Prompts by job · 4 prompts
AI Marketing Prompts for Small Business Owners
Paste-able prompts that turn work you already did into content, positioning, and proof, with an AI agent doing the heavy lifting. Copy a prompt, paste it into your agent, and replace anything in [BRACKETS] with your own details.
Read the full guide behind these prompts: The 47-prompt library for small business ownersWhich agent are you using?
Open the ChatGPT desktop app, switch to Work mode, and connect the tools these prompts mention under Plugins. Paste a prompt into the task box and let it run.
Open Claude Code (the Claude desktop app or terminal), connect the tools these prompts mention, and paste a prompt as your message. Claude plans first, then does the work.
1. A month of content from what I already know
Create a month of content ideas from real business evidence. Read what you can access that shows my expertise: - Sent emails where I explained something to a client - Proposals - Meeting notes - Client questions - Past posts - Case studies - Sales calls or transcripts - Internal notes - Training materials - Website pages Extract 20 content ideas. Every idea must come from a real moment. For each idea, include: 1. Source 2. Real client question, mistake, objection, or situation behind it 3. One-sentence point 4. First line written out fully 5. Best format: post, article, video, email, newsletter, or FAQ 6. Why my best buyer would care Cut anything generic. If it could appear on any competitor's blog, do not include it.
2. Make my website answer real buyer questions
Read my last 100 inbound emails from prospects and clients. List the questions people actually ask before buying. Then read my website. Show me the gap between what buyers ask and what the website answers. For the top five unanswered questions, draft the answer as it should appear on the website. Use plain language and my real phrasing from sent replies where possible. For each answer, include: 1. The buyer question 2. How often it appears 3. Whether the website answers it now 4. The answer I should add 5. Where it should go on the site 6. Why it matters for conversion 7. Whether it would help AI assistants understand and recommend my business Write the answers so a human trusts them and a machine can quote them cleanly.
3. Rewrite the page that matters
Review this services page: [URL] Read it as a skeptical buyer with three competitor tabs open. Do not be polite. Tell me: 1. What is unclear in the first five seconds 2. Where I talk about myself instead of the buyer's problem 3. Which claims have no proof 4. Where the offer is confusing 5. Where the page creates friction 6. What questions a serious buyer still has 7. Why someone might leave without contacting me Then rewrite the page using proof from my actual files, emails, case studies, testimonials, proposals, results, and client language. Flag every claim you cannot verify. Do not invent numbers, testimonials, logos, outcomes, or guarantees.
4. Competitor sweep
Compare my business against these three competitors: 1. [URL] 2. [URL] 3. [URL] Review their websites and public presence, then review mine. Give me a one-page competitive positioning brief. Include: 1. What they claim that I do not 2. What I can prove that they cannot 3. Where their offers are clearer than mine 4. Where my offer is stronger but poorly explained 5. What buyer objections they answer better 6. What buyer objections I answer better 7. The positioning gap none of us clearly owns 8. The one change I should make first Ground every point in something you actually read. Use quotes where useful. No generic strategy language.