5 more ChatGPT prompts I reuse for copy - CTAs, objections, and the clarity pass. None of them write the copy for me

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Same caveat as before: I'm not using AI to write the copy - that still sounds like AI. These are for the work around it, the parts that are grind, not craft: sharpening a CTA, translating features into benefits, catching the objections and confusion that quietly kill conversion. The judgment stays yours. Copy them, swap the {{variables}}. 1. The CTA Sharpener - so it actually gets the click Sharpen this call-to-action so it actually gets the click. CURRENT CTA: {{paste it}} What I want them to do: {{the action}} What's stopping them: {{the friction, risk, or hesitation}} Give me: - 5 CTA variations, each a different angle (urgency, value, low-risk, curiosity, specificity). - One line on who each works best for. - Flag any that overpromise or read as salesy. 2. The Feature-to-Benefit Translator - say what they actually care about Translate these features into what the customer actually cares about. FEATURES: {{list them}} The customer: {{their situation and what they want}} For each feature: - The benefit (what it lets them do or feel). - The deeper benefit under that (the real outcome). - One natural line pairing feature and benefit - no clunky "which means that." Cut any feature that doesn't map to something they'd genuinely care about. 3. The Objection Pre-empt - handle the doubts before they bounce Find the objections killing this copy before the reader even acts. COPY: {{paste}} Offer: {{what you're selling and to whom}} Give me: - The top 5 objections or hesitations a skeptical reader would have. - For each, whether the copy currently addresses it (yes/no). - A specific line I could add to handle the ones it misses. Rank them by how likely each is to stop the sale. 4. The Clarity Pass - find the confusion before you ship it Tell me where a reader gets confused or loses interest in this. COPY: {{paste}} The one thing they must understand: {{your core message}} Read it as a distracted first-time visitor, then: - Point to the exact line where you'd get confused, bored, or bounce. - Tell me whether the core message is actually clear by the end - and if not, why. - The single change that would make it clearest. Be blunt. I'd rather find the confusion than ship it. 5. The Subject Line Lab - and which ones to actually test Give me email subject lines for this, and tell me which to test. EMAIL / OFFER: {{what it's about}} Audience: {{who's on the list and their relationship to me}} Give me: - 10 subject lines across angles (curiosity, benefit, urgency, personal, contrarian). - The 3 you'd A/B test first, and why. - Flag any that would read as spammy or clickbait to this audience. Keep them short enough not to truncate on mobile. Same pattern as everything I use AI for in this work: it does the grunt work and the pressure-testing, I make the calls. The Clarity Pass earns its keep the most - you can't read your own copy like a stranger, and that's exactly the read that tells you whether it converts. (I keep these saved and pull them up by typing // in the ChatGPT box, so they're one keystroke away on every project. Happy to share which extension in the comments if anyone asks. They all work fine pasted by hand.)   submitted by   /u/Ok_Negotiation_2587 [link]   [comments]