35 ChatGPT Prompts for Social Media That Go Viral (2026) | AI Prompts Pro

35 copy-paste ChatGPT prompts for social media: LinkedIn posts, Twitter/X threads, Instagram captions, Facebook posts, YouTube descriptions, and TikTok hooks. Platform-optimized and ready to use.

35 ChatGPT Prompts for Social Media That Actually Go Viral (2026)

AP
AI Prompts Pro Editorial Team
35
Ready-to-use prompts
6
Platforms covered
Avg. engagement lift

Creating social media content at scale is one of the biggest time sinks for marketers, founders, and creators. Most people spend 2–3 hours writing a week's worth of posts — when the right ChatGPT prompt can do it in minutes.

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But generic prompts produce generic content. Platform algorithms reward posts that feel native — the LinkedIn post that tells a professional story, the TikTok hook that stops the scroll in 1.5 seconds, the Instagram caption that converts followers into link clicks.

These 35 prompts are engineered for each platform's specific format, algorithm triggers, and audience behavior. Each includes what it produces and a pro tip to squeeze maximum reach from every post.

LinkedIn Posts — 6 ChatGPT Prompts

LinkedIn rewards authenticity, data-backed insights, and professional storytelling. The algorithm favors posts that generate comments over likes — so these prompts bake in conversation-starters and opinion stakes.

💼 LinkedIn

Prompt 1 — The Contrarian Take

📋 Prompt
Write a LinkedIn post that challenges the conventional wisdom that [common belief in your industry]. I'm a [your role] at [company type]. My counterargument is [your contrarian view]. Make it 150–200 words, start with a bold one-liner hook, include 3 specific data points or observations to back up the argument, and end with a polarizing question to drive comments. No hashtags in the body — add 3 relevant hashtags at the end.
✅ Produces: A thought-leadership post that challenges consensus, sparks debate, and positions you as a credible independent thinker in your niche.
💡 Pro Tip: Post between Tuesday–Thursday at 7–9am local time. The "contrarian" format consistently outperforms motivational posts by 4× in comment rate on LinkedIn — comments are the #1 reach signal.

Prompt 2 — The Personal Failure Story

📋 Prompt
Write a LinkedIn story post about a professional failure I experienced: [describe the failure briefly]. I eventually learned [the lesson]. Structure it as: hook line → what I thought would happen → what actually happened → the painful realization → the lesson I now apply → how readers can avoid the same mistake. Keep it under 220 words, first-person, conversational, no corporate jargon. End with "What's the most expensive lesson you've ever learned?" as the CTA.
✅ Produces: A vulnerability-driven story post that builds trust and generates high engagement — failure posts routinely earn 3–5× more comments than success posts on LinkedIn.
💡 Pro Tip: Never bury the failure. Your hook should name the failure immediately (e.g., "I lost $47,000 in 6 months."). Specificity in the number makes it undeniable and scroll-stopping.

Prompt 3 — The "What I Wish I Knew" List

📋 Prompt
Write a LinkedIn post titled "X things I wish I knew before [milestone/role/industry event]" for someone who is [your background]. The milestone is [e.g., starting a SaaS company, becoming a sales manager]. Write 7 punchy lessons, each 1–2 sentences max. Start each with a number and a bold insight (not obvious advice). Open with a personal hook line. Close with "Save this for when you need it." Format with line breaks between each lesson for readability. Add 3 hashtags at the end.
✅ Produces: A high-save list post. LinkedIn saves are a strong secondary engagement signal — "save-worthy" content like numbered lists and actionable tips gets pushed to followers of followers.
💡 Pro Tip: Edit out any lesson that sounds like generic LinkedIn advice ("work hard", "network more"). Each point must contain a specific insight someone could only have by doing the thing.

Prompt 4 — The Industry Trend Reaction

📋 Prompt
Write a LinkedIn post reacting to this trend or news in [your industry]: [paste the trend/news headline]. My perspective as a [your role] is [your hot take]. Keep it 150 words max. Structure: 1 sentence hook with the trend → 2–3 sentences of my take → what this means for [target audience] → what I'm doing differently as a result → question for the audience. Be direct and opinionated. Avoid wishy-washy language like "it depends" or "both sides have merit."
✅ Produces: A timely, algorithm-friendly post that rides trending conversations — LinkedIn's "trending" tag increases distribution by up to 2× according to creator reports.
💡 Pro Tip: Post trend reactions within 24–48 hours of the news breaking. Use LinkedIn's "add to article" to attach the source — posts with documents or links pinned in comments (not the post body) maintain better organic reach.

