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Four ChatGPT Prompts Entrepreneurs Can Use to Turn Ideas Into Revenue

Every entrepreneur has a phase where they discover marketing frameworks and treat them like ancient scrolls.


AIDA. PAS. 4C. Storytelling strategy.


They copy templates from the internet, paste them into ChatGPT, and expect investors to appear like it is 2021 and venture capital is still being handed out for companies that sell dog food subscriptions on the blockchain.


Instead, they get polite marketing copy that sounds impressive and sells nothing.

The problem is not the frameworks. These models have survived decades because they work. The problem is how people prompt.


They forget to define the audience. They skip the product details. They avoid real constraints like budget, competition, or regulation. ChatGPT fills the gaps with generic optimism, which reads nicely and converts nobody.

A better approach is structured prompting.


Tell the model exactly who you are selling to. Describe the real problem. Explain why your product is different. Add constraints like pricing, channels, and timeline. Suddenly the frameworks become practical tools.


In Enigmatica workshops, especially with founders who want to move fast without wasting money, these prompts become idea filters. You test messaging before running ads. You find weak points in your offer. You refine your story until it is clear enough to explain to your grandmother and a venture capitalist in the same sentence.

Because good marketing frameworks are not about sounding clever. They are about making decisions.


And decisions are what turn prompts into profit.


Practical Tips for Using Marketing Framework Prompts

  1. Describe the Customer Clearly Include age, role, pain points, and buying motivation.

  2. Explain the Real Problem Avoid vague claims like “improves efficiency.” Say what is broken.

  3. Add Constraints Budget, timeline, and channel limitations make frameworks realistic.

  4. Test Multiple Variations Run the same framework with different angles or audiences.

  5. Compare Framework Outputs See where AIDA and PAS disagree. That often reveals weak messaging.

  6. Validate With Real Customers Use outputs in emails or landing pages and measure response.

  7. Save Proven Prompts Build a prompt library in Copilot or ChatGPT Teams so your team can reuse what works.


Prompts

# AIDA MARKETING PROMPT

## ROLE
You are a marketing strategist applying the AIDA framework.

## INPUT
- Product or service: **[details]**
- Target customer: **[persona]**
- Unique value: **[why different]**
- Channel: **[email, ad, landing page]**

## OUTPUT
Create:
1. Attention hook
2. Interest explanation
3. Desire section with benefits
4. Clear call to action
5. Weaknesses in the message
# PAS MARKETING PROMPT

## ROLE
You are a copywriter using the PAS framework.

## INPUT
- Customer problem
- Product solution
- Audience persona
- Constraints

## OUTPUT
Write:
1. Problem statement
2. Agitation section showing consequences
3. Solution explanation
4. Proof or credibility points
5. Suggested headline variations
# 4C MODEL PROMPT

## ROLE
You are a product marketer applying the 4C model.

## INPUT
- Customer profile
- Product description
- Competitors
- Pricing

## OUTPUT
Analyse:
1. Customer value
2. Cost considerations
3. Convenience of purchase
4. Communication strategy
5. Risks or objections
# STORYTELLING STRATEGY PROMPT

## ROLE
You are a brand strategist designing a narrative.

## INPUT
- Product or service
- Customer journey stage
- Brand personality
- Business goal

## OUTPUT
Provide:
1. Core story arc
2. Customer as hero framing
3. Emotional hooks
4. Proof points
5. Content ideas for email, ads, and social posts

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