Free ChatGPT Prompt Generator
Generate Clear, Reusable Prompts That Get Better AI Outputs
Create strong prompts for ChatGPT and other AI models in seconds. Define your goal, audience, tone, and constraints, then get a copy‑paste prompt with variables, structure, and guardrails for more accurate, on-brand results.
Generated Prompt
Your ChatGPT-ready prompt will appear here...
How the ChatGPT Prompt Generator Works
Get results in seconds with a simple workflow.
Describe Your Goal
Write what you want the AI to do (e.g., create an SEO outline, write ad variants, summarize a document). This is the main driver of prompt quality.
Add Context, Constraints, and Format
Optionally include audience, background, requirements (length, sections, do/don’t), and a preferred output format like bullets, steps, a table, or JSON.
Generate and Reuse the Prompt
Copy the final prompt into ChatGPT. Swap placeholders for new topics or inputs to produce consistent outputs faster across content and SEO workflows.
See It in Action
Turn a vague request into a structured ChatGPT prompt template that produces more accurate, consistent, and SEO-friendly outputs.
Write a blog post about internal linking.
You are an expert SEO content strategist.
GOAL: Create an SEO outline for a blog post about {{topic}} for {{audience}}.
CONTEXT:
- Website type: {{site_type}}
- Primary goal: improve topical authority and crawl paths
REQUIREMENTS:
- Align with search intent: {{intent}}
- Include: Title + H2/H3 outline, key talking points under each heading, and a brief intro angle
- Add: 5 FAQs (People Also Ask style)
- Provide: 8 internal link opportunities (anchor text + target page idea)
- Avoid: keyword stuffing, generic filler, and invented statistics
OUTPUT FORMAT:
- Return in this structure:
- SEO Title
- Intro angle (2–3 sentences)
- H2/H3 outline with bullet points
- Internal linking ideas
- FAQ (Q/A)
If any input is missing, ask up to 5 clarifying questions first—otherwise produce the outline.
Why Use Our ChatGPT Prompt Generator?
Powered by the latest AI to deliver fast, accurate results.
Copy-Paste ChatGPT Prompts With Variables
Generates reusable prompts with clear placeholders (e.g., {{topic}}, {{audience}}, {{constraints}}) so you can quickly adapt the same prompt for new tasks without rewriting from scratch.
Better Outputs With Roles, Constraints, and Acceptance Criteria
Adds proven prompt engineering elements—role, goal, context, constraints, and success criteria—to reduce vague responses and improve accuracy, consistency, and relevance.
SEO Prompt Templates for Outlines, Briefs, and Drafts
Creates SEO-friendly prompts that align with search intent, include keyword guidance, heading structure, FAQ requirements, and E‑E‑A‑T considerations—ideal for content strategy and on-page SEO.
Marketing Prompt Builder for Conversion Copy
Generates prompts for landing pages, ads, emails, and product messaging that capture audience pain points, benefits, objections, and CTAs—useful for A/B testing and faster iteration.
Output Formatting Controls
Choose bullet points, steps, tables, or structured JSON prompts so the AI response comes back in a predictable format that matches your workflow.
Pro Tips for Better Results
Get the most out of the ChatGPT Prompt Generator with these expert tips.
Ask for clarifying questions when inputs are missing
If you’re not sure what to provide, add a constraint like: “If anything is unclear, ask up to 5 clarifying questions before producing the final answer.” This reduces guesswork and improves accuracy.
Define “done” with acceptance criteria
Add pass/fail requirements (e.g., “Include 7 H2 sections, 5 FAQs, and 3 internal link suggestions”). Clear criteria improves consistency and saves editing time.
Specify the output format to avoid messy responses
When you request a table, checklist, or JSON structure, the AI response becomes easier to paste into docs, CMS fields, or content briefs with minimal cleanup.
Use placeholders for scalable content production
A prompt template with {{topic}}, {{audience}}, {{keywords}}, and {{tone}} lets you generate multiple pages or variants quickly while maintaining a consistent structure and voice.
Add “avoid” rules to prevent fluff and hallucinations
Include constraints like “avoid clichés,” “don’t invent statistics,” and “don’t mention being an AI.” This keeps outputs tighter, more credible, and more publishable.
Who Is This For?
Trusted by millions of students, writers, and professionals worldwide.
