet the same structure. - Do not overuse adjectives. - Each bullet should make the buyer understand why the feature matters. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#119Conversion Copy Audit and Rewrite Plan

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGLanding pages, sales pages, emails, ads, product pages, homepages, pricing pages, checkout pages, and funnel copy.

Audit existing copy for clarity, persuasion, relevance, proof, objections, CTA strength, and conversion friction, then produce a prioritized rewrite plan.

You are a conversion copy auditor. Review the copy below and identify what is helping, what is hurting, and how to improve it. Current copy: [PASTE COPY] Context: Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Traffic source: [TRAFFIC SOURCE] Awareness level: [AWARENESS] Proof available: [PROOF] Known objections: [OBJECTIONS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Audit across 20 conversion dimensions: 1. First impression clarity 2. Headline strength 3. Audience relevance 4. Problem clarity 5. Offer clarity 6. Value proposition 7. Differentiation 8. Benefit specificity 9. Feature translation 10. Proof strength 11. Objection handling 12. Risk reversal 13. CTA clarity 14. CTA placement 15. Message flow 16. Emotional resonance 17. Trust signals 18. Pricing or commitment clarity 19. Friction 20. Overall conversion readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - exact issue - reader reaction - recommended fix - priority level Then create: A. Top 10 rewrite priorities Rank by conversion impact. B. Copy gaps Identify missing: - proof - specificity - objections - benefits - examples - trust signals - CTA support - risk reversal C. Rewrite plan Provide: - new message hierarchy - recommended section order - headline direction - proof placement - CTA improvements - objection sections D. Sample rewrites Rewrite: - headline - subheadline - opening section - CTA section - FAQ section - one weak paragraph Rules: - Do not rewrite everything without explaining why. - Do not invent proof or claims. - Be direct about weak copy. - Focus on changes that improve clarity, trust, and conversion. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#120Full Copywriting, Persuasion & Conversion System Audit

COPYWRITING, PERSUASION & CONVERSION WRITINGBusinesses, creators, agencies, SaaS teams, product marketers, founders, copywriters, and marketers doing a full conversion messaging reset.

Audit and rebuild the full conversion copy system across positioning, offer clarity, headlines, messaging, page flow, proof, objections, CTAs, and testing.

Act as an independent copywriting, persuasion, and conversion writing auditor. Review my offer and current copy system, then rebuild it into a clearer, more persuasive, more trustworthy conversion engine. Inputs: Offer: [OFFER] Current copy: [CURRENT COPY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Audience awareness level: [AWARENESS] Audience pain points: [PAIN POINTS] Desired outcomes: [OUTCOMES] Unique mechanism or differentiator: [MECHANISM / DIFFERENTIATOR] Features: [FEATURES] Benefits: [BENEFITS] Proof: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Competitors or alternatives: [ALTERNATIVES] Pricing or commitment: [PRICING / COMMITMENT] Conversion goal: [GOAL] Traffic source: [TRAFFIC SOURCE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Compliance or claim limits: [LIMITS] Audit across 25 dimensions: 1. Audience-message fit 2. Awareness-stage fit 3. Offer clarity 4. Problem clarity 5. Promise strength 6. Differentiation 7. Unique mechanism 8. Headline quality 9. Hero section strength 10. Message hierarchy 11. Benefit clarity 12. Feature-to-value translation 13. Proof sufficiency 14. Trust signals 15. Objection handling 16. Risk reversal 17. Pricing clarity 18. CTA clarity 19. CTA microcopy 20. Page or campaign flow 21. Emotional persuasion 22. Rational persuasion 23. Specificity 24. Conversion friction 25. Testing readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the inputs - missing information - conversion risk - recommended fix - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard conversion truth Explain the biggest reason the current copy may fail to convert. B. Message rebuild Create: - core value proposition - one-line offer explanation - primary promise - supporting promises - unique mechanism explanation - proof strategy - objection strategy - CTA strategy C. Copy assets Write: - 15 headline options - 10 subheadline options - hero section - problem section - solution section - benefit section - proof section - objection FAQ - pricing reassurance - final CTA section D. Testing roadmap Create copy tests for: - headline - CTA - proof placement - offer framing - pricing framing - objection handling - audience angle - page structure E. Stop / Start / Continue List: - copy patterns to stop using - persuasion assets to start building - strong elements to continue F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - strongest conversion asset - weakest conversion gap - highest-leverage rewrite - proof needed most urgently - next action to take today Rules: - Do not invent testimonials, guarantees, numbers, or product capabilities. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Do not optimize for pressure; optimize for clarity, relevance, proof, and trust. - The final output should help me rewrite conversion copy immediately. CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLES

#121Article Brief Builder from a Rough Idea

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog posts, educational articles, thought leadership drafts, long-form content, newsletters, explainers, and authority-building essays.

Turn a rough topic or loose idea into a complete article brief with reader intent, thesis, structure, examples, research needs, and writing direction.

You are an editorial strategist. Turn my rough idea into a clear article brief that a writer can use to draft a useful, focused, and reader-relevant piece. Rough idea: [PASTE IDEA] Context: Target reader: [READER] Publishing platform: [PLATFORM] Article goal: [GOAL] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Current audience awareness level: [AWARENESS] My point of view: [POINT OF VIEW] Available proof, examples, or research: [PROOF / EXAMPLES / RESEARCH] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Target length: [LENGTH] CTA or next step: [CTA] Build the article brief: 1. Article direction Define: - working title - core thesis - reader promise - why this topic matters now - what the article should not become - what makes the angle specific 2. Reader intent Explain: - why the reader would click - what they expect to learn - what they are worried about - what they already know - what they likely misunderstand - what would make them leave 3. Content scope Create: - must include - should include - optional - cut or avoid - research needed - examples needed - proof needed 4. Structure Build: - headline options - introduction angle - section-by-section outline - transition logic - ending direction - CTA placement 5. Drafting instructions Give the writer: - opening guidance - depth level - voice direction - examples to use - claims to support - common clichés to avoid - final quality checklist Rules: - Do not turn the article into a generic overview. - Do not invent research, statistics, or quotes. - Use [SOURCE NEEDED] when evidence is missing. - The brief should make the article easier to write and harder to make vague. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#122SEO-Friendly Article Planner Without Generic Content

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog posts, search-driven articles, organic traffic content, educational guides, SaaS blogs, product-led content, and expert content.

Create an SEO-friendly article plan that satisfies search intent while still sounding original, useful, and human.

Act as an SEO editorial planner. Build an article plan that can rank for search demand while avoiding generic SEO filler. Inputs: Primary keyword: [PRIMARY KEYWORD] Secondary keywords: [SECONDARY KEYWORDS] Target reader: [READER] Search intent: [SEARCH INTENT] Article goal: [GOAL] Product or brand context, if any: [PRODUCT / BRAND] Competitors or SERP notes: [COMPETITOR / SERP NOTES] Expertise or unique point of view: [EXPERTISE / POV] Internal links available: [INTERNAL LINKS] Proof or sources available: [SOURCES] Tone: [TONE] Target length: [LENGTH] Create the SEO article plan: A. Intent diagnosis Identify: - dominant search intent - secondary intent - reader stage - what a satisfying answer must include - what most articles likely overdo - what most articles likely miss B. SERP differentiation strategy Recommend how to make the article better through: - sharper thesis - clearer structure - better examples - expert insight - stronger comparison - better templates - fresher explanation - practical next steps C. Keyword integration Create: - primary keyword placement - secondary keyword map - semantic topics - questions to answer - natural phrasing rules - terms to avoid overusing D. Article structure Provide: - SEO title - meta description - H1 - H2/H3 outline - intro plan - FAQ section - internal link plan - CTA plan E. Quality guardrails Add: - sections that need original insight - sections that need evidence - sections that should be concise - examples to include - common SEO clichés to avoid Rules: - Do not keyword-stuff. - Do not write empty sections just because competitors have them. - Do not invent search volume or rankings. - Optimize for reader satisfaction first, then search structure. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#123Long-Form Explainer Architect

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESEducational blogs, evergreen explainers, technical articles, beginner guides, industry education, creator essays, and knowledge-base-style content.

Build a clear long-form explainer that makes a complex topic understandable through definitions, examples, frameworks, sequence, and plain language.

You are a long-form explainer editor. Help me turn a complex topic into an article that is easy to understand without becoming shallow. Topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Reader knowledge level: [LEVEL] Why the topic is confusing: [CONFUSION] What the reader needs to understand: [OUTCOME] Key terms: [TERMS] Examples or analogies available: [EXAMPLES] Sources or proof: [SOURCES] Tone: [TONE] Target length: [LENGTH] Build the explainer: Step 1 - Complexity map Break the topic into: - simple definition - moving parts - common misconceptions - prerequisite concepts - advanced nuance - real-world implications Step 2 - Explanation sequence Decide the order: - what to explain first - what to explain second - what to delay - what to skip - where examples are needed - where readers may get lost Step 3 - Article blueprint Create: - title options - opening paragraph direction - section outline - examples for each section - analogy options - visual description suggestions - summary boxes - FAQ questions Step 4 - Reader support Add: - plain-language definitions - "what this means" lines - "why it matters" lines - beginner warnings - advanced notes - glossary Step 5 - Drafting rules Create style rules for: - sentence length - jargon handling - examples - transitions - summaries - ending Rules: - Do not oversimplify until the topic becomes inaccurate. - Do not use jargon without explaining it. - Do not assume the reader knows the basics. - The reader should finish with clarity, not more confusion. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#124Thought Leadership Article Angle Builder

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESExecutive articles, founder essays, LinkedIn articles, industry commentary, newsletter essays, B2B content, and authority-building writing.

Develop a thought leadership article with a clear thesis, original perspective, evidence, counterarguments, and strategic implications.

Act as a thought leadership editor. Help me create an article that has a real point of view, not just a summary of common advice. Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] My perspective: [PERSPECTIVE] Common belief in the market: [COMMON BELIEF] What I agree with: [AGREE] What I disagree with: [DISAGREE] Evidence, experience, or examples: [EVIDENCE] Business or industry context: [CONTEXT] Tone: [TONE] Target platform: [PLATFORM] Build the thought leadership article: 1. Point-of-view development Create: - main thesis - sharper thesis - nuanced thesis - contrarian thesis - practical thesis - future-facing thesis Evaluate each for: - originality - credibility - usefulness - supportability - audience relevance 2. Argument map For the strongest thesis, create: - main claim - 3 to 5 supporting arguments - counterargument - where nuance belongs - proof needed - example needed - reader implication 3. Article structure Design: - opening tension - context section - argument sections - evidence sections - practical implication section - closing insight 4. Voice calibration Write sample passages in: - executive voice - expert editorial voice - direct founder voice - analytical voice - warm advisor voice 5. Final brief Provide: - recommended title - subtitle - article outline - key lines - claims to support - risky overstatements to avoid Rules: - Do not create a hot take without substance. - Do not attack a strawman. - Do not pretend the idea is original if it is common. - The article should make the reader think differently and act more wisely. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#125Step-by-Step Tutorial Composer

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESHow-to articles, tutorials, documentation-style blogs, product education, educational newsletters, creator guides, and practical content.

Write a clear tutorial that teaches the reader how to complete a task with steps, examples, mistakes, checkpoints, and troubleshooting.

You are a practical tutorial writer. Create a step-by-step article that helps the reader complete a task successfully. Task to teach: [TASK] Target reader: [READER] Reader skill level: [SKILL LEVEL] Tools or materials needed: [TOOLS / MATERIALS] Starting point: [STARTING POINT] Desired end result: [END RESULT] Common mistakes: [MISTAKES] Constraints or warnings: [CONSTRAINTS] Examples available: [EXAMPLES] Tone: [TONE] Target length: [LENGTH] Write the tutorial plan and draft: A. Tutorial promise Create: - title - subtitle - who this is for - what they will be able to do - what they need before starting - how long it may take, if known B. Step structure For each step include: - step name - goal of the step - action instructions - example - checkpoint - common mistake - fix or warning C. Explanation support Add: - definitions - screenshots or visual suggestions - template placeholders - decision points - "if this happens, do this" notes D. Draft the tutorial Write: - introduction - step-by-step body - troubleshooting section - FAQ - conclusion - CTA or next action E. Quality check Confirm: - no missing prerequisites - steps are in correct order - examples are practical - reader knows when they are done - warnings are clear Rules: - Do not skip obvious steps for beginners. - Do not include unnecessary theory. - Do not invent tool features. - The tutorial should make execution easier, not just explain the concept. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#126High-Quality Listicle Builder

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog listicles, resource lists, tips articles, idea lists, tool roundups, mistake lists, newsletter lists, and social-to-blog content.

Create a list article that is specific, useful, non-repetitive, well-organized, and worth reading beyond the headline.

Act as a listicle quality editor. Build a list article that avoids shallow, repetitive, generic points. List topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Purpose of article: [PURPOSE] Desired number of items: [NUMBER] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader knowledge level: [LEVEL] Examples or resources available: [EXAMPLES / RESOURCES] Tone: [TONE] CTA: [CTA] Create the listicle: 1. List strategy Define: - what makes this list useful - what makes items eligible - what makes items too obvious - how items should be ordered - what the reader should be able to do after reading 2. Item generation Generate [NUMBER] items. For each item include: - item title - why it matters - how to apply it - example - common mistake - quick test or action step - when not to use it 3. Organization Group items by: - beginner items - strategic items - execution items - advanced items - mistakes to avoid - high-impact items 4. Article draft Write: - headline options - introduction - item sections - transition notes - conclusion - CTA 5. Quality filter Remove or rewrite items that are: - duplicates - generic - obvious - unsupported - too broad - not actionable Rules: - Do not create filler points to hit the number. - Do not repeat the same advice in different words. - Do not make every item the same length if some need more explanation. - The list should feel curated, not generated. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#127Authority-Building Article Research Plan

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESExpert blogs, thought leadership, industry reports, research-backed articles, opinion essays, guides, and educational content.

Build a research plan for an article that needs credibility, source support, expert insight, examples, and strong claims.

You are a research editor for authority-building articles. Create a research plan that helps me write a credible piece without overclaiming. Article topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Article goal: [GOAL] Current thesis: [THESIS] Claims I want to make: [CLAIMS] Sources I already have: [SOURCES] Examples I already have: [EXAMPLES] Industry context: [CONTEXT] Required rigor level: [RIGOR LEVEL] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Create the research plan: A. Claim audit For each claim identify: - what needs proof - what type of proof is needed - confidence level - risk of overclaiming - whether to keep, soften, or remove B. Research questions Create questions for: - definitions - market context - trends - expert opinions - data - examples - counterarguments - implementation - risks C. Source plan Recommend source types: - primary sources - expert interviews - official documentation - credible reports - customer examples - internal data - case studies - historical context D. Evidence map Create a map connecting: - section - claim - needed evidence - source type - status - notes E. Article integration Explain how to use research without making the article feel like a report: - where to quote - where to paraphrase - where to summarize - where to add interpretation - where to add examples Rules: - Do not invent citations or data. - Do not treat weak sources as strong evidence. - Mark unsupported claims as [SOURCE NEEDED]. - Research should support clarity and authority, not bury the reader. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#128Blog Introduction and Hook Workshop

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog posts, articles, essays, guides, SEO content, newsletters, product education, and thought leadership.

Create introductions that quickly establish relevance, tension, reader value, and article direction without wasting the opening.

Act as a blog introduction editor. Help me write an opening that makes the right reader continue. Article topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Article goal: [GOAL] Core thesis: [THESIS] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader expectation: [EXPECTATION] Tone: [TONE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Opening style preferences: [PREFERENCES] Generate introductions using 10 different opening types: 1. Problem-first opening 2. Question-first opening 3. Story-first opening 4. Contradiction opening 5. Data or proof opening, only if data is provided 6. Reader situation opening 7. Myth-busting opening 8. Direct promise opening 9. Pattern recognition opening 10. Stakes opening For each introduction include: - opening paragraph - why it works - reader emotion triggered - implied promise - best article type - risk or weakness Then choose the best 3 introductions based on: - clarity - relevance - originality - trust - momentum - fit with thesis Finally create: - recommended intro - shorter version - more emotional version - more direct version - transition into first section Rules: - Do not start with generic phrases like "In today's fast-paced world." - Do not use statistics unless provided. - Do not make the hook bigger than the article can deliver. - The introduction must tell the reader why this article matters. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#129Section-by-Section Article Draft Generator

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog posts, long-form content, educational articles, newsletters, SEO articles, tutorials, and authority-building content.

Draft a complete article from a structured brief while maintaining flow, clarity, examples, reader relevance, and consistent voice.

You are a professional content writer. Draft the article from the brief below, section by section, while keeping the writing useful, clear, and non-generic. Article brief: [PASTE BRIEF / OUTLINE] Context: Target reader: [READER] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Target length: [LENGTH] Primary goal: [GOAL] CTA: [CTA] Sources or proof: [SOURCES / PROOF] Examples to include: [EXAMPLES] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Draft the article: 1. Before drafting Confirm: - main thesis - reader promise - section logic - claims that need support - examples needed 2. Drafting rules Use: - clear paragraphs - specific examples - practical explanations - smooth transitions - active voice - skimmable sections - honest limitations - no unsupported claims 3. Article draft Write: - title - introduction - section headings - full body copy - examples - summary or key takeaways - conclusion - CTA 4. Inline quality notes Where needed, insert: - [SOURCE NEEDED] - [EXAMPLE NEEDED] - [VERIFY CLAIM] - [ADD INTERNAL LINK] - [IMAGE OR VISUAL SUGGESTION] 5. Final polish After the draft, provide: - 5 headline alternatives - meta description, if SEO relevant - excerpt - social teaser - revision checklist Rules: - Do not invent facts, statistics, or quotes. - Do not write filler to reach the target length. - Do not make every section sound the same. - The draft should be publishable after fact-checking and light editing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#130Article Depth Enhancer

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog rewrites, SEO refreshes, authority content, educational pieces, newsletters, and drafts that feel generic or underdeveloped.

Improve a shallow or thin article by adding nuance, examples, frameworks, counterarguments, evidence needs, and stronger reader value.

Act as a depth editor. Review my article draft and make it more useful, specific, and authoritative without adding fluff. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Target reader: [READER] Article goal: [GOAL] Desired depth level: [DEPTH] Tone: [TONE] Sources available: [SOURCES] Examples available: [EXAMPLES] Competitors or similar content: [COMPARABLE CONTENT] Things not to change: [DO NOT CHANGE] Deepen the article: A. Thinness diagnosis Identify where the draft is: - too obvious - too vague - too unsupported - too repetitive - too abstract - missing examples - missing nuance - missing reader application - missing counterarguments B. Depth opportunities Suggest improvements through: - original framework - specific example - mini case - step-by-step process - expert caveat - common mistake - comparison - checklist - data or source need - reader scenario C. Section-level improvements For each section provide: - current weakness - what to add - what to cut - what to clarify - example rewrite - priority level D. New content blocks Write 5 optional blocks: - practical example - advanced nuance - mistake section - framework section - summary checklist E. Final rewrite plan Create: - revised outline - sections to expand - sections to compress - claims to verify - new title options Rules: - Do not add length for the sake of length. - Do not invent evidence. - Do not make the article harder to read. - Depth should make the piece more useful, not heavier. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#131Comparison Article Builder

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESVersus articles, alternatives posts, buyer guides, method comparisons, product-led SEO, decision articles, and expert explainers.

Write a fair, useful comparison article that helps readers choose between options, tools, methods, strategies, products, or approaches.

You are a comparison article writer. Create a balanced article that helps the reader make a better decision. Comparison topic: [A VS B / OPTIONS] Target reader: [READER] Decision the reader is making: [DECISION] Options to compare: [OPTIONS] Reader criteria: [CRITERIA] Known strengths and weaknesses: [STRENGTHS / WEAKNESSES] Evidence or sources: [SOURCES] My product or point of view, if any: [MY PRODUCT / POV] Tone: [TONE] Target length: [LENGTH] Build the comparison article: 1. Decision frame Explain: - who this comparison is for - what decision is actually being made - what criteria matter most - what criteria are distractions - when each option can be right 2. Comparison dimensions Create comparison sections for: - use case - cost - ease of use - speed - depth - flexibility - risk - learning curve - long-term fit - best user type 3. Fair analysis For each option include: - best for - not ideal for - strengths - limitations - hidden tradeoffs - questions to ask before choosing 4. Article draft Write: - headline options - introduction - comparison table - detailed sections - recommendation by scenario - FAQ - conclusion 5. Decision support Add: - "choose A if..." - "choose B if..." - "consider another option if..." - final recommendation logic Rules: - Do not unfairly attack competitors or alternatives. - Do not invent features or pricing. - Use [VERIFY] for details that need confirmation. - The article should help the reader decide, not just rank options. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#132How-To Guide Troubleshooter

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESTutorials, guides, process articles, educational blogs, product education, documentation, and training content.

Improve how-to content by finding missing steps, confusing explanations, weak examples, unclear prerequisites, and execution risks.

Act as a how-to guide troubleshooter. Review my guide and find everything that could stop a reader from successfully completing the task. Guide draft or outline: [PASTE GUIDE] Context: Target reader: [READER] Reader skill level: [LEVEL] Task goal: [GOAL] Tools needed: [TOOLS] Known reader mistakes: [MISTAKES] Tone: [TONE] Success criteria: [SUCCESS CRITERIA] Troubleshoot the guide: A. Completion path audit Check whether the guide clearly explains: - prerequisites - starting point - required tools - sequence of steps - decision points - checkpoints - final outcome - next steps B. Reader failure points Identify where the reader may: - misunderstand a term - skip a step - use the wrong tool - apply advice in the wrong context - get stuck - not know whether they succeeded - lose motivation C. Fix each issue For every problem provide: - issue - reader consequence - severity - fix - replacement wording - example to add - visual or screenshot suggestion D. Troubleshooting section Write a dedicated troubleshooting section with: - common issue - likely cause - fix - prevention tip E. Revised guide plan Create: - improved outline - missing steps - sections to cut - examples to add - final checklist Rules: - Do not assume the reader can fill in missing steps. - Do not overcomplicate simple tasks. - Do not focus only on grammar. - The guide should help the reader actually complete the work. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#133Article Voice and Style Adapter

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBrand blogs, founder content, ghostwriting, newsletters, educational articles, thought leadership, and content teams standardizing style.

Rewrite or plan an article in a specific voice while preserving clarity, usefulness, structure, and reader trust.

You are a voice adaptation editor. Help me adapt this article or outline into the right style without changing the core meaning. Text or outline: [PASTE TEXT / OUTLINE] Context: Target reader: [READER] Desired voice: [VOICE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Reading level: [READING LEVEL] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Words or phrases to use: [USE] Words or phrases to avoid: [AVOID] Examples of preferred style: [STYLE EXAMPLES] Adapt the voice: 1. Current voice diagnosis Identify: - current tone - strengths - mismatches - sentences that feel off-brand - sections that feel too generic - sections that feel too formal or too casual 2. Voice principles Create 7 voice rules for this article. For each include: - rule - before example - after example - why it matters 3. Rewrite samples Rewrite: - headline - introduction - one explanatory paragraph - one transition - one section heading - one conclusion paragraph - CTA 4. Full adaptation plan If the full text is long, provide: - section-by-section voice instructions - words to replace - sentence patterns to use - rhythm guidance - examples to add or remove 5. Final style checklist Create a checklist to ensure the article feels: - clear - human - specific - credible - consistent - useful - aligned with the brand Rules: - Do not change factual meaning. - Do not make the voice performative. - Do not sacrifice clarity for personality. - Voice should support reader trust, not distract from the content. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#134Content Refresh and Rewrite Brief

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESOld blog posts, SEO refreshes, declining traffic content, outdated articles, thin content, product-led content, and evergreen guides.

Create a strategic refresh plan for an existing article by improving accuracy, relevance, SEO fit, structure, examples, depth, and conversion path.

Act as a content refresh strategist. Review the article below and create a rewrite brief that improves usefulness, freshness, clarity, and performance. Existing article: [PASTE ARTICLE] Context: Original goal: [ORIGINAL GOAL] New goal: [NEW GOAL] Target reader: [READER] Primary keyword, if any: [KEYWORD] Current performance notes: [PERFORMANCE] Outdated information: [OUTDATED INFO] New product or business context: [NEW CONTEXT] Sources or updates available: [SOURCES / UPDATES] Internal links: [INTERNAL LINKS] Tone: [TONE] Create the refresh brief: A. Refresh diagnosis Identify: - outdated sections - thin sections - missing sections - weak intro - weak conclusion - poor structure - unclear reader intent - unsupported claims - conversion gaps - internal linking gaps B. Keep / rewrite / remove Classify each section as: - keep - update - expand - compress - merge - move - remove - replace C. New structure Create: - improved title - improved meta description - revised outline - new section order - FAQ additions - internal link placements - CTA update D. Content upgrades Recommend: - examples to add - sources to verify - visuals to include - templates to add - definitions to clarify - expert insights to include E. Rewrite instructions Provide: - new angle - voice guidance - claims to fact-check - sections to prioritize - final publishing checklist Rules: - Do not rewrite outdated information as fact without verification. - Do not remove valuable content only because it is old. - Do not stuff keywords into the rewrite. - Refresh for reader value, accuracy, and strategic purpose. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#135Case-Led Educational Article Builder

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESCase-study blogs, founder content, B2B content, SaaS education, newsletters, thought leadership, and practical authority articles.

Build an educational article around a case, example, customer story, project, experiment, failure, or real-world scenario.

You are a case-led content writer. Turn the case below into an educational article that teaches a broader lesson. Case or example: [PASTE CASE / PROJECT / EXPERIMENT / STORY] Context: Target reader: [READER] Topic area: [TOPIC] Lesson or insight: [LESSON] Business or writing goal: [GOAL] Proof or data available: [PROOF / DATA] What can be shared publicly: [PUBLIC DETAILS] What must stay private: [PRIVATE DETAILS] Tone: [TONE] Target length: [LENGTH] Build the case-led article: 1. Case summary Clarify: - what happened - who was involved, anonymized if needed - starting problem - approach taken - result or outcome - limits of the case 2. Teaching angle Identify 5 possible lessons from the case. For each include: - lesson - reader relevance - evidence from the case - risk of overgeneralizing - best title 3. Article structure Create: - opening case moment - context section - problem section - decision or process section - result section - lessons section - application section - conclusion 4. Reader application Add: - checklist - questions to ask - mistakes to avoid - template or framework - when this lesson does not apply 5. Draft key sections Write: - introduction - case setup - lesson section - takeaway section - CTA Rules: - Do not exaggerate results. - Do not reveal private details. - Do not pretend one case proves a universal law. - Use the case to teach, not just promote. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#136Pillar Article and Topic Cluster Builder

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESContent marketing, SEO blogs, educational hubs, SaaS blogs, creator libraries, knowledge bases, and authority-building content systems.

Plan a pillar article and related supporting articles that build topical authority, internal links, and reader education around a central topic.

