Marketing6 min readUpdated Feb 2025
Copywriting Prompts: 25 High-Converting Templates
Benefit-first prompts for headlines, landing pages, emails, and ads—plus tools to polish them fast.
Benefit-firstSingle CTAPlatform-ready lengths
Speed up copy
Polish headlines and offers in minutes.
Headline (problem → benefit)
Write 5 headline options for {{product}} that call out {{core_problem}} and promise {{benefit}}. Keep under 12 words each.Landing page hero
Write a hero section for {{product}}: headline (benefit), subhead (how), CTA (1 action), and 3 bullet proofs. Tone: confident, plain English.Feature → benefit bullets
Rewrite these features into benefits: {{features}}. Output bullets with “so you can…” phrasing.PAS email
Write a PAS (Problem-Agitate-Solve) email for {{persona}} with {{problem}}. One CTA, under 120 words.Social proof block
Create a social proof block with a one-line quote, metric, and who said it (role/company) for {{product}}.Offer + scarcity
Draft a 3-sentence offer for {{product}} with a time-bound incentive. Include what’s included, value, and deadline.Ad copy (RSA)
Write 5 Google Ads headlines (30 chars) and 2 descriptions (90 chars) for {{product}} with USP {{usp}}.Email CTA variations
Write 5 CTA button labels for an email about {{topic}}. Keep 1-3 words, action-oriented.Checklist
- Lead with outcomes, not features.
- One CTA per asset; keep labels short.
- Use proof: metrics, quotes, or social proof blocks.
- Match tone to persona; use Tone Converter if needed.
FAQ
How short should copy be?
Headlines <12 words; emails 90-130 words; ads within platform limits.
How many CTAs?
One primary CTA per asset. Secondary CTAs reduce conversions.
Which model for copy?
Claude Sonnet/GPT-4o for nuance; Haiku/4o mini for speed. Always skim outputs.