Writing Prompts
AI prompts for blog posts, essays, emails, stories and all types of writing — 25 ready-to-use prompts, copy with one click.
How Structured AI Prompts Are Changing Content Creation in 2026
The most effective writers in 2026 are not those ignoring AI, nor those letting AI write everything for them — they are those who use AI as a thinking partner, structural aid, and first-draft accelerator while bringing their own voice, expertise, and editorial judgement to the final output. The difference between AI-assisted content that reads as generic and content that reads as genuinely authored comes entirely down to prompt quality and editorial input.
These 25 prompts cover the full range of content types: blog posts, email sequences, press releases, YouTube scripts, case studies, LinkedIn articles, and long-form white papers. Each prompt is pre-filled with a specific Indian content context — a Bengaluru SaaS startup product launch blog post, a fintech company newsletter, a Hyderabad tech company press release — so you can run them immediately and see realistic output.
The core principle: always give AI your actual point of view, your target audience, and your specific angle before running any writing prompt. The more editorial direction you provide, the more useful the output becomes as a first draft you then shape into your own voice.
How to Use These Prompts Effectively
Define your audience and angle first
Spend 2 minutes noting who you are writing for and what you want them to think or feel. Feed these notes into the prompt.
Use ChatGPT for long-form, Gemini for SEO
ChatGPT maintains voice consistency better over long pieces. Gemini understands search intent better for keyword-focused content.
Copy and customise the prompt
Replace the example brand/topic with your actual subject. The more specific your input, the more usable the output.
Edit in your own voice before publishing
Rewrite 30% in your own words. Add personal examples and your genuine opinion — the parts AI cannot write for you.
💡 Pro Tips
- Use ChatGPT for long-form, Gemini for SEO content. ChatGPT produces more coherent long-form writing with consistent voice. Gemini is stronger for SEO-focused content where search intent and keyword integration matter.
- Always provide your actual angle, not just a topic. "Write a blog post about AI productivity" gives generic output. "Write a contrarian piece arguing morning routines are overrated, for Bengaluru startup founders who work 10pm-2am" gives something usable.
- Rewrite 30% of AI output in your own voice. Add personal anecdotes, specific examples, and your genuine opinion. These are the elements AI cannot generate authentically.
- Chain writing prompts for campaigns. Use the Blog Post Generator, then Social Media Caption Generator, then Email Subject Line Creator — all for the same piece. Consistent cross-channel messaging without starting each from scratch.
Curated by Prabhu Kumar Dasari
Senior XR Developer · AI Architect · 13+ years experience · Writing content for AI, XR, and technology audiences since 2018
H1: Your Finance Team Spends 11 Hours a Week on Expense Reports. We Just Fixed That.
Opening paragraph:
Every finance team we have spoken to in the last year describes the same monthly ritual: three days before close, a WhatsApp group explodes with attachment requests, accounting chases missing receipts for transactions six weeks old, and somewhere in Bengaluru a CFO is manually reconciling a hotel bill from a Chennai conference against a credit card statement that arrived in a different format than the bank statement. This is not a process problem. It is a technology problem that nobody has solved for Indian mid-market companies — until now.
H2: What the Data Shows
We analysed 4,200 expense reports across 38 Indian companies in our beta. The average finance team member spends 2.3 hours per week just on receipt collection and data entry. For a 5-person finance team, that is 11 hours of productive capacity consumed every single week by tasks that should take minutes.
ChatGPT note: "I used 'you' framing throughout for direct conversation with the finance manager reader. The WhatsApp/receipt hook is specific to Indian finance teams who live this scenario. Add a real customer quote from your beta users before the CTA."
Headline: How a 400-Person Pune Manufacturer Reduced Employee Attrition by 23% in 8 Months
The Challenge:
Kalyani Precision Components, a Pune-based auto components manufacturer supplying Tata Motors and Mahindra, faced 31% annual attrition — nearly double the manufacturing sector average of 16-18%. The cost was quantifiable: ₹2.2 lakh average replacement cost per employee. With 400 employees and 31% attrition, the company was spending approximately ₹2.7 crore annually just replacing staff who left.
Results:
Attrition: 31% → 24% (8 months) → 23% reduction achieved
Cost saving: ₹62L in Year 1 on reduced recruitment and onboarding
ROI: 4.8x on annual software subscription cost
ChatGPT note: "I led with the rupee cost because Indian B2B buyers respond more strongly to quantified loss than to aspirational outcomes. The ₹2.7 crore/year statistic makes the software cost feel trivial by comparison."
Title: Indian Fintech's Biggest Mistake Is Building for an American User
Opening:
I have sat in enough product reviews in the last four years to notice a pattern that concerns me. An Indian fintech product manager presents a new feature. The benchmark is always the same: "Robinhood does it this way" or "Chime has this flow" or "Revolut's UX tested well in Europe."
We are building for Raj in Raipur using design patterns validated on Ryan in San Francisco. These are not the same person. They do not have the same phone, the same data plan, the same financial literacy, the same relationship with credit, or the same trust architecture around digital money.
Gemini note on format: "LinkedIn articles perform best with short paragraphs (2-3 sentences maximum) and a controversial opening that generates early comments. I formatted this for mobile reading where 70% of LinkedIn India traffic originates. The Raj/Ryan contrast is designed to be screenshot-worthy for re-sharing."
Hook (0:00-0:45)
"Every financial advisor in India will tell you the same thing: start a SIP, keep it for 20 years, retire comfortably. And they are technically right. But here is what they will not tell you: the standard SIP advice optimises for the wrong thing. It optimises for ending up with the most money at age 60. But if you are 28 and working in tech in Bengaluru — the financial decisions that will actually change your life are not about what happens at 60. They are about what happens in the next 5 years."
B-Roll suggestions by ChatGPT:
• 0:00 — Screen recording of SIP calculator, cut to your face
• 2:30 — Animated chart showing two investment paths diverging
• 5:15 — Cut to whiteboard or Notion screen for framework section
ChatGPT note: "The contrarian hook drives high click-through. Suggested thumbnail text: 'Your SIP advisor is wrong' — creates curiosity without being clickbait because you substantiate the claim in the video."