Act as a pillar content strategist. Build a pillar article and topic cluster around my core topic. Core topic: [CORE TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Business or publishing goal: [GOAL] Primary keyword, if any: [KEYWORD] Reader journey stages: [STAGES] Existing content: [EXISTING CONTENT] Internal links available: [INTERNAL LINKS] Product or offer connection: [PRODUCT / OFFER] Expertise or POV: [EXPERTISE / POV] Tone: [TONE] Build the pillar system: A. Pillar article definition Create: - pillar article title - reader promise - scope - what it covers - what it does not cover - why it deserves to be a pillar B. Pillar structure Build: - H1 - intro - major sections - definitions - frameworks - examples - FAQ - summary - CTA - internal link placements C. Topic cluster Create 20 supporting articles grouped by: - beginner questions - problem-aware content - comparison content - how-to content - advanced content - product-led content - thought leadership - troubleshooting For each supporting article include: - title - intent - target reader - relation to pillar - internal link direction - CTA D. Content sequencing Recommend: - what to publish first - what to update - what to link - what to combine - what to leave out E. Authority strategy Add: - proof needs - examples to collect - visuals to create - expert quotes needed - differentiation strategy Rules: - Do not make the pillar too broad to be useful. - Do not create cluster topics that repeat each other. - Do not force product promotion into every article. - Build for reader education and topical depth. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#137Article Formatting and Readability Doctor

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog posts, newsletters, long-form articles, SEO content, educational guides, thought leadership, and web publishing.

Improve article readability, formatting, flow, headings, paragraph length, scanning experience, transitions, and structure.

You are a readability and formatting editor. Make my article easier to read, scan, and finish without changing the core message. Article: [PASTE ARTICLE] Context: Target reader: [READER] Platform: [PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] Length preference: [LENGTH] Reader device or context: [DEVICE / CONTEXT] Main goal: [GOAL] Do not change: [DO NOT CHANGE] Audit readability: A. Scannability Evaluate: - headline - subheadings - paragraph length - bullet usage - section breaks - summary boxes - white space - opening clarity - conclusion clarity B. Flow Identify issues with: - abrupt transitions - repeated ideas - buried thesis - weak section order - long setup - unclear examples - confusing jumps - unnecessary tangents C. Sentence clarity Flag sentences that are: - too long - too vague - too passive - too jargon-heavy - too abstract - too repetitive D. Formatting improvements Recommend: - new headings - shorter paragraphs - bullet conversions - pull quotes - summary boxes - checklists - tables - callout boxes - visual suggestions E. Rewrite samples Rewrite: - headline - introduction - 3 weak headings - 3 dense paragraphs - conclusion Rules: - Do not dumb down complex ideas. - Do not over-format until the article feels fragmented. - Do not change facts or claims. - Make the article feel easier to enter, follow, and finish. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#138Expert Source Synthesis Article Builder

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESExpert roundups, interview-based articles, research blogs, industry commentary, reports, newsletters, and authority content.

Turn multiple expert notes, interviews, sources, or quotes into a coherent article with clear synthesis instead of a disconnected roundup.

Act as an expert synthesis editor. Turn the source material below into a coherent article that has a clear throughline. Source material: [PASTE INTERVIEWS / QUOTES / NOTES / SOURCE SUMMARIES] Context: Article topic: [TOPIC] Target reader: [READER] Article goal: [GOAL] Desired thesis: [THESIS] Sources allowed to quote: [QUOTE PERMISSIONS] Tone: [TONE] Target length: [LENGTH] Claims to avoid: [AVOID] Synthesize the article: 1. Source map For each source identify: - main point - strongest quote - unique insight - overlap with other sources - contradiction - credibility - relevance to reader 2. Throughline discovery Find: - common theme - central tension - strongest argument - surprising disagreement - practical implication - reader takeaway 3. Structure options Create 3 article structures: - theme-led synthesis - question-led synthesis - argument-led synthesis For each include: - section order - where sources fit - strengths - weaknesses 4. Draft plan Create: - title options - introduction - source integration plan - section headings - quote placement - interpretation notes - conclusion 5. Synthesis rules Define how to: - quote - paraphrase - summarize - contrast sources - handle disagreement - avoid cherry-picking Rules: - Do not stitch quotes together without analysis. - Do not invent source claims. - Do not overstate consensus. - The article should feel like synthesis, not a transcript. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#139Article Repurposing Engine

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog-to-newsletter workflows, long-form to social, SEO articles to email, podcast scripts, LinkedIn posts, X threads, carousels, and lead magnets.

Turn one article into multiple useful content assets while preserving the core idea and adapting format, angle, and depth for each channel.

You are a content repurposing strategist. Turn the article below into a set of channel-specific assets without simply copying and pasting the same points. Article: [PASTE ARTICLE] Context: Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Primary goal: [GOAL] Channels to repurpose for: [CHANNELS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] CTA: [CTA] Assets needed: [ASSETS] What to avoid: [AVOID] Repurpose the article: A. Core extraction Identify: - core thesis - strongest idea - best example - strongest quote or line - practical takeaway - emotional angle - controversial or surprising point B. Asset strategy For each channel, define: - audience state - best angle - format - length - hook - CTA - what to cut - what to emphasize C. Create assets Generate: - newsletter version - LinkedIn post - X thread - short social post - carousel outline - video script outline - lead magnet outline - email teaser - internal linking snippet D. Variation map Create 10 new angles from the same article: - beginner angle - advanced angle - story angle - checklist angle - mistake angle - contrarian angle - case angle - FAQ angle - comparison angle - personal reflection angle E. Repurposing calendar Recommend a 2-week publishing plan. Rules: - Do not flatten the article into generic snippets. - Do not use the same hook everywhere. - Do not change the meaning to fit a platform. - Each asset should feel native to its channel. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#140Full Content Writing, Blogs & Articles Audit

CONTENT WRITING, BLOGS & ARTICLESBlog posts, long-form articles, educational content, thought leadership, SEO drafts, content libraries, and article production workflows.

Audit and improve an article or content system across reader fit, structure, depth, clarity, SEO, examples, authority, voice, formatting, and publishing readiness.

Act as an independent content writing, blogs, and articles auditor. Review my article or article system and identify what is strong, weak, generic, unclear, underdeveloped, or ready to publish. Input: Article draft, outline, or content system: [PASTE ARTICLE / OUTLINE / CONTENT SYSTEM] Context: Target reader: [READER] Publishing platform: [PLATFORM] Article goal: [GOAL] Primary topic or keyword: [TOPIC / KEYWORD] Reader intent: [INTENT] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Proof or sources: [SOURCES] CTA: [CTA] Competitors or comparable content: [COMPARABLE CONTENT] Main concern: [CONCERN] Audit across 25 dimensions: 1. Topic clarity 2. Reader relevance 3. Search or reading intent fit 4. Thesis strength 5. Opening strength 6. Structure 7. Section flow 8. Depth 9. Specificity 10. Usefulness 11. Examples 12. Research and evidence 13. Claim support 14. Original insight 15. Voice consistency 16. Readability 17. Headings 18. Formatting 19. Internal links 20. SEO basics 21. CTA fit 22. Conclusion strength 23. Differentiation 24. Publishing readiness 25. Repurposing potential For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the draft - missing element - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 5 content problems Rank by: - reader impact - clarity impact - authority impact - SEO impact - ease of fixing B. Rewrite strategy Create: - stronger angle - improved headline - revised thesis - new section order - examples to add - claims to verify - sections to cut - sections to expand C. Publishing package Provide: - final title options - meta description - excerpt - key takeaways - FAQ ideas - internal link suggestions - CTA options - social teaser D. Revision roadmap Create: - first-pass edits - second-pass edits - fact-checking tasks - formatting tasks - final polish checklist E. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard content truth - the strongest part of the article - the weakest part of the article - the highest-leverage fix - the next action to take today Rules: - Do not flatter weak writing. - Do not invent facts, sources, or performance data. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Focus on making the article clearer, more useful, more credible, and easier to publish. SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENT

#141Platform-Native Post Composer

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTX posts, LinkedIn posts, Instagram captions, Threads posts, short-form creator updates, founder notes, and personal brand content.

Turn one idea into a platform-native social post that fits the audience, channel behavior, tone, and desired engagement action.

You are a platform-native social media writer. Turn my idea into a short-form post that feels natural on the platform instead of sounding like a recycled blog paragraph. Inputs: Core idea: [IDEA] Platform: [PLATFORM] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Desired reader reaction: [REACTION] Main point: [POINT] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Post goal: [GOAL] Personal detail or example to include: [DETAIL / EXAMPLE] CTA or engagement prompt: [CTA] Words or style to avoid: [AVOID] Create the post in this process: 1. Platform behavior check Explain how this platform changes the writing: - attention pattern - ideal length - hook style - formatting style - level of personality - level of directness - best CTA type 2. Message compression Condense the idea into: - one-sentence thesis - emotional trigger - reader benefit - strongest hook - simplest takeaway 3. Post drafts Write 5 versions: - direct and practical - personal and reflective - bold and opinionated - casual and conversational - curiosity-led 4. Format polish For each version improve: - first line - line breaks - rhythm - ending - CTA - clarity 5. Final recommendation Choose the strongest version and explain: - why it fits the platform - why it fits the audience - what engagement it is likely to earn - what to test next Rules: - Do not write like a press release. - Do not make the post sound like generic marketing. - Do not overuse emojis or hashtags unless platform-appropriate. - Make the post concise, readable, and native to the channel. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#142Hook Sprint for Short-Form Attention

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTX posts, LinkedIn posts, Reels captions, TikTok openings, newsletter teasers, Threads posts, carousels, and short videos.

Generate many distinct short-form hooks that capture attention without relying on clickbait, fake drama, or vague curiosity.

Act as a short-form hook strategist. Create hooks that make the right reader stop scrolling and want the next line. Topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Core message: [MESSAGE] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desire: [DESIRE] Emotional angle: [EMOTION] Proof or example available: [PROOF / EXAMPLE] Tone: [TONE] Avoid: [AVOID] Generate hooks using 15 different mechanisms: 1. Direct claim 2. Contrarian take 3. Mistake warning 4. Personal confession 5. Reader mirror 6. Specific result 7. Unexpected comparison 8. Before / after 9. Question 10. Pattern interruption 11. Myth correction 12. Behind-the-scenes 13. Tiny story 14. List promise 15. Decision trigger For each hook include: - hook - why it works - reader trigger - best platform fit - risk of sounding clickbait - stronger second line Then create: - top 10 hooks - top 3 safest hooks - top 3 boldest hooks - top 3 most conversational hooks - hooks to avoid and why Finally write 5 complete post openings using the strongest hooks. Rules: - Do not use fake urgency. - Do not promise what the post will not deliver. - Do not start every hook with "Stop doing..." - The hook must lead naturally into a real idea. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#143Short Story Post Builder

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTPersonal brand posts, founder stories, LinkedIn storytelling, X mini-stories, Instagram captions, Threads posts, and creator updates.

Turn a small personal moment, observation, customer moment, mistake, or lesson into a compact social media story with emotional payoff.

You are a short-form storytelling editor. Turn the raw story below into a social post that is brief, vivid, and useful to the reader. Raw story: [PASTE STORY / MOMENT / OBSERVATION] Context: Platform: [PLATFORM] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why this story matters: [WHY] Lesson or takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Emotion to create: [EMOTION] Tone: [TONE] Details to protect or remove: [BOUNDARIES] CTA or ending style: [CTA / ENDING] Build the short story: A. Story compression Identify: - main moment - emotional center - tension - turning point - lesson - reader relevance - unnecessary details B. Social story structure Create 4 versions using different structures: 1. moment → realization → takeaway 2. mistake → cost → lesson 3. scene → tension → question 4. before → event → after C. Scene detail Add only 1 to 3 concrete details that make the story feel real. D. Ending options Write 8 endings: - reflective - practical - vulnerable - question-led - bold takeaway - quiet line - CTA - reader challenge E. Final post Write the best version for the platform. Rules: - Do not invent details. - Do not make the story longer than the point requires. - Do not force inspiration if the story is more nuanced. - The reader should get value beyond knowing what happened to me. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#144Thread Architecture Builder

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTX threads, LinkedIn multi-post articles, Threads chains, educational sequences, launch threads, story threads, and thought leadership breakdowns.

Build a structured, engaging thread that develops one idea across multiple short posts with momentum, clarity, and a satisfying ending.

Act as a thread architect. Turn my topic into a clear, engaging thread that keeps readers moving from post to post. Thread topic: [TOPIC] Platform: [PLATFORM] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Thread goal: [GOAL] Core thesis: [THESIS] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader outcome: [OUTCOME] Proof, examples, or stories: [PROOF / EXAMPLES] Tone: [TONE] Desired length: [NUMBER OF POSTS] CTA: [CTA] Design the thread: 1. Thread promise Create: - main hook - reason to keep reading - one-line thesis - reader payoff - tension or curiosity gap 2. Post-by-post structure For each post include: - post number - function - draft copy - transition to next post - visual or formatting suggestion, if useful - reader reason to continue 3. Momentum mechanics Add: - pattern breaks - examples - mini reveals - short sentences - contrast - summary moments - questions 4. Ending strategy Write 5 possible endings: - practical CTA - save/share CTA - reply prompt - reflective close - offer or link transition 5. Final thread Provide the complete thread ready to paste. Rules: - Do not repeat the same point across posts. - Do not make the hook bigger than the thread. - Do not use filler posts. - Every post must either add value, create momentum, or deepen the idea. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#145Caption Context Adapter

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTInstagram captions, LinkedIn image posts, carousel captions, short video captions, product posts, founder posts, behind-the-scenes posts, and community updates.

Write captions that match the visual, platform, audience mood, and purpose instead of explaining the image too literally.

You are a social caption writer. Create captions that add meaning, context, and engagement to the visual or post idea below. Visual or post context: [DESCRIBE IMAGE / VIDEO / CAROUSEL / MOMENT] Inputs: Platform: [PLATFORM] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Post goal: [GOAL] Main message: [MESSAGE] Mood of the visual: [MOOD] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] CTA: [CTA] Hashtag preference: [HASHTAG PREFERENCE] Details to include: [DETAILS] Avoid: [AVOID] Write captions in 7 styles: 1. Minimal and elegant 2. Story-led 3. Educational 4. Personal and warm 5. Founder / behind-the-scenes 6. Community-oriented 7. Conversion-light For each caption include: - caption text - opening line - CTA - hashtag suggestions, if appropriate - why this version fits - risk or weakness Then choose the best caption and create: - shorter version - longer version - more casual version - more premium version - more engagement-focused version Rules: - Do not describe the visual unless it adds meaning. - Do not overload the caption with hashtags. - Do not make the caption sound disconnected from the image. - The caption should make the post feel more valuable, not just longer. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#146Engagement Question Lab

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTX posts, LinkedIn posts, Instagram captions, Threads, community posts, newsletters, Slack communities, Discord communities, and creator engagement.

Create authentic engagement prompts, questions, polls, and conversation starters that invite real responses without feeling forced.

Act as a community engagement writer. Create conversation starters that people would actually want to answer. Topic or community theme: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Relationship with audience: [RELATIONSHIP] Desired type of response: [RESPONSE TYPE] Tone: [TONE] Things people care about: [INTERESTS] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Post goal: [GOAL] Build engagement prompts: A. Engagement intent Clarify whether the post should invite: - quick replies - thoughtful comments - opinions - stories - recommendations - links - debates - votes - confessions - advice - examples - introductions B. Question bank Create 40 prompts across these styles: - easy answer - personal experience - this or that - unpopular opinion - fill in the blank - recommendation request - show your work - beginner-friendly - expert-level - community ritual C. Friction check For each top prompt identify: - effort required - emotional safety - likelihood of response - platform fit - risk of sounding engagement-bait D. Post packaging Turn the best 10 prompts into complete posts with: - hook - question - context line - reply instruction - optional example answer E. Final recommendation Choose: - best daily prompt - best weekly ritual - best expert discussion - best beginner prompt - best high-volume reply prompt Rules: - Do not use shallow engagement bait. - Do not ask questions that require too much effort for the platform. - Do not fake vulnerability to get replies. - Make the question useful to both the poster and the audience. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#147Comment-to-Authority Response Generator

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTLinkedIn comments, X replies, community discussions, founder engagement, creator networking, and social selling.

Write comments and replies that add value, build visibility, and demonstrate expertise without hijacking the conversation.

You are a strategic comment writer. Help me write comments that contribute to the conversation and build authority without sounding promotional. Original post or conversation: [PASTE POST / THREAD / COMMENT] Context: My point of view: [MY POV] Audience I want to attract: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] Goal of commenting: [GOAL] Expertise to show: [EXPERTISE] Offer or link, if any: [OFFER / LINK] What to avoid: [AVOID] Write comments in 8 formats: 1. Add a useful example 2. Add nuance 3. Agree and expand 4. Respectfully disagree 5. Ask a smart question 6. Share a short story 7. Provide a framework 8. Summarize the hidden point For each comment include: - comment text - why it works - authority signal - risk of sounding self-promotional - when to use it Then create: - 5 ultra-short replies - 5 thoughtful replies - 5 high-authority replies - 5 conversation-extending replies - 5 DM transition lines, only if appropriate Rules: - Do not hijack the original post. - Do not paste a pitch unless the conversation clearly asks for it. - Do not be generic. - The best comment should make people think, "This person understands the topic." --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#148Personal Brand Update Writer

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTFounder updates, creator updates, LinkedIn posts, X updates, build-in-public notes, career posts, milestone posts, and community updates.

Write personal brand updates that communicate progress, lessons, decisions, launches, wins, failures, or reflections in a human and strategic way.

Act as a personal brand editor. Turn my update into a post that feels clear, human, and useful without becoming self-congratulatory. Update: [WHAT HAPPENED / WHAT CHANGED / WHAT I WANT TO SHARE] Context: Platform: [PLATFORM] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why this matters: [WHY] Emotion behind the update: [EMOTION] Lesson or insight: [LESSON] Strategic goal: [GOAL] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Details to include: [DETAILS] Details to avoid: [AVOID] CTA, if any: [CTA] Create the update: 1. Update diagnosis Identify the best angle: - milestone - lesson learned - behind-the-scenes - decision explanation - failure reflection - gratitude - launch - pivot - public commitment - community invitation 2. Post versions Write 6 versions: - short and direct - reflective - story-led - practical lesson - humble win - build-in-public 3. Self-promotion filter For each version, flag: - what feels valuable - what may feel braggy - what needs more reader relevance - what should be cut 4. Final polish Create the best post with: - strong first line - concise context - useful lesson - human detail - natural ending - optional CTA Rules: - Do not make every update a lesson if it is simply news. - Do not hide the win so much that the post loses clarity. - Do not exaggerate impact. - Balance personal truth with audience value. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#149Build-in-Public Post System

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTFounders, indie hackers, solopreneurs, creators, SaaS builders, product teams, startup accounts, and public project logs.

Create build-in-public posts that share progress, experiments, failures, metrics, product decisions, and lessons without sounding repetitive or performative.

You are a build-in-public content strategist. Turn my project update into a strong post that helps people follow the journey and learn from it. Project update: [UPDATE] Project context: Product or project: [PROJECT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Current stage: [STAGE] Metric or progress, if any: [METRIC] Problem we are solving: [PROBLEM] Decision made: [DECISION] Lesson learned: [LESSON] What is next: [NEXT] Tone: [TONE] CTA: [CTA] Write build-in-public content using these formats: A. Progress log Show what changed and why it matters. B. Lesson from failure Show what went wrong and what changed. C. Decision breakdown Explain a product, marketing, or strategy decision. D. Metric reflection Use a number responsibly without pretending it proves everything. E. Behind-the-scenes Reveal process, tradeoff, or workflow. F. Ask the audience Invite useful feedback or participation. For each format include: - post draft - best first line - what value the audience gets - potential risk - improved CTA Then create: - 5 short update posts - 3 longer reflection posts - 3 question-based posts - 3 launch-adjacent posts Rules: - Do not share metrics without context. - Do not turn every update into a sales pitch. - Do not fake struggle for engagement. - The post should make the project feel alive and worth following. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#150One Idea, Ten Social Assets Engine

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTTurning essays, blog posts, newsletters, podcast notes, videos, research, frameworks, or product ideas into social content.

Repurpose one idea into multiple short-form assets while changing angle, format, hook, length, and platform fit.

Act as a short-form repurposing engine. Turn the source idea below into multiple social media assets that feel native and non-repetitive. Source idea: [PASTE IDEA / ARTICLE / NOTES / VIDEO SUMMARY] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Primary goal: [GOAL] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] CTA: [CTA] Assets needed: [ASSETS] Avoid: [AVOID] First extract: - core thesis - strongest insight - best example - emotional angle - practical takeaway - contrarian angle - quote-worthy line - question the idea answers Then create 10 social assets: 1. One-sentence post 2. Short X post 3. LinkedIn post 4. Instagram caption 5. Thread outline 6. Carousel outline 7. Short video script 8. Poll or question post 9. Comment starter 10. Newsletter teaser For each asset include: - platform fit - hook - copy - CTA - what was emphasized - what was cut Then create: - 10 alternate hooks - 10 quote cards - 10 reply prompts - 5 follow-up post ideas Rules: - Do not copy the same wording into every format. - Do not remove nuance just to make it shorter. - Do not make every asset promotional. - Repurposing should create fresh entry points into the same idea. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#151Social Post Originality Filter

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTPersonal brand posts, thought leadership, founder content, LinkedIn posts, X posts, newsletters teasers, and short-form content calendars.

Diagnose whether a social post idea sounds generic, overused, derivative, obvious, or too similar to common creator content, then make it more original.

You are a social originality editor. Review my post idea and make it more specific, distinctive, and worth posting. Post idea or draft: [PASTE IDEA / DRAFT] Context: Platform: [PLATFORM] Audience: [AUDIENCE] My point of view: [POV] My experience or proof: [EXPERIENCE / PROOF] Post goal: [GOAL] Tone: [TONE] Topics I often post about: [TOPICS] Creators or clichés to avoid: [AVOID] Run the originality filter: 1. Genericness diagnosis Identify if the post is: - too broad - too familiar - too motivational - too obvious - too derivative - too vague - too polished - too similar to common internet advice - missing lived experience - missing a real point of view 2. Specificity upgrade Make it sharper by adding: - specific audience - specific situation - specific mistake - specific consequence - specific example - specific belief - specific tension - specific lesson 3. Angle alternatives Create 10 more original angles: - personal story angle - unpopular truth angle - practical breakdown angle - behind-the-scenes angle - mistake angle - comparison angle - micro-case angle - question angle - confession angle - framework angle 4. Rewrite Write 5 improved versions: - concise - bold - reflective - educational - conversational 5. Final choice Choose the strongest version and explain: - what makes it original - what makes it useful - what makes it platform-fit - what still needs proof Rules: - Do not make the post controversial just to seem original. - Do not copy common creator phrasing. - Do not remove clarity in the name of uniqueness. - Originality should come from specificity, evidence, perspective, and voice. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#152Platform Voice Transcoder

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTX, LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, Threads, Facebook, YouTube Shorts captions, community posts, and creator distribution.

Adapt the same message for different platforms while changing structure, rhythm, tone, formatting, and CTA for each channel.

Act as a platform voice transcoder. Take one message and rewrite it so it fits each selected social platform naturally. Message: [PASTE MESSAGE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platforms to adapt for: [PLATFORMS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Goal: [GOAL] CTA: [CTA] Length limits: [LIMITS] Content type: [CONTENT TYPE] Avoid: [AVOID] For each platform, provide: A. Platform adaptation logic Explain: - how the opening should change - how much context to include - how personal it should be - how direct the CTA should be - formatting needs - typical reader mindset B. Adapted post Write: - hook - body - CTA - hashtag suggestions, if relevant - formatting notes C. Native alternatives Create 3 versions for each platform: - short - medium - high-engagement D. Risk check Flag where the message may feel: - too long - too promotional - too polished - too casual - not native - too vague E. Final publishing package Provide the best version for each platform. Rules: - Do not simply shorten the same post. - Do not use the same CTA everywhere. - Do not force hashtags where they are not useful. - Make every version feel written for that platform from the beginning. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#153Micro-Case Study Social Post Writer

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTLinkedIn posts, X threads, founder updates, agency content, SaaS content, consultant posts, creator case studies, and product marketing.

Turn a result, project, customer story, experiment, or before-and-after into a compact case study post that teaches and builds credibility.

You are a micro-case study writer. Turn the case below into a social post that communicates credibility and learning without exaggeration. Case details: Client / project / experiment: [CASE] Starting point: [BEFORE] Action taken: [ACTION] Result: [RESULT] Timeline: [TIMELINE] What changed: [CHANGE] What made it work: [WHY IT WORKED] Limits or caveats: [LIMITS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Tone: [TONE] CTA: [CTA] Create the micro-case: 1. Case validation Separate: - facts - interpretation - assumptions - claims needing proof - details that should stay private 2. Case angles Generate 6 angles: - result-led - process-led - mistake-led - lesson-led - behind-the-scenes - client transformation 3. Post drafts Write 5 versions: - short post - longer LinkedIn-style post - X thread - carousel outline - founder reflection 4. Credibility support Add: - proof line - caveat line - what not to overclaim - ethical wording - privacy-safe version 5. Final post Choose the best version and provide: - headline / hook - body - takeaway - CTA - follow-up post ideas Rules: - Do not invent metrics. - Do not imply causation if only correlation is known. - Do not reveal confidential information. - Make the case useful, not just impressive. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#154Opinion Post Thesis Builder

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTLinkedIn thought leadership, X posts, Threads, personal brand content, industry commentary, creator essays, and social debates.

Build strong short-form opinion posts with a clear thesis, tension, reasoning, nuance, and reader takeaway.

Act as a social opinion editor. Help me turn my opinion into a strong post that is clear, defensible, and engaging. Opinion or belief: [OPINION] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Topic area: [TOPIC] Common belief I am responding to: [COMMON BELIEF] Why I believe this: [REASON] Evidence or experience: [EVIDENCE / EXPERIENCE] Where I might be wrong: [NUANCE] Tone: [TONE] Goal: [GOAL] Build the opinion post: A. Thesis sharpening Create 10 thesis versions: - direct - nuanced - contrarian - practical - provocative but fair - calm and analytical - personal - beginner-friendly - expert-level - question-led B. Argument mini-map For the strongest thesis include: - main point - reason 1 - reason 2 - reason 3 - counterpoint - takeaway C. Post formats Write 5 versions: 1. one-liner 2. short post 3. structured LinkedIn post 4. X thread opener 5. debate prompt D. Nuance check Flag: - overstatements - weak claims - strawman risks - missing caveats - proof gaps E. Final version Write the strongest post with a clear first line, concise reasoning, and a natural ending. Rules: - Do not create rage bait. - Do not attack people; challenge ideas. - Do not make the opinion bigger than the evidence. - The post should invite thought, not just agreement. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#155Community Ritual Post Designer

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTWeekly threads, X engagement rituals, LinkedIn recurring posts, Instagram community prompts, newsletters, founder communities, and niche audiences.

Design repeatable social posts that create community habits, recurring participation, and recognizable audience interaction.

You are a community ritual designer. Create a repeatable post format that my audience can recognize and participate in over time. Community or audience: [AUDIENCE] Niche or theme: [THEME] Platform: [PLATFORM] Goal of the ritual: [GOAL] Desired participation type: [PARTICIPATION] Cadence: [CADENCE] Tone: [TONE] Examples of rituals I like: [EXAMPLES] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Design the ritual: 1. Ritual concept Create 10 recurring post ideas. For each include: - ritual name - audience action - why people would participate - emotional benefit - community benefit - post template - best day or timing - risk of fatigue 2. Participation design For the best 3 rituals define: - first post - weekly template - reply prompts - example participant response - host response style - escalation after 4 weeks 3. Content system Create: - 12-week ritual calendar - variation ideas - moderation guidelines - ways to feature participants - ways to connect ritual to broader content 4. Growth connection Explain how the ritual can support: - trust - repeat engagement - audience research - community identity - content ideas - soft conversion Rules: - Do not design a ritual that only benefits the creator. - Do not make participation too hard. - Do not rely on fake scarcity or pressure. - The ritual should feel useful, fun, or identity-reinforcing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#156Soft-Sell Social Post Generator

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTProduct launches, service posts, creator offers, newsletter promos, lead magnets, waitlists, SaaS announcements, and community offers.

