🧠 ChatGPT Prompts You’ll Never Find on Google (But Should Be Using)
Most people use AI to create more content. Smarter creators use it to create better, more human content. If your posts are starting to feel repetitive, the fix isn’t posting more it’s prompting smarter. Here are creative, pattern-breaking ChatGPT prompts you can use across platforms to stand out instead of blending in!! 👇 INSTAGRAM • “Write 5 carousel ideas that feel like mini comic strips about my niche — with an unexpected twist on the final slide.” • “Create a visual metaphor caption that explains my niche using a surprising analogy (pizza toppings, airport security, etc.).” • “Give me 3 Reel hooks written like a friend spilling tea at brunch — not a marketer shouting at the camera.” 👇 THREADS • “Write 5 Threads posts that read like unfiltered thoughts I almost didn’t post casual, honest, and scroll-stopping.” • “Turn my core belief about my niche into a short Threads rant that feels conversational, not polished.” • “Summarize my advice in one bold sentence that sounds like it came from a late-night text, not a content calendar.” 👇 PINTEREST • “Invent 5 pin titles that sound like secret diary entries, not blog headlines make people curious enough to click.” • “Describe my blog like a Pinterest recipe: ingredients (topics), instructions (steps), and servings (value).” • “Turn my top 3 tips into a Pinterest graphic outlined like tattoo designs.” 👇 YOUTUBE • “Draft 3 video titles that feel like movie trailers, not tutorials — build suspense.” • “Write my intro like the viewer just stumbled into a secret underground club where my niche is the theme.” • “Give me 5 thumbnail text ideas written like overheard conversations — casual, mysterious, and a little nosy.” 👇 TWITTER / X • “Write 5 tweets explaining my niche as fortune cookie messages — short, punchy, and cryptic but useful.” • “Turn my last post into a thread where each tweet sounds like a stand-up comedy punchline.” • “Summarize my brand story in 280 characters, but make it read like the opening line of a sci-fi novel.”