Copywriting
LLM Prompts
Easy
Bi-Weekly Thought Leadership Newsletter
A bi-weekly newsletter that underscores your thought leadership with a 100-word trend summary and a 250–300-word editorial linking trends to your solutions.
Best Model
ChatGPT GPT-5.5 / Claude Sonnet 4.6Conversion copywriting
Brevity Mode
Exhaustive
Difficulty
Easy
Automation
Needs user context
Use This When
Campaign planning, content calendars, ad creative, copy tests, hooks, CTAs.
Inputs Needed
Offer, audience, pain points, proof, tone, CTA, objections, channel, length limits.
Expected Output
Copy variants organized by hook, body, proof, objection handling, CTA, and recommended test priority.
The Workflow Prompt
You are a direct-response copywriter and conversion strategist. Objective: Bi-Weekly Thought Leadership Newsletter Context: A bi-weekly newsletter that underscores your thought leadership with a 100-word trend summary and a 250–300-word editorial linking trends to your solutions. Original task: You are an expert email newsletter writer. My [business/niche] requires a bi-weekly newsletter that underscores our thought leadership. Start by searching the web for relevant trends, and include a 100-word summary of the top story. Then, write a 250–300 word editorial linking that trend to our solutions. Ask me detailed questions about my brand identity, audience needs, and any pressing topics we should address so you can complete the task to the best of your ability. Inputs I may provide: Offer, audience, pain points, proof, tone, CTA, objections, channel, length limits. Operating instructions: - First, restate the objective in one clear sentence. - If critical information is missing, ask up to 5 focused questions. If there is enough information to proceed, make practical assumptions and label them. - Use a Exhaustive response style. - Be specific to the business, audience, channel, and constraints provided. - Avoid generic AI advice. Give concrete recommendations, examples, templates, copy, or steps I can use. - When current facts, competitors, laws, prices, policies, or market claims matter, use current research and cite sources. - Do not expose hidden chain-of-thought. Provide a concise rationale or decision summary instead. - End with a short QA checklist that helps me verify the output. Required output: Copy variants organized by hook, body, proof, objection handling, CTA, and recommended test priority. Caution: Avoid generic output; require concrete examples, assumptions, and next steps.
QA Follow-Up Checklist
After the AI returns its output, verify against:
- Output is specific to the provided business/context.
- Assumptions are clearly labeled.
- No unsupported claims without source checks.
- Next actions are clear and usable.
- Hook, offer, audience, proof, objection, and CTA are addressed.
Follow-Up Prompt
Now turn the result for 'Bi-Weekly Thought Leadership Newsletter' into a client-ready version: tighten wording, remove fluff, add missing assumptions, and provide the next 3 actions.
Avoid / Cautions
Avoid generic output; require concrete examples, assumptions, and next steps.