Write promotional social posts that sell an offer, product, service, newsletter, or resource without sounding pushy or breaking trust.

Act as a trust-first promotional copywriter. Write social posts that promote my offer while still giving value and respecting the reader. Offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Problem solved: [PROBLEM] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Offer details: [DETAILS] Proof: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] CTA: [CTA] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Promo intensity: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Avoid: [AVOID] Create soft-sell posts using 8 approaches: 1. Problem-first 2. Lesson-first 3. Story-first 4. Behind-the-scenes 5. Proof-first 6. FAQ / objection-first 7. Resource-first 8. Direct but low-pressure For each post include: - hook - body copy - value given before the ask - CTA - trust-building line - risk of sounding too salesy Then create: - 5 launch week posts - 5 evergreen promo posts - 5 reply-to-interest lines - 5 no-pressure CTA options Rules: - Do not pretend the post is not promotional if it is. - Do not create fake urgency. - Do not invent proof or testimonials. - Promotion should feel clear, honest, and useful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#157Short-Form Educational Post Builder

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTLinkedIn educational posts, X threads, Instagram carousels, Threads posts, TikTok scripts, founder education, and expert content.

Turn an educational idea into a concise social post, mini-guide, checklist, framework, or carousel that teaches quickly.

You are a short-form educator. Turn my educational idea into a concise post that teaches something useful without becoming a full article. Educational idea: [IDEA] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Reader skill level: [LEVEL] Outcome after reading: [OUTCOME] Format preference: [POST / THREAD / CAROUSEL / SCRIPT] Tone: [TONE] Examples available: [EXAMPLES] CTA: [CTA] Create the educational content: A. Learning objective Define: - what the reader will understand - what they can do after reading - what misconception to correct - what not to cover B. Teaching formats Turn the idea into 6 formats: 1. checklist 2. mistake list 3. mini-framework 4. before / after 5. quick tutorial 6. myth vs reality C. Final content For the best format, write: - hook - short explanation - numbered steps or points - example - quick takeaway - CTA or question D. Carousel or thread variant If useful, create: - slide / post sequence - title for each slide / post - body copy - ending slide / post E. Quality check Verify: - no filler - no unexplained jargon - clear takeaway - actionable next step - platform-native length Rules: - Do not teach too much in one post. - Do not make a carousel out of content that should be one sentence. - Do not use vague advice. - The reader should leave with one clear useful idea. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#158Social Content Calendar Sprint

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTWeekly or monthly social planning, creator calendars, founder content, brand accounts, LinkedIn planning, X planning, and multi-platform distribution.

Build a short-form content calendar with varied post types, hooks, angles, CTAs, and audience goals.

Act as a social content planner. Create a short-form content calendar that balances growth, trust, engagement, education, storytelling, and promotion. Planning inputs: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Main themes: [THEMES] Content goal: [GOAL] Posting frequency: [FREQUENCY] Time period: [TIME PERIOD] Offers or CTAs: [OFFERS / CTAS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Content types to include: [TYPES] Content types to avoid: [AVOID] Current ideas: [IDEAS] Build the calendar: 1. Content mix Recommend percentage split across: - educational posts - opinion posts - personal stories - engagement prompts - proof / case posts - community posts - promotional posts - behind-the-scenes posts - repurposed posts 2. Calendar For each day provide: - date or day number - platform - post type - topic - hook - angle - short draft - CTA - asset needed - success metric 3. Variation system Include: - 10 backup hooks - 10 backup questions - 10 repurposing ideas - 5 post series ideas - 5 low-effort posts 4. Publishing rhythm Recommend: - best order - what to repeat - what to test - when to promote - when to ask for engagement Rules: - Do not create 20 posts that all sound the same. - Do not make every post promotional. - Do not overload the calendar with content that takes too long to produce. - The calendar should be realistic, varied, and usable immediately. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#159Social Post Rewrite and Punch-Up Editor

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTEditing X posts, LinkedIn posts, Instagram captions, Threads posts, short announcements, founder updates, and promotional content.

Improve an existing social post by strengthening the hook, clarity, rhythm, specificity, platform fit, CTA, and engagement potential.

You are a short-form social editor. Rewrite my post so it is clearer, sharper, more engaging, and better suited to the platform. Current post: [PASTE POST] Context: Platform: [PLATFORM] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Post goal: [GOAL] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] What must stay: [MUST KEEP] What can change: [CAN CHANGE] CTA: [CTA] Avoid: [AVOID] Edit the post: A. Diagnosis Identify what is weak: - hook - clarity - specificity - rhythm - length - line breaks - reader relevance - emotional pull - CTA - platform fit - originality - proof B. Rewrite strategy Recommend whether to: - shorten - expand - make more specific - add a story - add proof - make the hook clearer - reduce self-focus - improve the CTA - change the format C. Rewrite versions Create 8 versions: 1. shortest version 2. clearer version 3. more conversational version 4. stronger hook version 5. more personal version 6. more educational version 7. more opinionated version 8. more engagement-focused version D. Final polish For the best version provide: - final post - alternate hook - alternate ending - CTA options - platform formatting notes Rules: - Do not change the meaning unless asked. - Do not make the post sound like everyone else. - Do not over-edit until the personality disappears. - Improve the post for attention, clarity, and trust. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#160Full Social Media Writing & Short-Form Content Audit

SOCIAL MEDIA WRITING & SHORT-FORM CONTENTCreators, founders, brands, marketers, personal brands, agencies, coaches, consultants, newsletters, and social media managers doing a full short-form content reset.

Audit and rebuild a social content system across hooks, clarity, platform fit, voice, engagement, storytelling, authority, originality, CTAs, and growth potential.

Act as an independent social media writing and short-form content auditor. Review my current posts, ideas, or content system and identify what is strong, weak, generic, unclear, repetitive, or missing. Inputs: Current posts or content ideas: [PASTE POSTS / IDEAS / CONTENT CALENDAR] Context: Platforms: [PLATFORMS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Content goals: [GOALS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Main themes: [THEMES] Offer or CTA: [OFFER / CTA] Competitors or creators I want to differ from: [COMPARABLES] Posting frequency: [FREQUENCY] What is currently not working: [PROBLEM] Audit across 25 dimensions: 1. Platform fit 2. Audience relevance 3. Hook strength 4. First-line clarity 5. Message clarity 6. Specificity 7. Originality 8. Voice consistency 9. Post length 10. Rhythm and formatting 11. Storytelling 12. Educational value 13. Opinion strength 14. Emotional resonance 15. Engagement potential 16. Comment-worthiness 17. CTA clarity 18. Promotional balance 19. Trust-building 20. Proof and examples 21. Community-building 22. Repetition 23. Content mix 24. Repurposing potential 25. Growth readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the inputs - missing element - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 5 content problems Rank by: - impact on attention - impact on trust - impact on engagement - impact on growth - ease of fixing B. Content pattern audit Identify: - posts that sound generic - posts that should be cut - ideas that should become threads - ideas that should become stories - ideas that should become carousels - ideas that should become comments - ideas that should be rewritten with stronger hooks C. Rebuilt short-form system Create: - positioning angle - content pillars - recurring post formats - hook library - CTA library - engagement prompts - platform-specific rules - repurposing workflow D. Rewrite package Rewrite: - 5 weak posts - 5 hooks - 5 CTAs - 5 engagement prompts - 5 promotional posts - 5 personal brand updates E. 30-day social writing plan Create: - weekly themes - daily post types - posting rhythm - engagement rhythm - testing plan - metrics to watch - review routine F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard content truth - the strongest content asset - the weakest writing pattern - the biggest growth opportunity - the next post to write today Rules: - Do not flatter weak content. - Do not invent performance data. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Focus on sharper short-form writing, stronger platform fit, better trust, and more meaningful engagement. EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITING

#161Newsletter Issue Architecture Builder

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGSolo writers, creators, founders, newsletter operators, community builders, educators, consultants, and brands that want every issue to feel intentional.

Build a complete newsletter issue structure with a clear promise, reader relevance, editorial flow, useful sections, and a natural CTA.

You are a newsletter editor and audience strategist. Help me design one complete newsletter issue that feels useful, personal, and worth opening. Newsletter context: Newsletter name: [NEWSLETTER NAME] Target reader: [READER] Reader problem or desire: [PROBLEM / DESIRE] Issue topic: [TOPIC] Main takeaway: [TAKEAWAY] Relationship with audience: [RELATIONSHIP] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] CTA or next step: [CTA] Length preference: [LENGTH] Links, resources, or offers to include: [LINKS / RESOURCES / OFFERS] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Build the issue architecture: 1. Issue promise Create: - subject line direction - issue title - one-sentence reader promise - why this issue matters now - what the reader should feel after reading - what the reader should be able to do after reading 2. Opening strategy Create 5 possible openings: - personal observation - reader problem - story-first - direct teaching - surprising contradiction For each include: - opening paragraph - why it works - risk or weakness - best follow-up section 3. Issue flow Design the newsletter in this sequence: - opening hook - context - main idea - useful framework or insight - example - practical takeaway - personal note - CTA or reply prompt - closing line 4. Section copy Write draft copy for each section. Use clear headings only where helpful. 5. Reader engagement Add: - one reply question - one share prompt - one save-worthy line - one community discussion prompt - one short version for social promotion Rules: - Do not make the issue feel like a blog post pasted into email. - Do not over-promote before giving value. - Do not use fake urgency. - The issue should feel like it was written for one specific reader. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#162Welcome Email Sequence Designer

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGNewsletters, creator businesses, communities, SaaS audiences, course creators, consultants, coaches, and audience-building funnels.

Create a welcome sequence that introduces the writer, sets expectations, builds trust, explains value, and encourages the first meaningful action.

Act as an email onboarding strategist. Build a welcome email sequence that turns a new subscriber into a warm reader who understands why they should keep opening. Inputs: Newsletter / brand / community: [NAME] Who subscribed: [AUDIENCE] Why they likely subscribed: [REASON] Promise of the newsletter or community: [PROMISE] Creator or brand background: [BACKGROUND] Main topics: [TOPICS] Offer or community path, if any: [OFFER / COMMUNITY PATH] Desired first action: [ACTION] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Sequence length: [NUMBER OF EMAILS] Sending cadence: [CADENCE] Create the welcome sequence: A. Subscriber mindset Explain: - what the subscriber expects - what they may be skeptical about - what trust needs to be built - what would make them unsubscribe early - what would make them reply or engage B. Sequence strategy For each email define: - email number - purpose - subject line - preview text - core message - emotional job - trust signal - CTA - what not to include yet C. Email drafts Write the full sequence. Each email should include: - warm opening - clear value - one main idea - light personal connection - simple CTA - human closing D. Relationship-building layer Add: - reply prompts - preference questions - community invitation language - expectation-setting lines - unsubscribe-safe trust language E. Quality check Identify: - where the sequence may feel too salesy - where it may feel too vague - where proof is missing - where personalization could improve it Rules: - Do not overload the first email. - Do not pretend intimacy before trust exists. - Do not push an offer before explaining value. - The sequence should make the reader feel oriented, respected, and curious. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#163Relationship-Driven Newsletter Voice Calibrator

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGPersonal newsletters, founder emails, community updates, creator writing, audience-building emails, and relationship-first content.

Create a consistent newsletter voice that feels personal, credible, warm, useful, and recognizable without sounding overly casual or generic.

You are a newsletter voice editor. Help me calibrate a voice system for relationship-driven emails and newsletters. Current writing sample: [PASTE SAMPLE] Context: Writer or brand: [WRITER / BRAND] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Newsletter purpose: [PURPOSE] Topics covered: [TOPICS] Desired relationship with readers: [RELATIONSHIP] Words readers should use to describe the voice: [DESIRED PERCEPTION] Words the voice should avoid feeling like: [AVOID] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Build the voice system: 1. Current voice diagnosis Identify: - what already feels strong - what feels generic - what feels too formal - what feels too casual - what feels performative - what feels trustworthy - what feels emotionally distant 2. Voice principles Create 10 voice rules. For each rule include: - rule name - what it means - before example - after example - when to use it - when not to use it 3. Signature elements Develop: - opening style - transition style - teaching style - personal story style - CTA style - closing style - subject line style 4. Rewrite samples Rewrite the sample in 4 voices: - warmer - sharper - more personal - more editorial Then choose the strongest version and explain why. 5. Voice checklist Create a pre-send checklist for: - clarity - warmth - usefulness - trust - personality - restraint - consistency Rules: - Do not make the voice artificially quirky. - Do not sacrifice clarity for personality. - Do not copy another writer's style. - The voice should feel repeatable across many emails. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#164Community Update Email Composer

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGOnline communities, paid communities, Discord groups, Slack groups, course cohorts, memberships, founder communities, and creator audiences.

Write a community update that informs, energizes, celebrates members, invites participation, and keeps the community alive between major events.

Act as a community communications manager. Write a community update that feels useful, warm, and worth reading. Community context: Community name: [COMMUNITY NAME] Audience / members: [MEMBERS] Purpose of the community: [PURPOSE] Update period: [TIME PERIOD] Important news: [NEWS] Wins to celebrate: [WINS] Upcoming events: [EVENTS] Member highlights: [MEMBER HIGHLIGHTS] Resources to share: [RESOURCES] Actions members should take: [ACTIONS] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Write the community update: 1. Update frame Create: - subject line options - opening line - main update theme - emotional tone - reason members should care 2. Community-first structure Write the update using: - quick welcome - what happened - member wins - useful resources - upcoming moments - participation prompt - next steps - friendly close 3. Participation design Create prompts that encourage: - replies - introductions - event attendance - member sharing - feedback - peer support - discussion 4. Versioning Create 3 versions: - short email version - longer newsletter-style version - Slack / Discord announcement version 5. Community warmth check Improve the copy so it: - sounds human - avoids corporate update language - highlights members, not only admins - makes participation feel easy - does not guilt inactive members Rules: - Do not make the update only about announcements. - Do not overuse exclamation points. - Do not invent member wins. - The update should make members feel included and clear on what to do next. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#165Nurture Email from One Core Idea

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGEmail lists, newsletters, creator funnels, SaaS nurture, service businesses, product education, and relationship-based selling.

Turn one useful idea into a nurture email that educates, builds trust, connects to reader pain, and gently points toward a next step.

You are a nurture email strategist. Turn the core idea below into an email that strengthens trust and moves the reader one step forward. Core idea: [CORE IDEA] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Reader stage: [STAGE] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Product, service, or next step, if any: [OFFER / NEXT STEP] Relationship with reader: [RELATIONSHIP] Proof or example available: [PROOF / EXAMPLE] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] CTA: [CTA] Build the nurture email: A. Reader connection Explain: - why this idea matters to the reader - what belief it should shift - what objection it may reduce - what emotion it should create - what practical value it should give B. Email angle options Create 7 angles: - lesson angle - mistake angle - story angle - myth angle - framework angle - example angle - question angle For each include: - subject line - opening direction - email promise - CTA style C. Full email draft Write the strongest version with: - subject line - preview text - opening - core idea - example - practical takeaway - soft CTA - human close D. Alternative versions Create: - shorter version - more personal version - more educational version - more sales-adjacent version E. Trust check Flag anything that may feel: - too promotional - too vague - too long - too detached - too unsupported Rules: - Do not turn every nurture email into a sales pitch. - Do not hide the point behind a long intro. - Do not over-teach until the email feels like a manual. - The reader should leave with value even if they do not click. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#166Launch Email Sequence Builder

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGProduct launches, course launches, book launches, service openings, community launches, beta launches, waitlists, and digital product promotions.

Build a launch sequence that announces, educates, handles objections, creates momentum, and sells without burning audience trust.

Act as a launch email strategist. Build an email sequence for my launch that balances excitement, clarity, proof, and trust. Launch context: Offer being launched: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Launch type: [LAUNCH TYPE] Launch dates: [DATES] Main promise: [PROMISE] Problem solved: [PROBLEM] Unique mechanism: [MECHANISM] Price or commitment: [PRICE / COMMITMENT] Bonuses or incentives: [BONUSES] Proof: [PROOF] Objections: [OBJECTIONS] Scarcity or deadline, if real: [DEADLINE / SCARCITY] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Design the launch sequence: 1. Launch strategy Define: - audience awareness level - core launch message - trust-building needs - urgency logic - proof needs - objections to address - sales intensity boundaries 2. Sequence map Create emails for: - pre-launch value email - announcement email - problem education email - method / mechanism email - proof email - objection handling email - FAQ email - final reminder email - post-launch close or waitlist email For each email include: - purpose - subject line options - preview text - core message - CTA - risk to avoid 3. Full copy Write the full copy for 5 highest-priority emails. 4. Trust safeguards Add: - low-pressure language - honest fit notes - refund or guarantee language, if provided - "not for you if" section - no-fake-urgency guardrails 5. Launch reuse plan Show how to turn the sequence into: - social posts - community announcements - FAQ page - sales page sections - reminder messages Rules: - Do not create fake scarcity. - Do not invent proof. - Do not shame people for not buying. - The launch should feel clear, helpful, and commercially honest. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#167Newsletter Editorial Calendar Strategist

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGWeekly newsletters, creator-led newsletters, brand newsletters, community newsletters, founder updates, and audience-building content systems.

Build a newsletter calendar that balances education, stories, community, offers, personal notes, experiments, and reader engagement.

You are a newsletter editorial strategist. Create a practical editorial calendar that keeps the newsletter useful, consistent, and relationship-driven. Newsletter context: Newsletter topic: [TOPIC] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Publishing cadence: [CADENCE] Primary goal: [GOAL] Secondary goals: [SECONDARY GOALS] Main themes: [THEMES] Offers or launches coming up: [OFFERS / LAUNCHES] Community moments: [COMMUNITY MOMENTS] Reader questions: [QUESTIONS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Time available per issue: [TIME] Build the calendar: A. Editorial pillars Create 5 to 7 pillars. For each include: - pillar name - reader value - example issue ideas - best format - relationship purpose - CTA type B. Issue mix Design a healthy mix of: - educational issues - personal story issues - curated resource issues - opinion issues - community issues - launch-adjacent issues - reader Q&A issues - behind-the-scenes issues C. Calendar Create a 12-week newsletter calendar. For each issue include: - week - issue title - pillar - main idea - reader promise - subject line direction - CTA - repurposing idea D. Rhythm rules Recommend: - how often to sell - how often to ask for replies - how often to share personal stories - how often to curate resources - how to avoid repetition E. Maintenance system Create: - idea capture system - reader feedback loop - issue review checklist - monthly calendar review - metrics to watch Rules: - Do not make every issue promotional. - Do not overload the calendar with topics the writer cannot sustain. - Do not repeat the same structure every week. - The calendar should help build trust over time. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#168Personal Letter Email Builder

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGFounder letters, creator newsletters, personal updates, community letters, reflective essays by email, audience relationship-building, and personal brand writing.

Write a personal, reflective email that feels intimate, useful, emotionally grounded, and relevant to the audience.

Act as a personal letter editor. Help me write an email that feels personal but still gives the reader meaning, usefulness, or emotional connection. Personal material: [PASTE STORY / UPDATE / REFLECTION] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Relationship with readers: [RELATIONSHIP] Why I want to share this: [WHY] What I learned or noticed: [LESSON / OBSERVATION] Reader relevance: [READER RELEVANCE] Boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] CTA or reply question: [CTA / QUESTION] Shape the personal letter: 1. Sharing purpose Clarify whether the letter is mainly: - reflective - instructive - vulnerable - celebratory - apologetic - transitional - invitational - behind-the-scenes 2. Private-to-public translation Separate: - details to include - details to anonymize - details to remove - personal meaning - reader-facing meaning - universal tension 3. Letter structure Create: - subject line options - opening note - story or reflection - emotional turn - reader connection - useful takeaway - soft ending - reply prompt 4. Draft versions Write 3 versions: - intimate and quiet - warm and practical - reflective and editorial 5. Safety and trust check Flag where the letter may feel: - overshared - vague - self-centered - too polished - too performative - unclear in purpose Rules: - Do not make vulnerability performative. - Do not reveal private details that do not serve the reader. - Do not force a neat lesson. - The letter should feel honest, useful, and emotionally respectful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#169Re-Engagement Email Campaign Builder

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGInactive email lists, newsletter reactivation, community re-engagement, product audiences, SaaS lists, membership lists, and dormant subscribers.

Write emails that reconnect with inactive subscribers, remind them of value, invite preference updates, and recover trust without guilt or pressure.

You are an email re-engagement strategist. Create a re-engagement campaign that makes inactive subscribers feel invited, not blamed. Context: List or community: [LIST / COMMUNITY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why they originally subscribed: [ORIGINAL REASON] Likely reasons they disengaged: [REASONS] Current value proposition: [VALUE] New updates or improvements: [UPDATES] Desired action: [ACTION] Options readers can choose: [OPTIONS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Campaign length: [NUMBER OF EMAILS] Build the re-engagement campaign: A. Inactive reader diagnosis Explain: - what they may be thinking - what would make them ignore the email - what would make them give it another chance - what trust needs to be repaired - what value must be made obvious B. Campaign map Create 3 to 5 emails: - gentle check-in - value reminder - best-of recap - preference update - final stay-or-go note For each include: - subject line - preview text - goal - emotional tone - CTA - unsubscribe-safe language C. Full email copy Write each email. D. Preference center copy Create: - preference options - frequency choices - topic choices - confirmation message - opt-out language E. Success evaluation Recommend: - open rate signal - click signal - reply signal - unsubscribe signal - how to interpret results Rules: - Do not guilt readers for inactivity. - Do not pretend nothing happened if the list was silent for months. - Do not hide the unsubscribe option. - The campaign should restore clarity, choice, and value. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#170Community Discussion Prompt Generator

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGSlack communities, Discord groups, Circle communities, Facebook groups, LinkedIn groups, course cohorts, memberships, and newsletter reply prompts.

Create thoughtful community prompts that start real conversations, encourage participation, and avoid shallow engagement bait.

Act as a community conversation designer. Create discussion prompts that help members share useful experiences, questions, wins, struggles, and insights. Community context: Community topic: [TOPIC] Members: [MEMBERS] Community goal: [GOAL] Current engagement level: [ENGAGEMENT LEVEL] Topics members care about: [TOPICS] Topics to avoid: [AVOID] Tone: [TONE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Frequency: [FREQUENCY] Design conversation prompts: 1. Prompt categories Create prompts for: - introductions - weekly wins - current challenges - decision help - resource sharing - experience sharing - reflection - accountability - feedback requests - hot-seat discussion - beginner questions - advanced insight - behind-the-scenes - community rituals 2. Prompt format For each prompt include: - prompt text - why it works - best day or moment to use it - expected response type - moderation note - follow-up question - risk of low-quality replies 3. Participation ladder Create prompts for different engagement levels: - low-friction one-line replies - medium-effort experience replies - high-trust deeper discussion - expert contribution prompts - peer support prompts 4. Monthly discussion plan Create a 4-week schedule with: - Monday prompt - midweek prompt - Friday reflection - monthly ritual 5. Anti-engagement-bait filter Rewrite any prompt that sounds: - forced - generic - overly broad - performative - too personal too soon Rules: - Do not ask members to reveal sensitive details. - Do not create prompts that only produce one-word answers unless intentional. - Do not use fake controversy. - The best prompts should make members feel safe, useful, and invited. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#171Founder / Creator Update Email

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGFounder updates, build-in-public emails, creator letters, investor-lite updates, community updates, product progress notes, and audience-building newsletters.

Write an update email that shares progress, lessons, decisions, challenges, and next steps in a way that builds trust and audience connection.

You are a founder and creator update editor. Help me write an update that feels transparent, useful, and interesting instead of self-congratulatory. Update material: [PASTE UPDATE NOTES] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Project / product / community: [PROJECT] Time period covered: [TIME PERIOD] Wins: [WINS] Challenges: [CHALLENGES] Decisions made: [DECISIONS] Lessons learned: [LESSONS] Metrics or proof, if any: [METRICS] What comes next: [NEXT] CTA or reply ask: [CTA] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Build the update email: A. Update angle Find the strongest angle: - progress update - lesson learned - honest challenge - decision explained - behind-the-scenes - community milestone - product roadmap - reflection B. Structure Create: - subject line options - opening note - short summary - progress section - challenge section - lesson section - next step section - reader invitation - closing line C. Draft the email Write a polished update email. Keep the focus on: - what changed - why it matters - what was learned - how readers can participate - what happens next D. Transparency calibration Flag anything that feels: - too vague - too promotional - too negative - too self-focused - too metric-heavy - too defensive E. Repurpose Create: - short community post - LinkedIn post - X post - internal note version Rules: - Do not inflate progress. - Do not hide important caveats if they affect trust. - Do not share private information carelessly. - The update should make readers feel closer to the journey. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#172Newsletter Curation and Digest Builder

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGWeekly digests, resource newsletters, creator recommendations, community roundups, industry updates, link collections, and educational curation.

Turn links, notes, resources, articles, tools, and recommendations into a curated email with context, opinion, and reader value.

Act as a newsletter curator. Turn the resources below into a useful digest that feels edited, not dumped. Resources to curate: [PASTE LINKS / NOTES / RESOURCES] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Newsletter theme: [THEME] Digest purpose: [PURPOSE] Reader knowledge level: [LEVEL] My point of view: [POV] Number of resources to include: [NUMBER] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] CTA or reply prompt: [CTA] Build the digest: 1. Resource triage Classify each resource as: - must include - useful but optional - niche - too weak - duplicate - needs verification - save for later 2. Editorial framing Create: - digest title - subject line options - opening note - theme connecting the resources - why this collection matters now 3. Resource write-ups For each selected resource write: - title - one-sentence summary - why it matters - who should read it - key takeaway - my editorial note - action or question for reader 4. Digest structure Organize into sections: - start here - worth thinking about - practical resource - community highlight - quick links - final thought 5. Reader engagement Add: - reply prompt - share prompt - save-worthy takeaway - next issue teaser Rules: - Do not pretend to have read sources if only titles are provided. - Use [VERIFY] where details need checking. - Do not include weak links just to fill space. - Curation should add judgment, context, and relevance. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#173Email Sequence Segmentation Planner

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGNewsletters, email funnels, launch sequences, onboarding, community emails, SaaS lifecycle emails, and creator audiences.

Adapt email and newsletter messages for different reader segments based on awareness, interests, objections, activity level, and relationship stage.

You are an email segmentation strategist. Help me adapt one email idea or campaign for different audience segments. Base message or campaign: [PASTE MESSAGE / CAMPAIGN IDEA] Context: Audience overall: [AUDIENCE] Known segments: [SEGMENTS] Reader data available: [DATA] Goal of message: [GOAL] Offer or next step: [OFFER / NEXT STEP] Current relationship stage: [RELATIONSHIP] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Create the segmentation plan: A. Segment diagnosis Identify useful segments by: - awareness level - topic interest - engagement level - buyer stage - customer status - community activity - pain point - sophistication level - objections B. Message adaptation For each segment include: - segment name - what they care about - what they may ignore - subject line direction - opening angle - proof needed - CTA type - tone adjustment - content to include - content to omit C. Versioned copy Write 4 versions of the email: - new subscriber version - engaged reader version - inactive reader version - buyer-ready reader version D. Personalization rules Create merge-field or dynamic-content ideas for: - topic preference - first action - last engagement - plan or status - location or role, if relevant - community behavior E. Risk check Flag where segmentation could become: - creepy - overcomplicated - inaccurate - too personalized - operationally unrealistic Rules: - Do not use sensitive personal data. - Do not personalize beyond what the reader knowingly provided. - Do not create segments that are too small to use. - Segmentation should make the message more relevant, not more complex. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#174Community Announcement Clarity Editor

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGCommunity managers, course creators, membership owners, startup teams, event hosts, Discord/Slack admins, and newsletter operators.

