Example Inputs
What I Sell
Done-for-you email lifecycle setup
Audience
Shopify stores doing $30k to $250k per month
Objection
Worried setup takes too long before seeing ROI
Shape a clearer service or product offer with audience, promise, deliverables, pricing logic, and objections.
This prompt is useful when you have a good skill or product idea but the offer still feels fuzzy. It helps you clarify the audience, problem, promise, scope, and pricing logic so the final offer is easier to sell.
Copy-And-Paste Prompt
Works well in ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini. Replace any bracketed variables before you run it.
Variables to customize
Act as a business strategist who helps package and position offers. Your task is to turn my business idea or service into a clearer offer that is easier to explain, price, and sell. Use these inputs when available: - [What I Sell] - [Target Audience] - [Problem Solved] - [Current Pricing or Revenue Goal] - [Common Buyer Objections] Requirements: - Clarify the offer promise and boundaries. - Show what is included and what is not. - Address common objections or confusion points. - Make the positioning feel commercially realistic. Return the answer in this format: 1. Offer statement 2. Deliverables and scope 3. Pricing rationale 4. Objection handling points Tone and style: commercial and specific Ask me concise follow-up questions only if a missing detail would materially change the quality of the final answer.
What I Sell
Done-for-you email lifecycle setup
Audience
Shopify stores doing $30k to $250k per month
Objection
Worried setup takes too long before seeing ROI
Offer positioning: Build a revenue-ready email foundation for Shopify stores in 30 days by setting up the highest-impact lifecycle flows first, not a bloated automation maze.
This is a mock example only. Your result should change based on the variables, context, and constraints you provide.
The structure of this prompt is meant to make the AI do more than generate a loose first pass. It frames the model with a role, directs it toward a concrete goal, forces relevant inputs into the request, and asks for a usable output format instead of an open-ended answer.
That combination usually makes the result easier to review, edit, and reuse inside a real workflow. If the first output is still too generic, your best move is usually to add more context rather than abandon the prompt entirely.
These related calculators and guides add more depth when you want to connect this business prompt to real numbers, strategy, or supporting tools.
Browse more copy-and-paste prompts that fit the same workflow, adjacent use case, or decision context.
Pressure-test pricing options using positioning, value, buyer psychology, and business constraints.
Good For
Summarize competitors across positioning, pricing, strengths, weaknesses, and gaps worth testing.
Good For
Turn a rough business concept into a structured plan with audience, offer, channels, risks, and priorities.
Good For
Draft standard operating procedures that are easier for a team to follow and improve.
Good For
Straight answers to the questions readers usually have before using these prompts.
Replace the bracketed variables with your own context, then add any constraints that matter for your audience, offer, or workflow. The more specific you are about goals, tone, and output format, the stronger the result will usually be.
Yes. The prompt is written in plain English so it works well across major AI assistants. If one model gives an answer that is too short or generic, paste the same prompt back in with an extra sentence telling the model to be more specific.