847+ AI Prompts for Marketing Every Function (2025)
The most complete collection of AI marketing prompts on the internet. Paid ads, content strategy, brand positioning, email campaigns, social media, SEO, influencer marketing, analytics, and more.
95 prompts for Facebook Ads, Google Ads, TikTok Ads, LinkedIn Ads, and programmatic — from creative briefs to campaign strategy.
Paid Ads • Strategy
Full-Funnel Paid Media Strategy
Advanced
Creates a complete paid media strategy with channel allocation, audience architecture, creative direction, budget guidance, and measurement framework.
Act as a senior performance marketing director who manages $50M+ in annual ad spend. Build a complete full-funnel paid media strategy for [BRAND/PRODUCT].
CONTEXT:
Product/Service: [WHAT YOU'RE ADVERTISING]
Monthly budget: $[BUDGET]
Current stage: [PRE-LAUNCH / GROWTH / SCALE]
Target CAC (customer acquisition cost): $[TARGET]
Key competitor: [MAIN COMPETITOR]
Geographic target: [US ONLY / SPECIFIC STATES / GLOBAL]
DELIVERABLE:
FUNNEL ARCHITECTURE
Awareness → Interest → Consideration → Conversion → Retention
For each funnel stage:
- KPI to optimize for
- Recommended channel(s) and why
- Budget % allocation
- Expected performance benchmarks
CHANNEL STRATEGY (detail each channel you recommend):
Channel → Recommended monthly budget → Best audience approach → Creative format → Expected CPM/CPC/CPA → Why this works for this brand
AUDIENCE ARCHITECTURE
- Cold audiences (who to prospect)
- Warm audiences (retargeting segments)
- Lookalike strategy
- Exclusion lists
CREATIVE DIRECTION
For each top channel: 3 creative concepts with hooks, visual direction, and messaging angle
90-DAY LAUNCH PLAN
Month 1 (Test): [What to test, at what budget]
Month 2 (Learn): [What to optimize based on learnings]
Month 3 (Scale): [What to scale and how]
MEASUREMENT FRAMEWORK
North Star metric, supporting metrics, attribution model recommendation, reporting cadence
Brand: [YOUR BRAND]
Monthly budget: $[AMOUNT]
[BRAND/PRODUCT][BUDGET][TARGET CAC][COMPETITOR]
Best with: Claude 3.5, GPT-4o
📝 Content Marketing Prompts
85 prompts for content strategy, editorial calendars, pillar content, thought leadership, and content distribution plans.
Content • Strategy
Annual Content Marketing Strategy
Advanced
Creates a complete annual content marketing strategy with audience targeting, content pillars, channel strategy, production calendar, and ROI measurement framework.
You are a Head of Content who has led content strategies at high-growth SaaS and B2B companies. Create a comprehensive annual content marketing strategy for [COMPANY].
COMPANY CONTEXT:
Company: [NAME — what they do]
Industry: [VERTICAL]
Target audience: [PRIMARY PERSONA with title, company size, pain points]
Business goal: [WHAT CONTENT SHOULD DRIVE — leads, brand awareness, SEO traffic, sales enablement]
Current content status: [STARTING FROM ZERO / HAS SOME BLOG / ESTABLISHED PRESENCE]
Budget/Team: [SOLO MARKETER / SMALL TEAM / FULL TEAM — approx resources]
Main competitors in content: [1-2 COMPETITORS WHO DO CONTENT WELL]
STRATEGY DOCUMENT:
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
One paragraph: what this strategy will accomplish, for whom, and how we'll measure success.
AUDIENCE INTELLIGENCE
Primary persona deep-dive:
- Job title, company size, industry
- Top 3 pain points (specific, not generic)
- Content consumption habits (where they read/watch/listen)
- Decision-making process and triggers
- Questions they Google in the buying journey
CONTENT PILLARS (3-4 themes)
Each pillar: Name + why it matters to our audience + why we have authority here + example content types
CONTENT MIX (% allocation by format):
- Long-form blog/articles: X%
- Short-form (social, quick tips): X%
- Video content: X%
- Downloadables (guides, templates, tools): X%
- Podcasts/audio: X%
- Email newsletter: X%
QUARTERLY THEMES AND FLAGSHIP PIECES
Q1: [Theme] — 1 major flagship piece + 3 supporting pieces
Q2: [Theme] — 1 major flagship piece + 3 supporting pieces
Q3: [Theme] — 1 major flagship piece + 3 supporting pieces
Q4: [Theme] — 1 major flagship piece + 3 supporting pieces
DISTRIBUTION STRATEGY
For each piece of content: how to distribute it across 5+ channels
SEO INTEGRATION
How content strategy connects to keyword targets
MEASUREMENT FRAMEWORK
30 / 60 / 90 / 180 day milestones and metrics
Company: [YOUR COMPANY]
58 prompts for growth hacking, conversion optimization, funnel analysis, referral programs, and product-led growth strategies.
Growth • Optimization
Conversion Rate Optimization Audit
Advanced
Performs a systematic CRO audit of any page or funnel, identifying friction points, copy issues, trust gaps, and specific test hypotheses ranked by expected impact.