How to Write Better ChatGPT Prompts (Without Overthinking It)
Most “bad” AI outputs come from one thing. A fuzzy prompt.
If your input is something like “write a blog post about X” the model has to guess the audience, the angle, the depth, the format, what to avoid, and what success even looks like. So you get generic results, repeated points, and random filler that looks fine at first glance but falls apart the second you try to publish it.
A solid prompt fixes that. Not by being long for no reason, but by being specific in the right places.
The Simple Prompt Formula That Works for Almost Anything
When you generate a prompt with this tool, it’s basically packaging the same core components that prompt engineers use every day.
1) Role
Tell the AI who it is supposed to be.
Examples:
- “You are an SEO content strategist.”
- “You are a conversion copywriter for SaaS landing pages.”
- “You are a research analyst summarizing a report for executives.”
Why it matters: role narrows the model’s style, priorities, and default assumptions.
2) Goal (the actual job)
This is the one field you should never skip.
Good:
- “Create an SEO outline targeting the keyword cluster around internal linking for SaaS.”
- “Write 10 ad headline variations for a Google Search campaign promoting X.”
- “Summarize this document and extract risks, next steps, and open questions.”
Not great:
- “Help me with SEO.”
- “Write copy.”
3) Context (inputs and background)
Context is where you stop the model from guessing.
Include things like:
- audience and reading level
- product details and positioning
- what you already have (notes, links, draft copy)
- examples of tone or competitor pages you like
- what you do not want (too salesy, too technical, too casual)
Even two sentences of context can change everything.
4) Constraints (rules and boundaries)
Constraints are the “guardrails” that keep responses usable.
A few that consistently improve quality:
- length limits
- required sections (FAQs, examples, steps)
- “avoid fluff”
- “do not invent stats”
- “use plain language”
- “ask clarifying questions if anything is missing”
If you run SEO prompts, constraints are also where you can require headings, internal link ideas, or schema friendly structure.
5) Output format (so you can copy paste it cleanly)
This is underrated. If you do not specify format, you usually get a blob of text.
Useful formats:
- bullet points for outlines and idea lists
- step by step for processes
- tables for comparisons and checklists
- JSON when you want structured output you can reuse elsewhere
Prompt Templates Beat One Off Prompts (Here’s Why)
A reusable prompt with placeholders is basically a system you can run again and again.
Instead of rewriting prompts from scratch, you swap variables like:
{{topic}}{{audience}}{{primary_keyword}}{{tone}}{{constraints}}
This is especially helpful for SEO and marketing teams because consistency matters. Same structure, same quality bar, less time fixing formatting and missing sections.
Practical Examples You Can Generate With This Tool
Here are a few prompt types that tend to perform well.
SEO content brief prompt
Use this when you want a writer or AI to produce something that actually aligns with intent.
- target keyword and supporting keywords
- suggested H2 and H3 structure
- internal link opportunities
- FAQs (People Also Ask style)
- do’s and don’ts for E-E-A-T
Marketing copy prompt
Use this when you want variants for testing.
- define persona, pain points, objections
- offer and positioning
- CTA style
- output multiple angles, not just one
Research and summarization prompt
Use this when accuracy matters more than “sounding smart.”
- request a structured summary
- extract key claims and supporting evidence
- ask for unknowns and what data is missing
- cite sources when you provide them
Coding help prompt
Best results usually come from including:
- environment details
- reproduction steps
- expected vs actual behavior
- constraints and edge cases
- request tests
Common Mistakes That Make Prompts Underperform
A few patterns to watch for, because they are sneaky.
-
Asking for too much in one prompt without structure
You can still ask for multiple deliverables, just list them clearly. -
Not defining the audience
“Write an article” for who, exactly. -
No “avoid” rules
If you hate fluff, clichés, invented stats, or AI disclaimers, say so. -
No acceptance criteria
“Make it good” is not a criterion. “Include 5 FAQs and 3 internal link ideas” is.
Want Better Results Across SEO, Content, and Marketing?
A good prompt is part instructions, part checklist. Once you get used to that, the output quality jumps and your editing time drops.
If you’re building a repeatable workflow for content and optimization, you can do a lot with tools like this and a simple stack around it. Also worth exploring the rest of the tools on SEO Software if you want to move from one off generations to something more process driven.
Frequently Asked Questions
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