Every prompt is tied to a specific outcome and a specific tool: Soogle, BotPenguin, Hoppy Copy, and Rosie. Copy, customize the bracketed variables, and deploy. No generic prompts. No philosophy. Just what converts.
Analyze the behavioral data for [PAGE URL] and identify the top 3 reasons visitors are not converting. For each reason, provide: 1) The specific behavioral signal (scroll depth, click pattern, exit point, heatmap data), 2) The most likely cause of the drop-off, 3) A specific, testable fix with a clear hypothesis, 4) The expected conversion lift if the fix works. Rank by revenue impact, not ease of implementation. Do not recommend adding more content, more CTAs, or redesigning the page unless the data specifically supports it.
Requires minimum 1,000 monthly visitors and at least 2 weeks of behavioral data before patterns are statistically meaningful. Running this prompt on low-traffic pages produces noise, not insight.
Write 10 headline variations for a sales page selling [PRODUCT/SERVICE] to [TARGET AUDIENCE]. Each headline must: 1) State a specific, measurable outcome (not a feature), 2) Address the primary objection or fear of [TARGET AUDIENCE], 3) Be under 12 words, 4) Avoid the words "revolutionary," "game-changing," "innovative," "best-in-class," and "world-class." For each headline, write one sentence explaining why it works and which audience segment it is most likely to convert. Rank the 10 headlines from most likely to convert to least likely, with a brief rationale for the ranking.
The most important variable is the specific, measurable outcome. "Lose 10 pounds in 30 days" converts better than "Transform your body." "Book 3 more jobs per week" converts better than "Grow your business." Specificity is the mechanism.
Write a chatbot conversation script for [BUSINESS NAME] that moves website visitors from interest to purchase or booking. The script should follow this structure: Opening (when visitor lands on pricing or product page): "You are looking at [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. What is the one thing you need to know before you decide?" Objection handling branch: Based on their response, address the most common objections: [OBJECTION 1], [OBJECTION 2], [OBJECTION 3]. Social proof delivery: After addressing the objection, share one specific customer result: "[CUSTOMER TYPE] used [PRODUCT/SERVICE] and got [SPECIFIC RESULT] in [TIMEFRAME]." Closing CTA: "Based on what you have told me, [PRODUCT/SERVICE] is a strong fit. Would you like to [BOOK A CALL / START A TRIAL / GET A QUOTE]?" Each message under 60 words. Include quick reply buttons for every question.
The three objections you list are the most important variable. If you do not know your top three objections, ask your last 10 customers what almost stopped them from buying. Deploy those answers, not assumptions.
Write a 4-email sales sequence for [BUSINESS NAME] targeting warm leads who have visited the pricing page or requested more information but have not yet purchased. Email 1 (Day 1, sent immediately): Acknowledge their interest. Ask one specific question: "What is the one thing you need to see before you decide?" Email 2 (Day 2): Address the most common answer to that question with a specific proof point (case study, testimonial, or data). Include a clear CTA to book a call or start a trial. Email 3 (Day 4): Share a specific customer result relevant to their situation. Make the CTA time-sensitive without being manipulative. Email 4 (Day 7): Final email. Acknowledge that they may not be ready. Offer an alternative (free resource, lower-commitment option). Keep the door open. Each email under 150 words. One CTA per email. No attachments.
The question in Email 1 is the most important element of this sequence. It tells you exactly what objection is blocking the sale. If you skip it and go straight to pitching, you are guessing. The answer to that question should inform every subsequent email.
You are a sales assistant for [BUSINESS NAME], a [BUSINESS TYPE] serving [SERVICE AREA]. When a caller asks about [PRODUCT/SERVICE], follow this script: Step 1 - Qualify: Ask "What is the main thing you are trying to accomplish with [PRODUCT/SERVICE]?" Step 2 - Confirm fit: Based on their answer, confirm that [BUSINESS NAME] can deliver that specific outcome: "We work with [CUSTOMER TYPE] who need [OUTCOME]. That sounds like exactly what you are describing." Step 3 - Handle the price question: If they ask about price, say "The investment depends on [VARIABLE]. To give you an accurate number, I need to ask two quick questions." Then ask [QUESTION 1] and [QUESTION 2]. Step 4 - Book: "Based on what you have told me, the next step is a [15-minute call / site visit / consultation] with [TEAM MEMBER]. I have [TIME SLOT 1] and [TIME SLOT 2] available. Which works better for you?"
The price handling script is the highest-leverage part of this prompt. Most businesses lose inbound leads at the price question because they either give a number too early (before establishing value) or refuse to answer (which kills trust). This script delays the number until after two qualifying questions, which is the correct sequence.
Write a product description for [PRODUCT NAME] targeting [TARGET CUSTOMER]. The description must: 1) Open with the specific outcome the customer gets, not the product features, 2) List 3 features with the benefit of each feature in plain language (Feature: [X]. This means: [Y for the customer].), 3) Address the primary objection: "[OBJECTION]" with a specific, factual response, 4) Include one social proof element (testimonial, rating, or result), 5) End with a single, clear CTA. Keep the total description under 250 words. No jargon. No superlatives. No claims you cannot prove.
The feature-benefit translation is where most product descriptions fail. "Made with premium materials" is a feature. "Lasts 3x longer than standard alternatives, which means you replace it once instead of three times" is a benefit. Every feature needs a "this means" translation.
Write a 3-message cart abandonment recovery sequence for [BUSINESS NAME] targeting customers who added [PRODUCT/SERVICE] to their cart but did not complete the purchase. Message 1 (1 hour after abandonment, email): Subject line that references the specific product they left. Body: Acknowledge they left something behind. Ask one question: "Was there something that stopped you?" Include a direct link back to their cart. No discount yet. Message 2 (24 hours after abandonment, email): Subject line that creates mild urgency without being manipulative. Body: Address the most common abandonment reason for [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. Include one customer testimonial. Offer a small incentive if appropriate ([INCENTIVE]). Message 3 (72 hours after abandonment, email or SMS): Final message. Make it short. Acknowledge this is the last message. Offer the best available option. Each message under 100 words.
The question in Message 1 is the most important element. Most businesses skip straight to the discount. The question tells you why people are abandoning, which is more valuable than recovering one cart. If 80% of abandoners say "shipping cost," fix the shipping cost. That is worth more than any recovery sequence.
Audit the sales conversion process for [BUSINESS NAME] and identify the top 3 points where potential customers are dropping out of the funnel. For each drop-off point, provide: 1) The specific stage where the drop-off occurs (awareness, consideration, decision, purchase), 2) The most likely reason for the drop-off based on [AVAILABLE DATA], 3) A specific, testable fix with a clear success metric, 4) The estimated revenue impact if the fix works, assuming [CURRENT MONTHLY REVENUE] and [CURRENT CONVERSION RATE]. Prioritize by revenue impact. Do not recommend adding more traffic until the conversion rate at each stage is above [BENCHMARK RATE].
The benchmark rate variable is critical. Without a benchmark, you cannot know if your conversion rate is a problem or normal for your industry. B2B SaaS: 2-5% trial-to-paid. E-commerce: 1-3% visitor-to-purchase. Service businesses: 20-40% lead-to-booked. Use industry benchmarks, not aspirational targets.
Each prompt above is tied to a specific tool. These pages tell you which tool is best for your specific use case.
Not sure which tool to use for sales conversion? These head-to-head comparisons give you the direct answer.
A prompt without the right tool produces nothing. A tool without the right prompt produces generic results. Diagnose the bottleneck first, then deploy the right tool with the right prompt.