5 Prompt Frames That Never Miss
When I first discovered AI tools inside WA, I did what everyone does: I typed random stuff like, “Write me a blog about SEO.”
The result? A generic, lifeless draft that felt like boiled vegetables without salt. This is even better for the case of green leaves with natural salts and healthier elements. Not for your article though.
That’s when I realized: AI is like a drum. If you don’t hit it with rhythm, you don’t get music. Prompts are that rhythm. The better your prompt, the better your content.
After months of trial, error, and wasted credits, I’ve collected 5 prompt frames that never miss. Use these, and you’ll see your AI drafts start to sing.
Frame 1: The Problem–Solution Prompt
“Write a blog post for beginners about [problem]. Explain why it matters, the common mistakes, and give 3 practical solutions.”
Example: “Write a blog post for beginners about why internal links matter. Explain why they matter, the common mistakes, and give 3 practical solutions.”
This gives you a clear, structured post without fluff.
Frame 2: The Step-by-Step Guide Prompt
“Create a step-by-step guide to [goal], written in a friendly but professional tone, with clear headings.”
Example: “Create a step-by-step guide to starting a blog in 2026, written in a friendly but professional tone, with clear headings.”
This one’s gold for tutorials and how-to posts.
Frame 3: The Comparison Prompt
“Write a comparison between [option A] and [option B], with pros, cons, and a final recommendation.”
Example: “Write a comparison between WA Premium and Premium Plus+, with pros, cons, and a final recommendation.”
Readers love comparisons. Google loves them too.
Frame 4: The Story-First Prompt
“Write a blog post about [topic], starting with a short story or metaphor, then teaching the main lesson.”
Example: “Write a blog post about affiliate links, starting with a story about buying food at the market, then teaching the main lesson.”
This one’s my favorite; it mirrors the way I write: story first, lesson second.
Frame 5: The Checklist Prompt
“Write a checklist for [task], with 7–10 items, short explanations, and a final call to action.”
Example: “Write a checklist for preparing a blog for publishing, with 7–10 items, short explanations, and a final call to action.”
Checklists are easy wins. People love quick, scannable content.
Why This Works
AI is not about replacing your voice; it’s about shaping raw clay into art. These prompt frames give you a solid structure so you can add your stories, values, and experiences on top.
Think of prompts like recipes. Follow them, and you’ll get a good meal. But when you add your local spices; your stories, your humor, your style; that’s when it becomes unforgettable.
🔥 Pro Tip: Keep these 5 prompt frames saved in a doc. The next time you’re stuck, copy, paste, tweak, and run. You’ll never face the “blank page panic” again.
Because with the right prompts, your AI Credits don’t just generate words; they generate momentum.
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Recent Comments
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This is such a practical and insightful guide! I love the way you compare prompts to music and recipes. It really captures how much creativity goes into getting AI to work for you. I especially appreciate the clear prompt frames. I can already see how using these will save so much time and make my AI drafts feel more alive. Thanks for sharing your experience and tips!
Thanks, Monica. You can actually try them and see what you get, then customize them and make them your very own. Cheers!
Thanks John! That’s a great idea I’ll definitely try them out and customize to fit my style. Appreciate the tip!
These are great prompts, John.
Each prompt has a solid structure useable in any niche. Good stuff.
Thanks a lot for reading. Put them to work, see the results, and discover better ways to chat with AI as you work with it.
Thanks, Teri. I'm using ChatGPT-5.2, Thinking now. AI 'flop' is purely a result of vague prompts. I'm learning, each day, I think.
You're welcome. I'm learning new prompts almost by accident, each day. I chat with AI a lot, even now, for my writing. It seems to be learning from me as well. I tell it to avoid some words (actual all AI-ish terms) and common AI phrases.
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Build a Logo + Website That Attracts Customers
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A great group of prompts that we can all adapt and use. I have learned that the better we prompt, the better the results. Also the more I work with ChatGPT, the more it picks up how I work and communicate, kind of amazing to see.
Yes, what you asked for is what you get, and even better when you tell it to save these to memory (Plus or Pro) users.
Not a Plus or Pro subscriber yet, so the memory is not perfect and it needs reminders now and again. I think that I will need it in the future, as I hit the limits, though that does force me to take a break. Which is not necessarily a bad thing. Just waiting until I can justify the cost.
Yes, only upgrade when you can budget it. Since I'm rewriting/proofreading almost all my works, I need the Plus version for now. Ah, I once upgraded to PRO, not being aware it will charge me $30/month/user.
Now, $30 x 5 = $150/month. I cancelled it a few days later, and the result? I lost all my 1year plus Personal chats, because I made a mistake of merging the Business account with Personal account, disregarding the warning message about losing all my personal chats, should I fail to renew. Lesson learned.
Ouch, that would have been a difficult lesson. It makes sense that you need Plus with the high volume of work.
Same with me here, Elyta.