Guide

Claude Prompts for Marketing: 25 Templates That Actually Work

📅 April 4, 2026 ⏱ 8 min read 🏷 Marketing & AI

Claude is especially strong for marketing tasks that require nuanced writing — understanding audience psychology, crafting persuasive copy, and maintaining brand voice across formats. These 25 Claude prompts for marketing are structured to give you real, usable output on the first try. Replace the placeholders and paste them directly into Claude.

Social Media

1. LinkedIn post from a key insight

Copy this prompt:
Write a LinkedIn post based on this insight: [YOUR INSIGHT OR FINDING]. Target audience: [AUDIENCE]. Tone: professional but conversational, not corporate. Format: hook in the first line (no "I" to start), 3-4 short paragraphs, end with a question to drive comments. Max 250 words.

2. Twitter/X thread from a blog post

Turn this blog post into a Twitter thread. Format: 8-10 tweets, each max 280 characters. Start with a strong hook tweet. Each tweet should stand alone but flow naturally to the next. End with a CTA tweet linking back to the full article. [PASTE BLOG POST OR SUMMARY]

3. Instagram caption with hashtags

Write 3 Instagram caption options for this image/post: [DESCRIBE CONTENT]. Brand: [BRAND NAME]. Tone: [FUN/INSPIRING/EDUCATIONAL]. Include 10 relevant hashtags at the end. Keep captions under 150 words each. Label them Option A, B, C.

Ad Copy

4. Google Ads headlines

Write 15 Google Ads headlines for this product/service: [DESCRIPTION]. Each headline must be max 30 characters. Focus on: benefits over features, urgency, and specificity. Include a mix of: problem-aware headlines, solution headlines, and social proof headlines.

5. Facebook/Meta ad copy

Write a Facebook ad for [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. Target audience: [DEMOGRAPHICS AND INTERESTS]. Objective: [AWARENESS/CLICKS/CONVERSIONS]. Format: - Primary text (3-4 sentences, hook + pain point + solution) - Headline (max 40 chars, benefit-focused) - Description (max 30 chars) - CTA button suggestion

6. A/B test variations

Take this ad headline: "[ORIGINAL HEADLINE]". Write 5 A/B test variations. Each should test a different angle: (1) curiosity, (2) fear of missing out, (3) social proof, (4) direct benefit, (5) question format. Keep each under 60 characters.

Email Marketing

7. Newsletter intro that gets read

Write the opening 100 words of a marketing newsletter. Topic this week: [TOPIC]. The goal is to hook the reader in the first sentence so they keep reading. Don't start with "In this issue" or "Welcome back." Use a surprising fact, bold statement, or micro-story as the opening.

8. Product launch email

Write a product launch email for [PRODUCT NAME]. Key benefit: [MAIN BENEFIT]. Target: existing customers. Tone: excited but not hypey. Structure: subject line + preview text + body (problem, solution, proof, CTA). Include 3 subject line options. Keep body under 200 words.

9. Re-engagement email for cold leads

Write a re-engagement email for leads who haven't opened our emails in 90 days. Product: [PRODUCT]. Don't be defensive or apologetic. Use a subject line that's honest about the situation (e.g., "Are we breaking up?"). Body: acknowledge the silence, share one new compelling reason to re-engage, soft CTA. Under 120 words.

Content Strategy

10. Content calendar for one month

Create a 4-week content calendar for [BRAND/PRODUCT] targeting [AUDIENCE]. Channels: [LIST CHANNELS]. For each week, suggest: 1 long-form piece (blog/video), 3 social posts per channel, and 1 email. Include topic ideas, content format, and goal (awareness/engagement/conversion) for each.

11. Blog post outline for SEO

Create an SEO-optimized blog post outline targeting the keyword "[TARGET KEYWORD]". Include: H1 title, meta description (155 chars), intro paragraph structure, 5-7 H2 sections with H3 sub-points, a FAQ section with 3 questions, and a conclusion with CTA. Focus on search intent: [INFORMATIONAL/COMMERCIAL/TRANSACTIONAL].
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Tip: Claude gives much better marketing output when you include your brand's tone of voice. Try adding: "Our brand voice is [adjective], [adjective], [adjective]. We avoid [X] and always [Y]." before any of these prompts.

Brand & Messaging

12. Unique value proposition

Help me craft a unique value proposition for [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. We help [TARGET CUSTOMER] who struggle with [PAIN POINT] to achieve [DESIRED OUTCOME] unlike [MAIN COMPETITORS] because [KEY DIFFERENTIATOR]. Write 3 versions: one for a homepage hero, one for a sales deck, one for a cold email.

13. Competitor messaging analysis

Analyze the messaging of these 3 competitors: [LIST COMPETITORS]. Based on the following positioning they use: [BRIEF DESCRIPTIONS]. Identify: (1) gaps in the market no one is owning, (2) overused phrases we should avoid, (3) a positioning angle we could own. Be specific and direct.

Conclusion

The best Claude prompts for marketing are specific — the more context you give Claude about your product, audience, and tone, the better the output. These templates give you the structure; your job is to fill in the brackets with real information about your business.

Save the ones you use most often to PromptChief so they're always one click away inside Claude or ChatGPT.

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