Independently researched from published sources. Last researched: April 2026. Results vary: this article teaches AI skills, not employment outcomes. See Terms and Privacy.
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Most marketing assistants already use ChatGPT. The difference between a useless response and a genuinely useful one is almost always the prompt. Vague input gets vague output. Structured input, with the right constraints, gets something you can actually send to your manager or post to a channel.
The prompts below are built for the work marketing assistants do every week: drafting social posts, writing newsletters, outlining blog content, repurposing assets, reporting on campaign performance, and planning content calendars. Each prompt includes specific structure, word counts, and formatting instructions so the output lands close to final on the first try.
Pick one, paste it into ChatGPT or any other AI assistant, fill in the bracketed placeholders with your actual details, and run it. You should have a usable first draft within a few minutes.
Writing the same announcement five different ways for five different platforms is one of those tasks that can eat an entire afternoon. This prompt handles it in one pass because it specifies platform, word count, tone, and format constraints for each output. That structure is what prevents the generic, could-be-anywhere copy you get when you just ask for "a social media post."
How to use it: Replace [PASTE YOUR CONTENT HERE] with your announcement or topic, fill in your brand voice and target audience, then paste the whole prompt. You get LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook drafts ready for light editing.
Starting a blog post from a blank page is slow. This prompt solves that by generating title options, section headers framed as searchable questions, and bullet points for each section, all anchored to a target keyword. It also explicitly tells the AI to skip the "In today's fast-paced world" opening, which saves you an editing pass.
How to use it: Fill in your topic, target keyword, audience, and tone. The output gives you a full outline with an intro draft you can build on, plus section-by-section guidance for a 1,500 to 2,000 word post.
Newsletters have a specific shape that generic AI output misses: subject line options, preview text, a hook that is not "Hi, hope you're doing well," scannable formatting, and a tight word count. This prompt encodes all of that, including three different subject line angles and a hard cap of 400 words. The result reads like a real newsletter, not a blog post stuffed into an email.
How to use it: Fill in your company name, frequency, topic, key points, audience, and tone. You get three subject line options, preview text, and a complete draft structured for scanning.
Finding these useful? The full guide has 20 of them, plus tool reviews and a 30-day plan. Get it for $29.
You published a blog post. Now your manager wants a LinkedIn post, a tweet thread, an Instagram caption, a newsletter teaser, quote graphics, and a short video script from the same material. This prompt extracts a different angle for each format instead of just summarizing the article eight times. Each output is designed to stand alone, which is what makes repurposed content actually work.
How to use it: Paste your full blog post or its key sections into the prompt. You get eight distinct assets formatted for their respective platforms, ready to schedule.
Turning raw campaign metrics into a brief your manager will actually read is a skill most marketing assistants learn by trial and error. This prompt forces the output into a tight format: three-sentence executive summary, top wins, underperformers with diagnosis, and specific next-month recommendations. The 250-word cap means it stays concise enough to skim.
How to use it: Paste your campaign metrics (impressions, clicks, CTR, conversions, spend, revenue, ROAS) into the bracketed section. Add previous-period data if you have it for a comparison. The output is formatted as bullet points under headers, ready to drop into an email or a slide.
Building a content calendar from scratch each month means juggling platforms, themes, formats, and posting frequency across weeks. This prompt handles all of that in one shot, organized as a table with date, platform, content type, topic, and notes. It also flags which posts can be repurposed from each other, which cuts your actual production work.
How to use it: Fill in your industry, audience, content pillars, posting frequency, and any upcoming events or launches. The output is a table-formatted calendar covering the full month, broken down by day and platform.
The full Marketing Assistant guide goes much further: 20 copy-paste prompts, honest reviews of 15 tools with current prices, a dos and don'ts chapter, and a 30-day plan to put it all into practice.
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