Prompt 5 — The Before/After Transformation

📋 Prompt
Write a LinkedIn post showing a transformation using the "Before → After → Bridge" format. Before: [describe the situation or struggle you or a client had]. After: [the result achieved]. Bridge: [the process/tool/method that made it happen]. Focus on the bridge — that's where the value is. 180 words max. Use line breaks generously. The post should make the reader feel seen (they're living the "before") and curious (they want the "bridge"). CTA: "DM me [keyword] if you want the full framework."
✅ Produces: A lead-generation LinkedIn post that combines storytelling with soft selling — ideal for coaches, consultants, and SaaS founders building a personal brand pipeline.
💡 Pro Tip: DM-based CTAs generate 10–20 DMs per post for high-engagement accounts. Pair this with LinkedIn Helper's auto-DM feature to follow up instantly when someone sends the keyword.

Prompt 6 — The Carousel Script (Document Post)

📋 Prompt
Write a LinkedIn document/carousel script on [topic]. It should have 8 slides:
Slide 1: Bold hook headline (the promise)
Slides 2–7: One insight per slide, each with a headline and 2–3 bullet points max
Slide 8: CTA slide — follow me + save this post
Topic: [your topic]. Target audience: [who they are]. Keep each slide under 40 words total. Make the headlines scannable and the bullets punchy. The overall arc should go from "problem" → "solution" → "implementation."
✅ Produces: A structured carousel script you can drop into Canva or Beautiful.ai. Document posts on LinkedIn receive 3× more impressions than standard text posts on average.
💡 Pro Tip: The first slide is your thumbnail — it must work as a standalone image. Front-load the most compelling hook possible; 80% of carousel reach is determined by slide 1 click-through.

Twitter / X Threads — 6 ChatGPT Prompts

X rewards threads, hot takes, and information density. The algorithm gives extra distribution to threads that get reshared in the first 30 minutes. These prompts are structured for max retention across the full thread.

🐦 Twitter / X

Prompt 7 — The "Most People Don't Know" Thread

📋 Prompt
Write a Twitter/X thread about [topic] using the format: "Most people don't know [surprising fact about topic]. Here's what [X years] in [your field] taught me: 🧵" Then write 8 tweets, each revealing one non-obvious insight. Tweet 1 is the hook. Tweets 2–8 are the insights. Final tweet is the summary + follow CTA. Each tweet max 280 characters. Number them 1/ through 9/. Make every tweet standalone-interesting so resharing any single one makes sense. Topic: [your topic].
✅ Produces: A high-retention thread with built-in reshare potential — numbered threads with surprising openers see 2–4× higher completion rates than rant-style threads.
💡 Pro Tip: Tweet 2 is your "second hook" — many users click "Show thread" only after reading tweet 2. Make it the second-most surprising fact in the list, not a preamble.

Prompt 8 — The Tactical Breakdown Thread

📋 Prompt
Write a Twitter/X thread breaking down exactly how [person/company] achieved [result]. Research angle: [what you know about this case]. Structure: Tweet 1 — the impressive result (hook). Tweets 2–4 — the 3 strategies they used (one per tweet). Tweets 5–7 — how to apply each strategy as an ordinary person/business. Tweet 8 — the key takeaway in one line. Tweet 9 — follow + bookmark CTA. Each tweet must be under 280 chars and end with a hook to the next tweet. No fluff, no filler.
✅ Produces: An analytical breakdown thread. "How X did Y" threads are among the most bookmarked content on X — bookmarks are X's strongest engagement signal and directly boost distribution.
💡 Pro Tip: Always link to a credible source in tweet 3 or 4. Citing sources increases perceived credibility and makes power users far more likely to repost to their own audiences.

Prompt 9 — The Hot Take Thread

📋 Prompt
Write a Twitter/X hot take thread. My hot take: [state your controversial opinion]. Write 7 tweets: Tweet 1 — state the hot take boldly (no hedging). Tweet 2 — the conventional wisdom I'm challenging. Tweets 3–5 — 3 pieces of evidence supporting my take. Tweet 6 — steelman the opposing view briefly, then dismantle it in 1–2 sentences. Tweet 7 — the conclusion and why this matters for [target audience]. Encourage replies that disagree. Max 280 chars each.
✅ Produces: A debate-driving thread. Controversial threads (with substance) generate 5–8× more quote tweets than neutral threads — and quote tweets are the highest-reach action on the platform.
💡 Pro Tip: The steelman in tweet 6 is crucial — it shows intellectual honesty, prevents pile-on dismissal, and actually increases the persuasiveness of your conclusion.