Write clear announcements for communities, launches, events, updates, policy changes, new features, schedules, and important notices.

Act as a community announcement editor. Write an announcement that is clear, warm, and easy to act on. Announcement details: What is being announced: [ANNOUNCEMENT] Who needs to know: [AUDIENCE] Why it matters: [WHY] When it happens: [DATE / TIME] What members need to do: [ACTION] Relevant links: [LINKS] Rules, requirements, or limits: [RULES] Possible confusion or objections: [CONFUSION / OBJECTIONS] Tone: [TONE] Platform: [PLATFORM] Write the announcement: 1. Clarity-first version Create a concise announcement with: - headline - what is happening - who it affects - when it happens - what to do next - link or CTA - support contact or next step 2. Warm community version Rewrite with more personality and community warmth. 3. Short platform versions Create: - email version - Slack / Discord version - in-app version - social post version - reminder version 4. FAQ support Write answers for: - who is this for? - what changed? - what do I need to do? - what if I cannot attend / participate? - where do I go next? - who do I contact? 5. Confusion check Identify what could be misunderstood and fix the copy. Rules: - Do not bury the action. - Do not use vague timing. - Do not over-explain if the announcement is simple. - The reader should know exactly what changed and what to do. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#175Newsletter Reply Magnet Builder

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGNewsletter engagement, audience research, community building, customer discovery, creator relationships, and reader-driven content strategy.

Create emails designed to generate thoughtful replies, reader stories, feedback, objections, questions, or community insights.

You are a reader engagement strategist. Build an email that invites genuine replies without sounding needy, manipulative, or engagement-bait. Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Relationship with readers: [RELATIONSHIP] Topic: [TOPIC] What I want to learn from readers: [LEARNING GOAL] Why their replies matter: [WHY] How I may use responses: [USE OF RESPONSES] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Boundaries or privacy note: [PRIVACY] Design the reply magnet email: A. Reply goal Clarify the kind of reply needed: - short answer - personal story - question - objection - recommendation - feedback - vote - experience - challenge - win B. Email structure Create: - subject line options - opening context - why I am asking - simple question - optional deeper prompt - privacy reassurance - gratitude line - closing C. Prompt quality Create 15 reply prompts grouped by: - low-friction - reflective - practical - emotional - research-driven - community-building For each include: - prompt - expected reply quality - risk - follow-up question D. Full email draft Write 3 versions: - concise - warm and personal - research-oriented E. Response handling plan Create: - how to categorize replies - how to follow up - how to turn replies into content ideas - how to protect privacy - how to thank readers Rules: - Do not pressure people to reply. - Do not ask for sensitive details unless necessary and clearly optional. - Do not hide how responses may be used. - Make replying feel easy, safe, and meaningful. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#176Educational Email Mini-Course Creator

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGLead magnets, onboarding sequences, paid community education, creator funnels, course previews, product education, and subscriber nurturing.

Build a short educational email course that teaches one outcome across multiple lessons with structure, examples, exercises, and momentum.

Act as an email course designer. Create a short email mini-course that helps readers achieve a specific learning outcome. Course context: Mini-course topic: [TOPIC] Target learner: [LEARNER] Desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Current skill level: [LEVEL] Number of lessons: [NUMBER] Cadence: [CADENCE] Offer or next step after course: [OFFER / NEXT STEP] Examples or exercises available: [EXAMPLES / EXERCISES] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Build the mini-course: 1. Course promise Define: - course title - one-line promise - who it is for - what they will learn - what they will not learn - success criteria 2. Lesson map For each lesson include: - lesson title - learning objective - core idea - example - exercise - mistake to avoid - homework - CTA or next step - teaser for next lesson 3. Full emails Write: - welcome email - lesson 1 - lesson 2 - lesson 3 - final recap email If more lessons are requested, provide the same structure for all lessons. 4. Engagement layer Add: - reply prompts - progress checkpoints - reflection questions - community sharing prompts - completion encouragement 5. Conversion bridge If there is an offer, write a low-pressure bridge from learning to the next step. Rules: - Do not teach too much in one email. - Do not make the course feel like disguised sales copy. - Do not skip exercises if the outcome requires practice. - Each lesson should create progress and anticipation. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#177Trust Repair and Apology Email Writer

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGService providers, founders, creators, community managers, SaaS teams, newsletter operators, course creators, and membership owners.

Write emails that acknowledge mistakes, delays, confusion, broken promises, changes, or community issues with honesty and care.

You are a trust repair communications editor. Help me write an email that addresses a problem honestly while protecting reader trust. Situation: What happened: [SITUATION] Who is affected: [AFFECTED AUDIENCE] What went wrong: [WHAT WENT WRONG] What was promised or expected: [EXPECTATION] Impact on readers / members / customers: [IMPACT] What we are doing now: [ACTION] What happens next: [NEXT] What we can and cannot offer: [LIMITS] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Write the trust repair email: A. Responsibility analysis Clarify: - what should be acknowledged - what should not be over-explained - what responsibility should be taken - what details readers need - what details create confusion - what action proves care B. Email structure Create: - subject line - direct opening - clear acknowledgment - impact recognition - explanation without excuses - corrective action - next steps - support path - closing C. Draft versions Write 3 versions: - concise operational update - warm apology - detailed explanation D. Language filter Remove or rewrite phrases that sound: - defensive - vague - corporate - blame-shifting - overly dramatic - dismissive - legally risky E. Follow-up plan Create: - follow-up email timing - status update template - support reply template - community post version Rules: - Do not fake accountability. - Do not overpromise fixes. - Do not blame the reader. - Do not hide the action readers need to take. - The email should rebuild trust through clarity, responsibility, and next steps. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#178Community Story Collection Email

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGCommunity builders, creators, customer research, testimonial collection, newsletter features, cohort programs, memberships, and audience-led content.

Write an email that invites readers or community members to share stories, wins, lessons, use cases, testimonials, questions, or experiences.

Act as a community story collection strategist. Write an email that invites people to share stories in a respectful, clear, and motivating way. Story collection context: Community / audience: [AUDIENCE] Type of stories wanted: [STORY TYPE] Why we are collecting them: [PURPOSE] How stories may be used: [USAGE] Who should respond: [WHO] Submission format: [FORMAT] Deadline, if any: [DEADLINE] Incentive or recognition, if any: [INCENTIVE] Privacy or permission rules: [PRIVACY] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Create the story collection email: 1. Invitation strategy Explain: - why someone would want to share - what might stop them - what reassurance they need - how to make the ask easy - how to avoid making it feel extractive 2. Story prompts Create prompts for: - before / after story - lesson learned - challenge overcome - small win - unexpected use case - community connection - advice for others - favorite resource - question or struggle 3. Email draft Write: - subject line options - opening invitation - why stories matter - what kind of story to share - submission instructions - privacy note - deadline note - thank-you close 4. Submission form copy Create: - form title - form description - question list - consent checkbox language - thank-you message 5. Follow-up messages Write: - reminder email - selected-story thank-you - not-selected-but-appreciated note - community recap message Rules: - Do not pressure people to share personal stories. - Do not imply stories will be used publicly without consent. - Do not ask overly broad questions. - The invitation should feel respectful, easy, and worthwhile. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#179Newsletter Sponsorship and Partner Message Builder

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGNewsletter sponsorships, creator partnerships, community promos, affiliate recommendations, partner announcements, and audience-first monetization.

Write sponsor, partner, or promotional newsletter messages that fit the audience, preserve trust, and clearly explain the value.

You are a newsletter monetization editor. Help me write a sponsor or partner message that feels useful to readers and transparent about the relationship. Sponsorship / partner context: Partner or sponsor: [PARTNER] What they offer: [OFFER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Why it is relevant: [RELEVANCE] Relationship type: [SPONSORSHIP / AFFILIATE / PARTNERSHIP] Disclosure requirements: [DISCLOSURE] Key benefits: [BENEFITS] Proof or credibility: [PROOF] CTA: [CTA] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Placement in newsletter: [PLACEMENT] Build the sponsor message: A. Fit analysis Evaluate: - why this partner fits the audience - what reader problem it solves - what could make it feel irrelevant - what disclosure is needed - what claims need proof - what trust risks exist B. Message angles Create 5 angles: - practical recommendation - problem-solution - personal note - resource spotlight - community benefit For each include: - headline - body copy - CTA - disclosure line - risk C. Final copy versions Write: - short sponsor block - longer partner feature - casual personal recommendation - community announcement - reminder version D. Trust safeguards Add: - transparent disclosure - fit note - who it is for - who it may not be for - no-pressure CTA language E. Review checklist Create a checklist for: - reader relevance - honesty - disclosure - proof - claim accuracy - tone fit Rules: - Do not hide paid relationships. - Do not overstate results. - Do not recommend something irrelevant to the audience. - Monetization should not damage reader trust. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#180Full Email, Newsletter & Community Writing Audit

EMAIL, NEWSLETTER & COMMUNITY WRITINGNewsletter operators, community managers, creators, founders, course creators, SaaS teams, coaches, consultants, and email marketers doing a full communication reset.

Audit and improve an email, newsletter, sequence, or community communication system across clarity, trust, voice, relationship, engagement, structure, and conversion.

Act as an independent email, newsletter, and community writing auditor. Review my current email or community communication and identify what is strong, weak, unclear, too generic, too promotional, or missing. Input: Email / newsletter / sequence / community message: [PASTE COPY OR COMMUNICATION SYSTEM] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Relationship with audience: [RELATIONSHIP] Goal: [GOAL] Message type: [MESSAGE TYPE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] CTA or desired action: [CTA] Reader stage: [READER STAGE] Community or product context: [CONTEXT] Known concerns: [CONCERNS] Audit across 25 dimensions: 1. Subject line strength 2. Preview text 3. Opening relevance 4. Reader fit 5. Message clarity 6. Voice consistency 7. Warmth 8. Trust 9. Usefulness 10. Emotional connection 11. Structure 12. Flow 13. Specificity 14. Personalization 15. Community feel 16. Engagement potential 17. Reply potential 18. CTA clarity 19. CTA pressure level 20. Objection handling 21. Promotional balance 22. Length 23. Skimmability 24. Relationship impact 25. Next-step clarity For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the message - missing element - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 5 communication problems Rank by: - reader trust impact - engagement impact - clarity impact - conversion impact - ease of fixing B. Rewrite strategy Create: - better subject line direction - stronger opening - improved message structure - voice adjustments - trust-building additions - CTA improvement - engagement prompt - sections to cut or shorten C. Copy improvements Rewrite: - subject line - preview text - opening - weakest paragraph - CTA section - closing - reply prompt D. Relationship strategy Recommend how to make future communication: - more useful - more personal - less generic - more community-driven - more consistent - less promotional - more reply-worthy E. Communication system Create: - weekly newsletter template - community update template - launch email template - re-engagement template - reader reply template - pre-send checklist F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard communication truth - the strongest part of the message - the weakest part of the message - the highest-leverage rewrite - the next action to take today Rules: - Do not flatter weak communication. - Do not invent audience data. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Optimize for trust, clarity, usefulness, and relationship depth before conversion. CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDING

#181Fiction Premise Forge

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGNovel ideas, short stories, scripts, speculative fiction concepts, fantasy premises, sci-fi ideas, literary fiction, and early-stage story development.

Turn a loose fiction idea into a strong story premise with genre fit, conflict, stakes, character desire, and narrative promise.

You are a fiction premise editor. Help me turn my rough idea into a story premise that has tension, character, stakes, and a reason to exist. Rough idea: [PASTE IDEA] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Target reader: [READER] Desired tone: [TONE] Story length: [SHORT STORY / NOVEL / SERIES / SCRIPT] Themes I want to explore: [THEMES] Ideas I want to avoid: [AVOID] Comparable works, if any: [COMPARABLES] My current concern: [CONCERN] Forge the premise: 1. Raw idea diagnosis Identify: - what is already interesting - what is too vague - what lacks conflict - what lacks emotional stakes - what feels familiar - what could become original - what genre expectations apply 2. Premise components Build: - protagonist - desire - obstacle - world or situation - inciting disruption - central conflict - emotional stakes - external stakes - moral question - possible ending pressure 3. Premise variations Create 10 different premise versions: - character-led - world-led - conflict-led - mystery-led - relationship-led - theme-led - high-concept - quiet literary - dark version - hopeful version For each include: - logline - what makes it work - strongest tension - risk or weakness - best format 4. Selection and refinement Choose the strongest 3 premises and refine each into: - one-sentence pitch - paragraph pitch - central question - first scene idea - final scene direction - title options Rules: - Do not make the premise generic. - Do not add complexity without increasing tension. - Do not invent a full plot unless needed. - Prioritize a premise that creates story movement and emotional curiosity. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#182Genre Collision Concept Lab

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGFantasy, sci-fi, horror, romance, mystery, thriller, literary fiction, genre mashups, speculative ideas, and experimental fiction.

Create fresh fiction concepts by combining genre conventions, emotional tones, settings, tropes, and unexpected constraints.

Act as a genre collision designer. Help me create original fiction concepts by combining genres and tropes in ways that feel fresh but still readable. Inputs: Primary genre: [PRIMARY GENRE] Secondary genre or influence: [SECONDARY GENRE] Setting idea: [SETTING] Character type: [CHARACTER TYPE] Theme: [THEME] Mood: [MOOD] Tropes I like: [TROPES] Tropes I want to avoid: [AVOID] Story length: [LENGTH] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Run the concept lab: A. Genre expectation map For each genre, list: - reader expectations - common promises - common clichés - emotional payoff - typical conflicts - pacing expectations B. Collision opportunities Generate concept collisions using: - genre + opposite tone - genre + unusual setting - trope + moral reversal - familiar setup + strange consequence - ordinary character + extraordinary rules - extraordinary world + intimate problem - expected ending + unexpected cost C. Concept cards Create 12 concept cards. Each card must include: - title - genre blend - premise - protagonist - central conflict - world hook - emotional hook - trope used - trope subverted - ending pressure D. Feasibility filter Score each concept from 1 to 10 on: - originality - clarity - emotional potential - genre fit - plot potential - world-building potential - difficulty E. Final shortlist Recommend: - safest concept - boldest concept - most commercial concept - most literary concept - strongest short story concept - strongest novel concept Rules: - Do not mash genres randomly. - Do not break genre promises without replacing them with a better promise. - Do not confuse originality with obscurity. - The best concept should feel surprising and inevitable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#183Character Contradiction Engine

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGProtagonists, antagonists, side characters, ensemble casts, literary fiction, fantasy characters, sci-fi characters, and character-driven stories.

Build complex characters through contradictions, wants, wounds, masks, habits, secrets, flaws, strengths, and pressure responses.

You are a character development editor. Build a character who feels alive because they contain contradictions, not because they have a long biography. Character seed: [CHARACTER IDEA] Story context: Genre: [GENRE] Role in story: [ROLE] World or setting: [SETTING] Main conflict: [CONFLICT] Character age / background, if known: [BACKGROUND] Desired reader feeling about character: [READER FEELING] Tone: [TONE] Build the character: 1. Surface identity Define: - name options - public role - social mask - visible strengths - visible flaws - reputation - first impression 2. Inner contradiction Create: - what they want - what they need - what they fear - what they claim to believe - what they actually believe - what they protect - what they sabotage - what they would never admit 3. Pressure test Show how the character behaves under: - embarrassment - betrayal - temptation - loss - praise - danger - love - power - failure - moral choice 4. Character reveal moments Create 10 scenes that reveal character through: - action - silence - choice - dialogue - habit - contradiction - sacrifice - mistake - tenderness - cruelty 5. Final character dossier Provide: - one-paragraph character summary - core wound - core desire - central contradiction - arc direction - relationship tension - secret - flaw that drives plot - strength that creates change Rules: - Do not create a perfect character. - Do not define the character only by trauma. - Do not make contradictions random. - Every contradiction should create story behavior. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#184Protagonist Desire, Wound & Choice Map

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGNovels, short stories, screenplays, fantasy quests, romances, thrillers, literary stories, and character-arc planning.

Design a protagonist arc by connecting desire, emotional wound, false belief, external goal, internal need, and final choice.

Act as a protagonist arc architect. Build the emotional and plot logic of my protagonist through desire, wound, belief, and choice. Protagonist: [PROTAGONIST DESCRIPTION] Story context: Genre: [GENRE] Premise: [PREMISE] External goal: [GOAL] Main obstacle: [OBSTACLE] Theme: [THEME] Ending type: [HAPPY / TRAGIC / BITTERSWEET / OPEN] Story length: [LENGTH] Map the protagonist: A. Desire map Separate: - what the protagonist says they want - what they actually want - what they need - what they fear losing - what they think will save them - what will truly change them B. Wound and false belief Identify: - origin of wound - belief created by the wound - behavior created by the belief - relationships affected by the belief - plot decisions caused by the belief - cost of keeping the belief C. Choice architecture Create 5 major choices: - early choice - reactive choice - midpoint choice - crisis choice - final choice For each include: - external situation - internal pressure - false belief at work - consequence - what changes D. Arc versions Develop 3 possible arcs: - healing arc - corruption arc - maturity arc For each include: - beginning state - midpoint shift - climax choice - final state - emotional payoff E. Final arc blueprint Create: - protagonist arc statement - turning point list - scenes needed - final choice scene - closing image Rules: - Do not make the arc happen only through explanation. - Do not make change too easy. - Do not disconnect internal need from external plot. - The final choice should prove who the protagonist has become. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#185Antagonist and Opposition System Designer

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGVillains, rivals, institutions, monsters, internal opposition, corrupt systems, competitive stories, thrillers, fantasy, sci-fi, and literary conflict.

Build antagonists and opposition forces that challenge the protagonist physically, emotionally, morally, socially, or philosophically.

You are an opposition designer. Help me create an antagonist or opposing force that is specific, believable, and thematically connected to the story. Story premise: [PREMISE] Protagonist: [PROTAGONIST] Current antagonist or opposition idea: [ANTAGONIST / OPPOSITION] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Theme: [THEME] World: [WORLD] Tone: [TONE] Type of opposition wanted: [PERSON / SYSTEM / FORCE / SELF / NATURE / SOCIETY] Ending direction: [ENDING] Design the opposition system: 1. Opposition function Clarify what the antagonist must do: - block the protagonist's goal - expose the protagonist's weakness - test the theme - raise stakes - force choices - create consequences - embody a competing worldview 2. Antagonist motive Build: - goal - belief - fear - justification - wound or origin - method - limits - line they will not cross - line they eventually cross 3. Opposition layers Create threats at multiple levels: - personal - relational - social - physical - moral - political - spiritual or philosophical - environmental 4. Conflict escalation Design 7 encounters where the opposition: - appears indirectly - blocks progress - tempts the protagonist - wins a round - reveals a deeper motive - forces sacrifice - creates the final test 5. Final antagonist profile Provide: - one-paragraph profile - worldview - strongest scene - weakness - final confrontation logic - why they are dangerous - why they are not a cartoon villain Rules: - Do not make the antagonist evil without motive. - Do not make the antagonist stronger only by giving them more power. - Do not disconnect the antagonist from the protagonist's arc. - The opposition should make the story's theme harder to ignore. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#186World-Building Bible Architect

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGFantasy, sci-fi, dystopian fiction, alternate history, speculative worlds, game narratives, fictional universes, and series planning.

Build a usable world-building bible that organizes setting, history, culture, power, geography, technology, magic, institutions, daily life, and story-relevant rules.

Act as a world-building architect. Help me build a story-useful world bible, not an encyclopedia that delays writing. World seed: [WORLD IDEA] Story context: Genre: [GENRE] Premise: [PREMISE] Main characters: [CHARACTERS] Main conflict: [CONFLICT] Scale of story: [LOCAL / REGIONAL / GLOBAL / COSMIC] Tone: [TONE] World-building elements I already have: [EXISTING ELEMENTS] Elements I want to avoid: [AVOID] Build the world bible: A. World foundation Define: - world name options - central concept - reader-facing hook - governing question - mood - level of realism - what makes this world different B. Story-relevant systems Design only what affects story: - geography - history - culture - class or status - economy - government - religion or belief - technology or magic - law and punishment - education - work - family structures - conflict systems - communication - transportation For each system include: - how it works - who benefits - who suffers - what tension it creates - how it affects the protagonist - scene opportunity C. Daily life texture Create details for: - food - clothing - greetings - insults - rituals - tools - entertainment - taboos - myths - slang - public spaces - private spaces D. World rules List: - hard rules - soft customs - exceptions - consequences - mysteries - contradictions E. World bible output Create: - concise world overview - key locations - factions - timeline - conflict map - glossary - story hooks - details to reveal slowly Rules: - Do not build details that never affect story. - Do not over-explain the world in exposition. - Do not copy familiar fantasy or sci-fi defaults without purpose. - World-building should create pressure, wonder, conflict, and meaning. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#187Magic or Technology Rulebook Stress Test

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGFantasy magic systems, sci-fi technology, superpowers, supernatural rules, futuristic inventions, game lore, and speculative fiction.

Build and test a fictional magic, technology, power, or supernatural system for rules, limits, costs, loopholes, consequences, and story potential.

You are a speculative systems editor. Help me design and stress-test a fictional power system so it creates story instead of solving every problem too easily. System idea: [MAGIC / TECHNOLOGY / POWER SYSTEM] World context: Genre: [GENRE] World: [WORLD] Who can use it: [USERS] What it can do: [CAPABILITIES] What it cannot do: [LIMITS] Cost or consequence: [COST] Story role: [STORY ROLE] Tone: [TONE] Stress-test the system: 1. Rule definition Clarify: - source of power - access requirements - learning process - limits - costs - failure modes - moral consequences - social consequences - physical consequences - unknowns 2. Loophole hunt Find possible loopholes where the system could: - solve every conflict too easily - remove danger - make death meaningless - break the economy - collapse politics - eliminate mystery - create contradictions - make characters passive For each loophole, suggest a fix. 3. Story pressure Create ways the system can generate: - temptation - sacrifice - addiction - inequality - fear - dependence - taboo - rebellion - mystery - irreversible choices 4. Scene test Design 8 scenes where the system is used: - first discovery - training failure - clever use - misuse - public consequence - moral dilemma - catastrophic failure - final decisive use 5. Rulebook output Provide: - simple explanation - advanced rules - limits - costs - forbidden uses - cultural impact - conflict hooks - reveal sequence Rules: - Do not make the system unlimited. - Do not add rules only for complexity. - Do not let powers replace character decisions. - The system should create problems as often as it solves them. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#188Setting as Conflict Builder

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGFiction scenes, fantasy locations, sci-fi environments, gothic settings, literary fiction, horror, mysteries, travel-based stories, and world-building.

Turn a setting into an active source of pressure, mood, conflict, limitation, symbolism, and plot movement.

Act as a setting dramaturg. Help me turn my setting into a story engine that shapes character choices and emotional atmosphere. Setting: [SETTING IDEA] Story context: Genre: [GENRE] Characters present: [CHARACTERS] Scene or story goal: [GOAL] Mood: [MOOD] Conflict: [CONFLICT] Time period: [TIME PERIOD] Rules of the place: [RULES] Tone: [TONE] Develop the setting: A. Physical reality Define: - location type - layout - weather or atmosphere - light - sound - smell - movement - danger - comfort - boundaries - hidden spaces B. Social reality Define: - who controls the place - who belongs - who does not belong - rules of behavior - status signals - taboos - punishments - secrets - surveillance - rituals C. Conflict generator Create 15 ways the setting can create conflict through: - distance - scarcity - exposure - confinement - class - weather - architecture - law - tradition - technology - memory - danger - temptation - misunderstanding - symbolic pressure D. Scene applications Create 5 scene concepts where the setting: - blocks the protagonist - reveals a secret - creates intimacy - increases fear - forces a decision E. Final setting sheet Provide: - setting summary - story function - sensory palette - conflict rules - symbolic meaning - reveal sequence - details to avoid overusing Rules: - Do not make the setting decorative. - Do not overload the scene with description. - Do not use generic atmosphere words without concrete details. - The setting should change what characters can do. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#189Plot Twist Logic Lab

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGMysteries, thrillers, fantasy, sci-fi, horror, literary reveals, short stories, novels, and serialized fiction.

Design plot twists that feel surprising, fair, emotionally meaningful, and supported by setup rather than random shock.

You are a plot twist editor. Help me create a twist that surprises the reader while still feeling inevitable after the reveal. Story setup: [STORY SETUP] Current plot: [PLOT SUMMARY] Characters involved: [CHARACTERS] Genre: [GENRE] Theme: [THEME] Known secrets: [SECRETS] Reader expectations: [EXPECTATIONS] Ending direction: [ENDING] Twists I want to avoid: [AVOID] Build the twist: 1. Expectation map Identify: - what the reader assumes - what the protagonist assumes - what other characters assume - what the genre trains readers to expect - what information is missing - what truth could reframe events 2. Twist types Create 10 possible twists across: - identity reveal - motive reveal - world rule reveal - betrayal - false victory - hidden cost - unreliable memory - moral reversal - secret alliance - consequence reveal For each include: - twist - setup needed - clues already available - clues to add - emotional effect - risk of feeling cheap 3. Fairness test For the best 3 twists, answer: - could a careful reader suspect it? - what clues must appear earlier? - what red herrings are fair? - what cannot be hidden? - what changes after the reveal? - why does it matter emotionally? 4. Reveal scene Design the reveal with: - location - who discovers it - trigger - immediate reaction - new problem created - line of dialogue or image - next scene consequence Rules: - Do not create a twist only for shock. - Do not withhold information unfairly. - Do not make the twist erase character agency. - The twist must deepen the story, not just surprise the reader. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#190Scene Tension Builder

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGFiction scenes, novel chapters, scripts, short stories, dialogue scenes, action scenes, quiet conflict scenes, and revision.

Turn a flat scene idea into a tense scene with objective, obstacle, stakes, subtext, escalation, reversal, and consequence.

Act as a scene tension coach. Help me build a scene that has movement, conflict, and consequence. Scene idea: [SCENE IDEA] Context: Story genre: [GENRE] Characters in scene: [CHARACTERS] Point of view: [POV] What the protagonist wants: [WANT] What blocks them: [OBSTACLE] What is at stake: [STAKES] What changed before this scene: [BEFORE] What must change after this scene: [AFTER] Tone: [TONE] Build the scene: A. Scene contract Define: - scene purpose - character objective - opposing force - hidden agenda - reader question - emotional promise - required plot movement B. Tension levers Increase tension through: - time pressure - withheld information - conflicting desires - social risk - physical limitation - moral dilemma - interruption - power imbalance - misunderstanding - irreversible choice C. Beat sequence Create a 12-beat scene plan: - entry - objective - first obstacle - pressure increase - subtext signal - false opening - reversal - confrontation - decision - consequence - emotional aftershock - exit hook D. Draft support Write: - opening paragraph - 10 lines of possible dialogue - 5 sensory details - 5 subtext cues - final beat options E. Scene check Confirm: - what changes - why the scene cannot be cut - what the reader learns - what remains unresolved Rules: - Do not make the scene tense only through loud conflict. - Do not let dialogue explain everything. - Do not end the scene where it began emotionally. - Every scene should change information, power, emotion, or direction. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#191Dialogue Voice Differentiator

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGFiction dialogue, scripts, character scenes, ensemble casts, revision, novels, short stories, and dramatic conversations.

