90 copy-ready prompts for ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude, sorted by your job and your
task — each shown with a real example output. Free, no signup, no paywall.
Write a short, personalized cold email that earns a reply instead of a delete.
The prompt
You are an experienced B2B sales rep known for cold emails that get replies. Write a cold outreach email to [PROSPECT NAME], the [JOB TITLE] at [COMPANY].
Context:
- What we sell: [ONE-LINE PRODUCT DESCRIPTION]
- The problem we solve for companies like theirs: [PAIN POINT]
- One specific thing I noticed about their company: [TRIGGER / RESEARCH NOTE]
Rules:
- Under 120 words, plain language, no buzzwords.
- Open with the specific observation, not "I hope this finds you well."
- One clear call to action: a 15-minute call.
- Plain text, no markdown. Then give me 2 subject line options.
Example output
Subject A: a quick idea for [Company]'s new office
Subject B: [Company] + faster ramp for new reps?
Hi [Name],
Saw [Company] just opened a second support office — congrats. Scaling support usually means new hires fielding the same 20 questions for weeks.
We give support teams an answer layer trained on your own docs, so new reps ramp in days instead of months. [Similar company] cut their ramp time by about a third.
Worth a 15-minute call next week to see if it'd fit your new office? Happy to work around your calendar.
Thanks,
[Your name]
TipPaste a real LinkedIn or news detail into the trigger line — generic openers are exactly what gets cold emails deleted. Asking for "2 subject line options" gives you something to A/B test.
ChatGPTGeminiClaude
Write an SEO content brief
Give a writer everything they need to rank: intent, outline, keywords, angle.
The prompt
Write a complete SEO content brief for an article targeting the keyword [TARGET KEYWORD].
Include:
- Primary keyword and 4–6 semantically related terms to weave in naturally
- Search intent classification (informational / navigational / commercial / transactional)
- Target audience and their assumed knowledge level
- Recommended word count range
- Suggested H1, H2 headings, and one H3 example
- One competing article to beat and what it is missing
- Angle that differentiates our piece
- One internal-link opportunity to [RELATED PAGE OR CATEGORY]
Topic area: [TOPIC]. Our product/service: [PRODUCT].
Example output
Target keyword: project management software for agencies
Intent: Commercial investigation (users comparing options before buying)
Audience: Agency ops managers, 30–200 staff; know PM tools, deciding to switch
Related terms to include: agency workflow software, client project tracking, resource allocation tool, retainer management, agency time tracking
Word count: 1,800–2,400
H1: The Best Project Management Software for Agencies in 2025
H2s: What makes agency PM different | How we tested | Top 6 tools | Feature comparison | Who should pick what | Bottom line
Gap in top result: Lacks pricing tiers and doesn't address retainer-based billing.
Angle: Focus on retainer + billable-hour workflow — the agency-specific pain point competitors skim.
Internal link: Link to /agency-time-tracking-guide at first mention of "time tracking."
TipPasting one competing article's URL and asking the model to find its gaps produces sharper angle ideas than asking it to invent them from scratch.
ChatGPTGeminiClaude
Turn messy meeting notes into clear action items
Convert raw notes or a transcript into decisions, owners, and next steps.
The prompt
Below are raw notes from a team meeting. Turn them into a clean summary for people who weren't there.
Format:
1. **TL;DR** — 2 sentences.
2. **Decisions made** — bullet list.
3. **Action items** — a table: Task | Owner | Due date. If an owner or date wasn't stated, write "unassigned" — do not invent one.
4. **Open questions** — anything left unresolved.
Keep it factual. Don't add advice. Here are the notes:
[PASTE NOTES OR TRANSCRIPT]
Example output
**TL;DR** — The team approved the Q3 pricing test and pushed the mobile redesign to August. Two action items are unassigned.
**Decisions made**
- Run the pricing A/B test on the Pro plan starting July 1.
- Delay the mobile redesign to August to avoid the holiday code freeze.
**Action items**
| Task | Owner | Due date |
|---|---|---|
| Set up pricing test in billing | Priya | Jun 27 |
| Draft August launch timeline | unassigned | unassigned |
| Tell support about the price change | Marco | Jun 30 |
**Open questions**
- Who signs off on the final August date?
TipThe "do not invent owners or dates" rule is what makes this trustworthy — AI otherwise fills gaps with plausible-but-wrong names. Paste a Zoom/Meet transcript directly for best results.
ChatGPTGeminiClaude
Summarize a research paper
Get the key claims, method, and findings of a dense paper.
