
Welcome to Your Tech Moments!
Quick question: How much time do you spend staring at a blank screen, wondering what to write for your marketing? If your answer is "too much," you're not alone. Most people struggle with this. Not because they lack ideas. But because they don't know how to get those ideas out of their head and onto the page. That's where AI comes in. But not the way most people use it.
Today I'll show you 8 prompts that do the heavy lifting for you. No guesswork. No frustration. Just results.
Let’s brake it down!
8 Claude Prompts for Marketing Beginners
Why You Should Use Them
Here's the truth about marketing: most people overcomplicate it. They spend hours writing captions that nobody reads. They guess what their audience wants. They post randomly and hope something sticks. Sound familiar? The problem isn't effort. It's direction. You're working hard, but you're working blind. These 8 prompts fix that. They help you understand your audience, create content that resonates, and plan your posts like a pro. No marketing degree needed. No expensive tools required.
Just copy the prompt, fill in the blanks, and let AI do the heavy lifting.
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Prompts
1. Brand Voice Creator
Analyze my brand [brand name/URL] and create a brand voice guide. Define tonality, 5 words we use, 5 we avoid, and give 3 example sentences for social media posts.
2. Content Idea Generator
Give me 10 content ideas for [platform] about [your topic]. Target audience: [description]. Focus on value, not selling. Sort by effort (low to high).
3. Hook Writer
Write 5 hooks for a post about [topic]. Goal: stop the scroll. Use: questions, controversial statements, numbers, or storytelling openers. Max 10 words per hook.
4. Caption Transformer
Here's my draft post: [paste text]. Turn it into 3 versions: (1) shorter and punchier, (2) with storytelling, (3) with a clear call-to-action for [desired action].
5. Audience Pain Finder
My target audience is [description]. List their 5 biggest frustrations with [topic/industry]. Explain why each problem exists and how I can address it in content.
6. Email Subject Tester
Rate these subject lines for my newsletter: [paste subject lines]. Score each 1-10 for open rate potential. Explain why and deliver an improved version.
7. Hashtag Strategist
Find 15 hashtags for [topic] on [platform]. Split into: 5 large (>500k), 5 medium (50-500k), 5 small (<50k) posts. Explain the strategy in one sentence.
8. Weekly Post Planner
Create a 7-day content plan for [platform]. Topic: [your topic]. Per day: post type, theme, best posting time for [timezone/region]. Format as table.
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Why Most Marketing Fails (And How to Fix It)
Let's talk about something nobody tells you: marketing isn't about being creative. It's about being clear.
Most people fail at marketing because they focus on the wrong things. They worry about perfect graphics, clever wordplay, and posting at the "right" time. But none of that matters if you don't understand one simple thing: what does your audience actually want?
This is where most beginners get stuck. They create content based on what THEY find interesting. Not what their audience needs. Big difference.
The First Rule: Know Their Pain
Every successful piece of marketing solves a problem. Your audience scrolls through hundreds of posts every day. They stop only when something speaks directly to them.
That's why the "Audience Pain Finder" prompt exists. It forces you to think about your audience first. What keeps them up at night? What frustrates them? What have they tried that didn't work?
Once you know their pain, everything else becomes easier. Your content has direction. Your message has purpose.
The Second Rule: Speak Their Language
Here's a mistake I see all the time: people write marketing copy that sounds like a robot wrote it. Formal. Stiff. Full of words nobody actually uses in real life.
Your audience doesn't want corporate speak. They want someone who gets them. Someone who talks like a friend, not a salesperson.
The "Brand Voice Creator" prompt helps you find that voice. It gives you specific words to use and words to avoid. It makes your content feel human.
The Third Rule: Hook Fast or Lose Them
You have about 2 seconds to grab attention. That's it. If your first line doesn't make someone stop scrolling, the rest of your post doesn't matter.
This is why hooks are so important. A good hook creates curiosity. It makes people think "wait, what?" and keep reading.
The "Hook Writer" prompt gives you five options every time. Not all of them will be perfect. But one or two will hit. That's all you need.
The Fourth Rule: Plan Beats Random
Posting randomly is like throwing darts in the dark. Sometimes you hit something. Mostly you don't.
A content plan changes everything. When you know what you're posting each day, you stop wasting time deciding. You just create.
The "Weekly Post Planner" prompt builds that structure for you. It considers your topic, your platform, and even your timezone. One prompt, seven days of content planned.
The Fifth Rule: Test and Improve
Marketing isn't a one-time thing. It's a process. You post something, see how it performs, and adjust.
That's why prompts like "Email Subject Tester" and "Caption Transformer" exist. They help you improve what you've already created. Better headlines. Stronger calls to action. More engaging stories.
Small improvements add up. A 10% better open rate this week. A 15% better click rate next week. Over time, these gains compound.
Start Simple, Build From There
You don't need to master all eight prompts today. Pick one. Try it. See what happens.
Marketing gets easier when you have the right tools. Now you do.
Conclusion
Marketing doesn't require a big budget or years of experience. It requires clarity, consistency, and the right tools.
These 8 prompts give you a head start. They help you understand your audience, create better content, and stop guessing what works.
But here's the thing: reading about prompts won't change anything. Using them will.
So pick one. Try it today. See what happens.
And if it works? Come back and try the next one.
You've got this.
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Adrian