Make each character sound distinct through rhythm, vocabulary, silence, subtext, worldview, power, and emotional habits.

You are a dialogue voice editor. Help me make the characters in this scene sound like different people, not one author speaking through multiple mouths. Scene or dialogue draft: [PASTE DIALOGUE / SCENE] Characters: [CHARACTER LIST] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Relationship between characters: [RELATIONSHIP] Conflict in scene: [CONFLICT] What each character wants: [WANTS] What each character hides: [HIDDEN] Tone: [TONE] Differentiate the voices: 1. Voice fingerprint For each character define: - sentence length - vocabulary - level of directness - humor style - emotional avoidance pattern - favorite verbal move - what they never say - how they lie - how they show care - how they show anger 2. Dialogue diagnosis Flag lines that feel: - interchangeable - too expositional - too polished - too direct - too vague - out of character - lacking subtext 3. Rewrite the exchange Create 3 rewritten versions: - realistic and restrained - high-tension - emotionally subtle 4. Subtext layer For each major line, identify: - what is said - what is meant - what is hidden - what the other person hears - how power shifts 5. Final polish Provide: - strongest revised dialogue - stage or action beats - silence moments - lines to cut - lines to keep Rules: - Do not make characters quirky just to sound different. - Do not use accents or dialect stereotypes. - Do not explain subtext in the dialogue itself. - Voice should emerge from desire, fear, background, and power. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#192Short Story Blueprint Generator

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGFlash fiction, literary short stories, genre short stories, contest entries, anthology pieces, writing practice, and compact narrative ideas.

Build a complete short story plan with premise, character, conflict, limited scope, scenes, ending, and emotional payoff.

Act as a short story architect. Help me turn my idea into a short story blueprint that fits the form instead of trying to behave like a novel. Short story idea: [IDEA] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Desired length: [WORD COUNT] Point of view: [POV] Main character: [CHARACTER] Theme: [THEME] Mood: [MOOD] Ending preference: [ENDING TYPE] Restrictions or prompts: [RESTRICTIONS] Build the short story: A. Scope control Clarify: - one central situation - one main character change - one core conflict - one primary setting - one emotional turn - one final image B. Story shape Choose the best structure: - single scene - one-day story - before / after - confession - letter - loop - countdown - encounter - reveal - braided memory Explain why it fits. C. Scene plan Create: - opening image - inciting moment - complication - midpoint realization - final choice - ending image D. Compression strategy List what to: - imply instead of explain - show in one detail - cut entirely - leave unresolved - reveal late - echo at the end E. Drafting package Provide: - title options - first paragraph direction - scene-by-scene outline - key sentence ideas - ending options - revision checklist Rules: - Do not overload the short story with too many subplots. - Do not explain the whole world unless needed. - Do not make the ending a simple moral. - The short story should feel focused, resonant, and complete enough. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#193Opening Page Hook Developer

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGNovel openings, short story openings, scripts, chapter ones, fantasy openings, sci-fi openings, literary openings, and revision.

Create a compelling opening page or first scene that introduces voice, tension, world, character, and reader curiosity without dumping exposition.

You are an opening page editor. Help me design the first page so readers immediately feel voice, tension, and story movement. Story premise: [PREMISE] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Point of view: [POV] Main character: [CHARACTER] Opening setting: [SETTING] Tone: [TONE] First conflict or disturbance: [DISTURBANCE] World details to introduce: [WORLD DETAILS] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Create opening options: 1. Opening strategy Define what the first page must establish: - who we are with - where we are - what feels unstable - what the character wants - what question pulls the reader forward - what voice promises - what not to explain yet 2. Opening types Write 8 opening concepts: - action opening - quiet disturbance - strange image - dialogue opening - moral choice - sensory immersion - aftermath opening - contradiction opening For each include: - first paragraph - reader question - strength - risk - what comes next 3. Exposition control Decide: - what to reveal now - what to delay - what to imply - what to cut - what to turn into action 4. Best opening buildout For the strongest opening, write: - first 500 words direction - scene beats - world details to weave in - character reveal moments - ending hook for the page Rules: - Do not start with a dream unless it is essential. - Do not begin with encyclopedia world-building. - Do not delay conflict too long. - The opening should make the reader want the next page. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#194Plot Escalation and Midpoint Reversal Planner

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGNovels, novellas, scripts, serialized fiction, fantasy quests, thrillers, romance plots, mystery arcs, and revision.

Build a plot that escalates through complications, pressure, discoveries, reversals, midpoint shifts, and irreversible consequences.

Act as a plot escalation architect. Help me build a plot where events become harder, choices become sharper, and the midpoint changes the story. Story premise: [PREMISE] Current plot outline: [OUTLINE] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Protagonist goal: [GOAL] Antagonist or opposition: [OPPOSITION] Stakes: [STAKES] Theme: [THEME] Ending direction: [ENDING] Length: [LENGTH] Plan escalation: A. Plot pressure map Identify: - starting pressure - first external obstacle - first internal obstacle - hidden complication - cost of failure - ticking clock, if useful - point of no return B. Escalation ladder Create 10 escalating events. Each event must include: - what happens - why it happens - what it costs - what it reveals - what decision it forces - how it changes the next event C. Midpoint reversal Generate 5 possible midpoint reversals: - truth reveal - false victory - major loss - goal change - betrayal - moral reversal - world expansion - identity reveal For each include: - setup needed - emotional effect - plot consequence - risk D. Second-half pressure After the midpoint, design: - new goal - higher stakes - deeper opposition - harder choices - irreversible mistake - crisis path - climax setup E. Final escalation plan Provide: - act structure - chapter-level beats - midpoint recommendation - missing pressure points - weak links - next drafting steps Rules: - Do not escalate by adding random events. - Do not make the midpoint cosmetic. - Do not let the protagonist remain passive. - Each event should force a new decision or consequence. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#195Mystery, Clue & Reveal Map

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGMysteries, thrillers, suspense, fantasy investigations, sci-fi mysteries, gothic stories, detective fiction, and reveal-driven plots.

Build a mystery structure with clues, red herrings, suspects, hidden motives, fair reveals, reader questions, and satisfying answers.

You are a mystery structure editor. Help me design a fair and compelling mystery where clues matter and reveals feel earned. Mystery premise: [PREMISE] Core question: [MYSTERY QUESTION] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Investigator or protagonist: [INVESTIGATOR] Culprit or truth, if known: [TRUTH] Victim or affected party: [VICTIM / AFFECTED PARTY] Setting: [SETTING] Tone: [TONE] Ending direction: [ENDING] Build the mystery map: 1. Truth first Define: - what really happened - who knows - who lies - who misunderstands - motive - method - opportunity - concealed evidence - emotional truth behind the mystery 2. Reader question sequence Create the questions readers should ask in order: - initial question - deeper question - false question - personal question - final question 3. Clue architecture Create: - 10 true clues - 5 misleading clues - 5 emotional clues - 5 world or setting clues - 5 dialogue clues For each include: - where it appears - what it seems to mean - what it really means - how obvious it is - fairness level 4. Suspect or theory map Build: - suspect / theory - motive - evidence for - evidence against - secret - reveal timing 5. Reveal plan Create: - minor reveals - midpoint reveal - false solution - final reveal - aftermath - final emotional meaning Rules: - Do not hide the truth by cheating. - Do not make red herrings irrelevant. - Do not reveal everything in one exposition dump. - The mystery should reward careful attention. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#196Character Relationship Web Builder

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGEnsemble casts, romance, family stories, fantasy parties, workplace fiction, political fiction, YA, literary fiction, and serialized stories.

Design relationships that create tension, loyalty, betrayal, intimacy, rivalry, secrets, power shifts, and emotional stakes.

Act as a relationship web designer. Help me build relationships between characters that create story movement instead of background information. Characters: [CHARACTER LIST] Story context: Genre: [GENRE] Premise: [PREMISE] Main conflict: [CONFLICT] Theme: [THEME] Tone: [TONE] Relationship types to include: [RELATIONSHIP TYPES] Build the relationship web: A. Pair dynamics For each important pair, define: - visible relationship - hidden tension - shared history - power balance - what one wants from the other - what one fears from the other - secret or misunderstanding - breaking point - repair possibility B. Web functions Identify which relationships create: - loyalty - temptation - betrayal - comic relief - emotional safety - moral challenge - rivalry - dependency - mentorship - forbidden desire - inherited conflict C. Pressure events Create 10 events that stress the relationship web. For each include: - event - who is affected - who changes sides - who reveals something - who loses trust - story consequence D. Relationship arcs For top 5 relationships, build: - beginning state - midpoint shift - crisis - final state - unresolved tension E. Web output Provide: - relationship map summary - strongest pair - most dangerous pair - emotional heart of the story - betrayal opportunity - reconciliation opportunity - scenes needed Rules: - Do not make every relationship supportive. - Do not create secrets that never matter. - Do not make conflict come only from misunderstanding. - Relationships should change choices, stakes, and plot direction. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#197Theme, Symbol & Motif Weaver

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGLiterary fiction, fantasy, sci-fi, memoir-style fiction, short stories, novels, scripts, and thematic revision.

Weave theme into story through character choices, symbols, motifs, images, setting, conflict, and repetition without becoming preachy.

You are a thematic development editor. Help me express the theme through story elements instead of explaining it directly. Story material: [PREMISE / OUTLINE / DRAFT NOTES] Theme or question: [THEME / QUESTION] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Main character: [CHARACTER] World or setting: [SETTING] Central conflict: [CONFLICT] Desired emotional effect: [EFFECT] Tone: [TONE] Weave the theme: 1. Theme clarification Define: - theme as a question - theme as a tension - theme as a false belief - theme as a final realization - theme as a conflict between values - what the story should not preach 2. Character embodiment Show how different characters can represent different answers to the theme. For each character include: - belief - behavior - contradiction - choice - consequence 3. Symbol and motif system Create: - 10 possible symbols - 10 recurring images - 10 motif actions - 5 setting details - 5 dialogue echoes - 5 object-based symbols For each include: - meaning - where it appears - how it changes - risk of being too obvious 4. Theme through plot Identify moments where the theme appears through: - choice - sacrifice - betrayal - failure - temptation - refusal - transformation - ending 5. Final thematic plan Provide: - thematic spine - motif list - scenes to add - scenes to revise - lines to avoid - ending image Rules: - Do not make characters deliver the theme as a speech. - Do not use symbols without story function. - Do not make the theme one-dimensional. - Theme should emerge through pressure, repetition, and consequence. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#198Alternate Ending Explorer

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGNovels, short stories, scripts, fantasy arcs, romance endings, mysteries, literary fiction, and revision.

Generate and evaluate multiple possible endings based on character arc, plot logic, emotional payoff, theme, genre promise, and reader satisfaction.

Act as an ending strategist. Help me explore endings that feel earned, memorable, and aligned with the story's emotional truth. Story summary: [SUMMARY] Current ending idea: [ENDING IDEA] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Main character arc: [ARC] Central conflict: [CONFLICT] Theme: [THEME] Reader promise: [READER PROMISE] Tone: [TONE] Desired ending feeling: [FEELING] Loose threads: [LOOSE THREADS] Explore endings: A. Ending requirements Identify what the ending must resolve: - external plot - internal arc - relationship tension - thematic question - world consequence - mystery or reveal - emotional promise B. Ending types Generate 12 endings: - happy - tragic - bittersweet - ironic - open-ended - circular - sacrificial - reversal - quiet literary - explosive genre - morally ambiguous - sequel-opening For each include: - what happens - final choice - cost - emotional effect - theme statement through action - risk C. Reader satisfaction test Score each ending on: - inevitability - surprise - emotional payoff - genre fit - thematic fit - character truth - memorability D. Final scene design For the top 3 endings, create: - final scene location - final image - last decision - last exchange - final line options - what remains unresolved E. Recommendation Choose the strongest ending and explain: - why it fits - what needs setup earlier - what threads to close - what threads to leave open Rules: - Do not choose shock over emotional truth. - Do not solve everything too neatly unless the genre demands it. - Do not betray the character arc. - The ending should feel earned by everything before it. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#199Creative Writing Experiment Generator

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGWriting practice, creative blocks, fiction exercises, workshops, journaling, experimental fiction, flash fiction, and style development.

Generate constrained writing experiments that help explore style, structure, voice, perspective, time, form, and imagination.

You are a creative writing workshop designer. Create writing experiments that help me explore fiction craft in fresh and useful ways. My writing focus: [FOCUS] Context: Genre or style: [GENRE / STYLE] Skill I want to improve: [SKILL] Theme or subject: [THEME / SUBJECT] Preferred length: [LENGTH] Difficulty level: [DIFFICULTY] Constraints I enjoy: [CONSTRAINTS] Constraints I dislike: [AVOID] Tone: [TONE] Generate experiments: 1. Craft diagnosis Identify which craft skills this focus can strengthen: - voice - scene - dialogue - pacing - sensory detail - character - conflict - structure - point of view - atmosphere - world-building - subtext - theme 2. Experiment menu Create 20 writing experiments across: - one-page scene - dialogue-only scene - object-centered story - second-person fragment - unreliable narrator - reverse chronology - setting as antagonist - character secret - forbidden word constraint - genre swap - one-room story - myth retelling - silent conflict - flash fiction - letter format - found document - memory braid - future artifact - moral dilemma - final-line-first story For each include: - prompt - constraint - goal - time limit - success criterion - revision challenge 3. Experiment path Recommend: - 3 warm-up exercises - 3 deep exercises - 3 uncomfortable exercises - 3 publishable exercises 4. Reflection questions After each experiment, ask: - what surprised me? - what felt alive? - what felt false? - what character or world emerged? - what should become a bigger piece? Rules: - Do not make exercises vague. - Do not make constraints decorative. - Do not focus only on generating ideas. - Each experiment should teach a specific craft skill. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#200Full Creative Writing, Fiction & World-Building Audit

CREATIVE WRITING, FICTION & WORLD-BUILDINGNovel planning, short story revision, fantasy worlds, sci-fi settings, plot repair, character development, creative writing workshops, and full story resets.

Audit and improve a fiction concept, story draft, world, character system, or plot across premise, structure, conflict, emotion, world-building, voice, and reader experience.

Act as an independent fiction editor and world-building auditor. Review my story material and identify what is strong, weak, generic, confusing, emotionally thin, overcomplicated, or worth developing. Story material: [PASTE PREMISE / OUTLINE / DRAFT / WORLD NOTES / CHARACTER NOTES] Context: Genre: [GENRE] Target reader: [READER] Story length: [LENGTH] Point of view: [POV] Tone: [TONE] Themes: [THEMES] Comparable works: [COMPARABLES] Current concern: [CONCERN] Elements I want preserved: [PRESERVE] Elements I am willing to change: [CHANGEABLE] Audit across 30 dimensions: 1. Premise strength 2. Genre promise 3. Originality 4. Reader curiosity 5. Protagonist desire 6. Protagonist flaw 7. Character arc 8. Antagonist or opposition 9. Central conflict 10. Stakes 11. Plot causality 12. Escalation 13. Midpoint strength 14. Climax logic 15. Ending potential 16. Scene potential 17. Dialogue potential 18. Relationship dynamics 19. Emotional depth 20. Theme 21. Symbol or motif potential 22. Setting 23. World-building clarity 24. World-building relevance 25. Magic / technology rules, if applicable 26. Exposition risk 27. Pacing 28. Voice 29. Market or audience fit 30. Revision priority For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the material - missing element - risk if ignored - recommended fix - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Top 7 story problems Rank by: - impact on reader engagement - impact on emotional depth - impact on plot logic - impact on originality - ease of fixing B. Story rebuild Create: - stronger premise - central conflict - protagonist arc - opposition system - stakes statement - world-building focus - theme question - plot spine - ending direction C. Scene and chapter opportunities Recommend: - 10 scenes to write - 5 scenes to cut or avoid - 5 world details to reveal through action - 5 relationship moments - 5 conflict escalations D. World-building audit Separate details into: - essential to story - useful texture - reveal later - cut - clarify - contradiction to fix E. Revision roadmap Create: - first-pass fixes - second-pass fixes - world-building cleanup - character deepening tasks - plot logic tasks - final polish checklist F. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - the hard story truth - the strongest creative asset - the weakest story system - the most promising change - the first scene or section to work on next Rules: - Do not flatter weak story choices. - Do not invent missing plot as fact. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - Focus on story movement, emotional truth, reader curiosity, and world-building that actually affects the narrative. EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENT

#201Clarity Surgery Editor

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTEssays, articles, newsletters, landing pages, reports, scripts, long-form content, educational writing, and first-draft cleanup.

Remove confusion from a draft by identifying vague claims, overloaded sentences, hidden assumptions, unclear references, and weak logic.

You are a clarity-focused editor. Your job is to make the text easier to understand without flattening the writer's voice. Text to edit: [PASTE TEXT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose of the piece: [PURPOSE] Desired tone: [TONE] Brand voice or writing style: [BRAND VOICE] Reader knowledge level: [BEGINNER / INTERMEDIATE / EXPERT] Things that must stay: [MUST KEEP] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Perform a clarity surgery: 1. Diagnose confusion Create a table with: - confusing sentence or section - why it may confuse the reader - type of problem - severity from 1 to 10 - suggested fix Look specifically for: - vague nouns - unclear pronouns - stacked ideas - buried main points - unexplained terms - abstract language - missing context - weak transitions - sentences that are trying to do too much 2. Rewrite for clarity Rewrite the full text. Requirements: - preserve the original meaning - keep the writer's voice where possible - simplify sentence structure - make the main point obvious - add missing context only when necessary - mark any added assumptions with [ASSUMPTION] 3. Explain major edits List the 10 most important changes and why each change improves clarity. 4. Reader test Answer: - what will the reader understand faster now? - what still may need more context? - what question might the reader still have? - what sentence carries the main idea best? Rules: - Do not change the core argument. - Do not add new claims unless clearly marked. - Do not make the writing generic. - Do not over-polish until the text loses personality. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#202Structure X-Ray Revision Planner

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTArticles, essays, newsletters, scripts, sales pages, thought leadership posts, reports, book chapters, and educational content.

Evaluate the structure of a piece and rebuild its order so ideas flow logically, sections support the main point, and the reader never feels lost.

Act as a structural editor. Do not rewrite the text immediately. First expose the current structure, then propose a better one. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Target reader: [AUDIENCE] Main message: [MAIN MESSAGE] Desired reader action or takeaway: [ACTION / TAKEAWAY] Current concern: [CONCERN] Format: [ARTICLE / EMAIL / SCRIPT / ESSAY / LANDING PAGE / OTHER] Length target: [LENGTH] Build the structure x-ray: A. Current structure map Break the draft into blocks. For each block identify: - current position - what the block says - function of the block - whether it belongs - whether it appears too early, too late, or in the right place - what reader question it answers - what reader question it creates B. Structural problems Identify: - missing setup - repeated points - weak opening - buried argument - unsupported leap - misplaced proof - slow section - abrupt transition - weak ending - sections that compete with each other C. Rebuild plan Create a new structure with: - section order - section title - purpose of each section - key point - evidence or example needed - transition into the next section - estimated length D. Three alternate structures Create three different versions: - strongest logical structure - strongest emotional structure - strongest conversion or action structure E. Final recommendation Choose the best structure and explain: - why it fits the reader - why it fits the goal - what to cut - what to move - what to expand - what to write next Rules: - Do not rewrite the full draft unless asked. - Do not preserve the current order out of politeness. - Do not add unnecessary sections. - Structure should serve reader comprehension, momentum, and purpose. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#203Sentence Rhythm and Flow Lab

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTEssays, personal writing, newsletters, fiction, speeches, scripts, thought leadership, memoir-style writing, and polished prose.

Improve sentence rhythm, pacing, readability, and musicality by varying sentence length, cadence, emphasis, pauses, and paragraph movement.

You are a sentence-level rhythm editor. Improve the flow of this text so it feels better to read aloud and easier to move through. Text: [PASTE TEXT] Context: Desired feeling: [FEELING] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Tone: [TONE] Voice to preserve: [VOICE NOTES] Target format: [FORMAT] Lines or phrases I like: [KEEP] Edit for rhythm: 1. Read-aloud diagnosis Identify where the text feels: - too choppy - too breathless - too repetitive - too flat - too dense - too slow - too polished - too mechanical Quote the exact sentence and explain the rhythm problem. 2. Cadence pattern Map the current rhythm using: - short sentence - medium sentence - long sentence - fragment - list - rhetorical question - emphasis line Then identify where the pattern becomes monotonous. 3. Rhythm rewrite Rewrite the text in three styles: - smooth and elegant - punchy and direct - intimate and conversational 4. Final blended version Create one final version that combines the best rhythm from all three. 5. Readability check After rewriting, provide: - strongest sentence - sentence to cut - paragraph with best flow - paragraph that still needs work - one read-aloud tip Rules: - Do not change the meaning. - Do not make every sentence short. - Do not make the prose artificially dramatic. - The final version should feel natural when spoken. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#204Tone Calibration Matrix

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTEmails, announcements, newsletters, social posts, client messages, product copy, essays, editorials, and sensitive communication.

Adjust a draft's tone for different audiences, contexts, emotional temperatures, and communication goals without losing the core message.

Act as a tone calibration editor. Your goal is to tune the emotional effect of the writing while keeping the message accurate. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Relationship with audience: [RELATIONSHIP] Current tone problem: [PROBLEM] Desired tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Communication risk: [RISK] What must not change: [MUST NOT CHANGE] Create a tone matrix: 1. Current tone reading Describe the current tone across: - warmth - authority - confidence - urgency - empathy - directness - formality - emotional weight - trustworthiness Give each a score from 1 to 10. 2. Tone risk audit Identify language that may sound: - cold - vague - arrogant - needy - defensive - too casual - too formal - salesy - passive-aggressive - over-excited 3. Rewrite in 6 tones Rewrite the draft in these versions: - clear and professional - warm and human - concise and direct - premium and confident - empathetic and calm - energetic but not hypey 4. Tone comparison For each version provide: - best use case - risk - emotional effect - strongest line - weakest line 5. Recommended final version Create the best final version for the stated audience and goal. Rules: - Do not soften important information until it becomes unclear. - Do not add enthusiasm that feels fake. - Do not over-apologize unless accountability is needed. - The final tone should match the reader, relationship, and stakes. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#205Word Choice Precision Editor

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTCopywriting, essays, newsletters, thought leadership, product messaging, speeches, scripts, and professional writing.

Replace weak, vague, inflated, repetitive, or generic words with sharper language that improves meaning, energy, and trust.

You are a precision language editor. Upgrade the word choice in this text while preserving the author's meaning and voice. Text: [PASTE TEXT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Words to keep: [KEEP] Words to avoid: [AVOID] Industry or topic: [TOPIC] Run a word choice precision pass: A. Weak word inventory Find and categorize: - vague adjectives - vague verbs - filler phrases - overused words - inflated business language - abstract nouns - clichés - redundant modifiers - hedging language - words that weaken confidence For each item include: - original word or phrase - why it weakens the text - stronger replacement options - best replacement - whether the tone changes B. Meaning preservation check For every major replacement, confirm: - meaning preserved - meaning sharpened - meaning changed - meaning uncertain Use [MEANING CHANGED] if the replacement alters the claim. C. Rewrite Provide a revised version with sharper word choice. D. Alternative diction sets Create 3 alternate diction styles: - plainspoken - premium - vivid E. Final word bank Create a reusable word bank for this writer or brand: - words to use more - words to use less - verbs that fit the voice - adjectives that fit the voice - banned phrases Rules: - Do not replace simple words with fancy words. - Do not make the text sound like a thesaurus. - Do not over-intensify claims. - Precision means clearer meaning, not louder language. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#206Logic Bridge Repair Editor

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTEssays, opinion pieces, reports, strategic memos, educational writing, thought leadership, argumentative articles, and persuasive content.

Find gaps in reasoning, unsupported claims, weak examples, unclear cause-and-effect, and missing transitions that make writing feel unconvincing.

Act as a logic editor. Examine the draft for reasoning gaps and repair the argument so the reader can follow and trust it. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Main claim: [MAIN CLAIM] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Reader skepticism level: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Required evidence: [EVIDENCE] Tone: [TONE] Analyze the logic: 1. Claim map Extract every important claim. For each claim, identify: - claim - evidence given - evidence missing - assumption behind it - reader objection - strength from 1 to 10 - fix needed 2. Gap detector Find: - unsupported statements - leaps in logic - unclear definitions - false cause-and-effect - overgeneralizations - vague comparisons - unproven conclusions - examples that do not prove the point - transitions that hide missing logic 3. Bridge repair For each gap, provide: - what the reader needs before accepting the point - one sentence bridge - one example bridge - one evidence bridge - one transition bridge 4. Revised argument flow Rewrite only the sections that need logical repair. 5. Skeptic test Answer as a skeptical reader: - what do I still not believe? - what proof would change my mind? - where does the argument feel strongest? - where does it feel weakest? Rules: - Do not invent data. - Use [NEEDS EVIDENCE] where evidence is required. - Do not make weak claims sound certain. - The final argument should be clearer, fairer, and more persuasive. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#207Readability Simplifier Without Dumbing Down

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTTechnical explainers, educational content, reports, research summaries, B2B content, essays, policy writing, and expert-led articles.

Make complex writing easier to read while preserving substance, nuance, authority, and intellectual credibility.

You are a readability editor. Simplify the text without dumbing it down. Text: [PASTE TEXT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Reader expertise: [EXPERTISE LEVEL] Topic complexity: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Tone: [TONE] Terms that must remain: [TERMS] Terms that can be explained: [EXPLAINABLE TERMS] Target reading level: [READING LEVEL] Simplify the text: A. Complexity scan Highlight: - long sentences - dense paragraphs - jargon - undefined terms - nested clauses - abstract explanations - overloaded lists - passive constructions - concepts that need examples B. Simplification strategy For each complexity issue choose one method: - split sentence - define term - add example - replace jargon - reorder idea - add signpost - turn abstract into concrete - remove filler - use active voice - create paragraph break C. Rewrite Create a simpler version. Requirements: - preserve technical accuracy - preserve nuance - explain difficult terms briefly - keep authority - reduce friction - use examples where helpful D. Before / after sample Show 10 key before-and-after improvements. E. Comprehension check Create: - one-sentence summary - 5 bullet summary - 5 reader questions answered by the rewrite - 3 remaining questions that may need more context Rules: - Do not remove necessary complexity. - Do not make the tone childish. - Do not change technical meaning. - Clarity must come from structure and explanation, not oversimplification. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#208Paragraph Strengthener

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTEssays, articles, reports, newsletters, chapters, educational content, and long-form writing.

Improve paragraph unity, topic sentences, transitions, focus, internal logic, and the relationship between paragraphs.

Act as a paragraph doctor. Evaluate and improve every paragraph as a unit of thought. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Goal: [GOAL] Tone: [TONE] Main idea: [MAIN IDEA] Length preference: [LENGTH] Work paragraph by paragraph: 1. Paragraph inventory For each paragraph, identify: - paragraph number - main point - topic sentence - supporting idea - weakest sentence - strongest sentence - paragraph function - whether it should stay, move, split, merge, or be cut 2. Paragraph problems Flag paragraphs that: - contain more than one main idea - start too late - end without impact - repeat another paragraph - lack evidence - lack transition - feel too dense - feel too thin - do not advance the piece 3. Paragraph rewrites For every weak paragraph provide: - improved topic sentence - tightened paragraph - stronger closing sentence - transition into next paragraph 4. Flow map Show how each paragraph should connect: Paragraph 1 leads to Paragraph 2 because... Paragraph 2 leads to Paragraph 3 because... Continue for all paragraphs. 5. Final revised draft Provide the full revised draft with improved paragraph structure. Rules: - Do not rewrite beyond paragraph-level needs unless necessary. - Do not make all paragraphs the same length. - Do not cut nuance only to shorten. - Each paragraph should do one clear job. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#209Pacing Throttle Revision

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTFiction scenes, essays, newsletters, scripts, sales pages, speeches, personal stories, tutorials, and long-form content.