The prompt
Act as a research methods tutor. I will give you the abstract and any sections I paste from a research paper. Summarize it using this structure:
1. Research question (one sentence)
2. Method (what they did, how many participants or data points)
3. Key findings (bullets, with numbers if they appear)
4. Limitations the authors mention
5. One sentence on why this paper matters
Do not interpret or add analysis. Use plain language I can explain to a classmate.
Paper excerpt: [PASTE ABSTRACT + KEY SECTIONS]
Example output
1. Research question: Does spaced repetition improve long-term retention compared to massed practice in undergraduate vocabulary learning?
2. Method: Randomized experiment, 94 undergraduate psychology students over 8 weeks; one group used a spaced flashcard app, one group did blocked study sessions.
3. Key findings:
- Spaced group retained 31% more words at the 4-week follow-up test.
- No significant difference at the immediate post-test (p = .42).
- Effect was strongest for low-frequency words.
4. Limitations: Self-selected study time; both groups used the same word list.
5. Why it matters: Confirms spacing benefit persists beyond the lab and applies to a practical student tool.
TipIf the paper is long, paste the abstract and the Results section first. Those two alone give you 80% of the structure; add the Discussion only if you need the "why it matters" layer.
ChatGPTGeminiClaude
Interview questions tailored to a role
Generate skill- and behavior-based questions for a specific job.
The prompt
Create an interview question set for a [JOB TITLE] role at [COMPANY TYPE].
The role requires: [TOP 3–4 SKILLS OR RESPONSIBILITIES].
Give me:
- 3 technical or skill-based questions (test actual competence, not trivia).
- 4 behavioral questions using a real situation the candidate would have faced.
- 2 questions that reveal how they think about [SPECIFIC CHALLENGE THIS ROLE FACES].
- Under each question, add one line: what a strong answer includes.
Don't invent requirements I haven't given you.
Example output
Technical
1. "Walk me through how you've structured a sourcing funnel for a role with under 200 qualified candidates in the market." → Strong answer: a specific example with search strategy, outreach rate, and how they adapted.
Behavioral
2. "Tell me about a time a hiring manager wanted a candidate you thought was wrong for the role. What did you do?" → Strong answer: held a position with data, didn't just defer.
Thinking questions
3. "This role has a two-week time-to-fill target. What breaks first and how do you manage it?" → Strong answer: surfaces pipeline risk, sets expectations early, doesn't promise what they can't control.
TipAsk for "what a strong answer includes" in the same request — it forces the model to think about what you are actually trying to learn, not just generate questions that sound good.
ChatGPTGeminiClaude
Repurpose a blog post into social
Spin one article into a week of platform-ready posts.
The prompt
Take the blog post below and repurpose it into 5 social media posts — one per platform: LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Instagram, Facebook, and Threads.
Each post should:
- Pull a distinct angle or insight from the article (no two posts should make the same point)
- Match the platform's tone and length norms
- Include a platform-appropriate CTA linking back to the article
Blog post: [PASTE POST OR SUMMARY]
Article URL: [URL]
Example output
LinkedIn (professional, ~150 words): "Most agencies blame scope creep for missed deadlines. The data says it's usually something quieter: nobody agreed on what 'done' looks like at kickoff. We analyzed 200 completed agency projects and found that the ones finishing on time shared one habit... [link]"
Twitter/X (~240 chars): "Agencies that finish projects on time don't have better clients. They agree on 'done' before work starts. 3 questions we ask every kickoff: [link] 🧵"
Instagram (caption, visual hook): "The one question that prevents scope creep 👇 (swipe to see all 3) Most agencies never ask it at kickoff. Full breakdown at the link in bio."
Facebook (~80 words conversational): "We looked at 200 agency projects to find what on-time delivery actually had in common. It wasn't better tools or bigger teams. It was one kickoff habit. Worth a read if your deadlines slip more than you'd like. [link]"
Threads (casual, 2 short paras): "Hot take: scope creep is a kickoff problem, not a client problem. Read our breakdown — link in bio."
TipForce each post to pull a different angle by numbering the key insights in the article and assigning one insight per platform — this prevents every caption from recycling the same hook.
A free, curated collection of copy-ready prompts for ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude, organized by job (marketing, sales, teaching, and more) and by task (emails, summaries, SEO briefs, interviews). Every prompt comes with an example of what it produces.
Is it really free, with no signup?
Yes. Every prompt is free to copy with no account, no email, and no paywall. There’s nothing to install and no usage limit.
Which AI models do the prompts work with?
All of them. The core prompts work in ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude. We also have model-specific sets — Gemini for Google Workspace and research, Claude for long documents and careful writing.
How do I use a prompt?
Find one by searching or browsing, click Copy, paste it into your AI tool, and replace the [BRACKETED] placeholders with your own details. The example output shows what to expect before you start.
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