guide

15 AI Prompts Every Solopreneur Should Steal

Published May 30, 2026

Disclosure: Some links below are affiliate links. If you sign up through them we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend tools we'd genuinely suggest to a friend. See our full disclosure.

Most people use AI like a search box and get bland, generic answers. The secret isn’t a magic model — it’s the prompt. Give the AI a role, context, constraints and an example, and the same tool suddenly produces work you’d actually use. Below are 15 copy-paste prompts for the jobs solopreneurs do every week. They work in Claude, ChatGPT or Gemini — steal them, then tweak the bracketed bits.

Content

1. Turn one idea into a week of content

Act as a content strategist. I sell [product] to [audience]. Give me 7 distinct content angles on [topic], each with a hook line and the single takeaway. Avoid generic advice; be specific and contrarian where honest.

2. Outline a blog post that ranks

You’re an SEO editor. Create a detailed outline for an article targeting the search “[keyword]”. Include the search intent, an H1, 6–8 H2s, and one question to answer under each. Keep it genuinely useful, not fluff.

3. Repurpose a post into a thread

Turn the article below into a 7-tweet thread. Lead with the strongest insight, one idea per tweet, plain language, no hashtags. End with a soft CTA. Article: [paste].

Email

4. Write a welcome email

Write a warm welcome email for new subscribers of [newsletter], who just downloaded [lead magnet]. Set expectations, deliver one quick win, and tease what’s coming. Friendly, concise, no hype.

5. Subject line variations

Give me 10 subject lines for an email about [topic]. Mix curiosity, benefit and specificity. Keep each under 50 characters. No spammy words or excessive punctuation.

6. Re-engage dead subscribers

Write a short re-engagement email for subscribers who haven’t opened in 90 days. Be honest, give them a reason to stay, and make it easy to leave. One clear CTA.

Sales & offers

7. Sharpen a value proposition

Here’s what I do: [describe]. Rewrite it as 5 one-line value propositions using “I help [who] achieve [outcome] with [method], without [pain]”. Make the who and outcome specific.

8. Write sales-page bullets

Turn these features into benefit-driven bullets a buyer cares about. For each, name the feature and the outcome it creates. Features: [list].

9. Handle an objection

A potential customer says “[objection]”. Write a confident, honest reply that acknowledges the concern, reframes it, and gives evidence — without being pushy.

Social

10. Hooks that stop the scroll

Give me 10 scroll-stopping opening lines for a post about [topic] aimed at [audience]. Vary the pattern (question, bold claim, story, stat, mistake). No clickbait I can’t back up.

11. Reply-bait question

Write 5 genuine, specific questions I can post to spark replies from [audience] about [topic]. Avoid yes/no questions.

Operations

12. Draft an SOP

Document this repeatable task as a clear step-by-step SOP a beginner could follow, including tools and common mistakes. Task: [describe].

13. Plan a launch

Build a simple 2-week launch plan for [product] to [audience]: pre-launch, launch and post-launch, with the key action for each day. Keep it realistic for a solo operator.

14. Summarize and decide

Summarize the notes below into: 3 key points, 2 risks, and 1 recommended next action. Notes: [paste].

15. Critique my work honestly

Act as a skeptical [customer/editor]. Review the draft below and tell me the 3 weakest parts and exactly how to fix each. Be blunt but constructive. Draft: [paste].

How to make any prompt better

Four upgrades turn a mediocre prompt into a great one:

  1. Give it a role — “Act as a sales copywriter…” focuses the output.
  2. Add context — who you are, who the audience is, what the goal is.
  3. Set constraints — length, tone, format, what to avoid.
  4. Show an example — paste one good sample of the style you want.

And always edit the result. AI gets you 80% there fast; your judgment and voice make it worth publishing — thin, unedited AI content gets ignored (and penalized). See how to use AI to write content for a workflow that keeps quality high, and the best AI tools for solopreneurs.

Want the full library?

These 15 are a starting point. If you’d rather have a complete, organized set ready to paste, the Solopreneur’s AI Prompt Pack gives you 50 prompts across content, email, sales, social, support and ops — copy, fill the blanks, done. It works with Claude, ChatGPT or Gemini.

Some links above are affiliate or product links — they never cost you extra. See our affiliate disclosure.

Frequently asked questions

What makes a good AI prompt?

Specifics. Give the AI a clear role, context about your audience and goal, the format you want, and an example if you have one. Vague prompts get vague output; the more relevant detail you provide, the more useful the result.

Do these AI prompts work in ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini?

Yes — well-written prompts are largely model-agnostic and work across the major AI assistants. You may tweak wording slightly for each, but the structure (role, context, task, format) transfers.

Can I just copy and paste AI prompts and get great results?

They're a strong starting point, but the best results come from adding your own context — your audience, voice, and specifics — then editing the output. Treat AI prompts as a first draft engine, not a finished-content button.

How do I make AI output sound less generic?

Feed it your real details (audience, examples, voice), ask for a specific angle rather than a broad topic, and edit the result in your own words. The combination of a good prompt plus your judgment is what removes the generic feel.