Marketing prompts need channel context — not just write ad copy.
When to copy a marketing template, when to use the channel builder, and how to keep ads and email constraints explicit.
Last updated: 2026-07-13
Templates vs builder
Templates are copy-ready starters — campaign brief, email sequence, social carousel — with placeholders you replace. The Marketing prompt builder fills your offer, audience, pain, proof, and CTA into a structured prompt shaped for Ads, Email, Social, or Landing.
Use templates when the example scenario is close to yours. Use the builder when your product facts are specific and you want channel extras (character limits, subject angles, section lists) baked into the prompt.
Channel constraints matter
A prompt that works for LinkedIn carousel outline language will frustrate you on Google RSA headlines. Our builder injects a different constraint block per channel; you still own compliance and claims review.
Email prompts should split subject goals from body shape. Social prompts should name the network and format. Landing prompts should list sections instead of asking for a whole page in one blob.
After you copy
Paste into ChatGPT (or switch preset if you prefer Claude/Gemini wording). Run a second pass through the homepage Optimizer if the result is one long paragraph. Do not treat template proof lines as real numbers — swap in facts you can defend.
Try it on the site
Structured rewrite · no model API call