Act as a senior CRO specialist who has improved conversion rates across 200+ landing pages. Conduct a comprehensive conversion rate optimization audit for [PAGE/FUNNEL TYPE].
PAGE CONTEXT:
Page type: [LANDING PAGE / PRODUCT PAGE / PRICING PAGE / CHECKOUT / SIGN-UP]
Current conversion rate: [X% OR "UNKNOWN"]
Traffic source: [WHERE VISITORS COME FROM — paid search / organic / social / email]
Target action: [WHAT WE WANT THEM TO DO]
Target audience: [WHO IS LANDING ON THIS PAGE]
[PASTE YOUR PAGE COPY, URL, OR DESCRIPTION BELOW]
CRO AUDIT FRAMEWORK:
1. ABOVE THE FOLD ANALYSIS
- Does the headline instantly communicate value to the target visitor?
- Is the primary CTA visible without scrolling on mobile?
- Is the value proposition clear within 5 seconds?
- Are there any immediate trust signals?
Score: __ / 10 + specific issues
2. HEADLINE & COPY AUDIT
- Headline clarity and customer-centricity
- Body copy: benefit-led vs feature-led ratio
- Reading level and cognitive load
- Presence of clichés or corporate jargon
Score: __ / 10 + specific rewrites suggested
3. TRUST & CREDIBILITY SIGNALS
- Social proof (reviews, testimonials, logos) — present? Specific? Recent?
- Guarantees or risk-reversals
- Security badges (if e-commerce/lead gen)
- Company credibility signals
Score: __ / 10 + gaps identified
4. FRICTION ANALYSIS
- Form fields (are there more than necessary?)
- Number of CTAs (competing or complementary?)
- Navigation and exit points
- Mobile experience issues
Score: __ / 10 + friction points
5. CTA ANALYSIS
- Button copy (action-specific vs generic "Submit")
- CTA placement and visual prominence
- CTA colors and contrast
- Micro-copy beneath CTAs (removes objections?)
Score: __ / 10 + rewrites
PRIORITIZED TEST ROADMAP
List 8-10 specific A/B tests, ranked by: Expected Impact (High/Med/Low) × Ease (Easy/Medium/Hard)
For each test: what to test, hypothesis, how to measure, sample size needed
QUICK WINS (implement without testing): 3 changes so obvious they need no test
Page/Funnel: [YOUR PAGE]
What Separates Good Marketing Prompts from Generic Ones
The most common failure mode in AI marketing prompts is vague target audience specification. "Write a Facebook ad for a productivity app" produces completely different (and worse) results than "Write a Facebook ad for a $9.99/month productivity app targeting freelance designers aged 28-40 who currently juggle client work in Notion but struggle with time tracking. Their biggest pain is billing clients accurately for hourly work. Tone: conversational, slightly self-deprecating, never corporate."
The second failure mode is not specifying what's been tried. Telling the AI "the previous headline was 'Work smarter, not harder' and it underperformed" allows it to avoid similar patterns rather than regenerate the same generic concept with slightly different words.
The prompts in this library are built around three principles: maximum audience specificity, explicit quality constraints (what NOT to write is as important as what to write), and outcome-focused framing (you're creating an ad that will be judged by click-through rate, not by how impressive it sounds).
Frequently Asked Questions: AI for Marketing
Can AI write marketing copy as well as a human copywriter?
For volume production and first drafts: yes, often better. AI can produce 50 headline variations in 2 minutes, something no human copywriter would do cost-effectively. For the highest-stakes, brand-defining copy — Super Bowl ads, major product launch campaigns, content that defines brand voice — experienced human copywriters with deep brand knowledge still produce better outputs. The best approach is using AI for high-volume, iterative work while reserving human judgment for brand-critical decisions and final polish.
Which AI tool is best for marketing?
For ad copy and short-form marketing content: GPT-4o produces more variation and is slightly bolder in creative directions. For brand strategy, long-form content, and complex multi-constraint briefs: Claude 3.5 Sonnet follows nuanced brand voice guidelines more accurately and produces less generic output. For marketing research that requires current data: Grok with its real-time X access, or ChatGPT with browse enabled. For most marketing teams, using GPT-4o and Claude together — ideally testing both on key tasks — produces better results than either alone.
Will Google penalize AI-generated marketing content?
Google's official position is that they evaluate content quality and helpfulness, not how it was produced. AI-generated content that is accurate, original, helpful, and written for humans rather than search engines is treated the same as human-written content. What Google penalizes is low-quality content at scale — thin, repetitive, or misleading content — regardless of whether it's AI-generated. High-quality AI content that is reviewed, edited, and fact-checked by humans is widely used successfully in SEO.
How do I maintain brand voice when using AI for marketing?
Include a brand voice guide in every prompt. This doesn't need to be long — 5-8 sentences that describe your tone (3 adjectives it IS, 3 adjectives it IS NOT), include 2-3 example sentences in your voice, and list explicit banned words or phrases. For example: "Our brand voice is direct, occasionally witty, never corporate. We are: confident, practical, human. We are not: hype-y, jargon-heavy, formal. Example: 'This is the tool your marketing team will actually use' NOT 'Leverage our cutting-edge platform to optimize your marketing stack.'"