Prompt 10 — The "I Tested This" Thread

📋 Prompt
Write a Twitter/X thread about an experiment I ran: [describe what you tested, e.g., "I tested 5 cold email subject lines on 500 prospects"]. Structure: Tweet 1 — hook: what I tested and the surprising result. Tweet 2 — why I ran the test. Tweets 3–6 — the specific variations tested and the results (include numbers). Tweet 7 — what the data means / the insight. Tweet 8 — what I'm changing based on results. Tweet 9 — "Repost if you found this useful." Keep it data-dense. No vague claims.
✅ Produces: An original-data thread. First-party data threads get massive reshare from journalists, newsletter writers, and industry accounts looking for fresh statistics.
💡 Pro Tip: Put the most surprising number in tweet 1 (hook tweet). Numbers with decimals or unexpected specificity (e.g., "47.3% open rate") feel more credible than round numbers.

Prompt 11 — The Mini-Course Thread

📋 Prompt
Write a Twitter/X thread that teaches [skill] in 10 tweets. Frame it as a free mini-course: "I'm going to teach you [skill] in 10 tweets. Bookmark this. 🧵" Then: Tweet 1 — hook + promise. Tweets 2–9 — one lesson each (concept + 1 actionable tip). Tweet 10 — summary + "Follow me for more threads like this." Each tweet should be self-contained but build on the previous. Max 280 chars. The skill: [your topic]. Audience level: [beginner/intermediate/advanced].
✅ Produces: A bookmark-magnet thread. Educational threads with a "save for later" opener see 3–5× higher bookmark rates than standard threads, which directly drives algorithmic distribution.
💡 Pro Tip: Tweet 10 should include a "what's next" tease — "Follow for part 2 on [advanced topic]" creates a follower incentive and gives you the hook for your next thread.

Prompt 12 — The Listicle Thread

📋 Prompt
Write a Twitter/X thread with the format: "[Number] [tools/frameworks/mistakes/resources] for [specific outcome]. You probably only know 3 of these. 🧵" List: [insert your list or ask ChatGPT to generate for your niche]. One item per tweet. Each tweet = item name + what it does + why it matters. Hook tweet teases the full list. Final tweet = follow + repost CTA. The list topic: [your topic]. Make each item genuinely useful — no filler picks. Total tweets: 12 maximum.
✅ Produces: A high-save listicle thread. "You probably don't know X of these" framing drives click-through because it creates a knowledge gap the reader immediately wants to close.
💡 Pro Tip: Include at least 2–3 genuinely obscure items. If every item is well-known, power users won't reshare — they'll feel the thread offers nothing new.

Instagram Captions — 6 ChatGPT Prompts

Instagram captions need to earn the "more" tap within the first two lines. The algorithm rewards saves and shares over likes. Every prompt below is designed for saves-first content strategy.

📸 Instagram

Prompt 13 — The Value Caption with CTA

📋 Prompt
Write an Instagram caption for a [post type: carousel/reel/photo] about [topic]. The first 2 lines (before the "more" break) must be irresistible and create curiosity or a knowledge gap. Then deliver genuine value in 150–200 words: [the value you want to share]. End with a clear CTA: "Save this for when you need it" or "Tag someone who needs this." Add 5–8 relevant hashtags at the bottom, mix of niche (#[niche]tips) and broad (#[broad topic]). Topic: [topic]. Brand tone: [casual/professional/inspirational].
✅ Produces: A saves-optimized caption. Instagram's algorithm prioritizes saves over likes as a distribution signal — save-focused CTAs outperform like CTAs by 40–60% in reach experiments.
💡 Pro Tip: Never start your caption with your name, an emoji, or "Hey guys." The algorithm shows the first ~125 characters before the "more" cut — use every character to hook.

