6 GPT Prompts Every Marketer Should Steal
Let’s be honest: not every marketer needs another trend report or 80-slide deck. What most teams need is this—better thinking, faster. That’s exactly what these 6 AI prompt templates are designed to do.
Built for strategists, brand leads, and creative thinkers, these prompts give you structured, intelligent outputs without fluff. They’re clear, focused, and designed to help you move from “What do I even write?” to “That’s exactly what I needed.”
Let’s break them down:
1. Market Condition Analysis
When to use it: You're entering a new category, evaluating expansion, or getting asked “what’s happening in the market?”
This prompt gives you a real-time pulse check. It scans macroeconomic trends, growth risks, consumer sentiment, and competitor activity—all summarized with recommendations and benchmarks. No jargon. Just signal over noise.
Use it when you need to back strategy with economic logic.
Input: "Analyze the market condition for [X]"
Prompt: "Analyze the current market conditions for [X] — including macroeconomic trends, demand curves, regulatory impacts, competitor activity, technological disruption, and consumer sentiment. Evaluate the market's maturity, growth potential, and investment risks. Benchmark against industry averages and historical performance. Use real-time data and cite trusted economic or industry sources. Conclude with a forecast and strategic recommendations."
2. Competitive Analysis
When to use it: Before a stakeholder meeting, pitch, or planning session.
This one’s built for speed and clarity. It compares your brand to the top 3 competitors in terms of positioning, pricing, digital presence, and uniqueness—in a clean, readable table.
Pro move: Ask for a short, 2-line pitch summary you can drop into a slide or say out loud. It sells the insight without the PowerPoint.
Input: "I want a competitive analysis for [Brand/Product/Company X]"
Prompt: "Conduct a comprehensive competitive analysis for [X], including a SWOT analysis, key competitors, market share estimates, pricing and positioning strategies, recent campaigns, partnerships, digital presence (SEO, social, traffic sources), and white space opportunities. Include visuals or charts if needed and cite real-time data where available. Provide actionable insights and strategic recommendations based on current market behavior and consumer sentiment."
3. Consumer Insight Generation
When to use it: You’re briefing creatives or building targeting profiles.
This prompt breaks down complex audience behavior into clear, actionable psychographics. Think lifestyle, pain points, motivations, and what actually drives decision-making.
Use it to build personas that don’t just “look good on a slide,” but actually shape messaging and media.
[ROLE]: You are a marketing specialist and research guru who breaks down complex behavior into actionable and easy-to-read personas.
[TASK]: Generate a consumer insight profile for [Product/Brand/Category].
[CONTEXT]: We’re planning a new campaign and need to know what drives our audience's decisions. Success = a clear psychographic snapshot and targeting recommendation.
[EXAMPLE]: Consumers of Oatly oat milk.
[FORMAT]: Bullet points or a persona grid (e.g., Name | Age | Lifestyle | Core Values | Pain Points | Media Habits)
4. Market Condition Snapshot
When to use it: You need a high-level view—fast.
Different from the first, this one’s about quick, strategic snapshots. Five parts: Overview, Growth Rate, Trends, Risks, Recommendation. All in plain language. Perfect for executive summaries or fast internal alignment.
Use it when you’re pitching an idea that needs industry grounding.
[ROLE]: You are a marketing research expert who synthesizes economic and industry data in plain language.
[TASK]: Analyze the current market conditions for [industry or product category].
[CONTEXT]: We’re evaluating whether to invest or expand in this sector. Success = understand risks, growth potential, and key trends.
[EXAMPLE]: Analyze the market for plant-based meat in North America.
[FORMAT]: 5-part summary: Overview | Growth Rate | Key Trends | Risks | Recommendation
5. Brand Positioning Audit
When to use it: You feel your brand is saying too much… or nothing memorable.
This prompt evaluates your current positioning and tells you what’s working, what’s forgettable, and how to sharpen it with 2–3 directional tweaks.
It’s like a strategist giving you a fast brand therapy session.
[ROLE]: You are a brand strategist who explains complex positioning through simple, fast, and clear summaries.
[TASK]: Audit the brand positioning of [Brand X] and suggest 2-3 ways to stand out.
[CONTEXT]: We need to refine messaging to better differentiate from competitors. Success = sharp articulation of what makes us different.
[EXAMPLE]: Audit Liquid Death’s brand voice in the beverage market.
[FORMAT]: SWOT-style bullets + 3-positioning tweak recommendations
6. Social Media Strategy Check
When to use it: Your feed looks fine, but feels flat.
This one audits a brand’s social presence across platforms, highlights what content is landing (or not), and offers platform-specific suggestions for more engaging posts. Great for content teams, social leads, or benchmarking competitors.
[ROLE]: You are a digital strategist who simplifies social content insights into what matters most.
[TASK]: Audit the social media strategy of [Brand X] and provide actionable recommendations.
[CONTEXT]: We're optimizing our channel content and need inspiration or benchmarks.
[EXAMPLE]: Analyze Glossier's Instagram and TikTok strategy.
[FORMAT]: Table or bullets with: Platform | Content Type | Engagement Trend | Suggested Action
Why These Work
Most prompts fall apart because they’re too vague or too bloated. These don’t. Each one is built around:
A specific outcome
A clear role (so GPT answers like the expert you need)
A defined format that’s presentation-ready
Whether you’re pitching, researching, auditing, or unblocking a brief, these prompts save time, spark new thinking, and give you language that moves work forward.
Want to try them? They’re all part of our strategic AI prompt kits at https://www.massfieldapplica.com
No fluff. No templates. Just prompts that work when the pressure’s on.