Control the speed of a piece by identifying sections that drag, rush, repeat, skip emotional beats, or need compression or expansion.

You are a pacing editor. Help me control the reader's experience by deciding where the text should slow down, speed up, expand, or compress. Text: [PASTE TEXT] Context: Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Desired pace: [FAST / BALANCED / SLOW-BUILDING / VARIABLE] Critical moments: [CRITICAL MOMENTS] Sections that feel slow: [SLOW SECTIONS] Sections that feel rushed: [RUSHED SECTIONS] Tone: [TONE] Create a pacing throttle map: A. Pace diagnosis Divide the text into sections and label each: - too fast - too slow - balanced - repetitive - underdeveloped - over-explained - abrupt - emotionally skipped B. Pacing causes For each issue, identify whether the problem comes from: - sentence length - paragraph length - repeated idea - missing transition - too much setup - too little context - too much explanation - weak stakes - lack of scene or example - unclear destination C. Throttle actions Recommend one action for each section: - cut - compress - expand - reorder - add example - add emotional beat - add transition - split paragraph - sharpen opening - strengthen ending D. Rewrite samples Rewrite: - one slow section - one rushed section - one repetitive section - one section that needs more emotional weight E. Final pacing plan Provide a revision checklist in the exact order I should edit. Rules: - Do not make the whole piece faster. - Do not delete useful context just because it is long. - Do not expand sections that do not matter. - Pacing should match reader attention and narrative importance. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#210Transition and Flow Connector

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTArticles, essays, newsletters, scripts, presentations, reports, book chapters, and long-form drafts with awkward jumps.

Improve the movement between ideas, paragraphs, sections, scenes, or arguments so the writing feels smooth, intentional, and easy to follow.

Act as a flow editor. Your job is to make the writing move smoothly from one idea to the next without adding fluff. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Reader: [AUDIENCE] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Tone: [TONE] Main idea: [MAIN IDEA] Current issue: [CURRENT ISSUE] Improve transitions: 1. Flow break detection Find every place where the reader may think: - why are we here now? - how does this connect? - did we skip a step? - is this a new idea or the same one? - what is the point of this section? - why does this example matter? 2. Transition type selection For each break, choose the best transition type: - cause-and-effect - contrast - escalation - example - consequence - summary - question - time shift - topic shift - emotional turn - narrowing - widening 3. Transition options Write 3 transition options for each break: - invisible transition - direct transition - elegant transition 4. Flow rewrite Rewrite the draft with improved transitions. 5. Navigation layer Add or recommend: - section headings - signpost sentences - summary lines - setup lines - closing lines - bridge questions Rules: - Do not add generic transition phrases. - Do not over-explain connections the reader can infer. - Do not make every transition obvious. - The flow should feel guided, not forced. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#211Voice Consistency Editor

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTBrand content, newsletters, social posts, books, landing pages, ghostwritten drafts, collaborative writing, and multi-section content.

Make a draft sound like one consistent writer or brand by correcting shifts in voice, personality, formality, energy, and language patterns.

You are a voice consistency editor. Make this text feel like it was written by one intentional voice. Text: [PASTE TEXT] Voice profile: Brand or writer: [BRAND / WRITER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Voice traits to preserve: [TRAITS] Voice traits to avoid: [AVOID] Tone: [TONE] Sample of ideal voice, if available: [PASTE SAMPLE] Words or phrases to use: [USE] Words or phrases to avoid: [AVOID WORDS] Audit voice consistency: A. Voice fingerprint Define the intended voice across: - sentence length - vocabulary - directness - warmth - humor - confidence - emotional range - level of detail - use of examples - CTA style B. Voice drift scan Find lines that sound: - too formal - too casual - too generic - too salesy - too academic - too robotic - too dramatic - too different from the rest C. Voice repair table For each drift, provide: - original line - voice problem - revised line - principle used - confidence level D. Full voice-aligned rewrite Rewrite the full text in the intended voice. E. Future voice rules Create a reusable guide: - 10 voice rules - 10 phrases that fit - 10 phrases to avoid - 5 sentence patterns to use - 5 editing questions before publishing Rules: - Do not imitate a real person's copyrighted style. - Do not make the voice louder than the message. - Do not erase useful nuance. - Consistency should make the piece feel more trustworthy. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#212Compression Editor for Overwritten Drafts

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTLong emails, newsletters, articles, essays, social posts, landing pages, reports, speeches, and scripts that feel too long.

Cut unnecessary words, repeated ideas, slow openings, bloated explanations, and weak paragraphs while keeping meaning, value, and voice.

Act as a compression editor. Reduce the text without reducing its value. Text: [PASTE TEXT] Context: Target length: [TARGET LENGTH] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Must keep: [MUST KEEP] Can cut: [CAN CUT] Tone: [TONE] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Compress the draft: 1. Cut map Identify content to remove: - repeated ideas - throat-clearing - over-explanation - obvious statements - weak examples - filler transitions - unnecessary qualifiers - low-value details - duplicated sentences - slow intro material 2. Compression levels Create 4 versions: - 90% version: light tightening - 70% version: meaningful compression - 50% version: aggressive compression - 25% version: executive summary 3. Preservation check For each version, state: - what was preserved - what was lost - best use case - risk of this version 4. Best final version Choose the best version for the goal and refine it. 5. Cut list Show the exact ideas removed and why. Rules: - Do not cut the strongest insight. - Do not remove necessary proof. - Do not make the text vague by shortening it. - The compressed version should feel sharper, not thinner. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#213Expansion Editor for Thin Drafts

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTDrafts that feel too shallow, outlines, short essays, thin newsletters, unfinished articles, weak scenes, and underdeveloped arguments.

Strengthen underdeveloped writing by adding examples, explanation, evidence, emotional depth, context, sensory detail, or practical application.

You are an expansion editor. Expand this draft only where expansion increases clarity, usefulness, emotion, or persuasion. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Desired length: [LENGTH] Tone: [TONE] Areas that feel thin: [THIN AREAS] Information available to add: [INFO] Do not add: [AVOID] Find expansion opportunities: A. Thinness diagnosis Identify sections that lack: - context - specificity - proof - example - story - emotional weight - practical steps - contrast - consequence - reader relevance B. Expansion menu For each weak section, suggest expansion using one of these methods: - concrete example - mini-story - analogy - counterexample - statistic placeholder - step-by-step explanation - before-and-after - reader scenario - sensory detail - expert caveat - objection answer C. Expand selectively Rewrite the draft with targeted expansion. Use [NEEDS DATA] for any factual point that requires verification. D. Expansion alternatives Provide: - practical expansion - emotional expansion - persuasive expansion - educational expansion E. Keep it tight Identify what should not be expanded and why. Rules: - Do not add filler. - Do not invent facts. - Do not expand every section equally. - Expansion should make the piece more valuable, not just longer. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#214Style Upgrade Without Voice Loss

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTPersonal essays, newsletters, thought leadership, speeches, creative nonfiction, founder writing, memoir fragments, and high-trust content.

Improve sophistication, polish, elegance, and sentence quality while protecting the author's natural voice and avoiding artificial over-editing.

Act as a style editor who respects the writer's voice. Upgrade the prose without making it sound like someone else wrote it. Text: [PASTE TEXT] Style direction: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Desired style: [STYLE] Tone: [TONE] Voice traits to preserve: [PRESERVE] Lines I love: [LINES TO KEEP] Lines I dislike: [LINES TO FIX] Level of polish: [LIGHT / MEDIUM / HIGH] Run a style upgrade: 1. Voice protection pass Identify: - phrases that feel authentic - sentence patterns worth preserving - emotional texture worth keeping - unusual choices that work - imperfections that add personality 2. Style weaknesses Identify: - flat verbs - dull phrasing - repetitive structure - awkward rhythm - weak imagery - generic transitions - overexplained thoughts - sentences that need elegance 3. Upgrade levels Rewrite the text in 3 polish levels: - light polish: still raw and personal - medium polish: clearer and smoother - high polish: refined and publication-ready 4. Choose final Select the best version for the stated audience and explain why. 5. Style notes Create a style guide for future revision: - what to preserve - what to improve - signature sentence moves - words that fit - editing habits to avoid Rules: - Do not make the text sound corporate. - Do not remove all rough edges. - Do not add decorative language without purpose. - Style should clarify and intensify the original voice. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#215Opening and Ending Strengthener

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTArticles, essays, newsletters, speeches, scripts, sales pages, chapters, social posts, and personal stories.

Improve the first and last impression of a piece by strengthening hooks, setup, reader promise, closure, resonance, and final action.

You are an opening and ending editor. Strengthen how the piece begins and how it lands. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Main message: [MAIN MESSAGE] Desired reader feeling: [FEELING] Desired reader action: [ACTION] Tone: [TONE] Improve the beginning and ending: A. Opening diagnosis Evaluate the current opening for: - immediate relevance - curiosity - clarity - tension - specificity - voice - reader promise - speed to main point B. Ending diagnosis Evaluate the current ending for: - closure - emotional resonance - practical takeaway - CTA clarity - memorability - connection to opening - final sentence strength C. Opening options Write 10 alternate openings: - direct claim - story - question - contradiction - surprising observation - reader pain - scene - statistic placeholder - confession - bold promise D. Ending options Write 10 alternate endings: - final insight - action step - emotional echo - return to opening - question - challenge - summary - quiet final image - CTA - memorable line E. Best pairing Choose the strongest opening and ending pair. Then revise the first 15% and last 15% of the draft. Rules: - Do not use clickbait. - Do not create an ending that feels like a slogan. - Do not start too far from the actual point. - The beginning should pull the reader in; the ending should make the piece feel complete. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#216Repetition, Redundancy and Echo Detector

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTLong-form writing, essays, newsletters, reports, landing pages, speeches, articles, book chapters, and revision passes.

Detect repeated ideas, duplicated sentence structures, overused words, rhythmic echoes, repeated transitions, and unnecessary restatements.

Act as a repetition detector. Find every form of repetition that weakens this text, then remove or vary it without losing important emphasis. Text: [PASTE TEXT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Tone: [TONE] Repeated ideas that are intentional: [INTENTIONAL REPETITION] Words that must remain: [MUST KEEP] Detect repetition: 1. Idea repetition Find ideas that appear more than once. For each: - repeated idea - locations - whether repetition helps or hurts - best action: keep, cut, merge, reframe, move - revised version 2. Word and phrase repetition Create a list of: - overused words - repeated phrases - repeated sentence openings - repeated transitions - repeated metaphors - repeated claims 3. Structural repetition Identify repeated patterns: - same paragraph shape - same sentence length - same rhetorical move - same example type - same CTA pattern - same emotional beat 4. Revision Rewrite the text to reduce harmful repetition. 5. Intentional repetition upgrade Where repetition is useful for emphasis, make it sharper and more deliberate. Rules: - Do not remove repetition that creates rhythm or emphasis. - Do not replace repeated words with awkward synonyms. - Do not weaken key terms that need consistency. - The revision should feel tighter and more varied. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#217Style Guide Compliance Editor

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTBrand content, client writing, agency deliverables, editorial teams, newsletters, corporate communications, product copy, and publication submissions.

Edit a draft against a specific style guide, brand voice, editorial standard, or publication preference while documenting every major decision.

You are a style guide compliance editor. Edit the draft so it follows the provided style rules exactly. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Style guide or rules: [PASTE STYLE GUIDE / RULES] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Publication or brand: [BRAND] Tone: [TONE] Required format: [FORMAT] Non-negotiable rules: [NON-NEGOTIABLES] Flexible rules: [FLEXIBLE] Apply the style guide: A. Rule extraction Extract the style guide into a checklist grouped by: - voice - tone - grammar - punctuation - formatting - terminology - capitalization - structure - banned words - preferred words - accessibility - citation or sourcing rules B. Compliance audit Create a table: - rule - current issue - severity - fix - confidence C. Edited draft Rewrite the draft to comply with the guide. D. Change log List all meaningful changes: - original - revised - rule applied - reason E. Remaining uncertainties List anything that needs human confirmation. Use [STYLE GUIDE UNCLEAR] where the rule is ambiguous. Rules: - Do not invent style rules. - Do not prioritize personal preference over the provided guide. - Do not change meaning unless required by the style guide. - Compliance should improve consistency without making the writing lifeless. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#218Developmental Edit Roadmap

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTLong essays, book chapters, reports, articles, white papers, lead magnets, scripts, guides, and complex drafts.

Create a practical revision roadmap from messy draft to stronger final piece by prioritizing big-picture issues before line-level edits.

Act as a developmental editor. Do not line edit first. Create a revision roadmap that fixes the biggest problems in the right order. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Goal: [GOAL] Main message: [MAIN MESSAGE] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Current draft stage: [STAGE] Biggest concern: [CONCERN] Build the roadmap: 1. Big-picture assessment Evaluate: - core idea - audience fit - promise - structure - argument - examples - evidence - pacing - tone - ending - originality - usefulness 2. Priority ranking Rank problems by: - impact on reader understanding - impact on persuasion - impact on trust - ease of fixing - order of operations 3. Revision phases Create a phased plan: Phase 1: concept and message Phase 2: structure and flow Phase 3: section-level development Phase 4: clarity and logic Phase 5: tone and voice Phase 6: sentence-level polish Phase 7: final QA For each phase include: - objective - exact tasks - what to ignore for now - success criteria - estimated effort 4. Revision checklist Create a checklist I can use while editing. 5. First 60 minutes Tell me exactly what to do in the first hour of revision. Rules: - Do not waste time polishing sentences before fixing structure. - Do not give vague advice. - Do not rewrite the whole draft unless requested. - The roadmap should make revision feel actionable and sequenced. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#219Multi-Version Rewrite Studio

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTRepurposing content, audience adaptation, social posts, emails, articles, sales copy, executive summaries, and brand communications.

Rewrite one piece for different goals, audiences, formats, lengths, and tones while preserving the central message.

You are a rewrite studio editor. Create multiple strong versions of the same message for different use cases. Source text: [PASTE TEXT] Core message that must remain: [CORE MESSAGE] Context: Original audience: [ORIGINAL AUDIENCE] New audiences: [NEW AUDIENCES] Formats needed: [FORMATS] Tone range: [TONE RANGE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Length limits: [LENGTH LIMITS] Things not to change: [MUST NOT CHANGE] Create the rewrite studio: A. Message lock Extract: - core claim - supporting points - emotional promise - proof - CTA - non-negotiable meaning B. Rewrite versions Create versions for: - executive summary - newsletter section - social post - landing page section - personal note - formal announcement - educational explanation - persuasive pitch - short caption - long-form paragraph For each include: - version - intended audience - intended use - tone - what changed from source - risk C. Audience adaptation For each target audience, adjust: - vocabulary - context level - objections addressed - proof emphasis - CTA style - emotional angle D. Best version selection Recommend the strongest version for each format. E. Reuse map Show how to repurpose the source into: - 5 posts - 3 emails - 1 article section - 1 presentation slide - 1 CTA block Rules: - Do not distort the core message. - Do not create generic rewrites. - Do not reuse the same sentence structure across every version. - Each version should feel native to its format. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#220Full Editing, Revision and Style Audit

EDITING, REVISION & STYLE IMPROVEMENTFinal-stage revision, editorial review, article cleanup, newsletter polishing, book chapter review, client deliverables, scripts, essays, and high-stakes writing.

Audit a draft across clarity, structure, tone, logic, rhythm, flow, readability, word choice, consistency, pacing, and publication readiness.

Act as an independent senior editor. Audit my draft honestly and give me a practical revision plan before rewriting anything. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Desired tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Target length: [LENGTH] Publication standard: [STANDARD] Known issues: [KNOWN ISSUES] What must stay: [MUST KEEP] Audit the draft across 30 dimensions: 1. Main idea clarity 2. Reader relevance 3. Opening strength 4. Structure 5. Flow 6. Transitions 7. Argument logic 8. Evidence 9. Specificity 10. Paragraph strength 11. Sentence clarity 12. Sentence rhythm 13. Word choice 14. Repetition 15. Tone fit 16. Voice consistency 17. Readability 18. Pacing 19. Emotional effect 20. Practical usefulness 21. Persuasion 22. Examples 23. Reader trust 24. Originality 25. Concision 26. Style polish 27. Ending strength 28. CTA or takeaway 29. Formatting 30. Publication readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the draft - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level Then synthesize: A. Top 7 revision priorities Rank by impact. B. What to cut List exact ideas, lines, or sections that should be removed or compressed. C. What to strengthen List sections that need more context, proof, examples, emotion, or clarity. D. Rewrite strategy Create a revision plan for: - opening - structure - key sections - transitions - tone - sentence style - ending E. Edited version Provide a full revised version of the draft. F. Final QA checklist Create a checklist for: - clarity - accuracy - voice - flow - repetition - formatting - final proofread G. Executive editorial note Write a direct note with: - the hard truth about the draft - the strongest part - the weakest part - the fastest improvement - what to do next Rules: - Do not flatter weak writing. - Do not invent facts or evidence. - Use [NEEDS SOURCE] where proof is required. - Preserve the writer's intent while making the piece clearer, stronger, and more publishable. VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMS

#221Brand Voice DNA Extractor

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSBrand voice guides, creator voice systems, startup messaging, content teams, newsletters, social media, websites, emails, and multi-channel writing consistency.

Build a distinct writing voice system from existing content, audience expectations, brand personality, and communication goals.

You are a senior brand voice strategist. Help me extract and define a clear writing voice system that can guide every future piece of communication. Inputs: Brand / writer / company: [BRAND NAME] What we do: [WHAT YOU DO] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Audience expectations: [EXPECTATIONS] Existing writing samples: [PASTE SAMPLES] Brand personality: [PERSONALITY] Communication goals: [GOALS] Channels used: [CHANNELS] Competitors or voices to avoid: [AVOID] Desired perception: [DESIRED PERCEPTION] Tone range: [TONE RANGE] Extract the voice DNA: 1. Voice diagnosis Analyze the existing samples and identify: - dominant voice traits - repeated sentence patterns - common word choices - energy level - emotional temperature - level of formality - level of authority - humor style, if any - clarity style - trust signals - phrases that feel distinctive - phrases that feel generic 2. Voice positioning Define the voice in contrast: - we sound like [THIS] - we do not sound like [THAT] - we are more [TRAIT] than [TRAIT] - we are less [TRAIT] than [TRAIT] - we never want readers to feel [FEELING] - we always want readers to feel [FEELING] 3. Voice pillars Create 5 voice pillars. For each pillar include: - pillar name - what it means - why it matters to the audience - do - do not - before example - after example - channels where it matters most 4. Voice operating rules Create rules for: - sentence length - vocabulary - emotional intensity - humor - directness - authority - vulnerability - CTAs - storytelling - technical explanation - promotional language 5. Final voice guide Produce: - voice summary - 10 writing rules - approved word bank - banned phrases - example paragraph - example email opening - example social post - example website section - final pre-publish checklist Rules: - Do not create a generic voice guide. - Do not invent personality traits unsupported by the samples. - Do not make the voice artificially quirky. - The final guide must be practical enough for a writer to use immediately. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#222Tone Spectrum Builder

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSTone guidelines, customer support, announcements, emails, landing pages, social media, community posts, crisis messages, and brand communications.

Create a flexible tone system that adapts the same brand voice across situations, audiences, emotional stakes, and formats.

Act as a tone systems designer. Build a tone spectrum that keeps the brand recognizable while adapting appropriately to different contexts. Brand context: Brand / writer: [BRAND NAME] Core voice traits: [VOICE TRAITS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Communication channels: [CHANNELS] Common situations: [SITUATIONS] High-stakes situations: [HIGH-STAKES SITUATIONS] Low-stakes situations: [LOW-STAKES SITUATIONS] Tone problems to avoid: [PROBLEMS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Build the tone spectrum: A. Core voice vs flexible tone Explain: - what must stay consistent - what can change by context - what should never change - what changes by channel - what changes by reader emotion - what changes by message goal B. Tone sliders Create tone sliders from 1 to 5 for: - formal to casual - calm to energetic - concise to explanatory - warm to authoritative - playful to serious - direct to gentle - promotional to educational - personal to institutional For each slider include: - when to use low end - when to use middle - when to use high end - example sentence at each level C. Situation map Create tone guidance for: - welcome message - product launch - apology - price increase - feature update - support response - community celebration - sales email - educational content - social comment - urgent announcement - renewal reminder For each include: - emotional context - recommended tone - words to use - words to avoid - sample message D. Misfire prevention Identify tone risks: - too corporate - too casual - too salesy - too vague - too defensive - too excited - too cold - too apologetic E. Final tone guide Create: - tone matrix - examples by channel - emergency tone rules - pre-send tone checklist - rewrite examples Rules: - Do not make tone random by channel. - Do not confuse brand voice with mood. - Do not make serious messages playful. - Tone should protect trust while keeping the voice recognizable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#223Brand Writing Style Guide Generator

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSContent teams, founders, agencies, startups, marketing teams, editorial systems, internal documentation, freelancers, and brand consistency.

Create a complete writing style guide covering voice, tone, grammar preferences, formatting, vocabulary, examples, CTAs, and channel rules.

You are an editorial style guide architect. Build a practical brand writing style guide that writers can follow without needing constant approval. Brand details: Brand name: [BRAND NAME] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Industry / category: [INDUSTRY] Core offer or product: [OFFER] Brand values: [VALUES] Voice traits: [VOICE TRAITS] Tone range: [TONE RANGE] Channels: [CHANNELS] Examples of good writing: [GOOD EXAMPLES] Examples of bad writing: [BAD EXAMPLES] Terms that must be used: [REQUIRED TERMS] Terms to avoid: [AVOID] Formatting preferences: [FORMATTING] Create the style guide: 1. Brand writing principles Write 7 principles. Each principle must include: - principle - reason - good example - bad example - editing question 2. Voice and tone rules Define: - voice summary - tone range - when to be warmer - when to be more direct - when to be more concise - when to explain more - what never changes 3. Language rules Create guidance for: - preferred vocabulary - banned words - jargon policy - contractions - punctuation - capitalization - numbers - acronyms - emojis - humor - CTAs - claims and proof - inclusive language - accessibility 4. Channel rules Create writing rules for: - website - landing pages - emails - newsletters - social posts - ads - help docs - support replies - community posts - product UI copy 5. Editing system Create: - before / after examples - quality checklist - review workflow - approval criteria - common mistakes - final publishing checklist Rules: - Do not create vague rules like "be authentic" without examples. - Do not make the guide too abstract to use. - Do not invent compliance rules. - Every guideline must help a writer make a real writing decision. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#224Voice Differentiation Map

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSBrand positioning, messaging, content strategy, category differentiation, founder brands, SaaS brands, creator businesses, and rebrands.

Define how a brand voice should stand apart from competitors, category clichés, and generic AI-sounding content.

Act as a differentiation strategist for brand voice. Help me make this voice sound distinct within its category without becoming gimmicky. Inputs: Brand: [BRAND NAME] Category: [CATEGORY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Competitors or similar voices: [COMPETITORS] Common category language: [CATEGORY CLICHÉS] Current voice: [CURRENT VOICE] Desired perception: [DESIRED PERCEPTION] Topics we write about: [TOPICS] Channels: [CHANNELS] Voice boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Create the differentiation map: A. Category voice audit Identify: - how competitors typically sound - phrases everyone uses - emotional tone of the category - overused claims - overused metaphors - common CTAs - common content structures - generic AI-like patterns B. Distinctive territory Define where the brand can be different through: - point of view - sentence rhythm - vocabulary - examples - humor - emotional restraint - level of detail - honesty - specificity - formatting - storytelling C. Voice contrast table Create a table with: - category default - why it is weak - our alternative - example before - example after - risk to avoid D. Signature moves Develop 10 signature writing moves. For each include: - move name - how it works - where to use it - where not to use it - example E. Final differentiation system Create: - voice positioning statement - words to own - words to avoid - content formats that fit the voice - rewrite examples - anti-generic checklist Rules: - Do not make the voice weird just to be different. - Do not insult competitors. - Do not create a voice that cannot scale across channels. - Differentiation must improve clarity, trust, and memorability. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#225Audience-Specific Voice Adapter

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSB2B and B2C messaging, multiple buyer personas, executive audiences, beginner audiences, technical users, communities, and multi-segment brands.

Adapt the same core brand voice for different audience segments without sounding inconsistent or fake.

You are a voice adaptation editor. Keep the brand voice consistent while adapting copy for different audience segments. Core brand voice: [PASTE BRAND VOICE] Base message: [PASTE MESSAGE] Audience segments: [LIST SEGMENTS] Context: Communication goal: [GOAL] Channels: [CHANNELS] Tone boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Terms to use: [USE] Terms to avoid: [AVOID] Brand personality: [PERSONALITY] Adapt the voice: 1. Segment psychology For each audience segment, define: - what they care about - what they fear - what they already know - what they need explained - what tone they trust - what tone they reject - what proof they need - what language they use 2. Voice constants Identify what must remain the same across all segments: - core promise - vocabulary anchors - personality traits - values - CTA style - level of honesty - claims policy 3. Segment adaptations For each segment rewrite the base message with: - adjusted opening - adjusted vocabulary - adjusted proof emphasis - adjusted level of detail - adjusted CTA - adjusted emotional temperature 4. Consistency check Compare versions and flag: - where the voice drifts too far - where the message becomes too generic - where the audience fit improves - where the meaning changes accidentally 5. Final output Create: - adapted copy for each segment - segment-specific voice notes - do / do not list - reusable adaptation rules Rules: - Do not create a different personality for every segment. - Do not stereotype audiences. - Do not over-personalize in a creepy way. - Adaptation should change emphasis, not identity. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#226Founder Voice Codifier

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSFounder-led brands, personal brands, ghostwriting, LinkedIn content, investor updates, newsletters, website copy, and executive communications.

Turn a founder's natural way of thinking, speaking, and writing into a repeatable voice system for public content, emails, updates, and brand messaging.

Act as a founder voice codifier. Extract a repeatable voice system from the founder's writing, interviews, notes, and opinions. Founder material: [PASTE WRITING / NOTES / TRANSCRIPTS / INTERVIEWS] Context: Founder role: [ROLE] Company / project: [COMPANY] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Topics the founder writes about: [TOPICS] Opinions or beliefs: [BELIEFS] Tone to preserve: [TONE] Tone to avoid: [AVOID] Channels: [CHANNELS] Codify the founder voice: A. Thinking patterns Identify how the founder tends to: - frame problems - explain ideas - make arguments - tell stories - challenge assumptions - use examples - express conviction - show uncertainty - speak to the audience B. Language fingerprint Extract: - repeated phrases - favorite verbs - sentence patterns - metaphors - transitions - humor style - directness level - emotional range - intensity level C. Voice principles Create 8 rules for writing in this founder's voice. For each include: - rule - why it matters - original evidence from sample - before example - after example D. Ghostwriting guide Create instructions for writing: - LinkedIn posts - newsletters - founder updates - website sections - investor notes - product announcements - comments and replies - thought leadership essays E. Voice protection List: - phrases that sound unlike the founder - arguments the founder would not make - tone mistakes - examples to avoid - editing checklist Rules: - Do not invent beliefs the founder has not expressed. - Do not imitate another public figure. - Do not over-polish until the founder voice disappears. - The output should help another writer sound aligned, not artificial. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#227Multi-Channel Voice Consistency System

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSBrands with multiple channels, marketing teams, agencies, SaaS companies, e-commerce brands, creators, communities, and growing content operations.