Prompt 14 — The Story-Driven Reel Caption

📋 Prompt
Write an Instagram Reel caption that complements a short video about [describe reel topic]. The caption should: tell the mini-story behind the video in 80–100 words (not repeat what's in the video), add context the viewer wouldn't get from watching alone, create a reason to save or share, and ask a simple yes/no or this-or-that question in the last line to drive comments. Tone: [conversational/motivational/educational]. Add a line break between each paragraph. Hashtags at the very end: 6–8 hashtags.
✅ Produces: A reel caption that adds value beyond the video itself, increasing watch-through rate (viewers read the caption while watching) and comment engagement.
💡 Pro Tip: The question at the end should have an obvious, easy answer. "Which one are you — A or B?" beats "What do you think?" because low-friction questions get 3–4× more comment responses.

Prompt 15 — The Educational Carousel Caption

📋 Prompt
Write an Instagram caption for an educational carousel with [number] slides about [topic]. The caption should: hook with a bold promise in the first line (e.g., "The framework that changed how I [outcome]"), briefly list what the carousel covers in 3–4 bullet points, prompt the viewer to swipe with "Swipe to get the full breakdown →", and close with "Save this — you'll want to come back to it." Keep total caption under 200 words. Include 8 hashtags that mix [topic]-specific and discovery hashtags.
✅ Produces: A carousel caption that maximizes swipe-through. Instagram's algorithm uses swipe-through rate as a key metric for carousel distribution — captions that pre-sell the value inside increase swipes significantly.
💡 Pro Tip: Mirror the first carousel slide's headline in your caption hook. Consistent messaging between caption and first slide reinforces the expectation and reduces drop-off.

Prompt 16 — The Relatable Humour Caption

📋 Prompt
Write a funny, relatable Instagram caption for someone who works in [industry/niche]. The caption should capture the shared experience of [specific pain point or absurd situation everyone in this niche knows]. Use dry humor, self-deprecation, or exaggeration. First line must be the punchline or the setup that makes people think "omg same." Keep it under 100 words. End with a "tag someone who gets this" CTA. Add 5 hashtags. Avoid dad jokes or corporate cringe — make it actually funny.
✅ Produces: A high-share caption. Relatable humor is the #1 share trigger on Instagram — "sharing with a friend" drives massive reach because shares expose your content to entirely new audiences.
💡 Pro Tip: Test your humor against the "would I send this to a friend?" filter. If yes, it passes. If you're even slightly uncertain, it needs a rewrite. Unfunny "funny" posts get ignored, not shared.

Prompt 17 — The Transformation Caption

📋 Prompt
Write an Instagram before/after transformation caption for [type of transformation: fitness/business/mindset/skill]. Before state: [describe]. After state: [describe result]. The caption should: resist making it sound braggy by leading with empathy for the "before" state, share 2–3 specific actions that drove the change, be honest about what didn't work or what was hard, and close with encouragement + a question ("Where are you in this journey?"). 180 words max. Authentic, first-person tone. No motivational poster clichés.
✅ Produces: An authentic transformation caption that builds credibility without feeling like a sales pitch — ideal for coaches, personal brands, and product-led accounts.
💡 Pro Tip: Transformation posts work best when paired with a genuine photo (not a stock image). Authentic imagery + honest caption = the highest-trust content format on Instagram.

Prompt 18 — The "Secret Formula" Caption

📋 Prompt
Write an Instagram caption that reveals a "secret formula" or little-known method for [achieving a specific outcome]. Frame it as something the reader probably hasn't heard before. Hook: "Nobody talks about this, but [insight]." Then share the 3–4 step method in a scannable format (short bullets or numbered steps). Close with "Bookmark this before it gets buried in your feed." Tone: knowledgeable but approachable. Under 180 words. 7 hashtags mixing niche and trending terms for [niche].
✅ Produces: A saves-optimized educational caption with urgency built in ("before it gets buried") — this framing consistently drives bookmark rates 2× higher than standard value captions.
💡 Pro Tip: The "secret" must actually be somewhat non-obvious. If it's common knowledge, your audience will ignore it. Run the caption through a credibility test: could this only come from real experience?

Facebook Posts — 5 ChatGPT Prompts

Facebook's algorithm favors posts that generate meaningful comments — especially longer, substantive responses. These prompts are built for group engagement, community discussion, and shares.

