Every prompt is tied to a specific outcome and a specific tool. Copy, customize the bracketed variables, and deploy. No generic prompts. No philosophy. Just what works.
You are a professional phone receptionist for [BUSINESS NAME], a [BUSINESS TYPE] serving [SERVICE AREA]. When a caller asks about [SERVICE], ask these three qualification questions in a natural, conversational tone: 1) What is the specific issue or need you are calling about? 2) What is your timeline for getting this resolved? 3) What is the best way to reach you to confirm the appointment? After collecting this information, offer to book an appointment for [AVAILABLE TIMES]. If the caller is not ready to book, offer to send a follow-up text with your contact information.
Replace [BUSINESS NAME], [BUSINESS TYPE], [SERVICE AREA], [SERVICE], and [AVAILABLE TIMES] with your specific details before deploying. Generic setups produce generic interactions.
You are a lead qualification assistant for [BUSINESS NAME]. When a visitor arrives on the website, greet them with: "Hi, I'm here to help you find the right solution. What brings you to [BUSINESS NAME] today?" Based on their response, ask follow-up questions to determine: 1) Their specific need or problem, 2) Their timeline (urgent vs. planning ahead), 3) Their budget range (if applicable), 4) Their contact information. If they qualify based on [QUALIFICATION CRITERIA], offer to connect them with the team or book a consultation. If they do not qualify, provide helpful resources and thank them for visiting.
Define your qualification criteria clearly before deploying. What makes a lead qualified vs. unqualified for your business? The chatbot can only filter based on criteria you define.
Analyze the user behavior data for [PAGE URL] and identify the top 3 conversion bottlenecks. For each bottleneck, provide: 1) The specific behavior pattern indicating the problem (e.g., scroll depth, click heatmap, exit rate), 2) The likely cause of the drop-off, 3) A specific, testable hypothesis for fixing it, 4) The expected impact on conversion rate if the hypothesis is correct. Prioritize bottlenecks by potential revenue impact, not by ease of fix.
Requires minimum 1,000 monthly visitors to generate statistically meaningful data. Below that threshold, patterns are noise. Use this prompt after Soogle has collected at least 2 weeks of behavioral data.
Write a 5-email nurture sequence for [BUSINESS NAME] targeting [AUDIENCE DESCRIPTION] who have expressed interest in [PRODUCT/SERVICE] but have not yet purchased or booked. Email 1 (Day 1): Welcome and set expectations. Remind them what they signed up for and what they will receive. Email 2 (Day 3): Address the #1 objection: [PRIMARY OBJECTION]. Use a real customer story or specific data point. Email 3 (Day 7): Provide a quick win or valuable insight related to [TOPIC]. Build trust without selling. Email 4 (Day 10): Present the offer with a clear, specific CTA. Include social proof (testimonial or result). Email 5 (Day 14): Final follow-up. Create urgency without being pushy. Offer an alternative if they are not ready to buy. Each email should be under 200 words, have a single CTA, and use a conversational tone.
Replace all bracketed variables with your specific details. The more specific your audience description and primary objection, the higher the conversion rate of the sequence. Generic sequences produce generic results.
Write a cold outreach email to [PROSPECT NAME] at [COMPANY NAME], a [COMPANY DESCRIPTION]. The email should: 1) Open with a specific, relevant observation about their business (not a generic compliment), 2) Identify a specific problem they likely have based on [TRIGGER EVENT OR SIGNAL], 3) State clearly what [YOUR COMPANY] does and the specific result it produces, 4) Include one specific proof point (customer name, result, or metric), 5) End with a single, low-friction CTA (a question, not a meeting request). Keep the email under 150 words. Do not use the word "synergy," "leverage," or "reach out." Do not start with "I hope this email finds you well."
The trigger event or signal is the most important variable. What specific thing happened that makes this prospect relevant right now? A job change, funding round, new product launch, or industry event all work. Generic outreach without a trigger produces generic reply rates.
Write the copy for a landing page offering [LEAD MAGNET NAME] to [TARGET AUDIENCE]. The page should include: Headline: A specific, outcome-focused headline that states what the visitor will get and why it matters to them. Subheadline: One sentence that clarifies who this is for and what problem it solves. 3 bullet points: Specific outcomes the visitor will achieve after consuming the lead magnet (not features, outcomes). Social proof: One testimonial or result from someone who has used this information. CTA button: Action-oriented text that reinforces the value (not "Download" or "Submit"). Privacy note: One sentence that reduces friction around giving their email. Keep the total copy under 300 words. No jargon. No vague promises.
The lead magnet must deliver genuine value to convert at a meaningful rate. A checklist or template that solves a specific, painful problem converts at 5-15%. A generic "free guide" converts at 1-2%. Fix the offer before fixing the copy.
Write a LinkedIn connection request message and a 3-message DM sequence for [YOUR NAME] at [YOUR COMPANY] targeting [PROSPECT TITLE] at [COMPANY TYPE]. Connection request (under 300 characters): Reference a specific, relevant reason for connecting. Do not pitch. Message 1 (after connection accepted): Thank them for connecting. Ask one specific, relevant question about their current situation related to [PAIN POINT]. Do not pitch. Message 2 (if they respond): Acknowledge their answer. Share one specific insight or result relevant to their situation. Ask if they would be open to a brief conversation. Message 3 (if no response to Message 1, sent 5 days later): One sentence follow-up. Reference a relevant piece of content or industry event. Ask the same question differently.
LinkedIn has strict limits on connection requests and messages. Never exceed 20-30 connection requests per day on a new account. Warm up accounts gradually. Generic DMs at scale get accounts flagged. Personalization at the message level is required.
Write a chatbot conversation script for [BUSINESS NAME] that captures and qualifies leads from website visitors. The script should follow this structure: Opening message: Friendly greeting that immediately offers value, not just "How can I help?" Qualification branch 1: Ask about their primary need or problem. Qualification branch 2: Ask about their timeline. Qualification branch 3: Ask about their budget range (if applicable). Lead capture: Ask for name and email (or phone if phone-first business). Routing: If qualified, offer to book a call or send more information. If not qualified, provide a helpful resource and thank them. Each message should be under 50 words. Use plain language. No corporate speak. Include 2-3 quick reply buttons for each question to reduce friction.
Quick reply buttons dramatically increase completion rates compared to open-ended text fields. Always offer a "Not sure yet" or "Just browsing" option so visitors do not feel trapped. Chatbots that feel like interrogations produce high abandonment rates.
Each prompt above is tied to a specific tool. These pages tell you which tool is best for your specific use case.
A prompt without the right tool produces nothing. A tool without the right prompt produces generic results. Match both to your specific channel and qualification criteria.