Copywriting

Copywriting Prompts: Sell Anything to Anyone

Stop writing boring text. Use these prompts to turn readers into buyers.

Professional copywriters charge thousands of dollars. But if you give AI the right “Frameworks,” it can write 90% as well as a pro—for free. Below are the 10 Prompts that master marketers use secretly.


PART 1: The Hook (Getting Attention)

1. The “Click-Magnet” Headlines

If they don’t click the headline, the rest doesn’t matter.

🧲 Copy This:

"Act as a Direct Response Copywriter. I am writing an article/email about [Topic]. Generate 10 viral-style headlines using these psychological triggers: 1. Curiosity Gap 2. Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) 3. The 'How-To' Promise. Make them impossible to ignore."

2. The “Slippery Slope” Opener

The goal of the first sentence is to make them read the second sentence.

🧲 Copy This:

"I have a boring introduction: '[Paste your intro]'. Rewrite this using the 'Slippery Slope' technique. Start with a short, punchy statement or a shocking fact that forces the reader to keep scrolling. Keep the tone conversational."

3. The “So What?” Test

Turn features into benefits. Customers don’t buy a drill; they buy a hole in the wall.

🧲 Copy This:

"I have a product with these features: [List Features]. For each feature, write the 'Benefit'. Use the phrase 'So that you can...' to explain why the user should care. Focus on emotional outcomes (saving time, feeling safe, status)."

PART 2: The Frameworks

4. The Classic “AIDA” Formula

Attention -> Interest -> Desire -> Action. The oldest trick in the book.

📐 Copy This:

"Write a sales landing page section for [Product Name] using the AIDA framework. \n1. Attention: Grab them with a hook.\n2. Interest: Give interesting facts.\n3. Desire: Show them how their life improves.\n4. Action: Tell them exactly what to click."

5. The “PAS” Formula (Pain-Agitate-Solution)

This is aggressive but effective. It focuses on the problem first.

📐 Copy This:

"Write a social media ad for [Product] using the PAS framework. \n1. Problem: Call out the user's pain.\n2. Agitate: Rub salt in the wound (explain why it sucks).\n3. Solution: Present my product as the only cure."

6. The “BAB” Formula (Before-After-Bridge)

Best for storytelling and testimonials.

📐 Copy This:

"Write a short email using the Before-After-Bridge method. \nBefore: Describe the current bad situation.\nAfter: Describe the dream scenario.\nBridge: Explain how [My Product] is the bridge to get there."

PART 3: Closing the Deal

7. The “Objection crusher”

Answer the question “Why shouldn’t I buy this?” before they ask it.

💰 Copy This:

"List the 5 main reasons someone would NOT buy [My Product]. Then, write a bullet point for each one that overcomes that objection using logic or social proof."

8. The “Testimonial” Polisher

Have a messy review? Clean it up for your website (without lying).

💰 Copy This:

"I have a rough customer review here: '[Paste Review]'. Fix the grammar and spelling, and shorten it to be punchy, but keep the original sentiment and voice. Make it ready for a website homepage."

9. The “Irresistible” CTA

Don’t just write ‘Click Here’. Boring.

💰 Copy This:

"I need a Call to Action (CTA) button for my [Product]. Give me 5 options that are action-oriented and low-friction. Instead of 'Submit', try things like 'Get My Free Guide Now'. Make them urgent."

10. The “Personality” Injector

Nobody buys from robots. Sound like a human.

💰 Copy This:

"Rewrite this paragraph to sound witty, confident, and slightly rebellious. Use short sentences. Remove any corporate jargon. Text: [Paste Text]"

Words Are Power.

Use these prompts wisely. Good copy doesn’t just inform; it persuades.

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