👥 Facebook

Prompt 19 — The Community Question Post

📋 Prompt
Write a Facebook post for a [industry/niche] community that asks a question most members have strong opinions about. The question topic: [e.g., remote work, AI tools, industry trends]. Format: 3–4 sentences of context setting up why this is relevant right now, then the question itself (specific enough that people can give a concrete answer), then a "I'll start — [my take in 1 sentence]" to model the type of response you want. Under 150 words. No links — they kill Facebook reach.
✅ Produces: A high-comment Facebook post. Facebook's algorithm prioritizes posts with long, meaningful comment threads — a seed answer from you primes the pump and typically doubles comment volume.
💡 Pro Tip: Avoid generic questions ("What's your biggest challenge?"). Specific questions ("What's the one tool you'd never give up even if it cost 10× more?") generate 3–5× more comments because they have a clear, answerable focus.

Prompt 20 — The Group Value Post

📋 Prompt
Write a Facebook group post delivering genuine value about [topic] to [target audience, e.g., small business owners, new parents, fitness enthusiasts]. Format: problem-aware hook (acknowledge their pain point) → 5 actionable tips or insights (numbered, 1–2 sentences each) → invitation to share their own tip in comments. Tone: helpful, peer-to-peer (not expert-talking-down). Under 250 words. No emojis overload — use them sparingly for emphasis. No links in the post body.
✅ Produces: A group-native post that gets pinned by admins, drives comments, and builds authority within the group without feeling promotional.
💡 Pro Tip: End with "What would you add?" rather than "Leave a comment." "What would you add?" frames the comment as a contribution, which appeals to the desire to be seen as knowledgeable — it's a subtle but measurable difference in comment rate.

Prompt 21 — The Share-Worthy Story Post

📋 Prompt
Write a Facebook post telling a personal story about [experience] that will resonate with [target audience]. The story should have: a relatable opening situation, a turning point or unexpected moment, a resolution with a lesson, and an emotional takeaway. 200–300 words. Write it the way you'd tell it to a friend — conversational, real, no corporate language. The reader should finish it thinking "I needed to read this today" and want to share it. End with a 1-sentence reflection, no hard CTA.
✅ Produces: A shareable story post. Emotional resonance is Facebook's highest share trigger — posts that end with a quiet, reflective note outperform posts with explicit "share this!" CTAs.
💡 Pro Tip: Shares on Facebook expose your post to entirely new audiences — aim for the share, not the like. Emotional story posts get shared 4–6× more than informational posts.

Prompt 22 — The "Unpopular Opinion" Post

📋 Prompt
Write a Facebook post sharing an unpopular opinion about [topic in your niche]. Start with "Unpopular opinion:" then state it clearly in one sentence. Follow with 3–4 sentences explaining your reasoning without being preachy. Acknowledge that others disagree and invite them to say so respectfully. Close with: "Agree or disagree?" Keep it under 120 words. No hedging or "well, it depends" language — own the opinion. Topic: [your topic]. Audience: [who they are].
✅ Produces: A debate post that Facebook's algorithm loves. Posts that generate both "agree" and "disagree" comments create longer threads and receive preferential distribution.
💡 Pro Tip: The opinion must be genuinely debatable — not actually controversial. Political or socially divisive "unpopular opinions" attract the wrong audience and lower overall reach quality.

Prompt 23 — The Event/Launch Announcement Post

📋 Prompt
Write a Facebook post announcing [event/product launch/webinar/offer]. Structure: exciting hook that leads with the benefit (not the feature), 3 bullet points covering what attendees/buyers will get, urgency element (limited spots/time), and a simple 1-line CTA with the link. Tone: warm and enthusiastic, not salesy. Under 180 words. Use 2–3 emojis strategically. Include one social proof element (number of past attendees, testimonial quote snippet, or results achieved). The event/launch: [describe it].
✅ Produces: An announcement post optimized for click-through. Benefit-led announcements with social proof consistently outperform feature-led posts by 2–3× in event sign-up rate.
💡 Pro Tip: Put the link in the first comment, not the post body. Facebook's algorithm demotes posts with external links in the body — pinning the link as the first comment preserves reach while still driving traffic.

YouTube Descriptions — 5 ChatGPT Prompts

YouTube descriptions are SEO documents as much as they are content previews. These prompts produce descriptions that rank in YouTube search, appear in Google's video snippets, and convert viewers into subscribers and clicks.

