Struggling to produce consistent, high-impact content that actually converts?
Marketing managers are expected to deliver blogs, emails, social posts, landing pages, and more—often with limited time and shifting priorities. The gap between a raw idea and publishable content is where most productivity and performance are lost. This article gives you 10 copy-paste-ready AI prompts to close that gap: each prompt targets a real content-creation task, and each section explains how to use the generated output immediately.
How to use these prompts
For best results, paste the prompts into your preferred AI assistant, replace bracketed placeholders (like [BRAND_NAME] or [PRIMARY_KEYWORD]), and add any team constraints (brand voice, forbidden phrases, legal review). Treat the AI output as a first draft: edit for accuracy, add data points, and finalize CTAs.
Prompt structure tips
- Start with the role (e.g., "Act as a senior content strategist"). That focuses tone and depth.
- Be explicit about audience (persona, pain points, maturity stage).
- Include format and length (e.g., 900–1,200 words; H2/H3 headings).
- Request SEO elements (meta title, meta description, target keyword usage).
- Ask for variations (A/B headlines, 3 tone variants, 5 social captions) to save revision time.
1 — Blog brief + outline for faster drafts
Use this prompt to create a clear content brief that your writers (or the AI) can execute on immediately.
Act as a senior content strategist. Create a complete brief for a 1,000–1,200 word blog post for [BRAND_NAME] on the topic "[PRIMARY_KEYWORD]". Audience: [TARGET_AUDIENCE] (age, role, pain points). Include: a short one-sentence purpose, 5 targeted SEO keywords, an outline with H2/H3 headings and 2–3 bullet points under each heading, a suggested word count per section, 3 suggested internal links (by topic), and a recommended CTA. Finish with a suggested meta title (60 chars) and meta description (155 chars).
Actionable use: Share the brief with a writer or paste it back into the AI to generate the first full draft.
2 — Full blog draft optimized for a single keyword
When you need a near-final post fast, this prompt instructs the AI to produce a length, SEO-friendly draft with headings and a conclusion.
Act as an SEO copywriter. Write a 1,000–1,200 word blog post targeting the keyword "[PRIMARY_KEYWORD]". Use the voice: [BRAND_VOICE—e.g., authoritative but conversational]. Include an engaging intro, H2/H3 headings, short paragraphs, 2–3 practical examples, and a conclusion with a clear CTA that fits a middle-of-funnel offer. Use the keyword in the title, first paragraph, and 3–4 times across the article. Provide a meta title (<=60 chars) and meta description (<=155 chars) at the end.
Actionable use: Run the draft through your SEO and legal checks and add brand-specific screenshots or data points.
3 — Repurpose blog into social and visual formats
Turn long-form content into multiple social posts and short captions in one pass.
Act as a senior social media manager. Given this blog summary: [PASTE BRIEF OR BLOG TITLE], produce: (1) five LinkedIn post drafts (200–300 characters) with one CTA each, (2) five Twitter/X variations (<=280 chars) with 3 hashtag suggestions each, and (3) three short Instagram carousel outlines (5 slides each) with suggested image copy. Maintain the [BRAND_VOICE] and adapt messaging to the platform.
Actionable use: Schedule directly in your social tool after light editing and adding assets.
4 — Email nurture sequence from a top-performing asset
Convert a blog or whitepaper into a three-email nurture flow designed to move readers down the funnel.
Act as a conversion-focused email copywriter. Create a 3-email nurture sequence (subject line, preheader, 100–200 word body) based on the asset "[ASSET_TITLE]". Email 1: value + download link, Email 2: case study or example, Email 3: product/service CTA with urgency. Target audience: [BUYER_PERSONA]. Include personalization tokens: first name, company, and a single-tracked CTA.
Actionable use: Import into your ESP, set up tracking parameters, and test subject lines.
5 — Content calendar with measurable outcomes
Generate a 90-day calendar that ties topics to goals and KPIs so content isn’t just output but contributes to growth.
Act as a growth marketer. Create a 90-day content calendar for [BRAND_NAME] focused on [PRIMARY_GOAL—e.g., lead gen]. Provide 12 entries (weekly): topic/title, content format (blog/social/email/video), target audience stage, primary KPI (clicks, MQLs, signups), estimated effort (low/med/high), and one quick promotion idea per entry.
Actionable use: Use this calendar to align cross-functional teams and allocate production resources.
6 — High-converting landing page copy
When launching offers, you need persuasive landing pages that convert—fast.
Act as a senior conversion copywriter. Draft landing page copy for the offer "[OFFER_NAME]": headline, subheadline, 3 benefit bullets, 3 social proof lines, short feature section (3 features), pricing/offer summary, and a primary CTA. Audience: [BUYER_PERSONA]. Tone: [BRAND_VOICE]. Provide two headline variations for A/B testing.
Actionable use: Use the two headline variations and test them with at least 1,000 visitors or via an internal experiment platform.
7 — Generate headline and A/B variants for paid ads
Quickly create ad creatives that align with landing pages and audience segments.
Act as a paid ads copy expert. For campaign "[CAMPAIGN_NAME]" targeting [AUDIENCE_SEGMENT], provide 8 headline variations (<=30 characters), 6 description lines (<=90 characters), and 4 CTA variations. Indicate which headline-description pairs are best for high-intent vs. awareness audiences.
Actionable use: Upload the variations into your ad manager to run multivariate tests with even distribution.
8 — Rewrite content for different personas or reading levels
Personalization improves engagement. Use this to create persona-specific copies from one source piece.
Act as a personalization specialist. Rewrite the following paragraph into three persona-targeted versions: (A) CTO who cares about reliability, (B) Head of Marketing who cares about ROI, (C) Operations Manager who cares about ease of integration. Keep each version 40–60 words and maintain the same core message. Source paragraph: "[PASTE PARAGRAPH]".
Actionable use: Serve these persona-specific snippets in ads, email segments, and landing page experiments.
9 — Convert an article into a short video script (copy-paste)
Short-form video is essential for reach. Use this prompt to create a tight, shareable script.
Act as a video scriptwriter. Convert the article titled "[ARTICLE_TITLE]" into a 60–90 second video script for LinkedIn. Format with: Hook (first 10 seconds), 3 key points with short supporting lines, transition cues for on-screen text, and a closing CTA. Include suggested on-screen captions and an attention-grabbing first-frame headline.
Actionable use: Share the script with your video editor and record a quick human-read or text-to-speech version for fast deployment.
10 — Content experiment plan and success metrics (copy-paste)
Every piece of content should be measurable. This prompt creates a test plan so you know what to measure and when to iterate.
Act as an analytics-driven content strategist. Create an experiment plan for testing two content variations for the asset "[ASSET_TITLE]". Include hypothesis, primary and secondary KPIs, sample size needed, test duration, segmentation (by channel and persona), required tracking tags/events, and decision criteria for declaring a winner.
Actionable use: Implement the tracking, run the experiment, and use the decision criteria to scale the winning variation.
Putting it into practice
Pick 2–3 prompts that address your current bottlenecks this week—e.g., a blog brief, a social repurpose prompt, and an email nurture sequence—and run them end-to-end. Keep a short feedback loop: review AI outputs within 24 hours, make brand-specific edits, and launch. Track at least one KPI per asset so you can learn and improve the prompts over time.
Final notes
AI is a force multiplier when prompts are specific and tied to measurable goals. Always instruct the model with role, audience, format, and desired outcomes. Save the prompts that work and iterate on them—turn a winning prompt into a template for your team.
Tools like Daily Prompts deliver these kinds of practical, editable prompts daily so your team can scale consistent, higher-performing content without reinventing formats every week.