Build a system that keeps voice consistent across websites, ads, emails, social media, product UI, support, community, and internal communications.

You are a cross-channel brand writing systems designer. Create a voice consistency system that works across every communication channel. Brand context: Brand: [BRAND] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Core voice traits: [VOICE TRAITS] Channels used: [CHANNELS] Primary conversion goals: [GOALS] Community or support context: [COMMUNITY / SUPPORT] Known inconsistency problems: [PROBLEMS] Examples of current copy: [COPY SAMPLES] Tone boundaries: [BOUNDARIES] Build the system: 1. Channel role map For each channel, define: - role of the channel - reader mindset - level of attention - ideal tone - message length - CTA style - proof requirement - voice risks Channels to include: - homepage - landing pages - ads - email - newsletter - social posts - comments - product UI - support - community - sales materials - internal updates 2. Consistency anchors Define shared elements across channels: - core promise - vocabulary - point of view - personality traits - claim style - CTA philosophy - relationship stance 3. Channel adaptation rules For each channel write: - do - do not - example - rewrite pattern - approval checklist 4. Inconsistency repair Audit the samples and identify: - mismatched tone - conflicting claims - inconsistent vocabulary - uneven formality - CTA inconsistency - proof mismatch - personality drift 5. Final operating system Create: - cross-channel voice map - reusable templates - voice QA checklist - review workflow - owner responsibilities - update process Rules: - Do not force every channel to sound identical. - Do not let channel conventions erase the brand voice. - Do not create rules that are impossible to maintain. - Consistency means recognizable identity, not identical wording. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#228Brand Voice Before-and-After Rewrite Studio

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSWebsite copy, emails, social posts, landing pages, ads, product copy, announcements, newsletters, and brand refreshes.

Rewrite weak, generic, off-brand, or inconsistent copy into a stronger brand voice while showing why each revision works.

Act as a brand voice rewrite editor. Rewrite the copy below so it better matches the intended voice and explain the edits. Copy to rewrite: [PASTE COPY] Voice guide or desired voice: [PASTE VOICE GUIDE / DESCRIBE VOICE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Channel: [CHANNEL] Goal: [GOAL] Tone: [TONE] Words to use: [USE] Words to avoid: [AVOID] Length preference: [LENGTH] Run the rewrite studio: A. Off-brand diagnosis Identify where the copy is: - too generic - too formal - too casual - too salesy - too vague - too robotic - too emotional - too dry - inconsistent with the voice - unclear for the audience B. Voice rewrite options Rewrite the copy in 5 versions: - closest to current copy - more distinctive - warmer - sharper - most concise C. Before / after table Create a table with: - original line - voice issue - revised line - voice principle applied - why it works D. Final selected version Choose the strongest version and polish it. E. Reusable rules Extract 10 rewrite rules that can be applied to future copy. Rules: - Do not change factual meaning. - Do not add claims or proof not provided. - Do not make the copy sound artificially clever. - The revised copy should sound more like the brand and still be clear. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#229Tone-of-Voice QA Checklist Builder

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSContent teams, marketing departments, agencies, brand managers, editors, freelancers, and approval workflows.

Create a repeatable QA checklist for reviewing whether copy matches the brand voice, tone, channel, audience, and message goal.

You are a tone-of-voice QA system designer. Build a practical checklist and scoring system for reviewing copy before publication. Brand context: Brand: [BRAND] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Voice principles: [VOICE PRINCIPLES] Tone range: [TONE RANGE] Channels: [CHANNELS] Common mistakes: [MISTAKES] Approval workflow: [WORKFLOW] Reviewers: [REVIEWERS] High-risk content types: [HIGH-RISK CONTENT] Create the QA system: 1. Voice scorecard Build a scorecard with 10 dimensions: - clarity - audience fit - voice consistency - tone fit - specificity - trust - emotional temperature - vocabulary - CTA fit - channel fit For each dimension include: - what to check - pass criteria - fail signs - score from 1 to 5 - example fix 2. Red flag list Create red flags for copy that sounds: - generic - off-brand - inflated - defensive - too casual - too corporate - misleading - over-optimized - AI-generated - inconsistent 3. Review workflow Design: - first-pass self-review - editor review - brand review - legal or compliance review, if needed - final approval - archive of examples 4. Rewrite prompts for reviewers Create micro-prompts reviewers can use to fix: - tone mismatch - weak clarity - generic language - CTA mismatch - inconsistent vocabulary - overclaiming 5. Final checklist Create a one-page checklist for publishing. Rules: - Do not make QA subjective only. - Do not create a checklist so long no one will use it. - Do not prioritize voice over accuracy. - The system should make review faster, clearer, and more consistent. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#230Brand Vocabulary and Phrase Bank Builder

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSBrand messaging, content teams, copywriters, social media managers, website copy, email marketing, product marketing, and editorial consistency.

Build a controlled vocabulary, phrase bank, banned word list, preferred wording system, and reusable language library for a brand.

Act as a brand language librarian. Build a vocabulary system that helps writers sound consistent without copying the same lines everywhere. Brand context: Brand: [BRAND] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Category: [CATEGORY] Offer / product: [OFFER] Voice traits: [VOICE TRAITS] Positioning: [POSITIONING] Existing copy: [PASTE COPY] Competitor language to avoid: [AVOID] Required terms: [REQUIRED TERMS] Create the language library: A. Vocabulary audit From the existing copy identify: - strong words to keep - generic words to replace - overused words - unclear terms - category clichés - words that create trust - words that create confusion - words that feel off-brand B. Controlled vocabulary Create lists for: - preferred product terms - audience terms - problem terms - outcome terms - proof terms - CTA terms - emotional terms - educational terms - community terms - support terms C. Phrase bank Create reusable phrase options for: - headlines - subheadlines - email openings - transitions - CTAs - reassurance lines - social hooks - product explanations - objection handling - closing lines D. Banned and caution language List: - banned phrases - overused phrases - risky claims - vague words - words that sound too corporate - words that sound too hypey - words that require proof E. Usage rules For each vocabulary category explain: - when to use - when not to use - examples - alternatives - common mistakes Rules: - Do not create robotic repetition. - Do not ban useful words without reason. - Do not invent legal claim restrictions. - The language library should increase consistency and flexibility at the same time. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#231Voice for Product UI and Microcopy System

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSSaaS products, apps, websites, onboarding flows, product teams, UX writers, design systems, and product-led brands.

Define how brand voice appears in product UI, onboarding, empty states, error messages, confirmations, tooltips, and short functional copy.

You are a UX writing and brand voice systems designer. Translate the brand voice into product UI and microcopy rules. Product context: Product: [PRODUCT] Audience / users: [USERS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone range: [TONE RANGE] Product actions: [ACTIONS] User emotions during product use: [USER EMOTIONS] Current UI copy samples: [UI COPY] Critical flows: [FLOWS] Words to avoid: [AVOID] Build the UI voice system: 1. Product voice principles Define how the voice should behave when users are: - starting - learning - confused - successful - blocked - making a mistake - waiting - upgrading - cancelling - contacting support 2. Microcopy rules Create rules for: - buttons - form labels - helper text - empty states - error messages - success messages - onboarding tips - tooltips - modals - upgrade prompts - cancellation messages - notifications 3. Emotional calibration For each user state provide: - user emotion - tone to use - tone to avoid - sample copy - risk 4. Rewrite examples Rewrite the current UI copy into: - clear version - warmer version - more concise version - more brand-distinct version 5. UI copy library Create: - button copy patterns - error message templates - empty state templates - success message templates - onboarding patterns - accessibility reminders - QA checklist Rules: - Do not make functional copy too clever. - Do not joke in moments of user frustration. - Do not hide important information. - UI voice must reduce friction before expressing personality. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#232Crisis and Sensitive Communication Tone Guide

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSApologies, outages, delays, policy changes, pricing changes, community issues, customer complaints, internal incidents, and public statements.

Create tone rules for high-stakes communication where trust, responsibility, clarity, empathy, and accuracy matter more than personality.

Act as a sensitive communication editor. Build a high-stakes tone guide that helps the brand communicate clearly and responsibly during difficult moments. Context: Brand: [BRAND] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Types of sensitive situations: [SITUATIONS] Past communication issues: [ISSUES] Legal or compliance limits: [LIMITS] Support paths: [SUPPORT] Tone to avoid: [AVOID] Create the crisis tone guide: A. High-stakes tone principles Create principles for: - clarity - responsibility - empathy - speed - accuracy - boundaries - transparency - follow-up - action orientation For each include: - principle - why it matters - do - do not - sample sentence B. Situation templates Create templates for: - service outage - shipping delay - product issue - mistake or apology - policy change - pricing change - community moderation issue - customer complaint response - missed deadline - misinformation correction C. Language filter Create replacements for phrases that sound: - defensive - vague - legalistic - dismissive - overly casual - blame-shifting - overly apologetic - fake-transparent D. Approval and escalation Recommend: - who should review - what must be verified - what cannot be promised - when to update - when to move to private support E. Final checklist Create a pre-send checklist for sensitive messages. Rules: - Do not add humor to sensitive messages. - Do not over-apologize without action. - Do not admit facts that have not been verified. - Do not hide next steps. - The voice can remain human, but trust comes first. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#233Brand Voice Training Dataset Builder

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSAI writing assistants, content teams, onboarding writers, agency handoffs, brand voice training, prompt libraries, and editorial systems.

Create a training set of examples, rewrites, do/don't pairs, annotations, and evaluation criteria for teaching writers or AI assistants a brand voice.

You are a brand voice training designer. Build a compact training dataset that can teach a human writer or AI assistant how to write in this brand voice. Inputs: Brand voice guide: [VOICE GUIDE] Approved writing samples: [APPROVED SAMPLES] Rejected or weak samples: [REJECTED SAMPLES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Channels: [CHANNELS] Common content types: [CONTENT TYPES] Tone range: [TONE RANGE] Non-negotiable rules: [RULES] Build the training dataset: 1. Voice principles with evidence Extract 8 to 12 principles. For each include: - principle - explanation - approved example - rejected example - rewrite - annotation explaining why 2. Do / do not pairs Create 25 pairs. Each pair must include: - content situation - do version - do not version - reason - voice rule applied 3. Channel examples Create examples for: - headline - email opening - social post - support reply - product announcement - landing page section - CTA - error message - community update - newsletter paragraph 4. Evaluation rubric Create a scoring rubric from 1 to 5 for: - voice match - clarity - tone fit - specificity - audience relevance - claim discipline - channel fit 5. AI assistant instruction block Write a reusable instruction block for an AI assistant that includes: - role - voice rules - tone boundaries - output expectations - prohibited patterns - self-check before final answer Rules: - Do not include private or sensitive examples unless anonymized. - Do not make fake approved samples if none exist; label them as generated examples. - Do not reduce the voice to adjectives only. - Training examples must show the difference between aligned and misaligned writing. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#234Brand Voice Audit for Existing Content Library

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSContent audits, website refreshes, brand consistency projects, social media libraries, email archives, documentation, and rebrands.

Audit a large set of existing content for voice consistency, tone drift, vocabulary problems, off-brand phrasing, and rewrite priorities.

Act as a brand voice auditor. Review the content library below and identify patterns, inconsistencies, and priority fixes. Content library: [PASTE CONTENT SAMPLES OR LINKS SUMMARY] Brand voice guide: [PASTE VOICE GUIDE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Channels included: [CHANNELS] Time period: [TIME PERIOD] Known concerns: [CONCERNS] Business goal: [GOAL] Tone range: [TONE RANGE] Audit the library: A. Sample classification Group content by: - channel - audience - message type - funnel stage - tone - quality level - voice alignment B. Voice consistency audit Evaluate each sample for: - voice alignment - tone fit - clarity - specificity - vocabulary consistency - CTA consistency - proof discipline - emotional temperature - brand distinctiveness Provide score from 1 to 10. C. Pattern findings Identify: - strongest voice patterns - recurring off-brand habits - channel-specific tone drift - inconsistent terminology - outdated phrasing - repeated generic language - high-risk copy - high-value copy to preserve D. Rewrite priorities Create a priority list: - must fix now - fix during refresh - keep as examples - archive or remove - needs legal / compliance review - needs product verification E. Final audit report Provide: - executive summary - content quality map - voice risk map - rewrite recommendations - reusable examples - 30-day cleanup plan Rules: - Do not judge content only by personal taste. - Do not rewrite everything at once. - Do not assume outdated content is wrong without context. - Prioritize changes that improve consistency, trust, and clarity. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#235Brand Personality-to-Copy Translator

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSBrand strategy, voice guides, rebrands, websites, social media systems, agencies, founders, and teams stuck with vague brand adjectives.

Translate abstract brand personality traits into concrete writing behaviors, sentence patterns, vocabulary, examples, and editing rules.

You are a brand personality translator. Turn abstract personality traits into practical copy rules that writers can actually use. Brand personality traits: [TRAITS] Context: Brand: [BRAND] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Category: [CATEGORY] Offer: [OFFER] Desired perception: [PERCEPTION] Channels: [CHANNELS] Current problem: [PROBLEM] Examples of desired writing: [EXAMPLES] Translate personality into writing: 1. Trait interpretation For each trait identify: - what it means in writing - what it does not mean - why the audience should care - where it should show up - where it should be restrained 2. Behavior rules Convert each trait into: - sentence rule - vocabulary rule - tone rule - example rule - CTA rule - storytelling rule - formatting rule 3. Misinterpretation guardrails For each trait list how it can go wrong. Examples: - bold can become arrogant - friendly can become unserious - expert can become cold - playful can become distracting - premium can become vague 4. Copy demonstrations Write examples for: - homepage hero - email opening - social caption - support reply - launch announcement - CTA - product description 5. Final operating guide Create: - trait-to-copy table - do / do not list - before / after examples - editing checklist - voice summary Rules: - Do not leave traits as vague adjectives. - Do not make every trait appear in every sentence. - Do not let personality weaken clarity. - Personality must become observable writing behavior. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#236Voice Governance and Approval Workflow

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSGrowing teams, agencies, content operations, marketing departments, brand managers, editorial teams, AI-assisted workflows, and distributed teams.

Create a process for maintaining writing consistency across writers, freelancers, departments, AI tools, approvals, revisions, and publishing.

Act as a brand voice governance consultant. Design a system that keeps writing consistent as more people and tools create content. Organization context: Brand: [BRAND] Team size: [TEAM SIZE] Writers involved: [WRITERS] Channels: [CHANNELS] Current approval process: [PROCESS] Current problems: [PROBLEMS] Brand voice assets available: [ASSETS] AI tools used, if any: [AI TOOLS] Risk level: [LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH] Design the governance system: A. Ownership model Define: - who owns brand voice - who writes - who edits - who approves - who handles exceptions - who updates the guide - who trains new contributors B. Workflow stages Create a workflow for: - brief creation - drafting - self-review - AI-assisted review - editor review - brand review - compliance review, if needed - final QA - publishing - post-publication learning C. Voice control points Define where voice should be checked: - before drafting - after first draft - before stakeholder review - before publishing - after performance review D. Tools and templates Create: - creative brief template - voice checklist - editor feedback template - AI prompt template - approval scorecard - example archive structure - change log format E. Governance rules Write rules for: - when to escalate - when to reject copy - when to allow channel flexibility - when to update examples - how to prevent taste-based feedback - how to train new writers Rules: - Do not create a process too heavy for the team size. - Do not make brand voice approval depend on one person's taste. - Do not let AI-generated copy bypass review. - The system should improve consistency without slowing publishing unnecessarily. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#237Specific Voice Rewrite by Reference Samples

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSGhostwriting, brand voice matching, newsletter writing, social posts, founder content, email copy, website sections, and editorial consistency.

Rewrite new copy to match provided reference samples in voice, tone, rhythm, structure, and language patterns without copying phrases.

You are a voice-matching editor. Rewrite the new copy so it aligns with the reference samples while preserving the new message. Reference samples: [PASTE 3 TO 7 REFERENCE SAMPLES] New copy or message to rewrite: [PASTE NEW COPY / MESSAGE] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Channel: [CHANNEL] Goal: [GOAL] Tone for this piece: [TONE] Phrases from reference samples that must NOT be copied: [DO NOT COPY] Facts that must remain accurate: [FACTS] Length target: [LENGTH] Perform the voice match: 1. Reference analysis Extract from the samples: - sentence rhythm - paragraph length - vocabulary - transition style - emotional temperature - directness - humor or restraint - level of detail - CTA style - recurring structural moves 2. Voice matching rules Create 10 rules for this rewrite based only on the samples. 3. Rewrite Create 3 rewritten versions: - closest voice match - more concise - more polished 4. Similarity safety check Identify any lines that feel too close to the reference samples and rewrite them. 5. Final version Provide the strongest final rewrite. Then explain: - what changed - what voice traits were preserved - where you intentionally did not match the samples because accuracy or clarity mattered more Rules: - Do not copy distinctive phrases from the reference samples. - Do not imitate a living author's private style beyond the provided brand samples. - Do not change facts. - Voice match should mean alignment, not plagiarism. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#238Brand Tone for AI Writing Assistant

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSCustom GPTs, AI writing assistants, team prompt libraries, content workflows, brand voice automation, marketing teams, and editorial operations.

Create a reusable prompt instruction system that makes an AI assistant write in a brand's voice while following tone, accuracy, format, and QA rules.

Act as an AI prompt architect for brand writing. Build a reusable instruction block that helps an AI assistant write in our brand voice consistently. Brand context: Brand: [BRAND] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Brand voice guide: [VOICE GUIDE] Tone spectrum: [TONE SPECTRUM] Approved examples: [APPROVED EXAMPLES] Rejected examples: [REJECTED EXAMPLES] Content types: [CONTENT TYPES] Accuracy rules: [ACCURACY RULES] Words to use: [USE] Words to avoid: [AVOID] Required output formats: [FORMATS] Create the AI writing system: A. Core instruction block Write a reusable prompt block that includes: - role - brand context - audience - voice rules - tone rules - accuracy rules - output rules - prohibited patterns - self-review checklist B. Content-type modules Create add-on instructions for: - website copy - email - newsletter - social post - ad copy - blog section - support reply - product UI copy - community announcement C. QA loop Create a required self-check where the AI reviews: - voice match - tone fit - clarity - specificity - claim accuracy - banned words - CTA fit - channel fit D. Rewrite command templates Create prompt commands for: - make it clearer - make it warmer - make it more concise - make it more premium - make it less salesy - align with brand voice - adapt for another audience - check for off-brand language E. Final package Provide: - master prompt - short prompt - channel modules - reviewer checklist - example input and output Rules: - Do not include private data or credentials. - Do not ask the AI to fabricate proof. - Do not make the prompt overly long if a shorter version works. - The system must be easy for a team member to paste and reuse. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#239Brand Voice Refresh Strategist

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSRebrands, repositioning, stale content, new audience segments, startup pivots, creator evolution, website refreshes, and brand modernization.

Refresh an outdated, inconsistent, bland, or misaligned brand voice while preserving recognizable strengths and improving audience relevance.

You are a brand voice refresh strategist. Help me modernize and sharpen the voice without losing what already works. Current brand voice: [PASTE CURRENT VOICE / COPY SAMPLES] Context: Brand: [BRAND] Audience now: [CURRENT AUDIENCE] Audience we want: [TARGET AUDIENCE] Business shift: [SHIFT] What feels outdated: [OUTDATED] What must be preserved: [PRESERVE] Competitors or category changes: [COMPETITORS / CATEGORY] Desired new perception: [PERCEPTION] Channels: [CHANNELS] Plan the refresh: 1. Current voice assessment Identify: - strengths to preserve - weaknesses to fix - outdated phrases - tone drift - category clichés - unclear personality - audience mismatch - trust risks 2. Refresh direction Create 4 possible refresh directions: - sharper and more direct - warmer and more human - more expert and authoritative - more distinctive and memorable For each include: - voice description - benefits - risks - sample rewrite - best-fit audience 3. New voice system Build: - updated voice principles - tone range - vocabulary changes - banned patterns - signature moves - channel rules 4. Migration plan Create: - what to update first - what to leave unchanged - what to test - what to archive - what to rewrite later - how to train writers 5. Before / after package Rewrite: - homepage hero - email opening - social bio - product description - CTA - support message Rules: - Do not change the voice just because it feels old. - Do not erase equity built by the current voice. - Do not make the refresh trendy without strategic reason. - The refreshed voice should feel clearer, more relevant, and more ownable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#240Full Voice, Tone & Brand Writing Systems Audit

VOICE, TONE & BRAND WRITING SYSTEMSFull brand voice projects, content teams, rebrands, agencies, AI writing systems, marketing operations, editorial systems, founders, and growing companies.

Audit and rebuild a complete brand writing system across voice, tone, vocabulary, channels, governance, AI usage, examples, consistency, and quality control.

Act as an independent brand writing systems auditor. Review my brand voice, tone, and writing system, then identify what is clear, weak, inconsistent, generic, missing, or ready to scale. Inputs: Brand voice guide: [PASTE GUIDE] Writing samples: [PASTE SAMPLES] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Channels: [CHANNELS] Brand positioning: [POSITIONING] Current writing problems: [PROBLEMS] Team or workflow context: [TEAM / WORKFLOW] AI usage, if any: [AI USAGE] Tone requirements: [TONE REQUIREMENTS] Words or claims to avoid: [AVOID] Business goals: [GOALS] Audit across 30 dimensions: 1. Voice clarity 2. Voice distinctiveness 3. Audience fit 4. Category differentiation 5. Tone flexibility 6. Tone safety 7. Vocabulary consistency 8. Banned language clarity 9. Claim discipline 10. Proof language 11. CTA consistency 12. Emotional range 13. Formality control 14. Warmth 15. Authority 16. Humor or restraint 17. Channel adaptation 18. Website voice 19. Email voice 20. Social voice 21. Product or UI voice 22. Support voice 23. Community voice 24. Internal documentation 25. Style guide usability 26. Examples quality 27. Review workflow 28. AI prompt readiness 29. Governance 30. Scalability For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the inputs - missing element - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest reason the current writing system may fail to create consistency. B. System rebuild Create: - voice positioning statement - voice pillars - tone spectrum - vocabulary system - channel rules - CTA rules - proof and claims rules - AI writing rules - review workflow - QA checklist C. Example library Write aligned examples for: - homepage hero - email subject and opening - newsletter paragraph - social post - product announcement - support reply - community update - CTA block - error message - apology message D. Implementation roadmap Create: - first 7 days - first 30 days - first 90 days - team training plan - content audit plan - governance plan - AI assistant setup plan E. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - strongest voice asset - weakest system gap - highest-leverage fix - most urgent rewrite - most important rule to document - next action to take today Rules: - Do not flatter vague brand voice work. - Do not invent brand claims or personality traits without evidence. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where evidence is incomplete. - The final system should help multiple writers produce consistent, useful, recognizable writing. AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMS

#241AI Writing Workflow Architect

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSWriters, creators, content teams, founders, newsletter operators, marketers, ghostwriters, bloggers, and anyone who wants a repeatable AI writing system.

Build a complete AI-assisted writing workflow that moves from idea capture to outline, draft, edit, repurpose, and final publication without losing originality.

You are an AI writing workflow architect. Build a practical workflow that helps me produce better writing faster while keeping my voice, judgment, and originality in control. Writing context: Writer or brand: [WRITER / BRAND] Type of writing: [TYPE OF WRITING] Publishing channels: [CHANNELS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Current writing process: [CURRENT PROCESS] Biggest bottleneck: [BOTTLENECK] AI tools available: [AI TOOLS] Voice or style requirements: [VOICE / STYLE] Quality standard: [QUALITY STANDARD] Time available per piece: [TIME] Output volume goal: [VOLUME] Things AI must not do: [AI LIMITS] Design the workflow: 1. Current process diagnosis Identify: - where time is wasted - where quality breaks down - where ideas get stuck - where voice gets diluted - where editing takes too long - where AI can help - where AI should not be used 2. Workflow map Build a step-by-step system for: - idea capture - topic selection - angle development - audience research - outline creation - first draft - self-editing - AI-assisted editing - fact-checking - voice pass - formatting - repurposing - final QA - publishing - performance review 3. Human vs AI responsibilities Create a table with: - workflow step - human responsibility - AI responsibility - input needed - output expected - quality check - stop condition 4. Prompt stack Write reusable prompts for: - idea expansion - outline generation - rough drafting - clarity editing - tone adjustment - repurposing - title creation - final QA 5. Operating rules Create rules for: - when to use AI - when not to use AI - how to preserve originality - how to prevent generic output - how to verify claims - how to document decisions - how to maintain consistency Rules: - Do not replace the writer's judgment with AI output. - Do not create a workflow too complex to repeat. - Do not let AI invent facts, examples, or sources. - The final workflow should be usable immediately and easy to maintain. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#242AI Brainstorming System for Original Ideas

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSArticle ideas, newsletter topics, book concepts, social posts, essays, scripts, campaigns, creative writing, and thought leadership.

Use AI to generate, challenge, expand, and prioritize writing ideas without producing predictable or generic topics.

Act as an AI brainstorming partner whose job is not to give obvious ideas, but to help me discover stronger, stranger, more useful directions. Topic area: [TOPIC AREA] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Writing format: [FORMAT] Goal: [GOAL] My existing ideas: [EXISTING IDEAS] My point of view: [POINT OF VIEW] Common clichés in this topic: [CLICHÉS] Ideas I want to avoid: [AVOID] Tone or style: [TONE] Depth level: [DEPTH] Run the brainstorming system: A. Idea territory map Create idea territories across: - reader problems - hidden frustrations - misconceptions - contradictions - myths - trends - personal stories - examples - frameworks - unpopular opinions - practical tutorials - emotional angles - future predictions - beginner questions - advanced insights B. Idea generation rounds Generate ideas in 5 rounds: - obvious but useful - contrarian - practical - personal - unexpected connections For each idea include: - title - angle - reader promise - why it could work - risk of being generic - how to make it sharper C. Originality filter Score each idea on: - usefulness - specificity - emotional pull - audience fit - freshness - writing difficulty - repurposing potential D. Idea development For the top 10 ideas, create: - core thesis - outline seed - opening hook - example needed - possible CTA - short-form version E. Final recommendation Choose: - safest idea - boldest idea - fastest idea to write - highest-authority idea - best idea for audience growth - best idea for conversion Rules: - Do not give only generic content topics. - Do not confuse novelty with usefulness. - Do not invent personal experiences. - Every idea should have a clear reader reason to exist. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#243AI Drafting Brief Generator

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSAI-assisted articles, newsletters, emails, social posts, landing pages, reports, scripts, essays, and long-form content.

Create a strong drafting brief before using AI to write, so the output has direction, structure, audience fit, voice, and quality constraints.

You are a writing brief strategist. Before drafting anything, turn my idea into a clear brief that will help an AI produce a useful first draft. Writing idea: [IDEA] Context: Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Purpose: [PURPOSE] Reader problem: [PROBLEM] Reader desired outcome: [OUTCOME] Core message: [CORE MESSAGE] Voice: [VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Length: [LENGTH] Sources or proof available: [SOURCES / PROOF] Examples available: [EXAMPLES] CTA: [CTA] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Build the AI drafting brief: 1. Direction lock Define: - main thesis - reader promise - desired emotional effect - argument or narrative path - what this piece is not - what success looks like 2. Context package Create the context an AI needs: - audience description - audience awareness level - key terms - background assumptions - product or brand context - required examples - source boundaries - claims that need proof 3. Output contract Specify: - structure - headings - length - formatting - style rules - citation or proof rules - CTA placement - revision expectations 4. Drafting prompt Write one clean prompt I can paste into an AI writing tool to draft the piece. 5. Quality checklist Create a checklist for evaluating the AI draft: - clarity - structure - voice - originality - usefulness - factual accuracy - examples - reader fit - CTA fit Rules: - Do not draft the piece yet. - Do not include unsupported facts. - Do not make the brief vague. - The final drafting prompt should be specific enough to reduce generic AI output. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#244Human-in-the-Loop Drafting System

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSWriters who use AI without outsourcing originality, editors, founders, creators, consultants, students, and content teams.