▶️ YouTube

Prompt 24 — The SEO-Optimized Description

📋 Prompt
Write a YouTube video description for a video titled "[your video title]" targeting the keyword "[primary keyword]." The description should: open with a 2–3 sentence hook (above the fold, before "Show More") that re-states the video's value, include a full paragraph summary of what the video covers (150–200 words) with [primary keyword] and [2–3 secondary keywords] naturally embedded, list 5–7 timestamps with emoji icons, include a subscribe CTA, links to related videos: [list 2–3], and social links at the bottom. Also add 15 tags to paste in the tags field. Make it feel human, not keyword-stuffed.
✅ Produces: A complete, SEO-ready YouTube description with timestamps, keyword-optimized copy, related video CTAs, and a suggested tags list.
💡 Pro Tip: The first 100 characters of a YouTube description appear in Google search snippets. Lead with the primary keyword and the core benefit — this double-serves YouTube SEO and Google video indexing.

Prompt 25 — The Tutorial Description

📋 Prompt
Write a YouTube description for a tutorial video: "[Tutorial Title]." Target keyword: "[keyword]." Include: (1) a 2-sentence opener that addresses who this tutorial is for and what they'll achieve; (2) "In this tutorial, you'll learn:" followed by 5 bullet points matching the video chapters; (3) timestamps for each section; (4) a "Resources mentioned" section with [list your tools/links]; (5) "Watch next:" with 2 related tutorials; (6) Subscribe reminder. Embed the keyword "[keyword]" 3× naturally. Add a 15-word chapter description for each timestamp.
✅ Produces: A structured tutorial description with chapters (which YouTube auto-creates as navigation links), resources section, and keyword optimization for discovery.
💡 Pro Tip: Timestamps with descriptive chapter titles increase average view duration by up to 20% — viewers jump to the part they need and then continue watching, rather than abandoning when they can't find it.

Prompt 26 — The Review/Comparison Description

📋 Prompt
Write a YouTube description for a review or comparison video: "[Video Title: Tool A vs Tool B]" targeting the keyword "[X vs Y]." Include: (1) hook that addresses the buyer's decision ("Choosing between X and Y? Watch this before you spend a dollar."); (2) what the video covers with 4 bullet points; (3) verdict preview (don't spoil but tease); (4) timestamps; (5) affiliate disclosure if applicable: [yes/no]; (6) relevant resources and links; (7) tags list of 15 comparison-intent keywords. Tone: independent, fair, expert.
✅ Produces: A high-converting review description targeting buyers in decision mode — "X vs Y" and "best X for Y" searches have the highest commercial intent on YouTube.
💡 Pro Tip: Use "vs" in the video title, filename, and description 2–3 times. YouTube's algorithm treats "vs" content as high-intent and surfaces it in "Suggested" for viewers watching either product's content.

Prompt 27 — The Vlog/Personal Content Description

📋 Prompt
Write a YouTube description for a vlog or personal content video about [what happens in the vlog]. The description should: feel conversational and personal (like a note to the viewer, not a press release), hint at 3 memorable moments from the video without spoiling them, share a personal reflection or message to the viewer in 2–3 sentences, include a subscribe CTA that feels genuine not scripted, and add social media handles at the bottom. Target keyword: [lifestyle-related keyword]. Keep it under 200 words total. No clickbait framing.
✅ Produces: A human, engaging vlog description that complements personal content — search-optimized without feeling out of place with the video's authentic tone.
💡 Pro Tip: For lifestyle/vlog content, a soft keyword (city name, experience type, lifestyle term) outperforms aggressive keyword stuffing, which creates a tone mismatch that repels the very audience you're trying to build.

Prompt 28 — The Podcast/Interview Description

📋 Prompt
Write a YouTube description for a podcast interview or long-form conversation with [Guest Name], [Guest Title/Background]. Topics discussed: [list 4–5 topics]. Structure: (1) who the guest is and why viewers should care (2 sentences); (2) key insights from the episode (5 bullet points, each as a teaser); (3) timestamps for each main topic; (4) guest's links: [website, social handles]; (5) where to listen as a podcast: [platforms]; (6) subscribe + comment CTA. Target keyword: "[guest name podcast]" or "[topic interview]." Under 350 words.
✅ Produces: A podcast episode description that drives click-through, builds guest credibility, provides cross-platform listening options, and gets discovered via the guest's own audience searching their name.
💡 Pro Tip: Guest name + their company/brand is a high-click-through keyword combination. Their existing audience will search for them and find your interview — always include the guest's full name and company in the description.

TikTok Hooks — 7 ChatGPT Prompts

TikTok is won or lost in the first 1.5 seconds. These prompts focus exclusively on hooks — the opening spoken line, on-screen text, or visual action that determines whether the algorithm serves your video to 1,000 or 1,000,000 people.

🎵 TikTok

Prompt 29 — The "Nobody Talks About This" Hook

📋 Prompt
Write 10 TikTok hook variations for a video about [topic]. All hooks should use the "secret/hidden/nobody talks about" angle. Each hook must: be under 10 words (spoken), create a strong curiosity gap, and feel urgent enough to stop scrolling. Format each as: [Hook] — [Why it works in 1 sentence]. The hooks should vary in structure: some as questions, some as statements, some starting with a number. Niche: [your niche]. Target viewer: [who they are].
✅ Produces: 10 hook variations to A/B test across videos. Testing hooks is the single highest-leverage activity for TikTok growth — a 2× better hook equals 2× the views for the same content.
💡 Pro Tip: Post the same video with different hook lines as the opening on-screen text. TikTok allows you to test 2–3 covers — use them. Track 3-second view rate in analytics; this is your hook score.

Prompt 30 — The "Wait for It" Hook

📋 Prompt
Write 8 TikTok hooks for videos about [topic] that use the "wait for it" or "stay to the end" pattern. The hook must create a payoff promise that feels worth waiting for. Include: hooks that reference the end of the video, hooks that set up a surprising reveal, hooks that start mid-action (in medias res), and hooks that address a common mistake viewers are making right now. Topic: [your topic]. Each hook max 12 words. No clichés like "you won't believe this" — make them feel specific and credible.
✅ Produces: Completion-rate-optimized hooks. TikTok's algorithm uses video completion rate as a major distribution signal — hooks that promise a payoff increase the percentage of viewers who watch to the end.
💡 Pro Tip: Only use "wait for it" hooks if you actually have a strong payoff. Promising a reveal and under-delivering destroys watch time and trains your audience to skip your videos.

Prompt 31 — The Relatable Situation Hook

📋 Prompt
Write 8 TikTok hooks for a video about [topic] that use the "POV" or "relatable situation" format. The hooks should immediately make the target viewer feel seen and understood. They should describe a specific moment, feeling, or experience that [target audience] will instantly recognize. Start some with "POV:", some with "When you...", some with "That feeling when...", and some as direct statements. Topic: [topic]. Target viewer: [describe them specifically, e.g., "a freelancer who struggles to price their work"]. No generic situations.
✅ Produces: Highly shareable relatable hooks. TikTok's share function is most triggered by "this is literally me" content — relatable hooks drive shares, which is TikTok's highest-value engagement signal.
💡 Pro Tip: The more specific the relatable detail, the more universal the appeal — paradoxically. "POV: you've explained your pricing for the 40th time and they still say 'that seems high'" beats "POV: you're a freelancer" every time.

Prompt 32 — The Educational Hook with On-Screen Text

📋 Prompt
Write a complete TikTok video script for a 45–60 second educational video about [topic]. Include: (1) On-screen text hook (6 words max, shown in first 2 seconds); (2) Spoken hook line (first 5 seconds); (3) Video body — 5 fast-cut points, each with spoken line + on-screen text overlay; (4) Closing line that teases a follow-up video or asks a question. Audience: [target viewer]. Tone: [energetic/calm/witty]. The on-screen text should be 3–5 words per card — scannable by silent viewers. Topic: [your topic].
✅ Produces: A full TikTok script with both spoken and on-screen text — 85% of TikTok videos are watched with sound, but silent-viewer captions increase total watch time across all viewers.
💡 Pro Tip: Write the on-screen text first, then write spoken lines to complement (not repeat) it. Redundant text + speech bores viewers. Complementary text + speech adds a second layer of information density.

Prompt 33 — The Trending Audio Hook

📋 Prompt
📋 Prompt
Write 6 TikTok hook scripts designed to sync with trending audio formats. For each, provide: (1) the audio mood/type it works with (e.g., dramatic build, upbeat pop, lo-fi chill), (2) the spoken/text hook line, (3) what action or visual should happen on the beat drop or audio peak. Topic for all hooks: [your topic]. Target: [your audience]. Format the hooks so they can be adapted to whichever trending sound fits the mood without rewriting from scratch. Hooks should feel native to TikTok — not like repurposed Instagram content.
✅ Produces: 6 audio-aware TikTok hook scripts that can be adapted to trending sounds — audio-driven content gets 2× the distribution on TikTok because the platform promotes content using trending sounds.
💡 Pro Tip: Check TikTok's "Trending" sounds tab weekly. Using a sound in its early viral phase (10K–100K videos using it) gives you more reach than using a saturated sound (1M+ videos).