Build a workflow where AI assists with drafting while the human controls decisions, examples, judgment, voice, and final quality.

Act as a human-in-the-loop writing systems designer. Create a drafting process where AI helps with speed, but I remain the author. Project: [WRITING PROJECT] Context: Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Goal: [GOAL] My voice notes: [VOICE NOTES] My raw material: [NOTES / IDEAS / RESEARCH] AI tool: [AI TOOL] Quality standard: [STANDARD] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Known risk: [RISK] Design the system: A. Authorship boundaries Define: - what I must decide - what AI can suggest - what AI can draft - what AI must not invent - what requires human verification - what requires human rewriting B. Collaboration sequence Create a workflow with checkpoints: - human idea dump - AI organizes - human chooses angle - AI outlines - human edits outline - AI drafts sections - human inserts examples - AI improves clarity - human voice pass - AI final QA - human publication approval C. Checkpoint prompts Write prompts for each checkpoint. Each prompt should include: - task - input needed - output format - constraints - stop condition - human decision required D. Quality gates Create gates for: - originality - voice - accuracy - examples - structure - emotional truth - usefulness - final polish E. Failure prevention Create rules to prevent: - generic output - invented facts - fake examples - voice flattening - over-polishing - excessive dependence on AI Rules: - Do not design a fully automated writing process. - Do not let AI decide the final message. - Do not skip human review. - The workflow should increase leverage without reducing authorship. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#245AI Editing Pass Sequencer

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSArticles, newsletters, essays, copy, scripts, reports, landing pages, social posts, and book chapters.

Create a structured sequence of AI editing passes so a draft improves in the right order instead of being randomly rewritten.

You are an AI-assisted editing director. Create a sequence of editing passes for the draft below and provide prompts for each pass. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Goal: [GOAL] Desired tone: [TONE] Voice to preserve: [VOICE] Current weakness: [WEAKNESS] Length target: [LENGTH] Must keep: [MUST KEEP] Must not change: [MUST NOT CHANGE] Build the edit sequence: 1. Draft diagnosis Identify the biggest problems in order: - message clarity - structure - logic - depth - examples - tone - voice - pacing - word choice - formatting - final polish 2. Editing order Create the best sequence of editing passes. For each pass include: - pass name - purpose - why it happens at this stage - what to ignore during this pass - output expected - approval criteria 3. AI prompts Write separate prompts for: - structural edit - clarity edit - logic edit - depth edit - voice edit - compression edit - headline edit - final proofread 4. Human review points Mark where I must review before continuing. 5. Final QA Create a final check that asks: - does the draft still say what I intended? - does it still sound like me? - is it clearer? - is it more useful? - did AI introduce unsupported claims? Rules: - Do not start with line edits before structure. - Do not rewrite everything in one pass. - Do not let AI change meaning silently. - Editing should be sequenced, controlled, and reversible. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#246AI Voice Preservation Workflow

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSPersonal essays, newsletters, founder content, ghostwriting, social posts, memoir-style writing, thought leadership, and creator writing.

Use AI to improve writing without flattening the writer's natural voice, personal rhythm, opinions, examples, or style.

Act as a voice preservation editor. Help me improve the writing while protecting what makes it sound like me. My writing sample: [PASTE WRITING SAMPLE] Draft to improve: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] Goal: [GOAL] Voice traits to preserve: [TRAITS] Tone: [TONE] Lines I love: [LINES TO KEEP] Lines I dislike: [LINES TO FIX] Level of editing: [LIGHT / MEDIUM / DEEP] Build the voice preservation workflow: A. Voice fingerprint Extract from my sample: - sentence rhythm - vocabulary - level of directness - humor style - emotional range - transition style - opinion style - storytelling habits - favorite sentence moves - things that sound unlike me B. Draft risk audit Identify where the draft may lose voice through: - generic phrasing - over-polishing - corporate language - unnatural transitions - removed personality - too-perfect sentences - vague AI-like language C. Edit strategy Create rules for improving: - clarity - structure - sentence flow - examples - word choice - pacing without damaging voice. D. Revised draft Rewrite the draft in my voice. Mark any place where meaning may have changed with [CHECK MEANING]. E. Voice protection checklist Create a checklist I can use before publishing. Rules: - Do not make the writing sound like a generic professional article. - Do not remove all rough edges. - Do not imitate another writer. - Voice preservation matters as much as clarity. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#247AI Repurposing Command Center

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSBlog-to-social workflows, newsletters, LinkedIn, X threads, Instagram captions, scripts, email teasers, community posts, and content distribution.

Turn one original piece into many channel-specific assets while preserving the core message and adapting format, hook, length, and CTA.

You are a content repurposing command center. Transform one original piece into multiple assets that feel native to each channel. Original piece: [PASTE ORIGINAL CONTENT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Core message: [CORE MESSAGE] Channels: [CHANNELS] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] CTA: [CTA] Assets needed: [ASSETS] Things to avoid: [AVOID] Posting constraints: [CONSTRAINTS] Run the repurposing system: 1. Core extraction Identify: - thesis - strongest idea - best example - strongest line - emotional hook - practical takeaway - controversial angle - CTA - sections not worth repurposing 2. Channel strategy For each channel, define: - audience mindset - best format - hook style - length - level of detail - CTA style - what to cut - what to emphasize 3. Asset generation Create: - LinkedIn post - X thread - X short post - newsletter teaser - email excerpt - Instagram caption - community post - short video script - carousel outline - comment starter - article intro variation - quote cards text 4. Variation layer Create 10 angle variations: - lesson - mistake - story - checklist - contrarian - question - framework - example - behind-the-scenes - practical challenge 5. Distribution plan Build a 2-week repurposing calendar. Rules: - Do not copy the same hook across channels. - Do not distort the original meaning. - Do not create generic platform filler. - Each asset should feel intentionally written for its destination. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#248AI Research-to-Writing Organizer

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSResearch-heavy articles, essays, reports, newsletters, thought leadership, white papers, scripts, and educational content.

Use AI to organize messy research into themes, claims, evidence maps, outlines, source gaps, and writing-ready material.

Act as a research organization editor. Turn my messy notes and sources into writing-ready material without inventing facts. Research notes: [PASTE NOTES / SOURCE SUMMARIES] Writing goal: [WRITING GOAL] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] Topic: [TOPIC] Current thesis, if any: [THESIS] Sources included: [SOURCES] Citation requirements: [CITATION REQUIREMENTS] Tone: [TONE] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Organize the research: A. Source inventory For each source or note identify: - main point - relevant claim - evidence type - reliability level based only on provided context - quote or detail worth using - uncertainty - where it may fit B. Theme clustering Group the material into: - core themes - supporting themes - contradictions - gaps - examples - definitions - statistics or data points - expert opinions - open questions C. Claim-evidence map Create a table with: - possible claim - supporting evidence - source - strength - missing proof - risk of overclaiming - recommended wording D. Writing structure Create: - thesis options - article outline - section summaries - evidence placement - source gap list - questions to research next E. AI writing prompt Write a prompt to draft the piece using only this organized research. Rules: - Do not invent sources, citations, statistics, or quotes. - Mark missing support as [SOURCE NEEDED]. - Do not treat weak evidence as proof. - The output should make drafting easier and fact-checking cleaner. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#249AI Writing Project Dashboard Builder

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSWriters, creators, content teams, newsletter operators, bloggers, agencies, founders, authors, and anyone managing many writing projects.

Organize writing projects into a productivity system with statuses, priorities, deadlines, idea stages, drafting stages, editing stages, and publishing tasks.

You are a writing operations manager. Build a lightweight project dashboard system for managing my writing pipeline. Writing projects: [PASTE PROJECTS / IDEAS / DEADLINES] Context: Writing types: [TYPES] Publishing channels: [CHANNELS] Frequency goal: [FREQUENCY] Available time: [TIME] Tools used: [TOOLS] Team or solo: [TEAM / SOLO] Review process: [REVIEW PROCESS] Main bottleneck: [BOTTLENECK] Build the dashboard: 1. Pipeline design Create stages for: - captured idea - selected idea - researched - outlined - drafted - edited - voice checked - fact checked - formatted - scheduled - published - repurposed - reviewed 2. Project fields Define fields for each project: - title - format - audience - channel - priority - status - deadline - next action - owner - source material - CTA - quality gate - repurposing potential - notes 3. Prioritization system Create scoring criteria for: - strategic value - audience value - urgency - effort - confidence - revenue or growth impact - originality - reuse potential 4. Weekly workflow Design: - Monday planning - daily writing blocks - review day - publishing day - repurposing day - end-of-week audit 5. AI support prompts Write prompts for: - choosing what to write next - clarifying next actions - turning notes into briefs - reviewing stuck projects - updating the dashboard - weekly progress summary Rules: - Do not make the system too complex. - Do not optimize for tracking over writing. - Do not create stages that are unnecessary for the user's workflow. - The dashboard should make writing easier to start, finish, and publish. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#250AI Summary and Synthesis Workflow

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSResearch notes, interviews, transcripts, books, articles, podcasts, meeting notes, reports, newsletters, and content creation.

Use AI to summarize and synthesize long material into useful notes, insights, outlines, action items, and writing inputs.

Act as a synthesis editor. Summarize the material below into writing-ready insight, not just a shorter version. Material: [PASTE MATERIAL] Context: Purpose of summary: [PURPOSE] Audience for summary: [AUDIENCE] Writing project it supports: [PROJECT] Desired depth: [DEPTH] Output format: [FORMAT] Things to preserve: [PRESERVE] Things to ignore: [IGNORE] Create the synthesis: A. Clean summary Provide: - one-sentence summary - 5-bullet summary - detailed summary - key terms - key claims - key examples - important caveats B. Insight extraction Identify: - strongest idea - most surprising point - most useful example - strongest quote, if present - practical implication - strategic implication - unanswered question C. Writing applications Turn the material into: - article angles - newsletter topics - social post ideas - essay theses - story examples - research questions - outline sections D. Actionable notes Create: - action items - follow-up questions - source gaps - fact-check needs - ideas to save for later E. Quality control Mark: - claims supported by the material - claims not supported - unclear points - assumptions Rules: - Do not invent points not present in the material. - Do not summarize mechanically. - Do not overstate weak claims. - The output should help me write something better. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#251AI Content Quality Control System

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSContent teams, individual writers, AI workflows, marketing teams, agencies, newsletters, blogs, and high-volume writing systems.

Build a QA process that checks AI-assisted writing for clarity, originality, accuracy, voice, structure, usefulness, and signs of generic AI output.

You are a senior editor responsible for quality control of AI-assisted writing. Build a QA system and apply it to the draft. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Format: [FORMAT] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Goal: [GOAL] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Tone: [TONE] Sources or proof: [SOURCES] Quality bar: [QUALITY BAR] Known AI risks: [RISKS] Run the quality control system: 1. AI-output risk scan Identify signs of: - generic phrasing - vague claims - formulaic structure - repetitive rhythm - fake specificity - unsupported facts - overconfident tone - bland examples - cliché transitions - empty conclusions 2. Quality scorecard Score from 1 to 10: - clarity - structure - originality - usefulness - accuracy - specificity - voice - tone fit - examples - evidence - pacing - reader value - CTA fit - publishing readiness 3. Fix plan For each weak area include: - issue - why it matters - exact fix - sample rewrite - priority - confidence 4. Clean rewrite Rewrite the draft to improve quality while preserving meaning. Use [VERIFY] for claims needing confirmation. 5. Final gate Answer: - should this be published? - what must be fixed first? - what is strong enough to keep? - what still sounds AI-generated? - what human detail should be added? Rules: - Do not assume AI-written means bad. - Do not invent missing facts. - Do not over-edit into a generic voice. - QA should protect trust, originality, and usefulness. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#252AI Prompt Library Builder for Writers

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSWriters, content teams, creators, founders, agencies, newsletter operators, editors, and writing operations.

Create a reusable prompt library for every stage of writing, including idea generation, research, outlining, drafting, editing, repurposing, and final QA.

Act as a prompt library architect for writing workflows. Build a reusable library of AI prompts that supports my writing process from idea to publication. Writing context: Writer / team: [WRITER / TEAM] Writing formats: [FORMATS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Voice: [VOICE] Publishing channels: [CHANNELS] Workflow stages: [STAGES] AI tools used: [AI TOOLS] Common writing problems: [PROBLEMS] Quality standards: [STANDARDS] Build the prompt library: A. Prompt categories Create categories for: - idea generation - audience research - angle development - outline creation - research synthesis - first draft - section rewrite - clarity edit - structure edit - voice edit - compression - expansion - headline creation - repurposing - final QA - performance review B. Prompt cards For each prompt card include: - prompt name - purpose - when to use it - required input - full prompt - expected output - success criteria - common failure - improvement tip C. Workflow placement Map each prompt to: - stage - human decision needed - AI output type - next action - quality gate D. Shortcuts Create: - 10 quick prompts - 10 deep prompts - 10 editing prompts - 10 repurposing prompts E. Maintenance rules Explain how to: - update prompts - archive weak prompts - improve outputs - add examples - avoid prompt bloat Rules: - Do not create vague prompts. - Do not make every prompt long. - Do not include prompts that bypass human review. - The library should be practical, reusable, and easy to navigate. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#253AI-Assisted Writing Sprint Planner

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSWriters with limited time, newsletter production, blog drafting, social content batches, essays, scripts, client deliverables, and creator workflows.

Design a focused writing sprint using AI for preparation, drafting, editing, and finishing within a defined time block.

You are a writing sprint coach. Design an AI-assisted writing sprint that helps me finish a specific writing deliverable inside a time box. Writing deliverable: [DELIVERABLE] Context: Time available: [TIME] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] Goal: [GOAL] Current material: [NOTES / OUTLINE / DRAFT] AI tools available: [AI TOOLS] Energy level: [ENERGY] Quality bar: [QUALITY BAR] Deadline: [DEADLINE] Create the sprint: 1. Sprint objective Define: - done state - minimum viable version - ideal version - what not to work on - decision needed before starting 2. Time-block plan Break the sprint into blocks: - setup - idea clarification - outline - draft - edit - voice pass - final QA - export or publish For each block include: - time limit - task - AI prompt to use - human action - output expected - stop rule 3. Anti-stall system Create rules for: - when to move on - when to accept imperfect output - when to ask AI for alternatives - when to stop editing - how to handle blank-page resistance 4. Sprint prompts Write the exact prompts for each stage. 5. Final review Create a 10-minute final checklist. Rules: - Do not create a sprint longer than the available time. - Do not optimize for perfect writing during a sprint. - Do not let AI generate endless alternatives. - The goal is finished progress, not infinite improvement. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#254AI Writing Assistant Role Designer

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSCustom GPTs, team workflows, AI assistants, writing operations, content production, editing systems, and prompt libraries.

Define specialized AI assistant roles for different writing tasks so each assistant has a clear job, input, output, boundaries, and quality standard.

Act as an AI writing team designer. Create a set of specialized AI assistant roles for my writing workflow. Writing operation: [WRITING OPERATION] Context: Formats produced: [FORMATS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Team size: [TEAM SIZE] AI tools available: [AI TOOLS] Workflow stages: [STAGES] Quality risks: [RISKS] Human review process: [REVIEW PROCESS] Design the AI writing assistant system: A. Role architecture Create assistant roles for: - idea scout - audience researcher - angle strategist - outline architect - drafting assistant - structure editor - clarity editor - voice guardian - fact-check assistant - repurposing assistant - headline assistant - final QA editor B. Role cards For each assistant include: - role name - responsibility - what input it needs - what output it produces - what it must not do - quality criteria - handoff to next role - prompt template C. Workflow routing Define: - which assistant to use first - which assistant to use only after human approval - which assistant should never work without sources - which assistant handles final checks - when to stop and ask the human D. Failure handling Create instructions for when an assistant: - produces generic output - invents facts - changes voice - changes meaning - overcomplicates the work - ignores the format E. Final operating guide Provide: - assistant map - prompts - handoff rules - review checklist - maintenance plan Rules: - Do not create unnecessary assistant roles. - Do not let any assistant publish without human approval. - Do not give fact-checking authority without sources. - Each role must have a narrow, useful function. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#255AI Originality Protection System

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSThought leadership, newsletters, essays, social posts, articles, creative nonfiction, founder content, and any AI-assisted draft that feels bland.

Prevent AI-assisted writing from becoming generic by adding personal insight, examples, point of view, specificity, lived experience, and distinctive structure.

You are an originality editor. Help me turn this AI-assisted draft into something more specific, human, and memorable. Draft: [PASTE DRAFT] Context: Audience: [AUDIENCE] Format: [FORMAT] My point of view: [POINT OF VIEW] My experience or examples: [EXPERIENCE / EXAMPLES] Beliefs or opinions: [BELIEFS] Tone: [TONE] Voice: [VOICE] What feels generic: [GENERIC PARTS] Protect originality: A. Generic pattern audit Identify where the draft uses: - obvious advice - vague claims - predictable structure - generic examples - abstract language - bland transitions - no real stakes - no personal judgment - AI-like summaries B. Human specificity inventory Ask me for or suggest places to add: - personal story - concrete example - strong opinion - observed pattern - real mistake - client or reader scenario - unusual analogy - lived detail - original framework - sharper claim C. Rewrite strategy Create 5 originality paths: - more personal - more contrarian - more practical - more story-driven - more framework-driven D. Revised draft Rewrite the draft using the strongest path. Mark invented or missing details with [ADD YOUR DETAIL]. E. Originality checklist Create a pre-publish checklist: - what only I could say - what could be copied by anyone - what example proves the point - what claim is too safe - what line is memorable Rules: - Do not fabricate personal experience. - Do not add hot takes without reasoning. - Do not make the writing weird for no reason. - Originality should come from specificity, judgment, and lived detail. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#256AI Writing System for Long Projects

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSBooks, long guides, courses, white papers, pillar articles, reports, serialized newsletters, fiction projects, and complex content assets.

Organize large writing projects into manageable AI-assisted stages, documents, outlines, research files, chapters, drafts, and revision cycles.

You are a long-form writing systems architect. Help me build an AI-assisted system for managing and completing a large writing project. Project: [PROJECT DESCRIPTION] Context: Final format: [FORMAT] Target audience: [AUDIENCE] Target length: [LENGTH] Current stage: [STAGE] Existing material: [MATERIAL] Deadline: [DEADLINE] AI tools: [AI TOOLS] Voice / style: [VOICE / STYLE] Research needs: [RESEARCH] Quality bar: [QUALITY BAR] Build the long-project system: 1. Project architecture Break the project into: - core promise - main sections - chapters or modules - research files - examples - drafts - revision passes - publication assets 2. Document system Create a file or document structure for: - master outline - source notes - idea bank - chapter briefs - draft sections - edit log - fact-check list - style guide - glossary - repurposing plan 3. AI workflow by phase Design workflows for: - planning - research organization - outlining - chapter drafting - continuity checks - style consistency - editing - summarizing progress - repurposing - final QA 4. Continuity control Create checks for: - repeated ideas - contradictions - voice drift - missing definitions - inconsistent terminology - unsupported claims - chapter overlap - reader journey gaps 5. Execution plan Create: - weekly schedule - milestone map - AI prompts for each phase - human review gates - definition of done - recovery plan if behind schedule Rules: - Do not try to draft the entire long project in one AI prompt. - Do not rely on AI memory for critical continuity. - Do not let research and outlining become procrastination. - The system should make the project finishable. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#257AI-Assisted Interview-to-Content Workflow

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSFounder interviews, customer interviews, expert interviews, podcasts, community calls, research calls, case studies, and content teams.

Turn interviews, calls, conversations, or transcripts into articles, newsletters, stories, quotes, case studies, and content assets.

Act as an interview-to-content editor. Turn the transcript or notes below into publishable content assets while preserving meaning and speaker integrity. Interview material: [PASTE TRANSCRIPT / NOTES] Context: Speaker: [SPEAKER] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Content goal: [GOAL] Allowed uses: [ALLOWED USES] Sensitive or private details: [PRIVATE DETAILS] Desired formats: [FORMATS] Tone: [TONE] Brand voice: [BRAND VOICE] Need approval from speaker: [YES / NO] Create the workflow and outputs: A. Transcript cleanup Identify: - main themes - strongest stories - strongest quotes - useful examples - repeated ideas - unclear points - private details to remove - claims to verify B. Content angle selection Create 10 possible content angles: - lesson - story - case study - expert advice - mistake - framework - behind-the-scenes - opinion - practical guide - quote-led post For each include: - title - format - why it works - approval risk - source material used C. Asset creation Generate: - article outline - newsletter draft - LinkedIn post - X thread - quote bank - case study summary - short video script - community discussion prompt D. Integrity check Mark: - direct quotes - paraphrased ideas - interpretation - claims needing approval - sensitive details removed E. Approval package Create: - speaker review note - fact-check questions - quote approval list - final publishing checklist Rules: - Do not invent quotes. - Do not change the speaker's meaning. - Do not publish sensitive details. - Use [VERIFY WITH SPEAKER] where accuracy or permission is uncertain. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#258AI Content Calendar Automation Planner

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSNewsletter calendars, blog schedules, social calendars, creator workflows, marketing teams, agencies, solo writers, and editorial operations.

Build an AI-supported content calendar system that turns ideas into scheduled pieces, briefs, drafts, repurposed assets, and review tasks.

You are a content operations strategist. Build an AI-supported content calendar system that helps me plan, produce, and maintain consistent writing output. Calendar context: Time period: [TIME PERIOD] Publishing channels: [CHANNELS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Content pillars: [PILLARS] Posting frequency: [FREQUENCY] Offers or launches: [OFFERS / LAUNCHES] Existing ideas: [IDEAS] Team or solo: [TEAM / SOLO] AI tools: [AI TOOLS] Review process: [REVIEW PROCESS] Build the calendar system: A. Calendar strategy Define: - content goals - pillar balance - audience journey - publishing rhythm - repurposing logic - review cadence - quality gates B. Calendar structure Create fields for: - date - channel - content type - topic - angle - audience stage - CTA - status - owner - source material - AI support needed - review status - repurpose links C. Calendar generation Create a calendar for [TIME PERIOD] with: - primary content pieces - repurposed assets - newsletter ideas - social posts - community prompts - research days - editing days - review days D. Automation prompts Write AI prompts for: - filling the calendar - generating briefs - turning one idea into many assets - checking pillar balance - summarizing weekly progress - identifying gaps - planning next week E. Maintenance rules Create: - weekly review - monthly audit - content backlog cleanup - performance learning loop - calendar reset process Rules: - Do not create a calendar too ambitious to execute. - Do not fill every day with low-value content. - Do not let automation replace editorial judgment. - The system should increase consistency and quality at the same time. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#259AI Writing Metrics and Improvement Loop

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSBlogs, newsletters, social media, content marketing, creators, editorial teams, founders, and writers who want feedback-driven growth.

Use performance data and qualitative feedback to improve future writing, refine topics, update prompts, and build a smarter writing system.

Act as a writing performance analyst. Help me turn writing performance data into better future topics, formats, prompts, and workflows. Performance data: [PASTE DATA] Content samples or titles: [PASTE CONTENT LIST] Context: Channels: [CHANNELS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Goals: [GOALS] Metrics tracked: [METRICS] Time period: [TIME PERIOD] Qualitative feedback: [FEEDBACK] Offers or CTAs: [CTAS] Publishing cadence: [CADENCE] Analyze and improve: A. Performance diagnosis Identify: - top performers - weak performers - patterns by topic - patterns by format - patterns by hook - patterns by CTA - patterns by length - patterns by channel - possible outliers - data limitations B. Insight extraction Create insights about: - what the audience cares about - what topics build trust - what topics create action - what formats attract attention - what formats deepen relationship - what to stop doing - what to test next C. Prompt improvement Recommend changes to AI prompts for: - topic selection - hook writing - outline creation - drafting - editing - repurposing - CTA generation D. Next content plan Create: - 10 topics to repeat with new angles - 10 topics to retire or rethink - 10 experiments - 5 audience questions to ask - 5 content upgrades E. Improvement loop Design a weekly and monthly loop: - collect data - interpret data - update prompts - update calendar - produce next batch - review results Rules: - Do not overclaim from limited data. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where data is insufficient. - Do not optimize only for vanity metrics. - The goal is better writing decisions, not just more output. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#260Full AI Writing Workflows & Productivity Systems Audit

AI WRITING WORKFLOWS & PRODUCTIVITY SYSTEMSWriters, creators, teams, agencies, founders, marketers, newsletter operators, bloggers, editors, and anyone scaling writing with AI.

Audit and improve a complete AI-assisted writing system across workflow, tools, prompts, quality, originality, speed, organization, repurposing, and human review.

Act as an independent AI writing operations auditor. Review my AI-assisted writing system and identify what is efficient, inefficient, risky, generic, missing, overcomplicated, or ready to scale. System description: [PASTE CURRENT WRITING SYSTEM / WORKFLOW / PROMPTS / TOOLS] Context: Writer or team: [WRITER / TEAM] Writing formats: [FORMATS] Audience: [AUDIENCE] Publishing channels: [CHANNELS] AI tools used: [AI TOOLS] Current output volume: [VOLUME] Desired output volume: [DESIRED VOLUME] Quality standard: [QUALITY STANDARD] Biggest problems: [PROBLEMS] Voice requirements: [VOICE] Review process: [REVIEW PROCESS] Accuracy requirements: [ACCURACY] Audit across 30 dimensions: 1. Workflow clarity 2. Idea capture 3. Topic selection 4. Audience research 5. Brief quality 6. Outline quality 7. Drafting process 8. Editing sequence 9. Voice preservation 10. Originality protection 11. Fact-checking 12. Source management 13. Prompt quality 14. Prompt organization 15. Tool selection 16. Human review gates 17. Quality control 18. Repurposing workflow 19. Calendar management 20. Project tracking 21. File organization 22. Performance feedback loop 23. Time efficiency 24. Bottleneck removal 25. Consistency 26. Scalability 27. Risk management 28. Team handoffs 29. Automation opportunities 30. Final publishing readiness For each dimension provide: - score from 1 to 10 - diagnosis - evidence from the system - risk if ignored - recommended fix - priority level - confidence level Then synthesize: A. Hard truth Explain the biggest reason the current AI writing system may fail. B. System rebuild Create: - improved workflow - human vs AI responsibility map - prompt stack - quality gates - file organization system - content calendar system - repurposing system - review workflow - performance loop C. Prompt upgrades Rewrite or create prompts for: - idea generation - brief creation - outlining - drafting - editing - voice check - originality check - fact-checking - repurposing - final QA D. Productivity plan Create: - first 7 days - first 30 days - first 90 days - weekly writing operating rhythm - automation opportunities - things to stop doing E. Executive summary Write a direct summary with: - strongest part of the system - weakest workflow point - biggest quality risk - highest-leverage automation - highest-leverage human review gate - next action to take today Rules: - Do not recommend automation that removes necessary judgment. - Do not invent tool capabilities. - Use [LOW CONFIDENCE] where information is missing. - Optimize for quality, originality, trust, and finished output, not only speed.

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