Prompt 34 — The "This Changed Everything" Hook

📋 Prompt
Write 8 TikTok hooks using the "this changed everything" structure for videos about [topic]. Variation types to include: "I used to [old way] until I tried [new way]", "The [thing] that completely changed how I [do X]", "Why I stopped [common practice] and what I do instead", and "One [discovery/tool/habit] that made [outcome] 10× easier." Topic: [your topic]. Each hook should be specific enough to be credible and vague enough to create curiosity. Maximum 12 words each. No hyperbole that sounds like an ad.
✅ Produces: 8 high-curiosity hooks across 4 structural formats — variety in hook structure prevents your content from sounding formulaic, which is the fastest way to lose the TikTok algorithm's favor.
💡 Pro Tip: "I stopped doing X" hooks consistently outperform "I started doing X" hooks because loss aversion is a stronger motivator than gain. The viewer thinks: "Am I doing X? Should I stop?"

Prompt 35 — The Duet/Response Hook

📋 Prompt
Write 5 TikTok hook scripts designed for Duet or Stitch response videos reacting to [type of content/claim/mistake]. The hooks should: position me as a knowledgeable expert adding value (not just dunking), create curiosity about my take before they hear it, and make the viewer want to watch both sides. Format: [Hook line] + [first 10 seconds spoken script]. Topic: [your niche topic]. Tone: [respectful/direct/playful]. The response should educate, not humiliate — these are designed for long-term audience building, not viral drama.
✅ Produces: Duet/Stitch response hooks that leverage other creators' existing views while building your own credibility — Duets receive 30–50% more distribution than standalone videos because they're attached to the original's reach.
💡 Pro Tip: Stitch a video that makes a claim you can respectfully correct or expand. Your hook: "Okay but they forgot the most important part…" This keeps the framing collaborative, not combative, and protects your brand long-term.

Bonus: How to Use These Prompts Like a Pro

The prompts above are frameworks, not finished posts. Here's how to get from generic AI output to platform-native content that actually performs:

1. Always Fill In the Variables First

Every bracket in these prompts — [your topic], [your audience], [your niche] — is doing real work. The more specific you are in filling them in, the better ChatGPT's output. "SaaS founder targeting HR directors at 50–500 person companies" beats "business person" every time.

2. Ask for Variations

After you get your first output, follow up with: "Give me 5 alternative versions of this, each with a different hook but the same content." Test 2–3 variations per week to find your platform's sweet spot.

3. Inject Your Voice

ChatGPT's default output sounds like ChatGPT. Paste your best-performing posts into the conversation first: "Here are 3 examples of content that resonates with my audience. Match this tone and voice." The model will calibrate to your style.

4. Build a Platform Content Calendar

Assign each platform's prompts a weekly slot. Example: Monday = LinkedIn thought leadership (Prompt 1–3), Wednesday = Twitter/X thread (Prompt 7–9), Friday = Instagram carousel (Prompt 15). Batch-create in 2-hour sessions once a week.

5. Measure and Iterate

Track which prompt categories produce your highest-reach posts per platform. After 4 weeks, you'll know your "signature content formats." Double down on what works, retire what doesn't. The prompts are a starting point — your data is the finish line.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use these prompts with Claude or Gemini instead of ChatGPT?

Yes — these prompts are model-agnostic. They work with any large language model. Claude tends to produce longer, more nuanced outputs; Gemini integrates well with Google Workspace. Test the same prompt across models to find which output fits your brand voice best.

How do I make AI-generated posts sound less robotic?

Three techniques: (1) Add your real opinion or a specific example before running the prompt. (2) After generation, read it aloud — anything that doesn't sound like something you'd say, rewrite manually. (3) Use the "match my voice" technique above with 3–5 examples of your best content.

How often should I post on each platform?

For growth: LinkedIn 4–5x/week, X/Twitter 1–3 threads/week, Instagram 4–5 reels + 2–3 carousels/week, Facebook 3–4x/week (groups), YouTube 1–2 videos/week, TikTok 1–3 videos/day. These are aggressive targets — start with one platform and master it before expanding.

Is using AI for social media content against platform rules?

No platform currently prohibits AI-assisted content creation. What matters is quality and authenticity — AI-generated content that provides real value performs the same as (or better than) manually written content of equivalent quality. The content is what matters, not the method of creation.