WTF… this AI writes business plans like a real team.
You give it an idea, it studies the market, sets the numbers, finds the risks, and gives you a plan investors can read in hours.
Goodbye $5k consultants and empty documents.
10 simple prompts you can use: 🧵
1/ Complete Business Plan Draft
You are a veteran startup strategist and investor.
Write a complete business plan for [BUSINESS NAME] in [INDUSTRY] serving [TARGET CUSTOMER] in [GEOGRAPHY].
Include:
- 1 page executive summary
- Problem and solution (with 3 to 5 concrete use cases)
- Market analysis (TAM, SAM, SOM with simple logic and assumptions)
- Business model and revenue streams
- Go to market strategy (channels, messaging, first 90 days)
- Competitive landscape and positioning
- 3 year high level financial overview (revenue drivers, cost buckets, basic unit economics)
- Top 5 risks and how we will mitigate them
Write in clear, investor friendly language. Use headings and bullet points so I can copy this into a doc.
2/ Founder Clarity and Vision Pack
You are a startup coach helping me clarify my vision.
Ask me up to 15 very pointed questions about my idea, market, customer, pricing, and personal goals. Then:
- Turn my answers into a crisp "Why now, why us, why this" story
- Write a one paragraph mission, one paragraph vision, and 5 bullet values
- Create a one page narrative I can share with early hires, advisors, and investors
Keep everything specific, not generic startup fluff.
3/ Market and Customer Insight Summary
You are a market research analyst.
Based only on the information I give you about my market and customers, do the following:
- Describe my primary customer segments and their main pain points
- List the top 5 alternatives they currently use and why those are not good enough
- Draft a simple TAM/SAM/SOM view with clear, realistic assumptions (no made up stats)
- Write 5 bullets that explain why this is a good or bad market to enter right now
Explain everything in plain English so a non business person can understand.
4/ Value Proposition and Positioning System
You are a category design and positioning expert.
Using my idea description, create:
- One sentence value proposition
- One paragraph version for the website hero
- A simple positioning statement: "For [who] who [problem], [product] is a [category] that [unique benefit]. Unlike [alternative], it [key differentiator]."
- 3 to 5 sharp taglines or hooks I can test on social or landing pages
- A short paragraph that explains why we are different and worth choosing
Keep the language concrete and specific to my market.
5/ Business Model and Unit Economics Designer
You are a CFO who has worked with early stage startups.
Based on my description of pricing, costs, and how the product works, build:
- A simple breakdown of revenue streams
- A basic unit economics view (LTV, CAC, gross margin, payback period) using assumptions I can adjust
- 3 different pricing approaches I could test (and who each one fits)
- 5 bullets on what would break the model (churn too high, CAC too high, etc.)
Explain the formulas in words so I can rebuild them in a spreadsheet.
6/ Go To Market Plan in 90 Days
You are a CMO for an early stage startup.
Design a simple, realistic go to market plan for the first 90 days after launch:
- Primary audience and core message
- Top 5 acquisition channels ranked by expected impact and difficulty
- What to do in the first 2 weeks, first 30 days, and first 90 days
- Content and outreach ideas I can execute as a solo founder or tiny team
- 10 key metrics to track and simple targets for each
Keep it scrappy and focused on actions, not theory.
7/ Operations and Execution Blueprint
You are an operations leader who has scaled small teams.
Based on my business idea, create:
- The 5 most important recurring processes (for example: sales, onboarding, fulfillment, support, reporting)
- A simple description of how each process should work at launch
- A list of the first 3 roles I should hire or contract out, with responsibilities for each
- A basic weekly operating rhythm (meetings, reviews, dashboards) for the first 6 months
Assume I am starting with very limited budget and a small team.
8/ Risk, Failure Modes, and Guardrails
You are a risk and strategy advisor.
Look at my business idea and:
- List 10 realistic ways this business could fail (market, product, team, cash, legal, etc.)
- For each, describe how I would notice it early and what leading indicators to watch
- Suggest a practical mitigation or backup plan for each risk
- End with 5 non obvious guardrails or rules I should follow to avoid dumb mistakes
Be candid and practical, not optimistic.
9/ Investor Ready One Pager and Pitch Outline
You are a seed investor who sees thousands of decks per year.
Using the business plan content, create:
- A one page summary I can send to investors or partners
- A 10 slide outline for a pitch deck with bullet points for what to put on each slide
- A short spoken pitch script (60 to 90 seconds) in simple language
Write it so it is easy to copy into Notion, Google Docs, or Slides.
10/ Execution Roadmap for the First 12 Months
You are a startup operator with multiple exits.
Turn this entire business plan into an execution roadmap for the first year:
- Break the year into quarters, with 3 to 5 main goals per quarter
- For each goal, list the key projects and who would own them (by role, not name)
- Show dependencies, what must come first, and what can wait
- Highlight 5 moments in the year that will be make or break for the business
- Finish with a simple checklist I can revisit monthly to stay on track
Keep it realistic for a small, resource constrained team.
BREAKING: AI can now write your entire business plan for free.
Here are 10 insane Grok prompts that replace $5,000 business consultants. (Save for later).
1/ Executive Summary Generator
You are a McKinsey senior partner. I need a compelling executive summary for my business plan for [YOUR BUSINESS].
Please provide:
* One-sentence company description
* The problem you're solving, with market pain points
* Your solution and unique value proposition
* Target market and customer profile
* Business model and revenue streams
* Traction and key milestones achieved
* Funding ask and use of funds
* 3-year vision and exit potential
Format as a 2-page investor-ready executive summary that hooks readers in the first paragraph.
My business: [DESCRIBE BUSINESS, STAGE, TRACTION, GOALS]
2/ Business Model Canvas Builder
You are a startup strategist who has helped 100+ companies refine their business models. I need a complete Business Model Canvas for [YOUR BUSINESS].
Build out all 9 blocks:
* Customer Segments: Who are we creating value for?
* Value Propositions: What unique value do we deliver?
* Channels: How do we reach customers?
* Customer Relationships: How do we acquire, retain, and grow?
* Revenue Streams: How does the business make money?
* Key Resources: What assets are essential?
* Key Activities: What must we do exceptionally well?
* Key Partnerships: Who are our critical partners?
* Cost Structure: What are the major cost drivers?
For each block, provide specific details, not generic answers. Identify the 3 riskiest assumptions to test.
My business: [DESCRIBE PRODUCT, MARKET, CURRENT STATE]
I DON'T UNDERSTAND WHY PEOPLE DON'T USE GROK FOR STOCKS.
Most traders are looking at charts from 3 months ago.
Grok analyzes real-time sentiment on X to predict tomorrow.
Here are 8 prompts to find the next 10x stock:
1. Analyze Real-Time Market Sentiment on X
This is how you catch trends BEFORE they run, not after.
Prompt:
"Search X (Twitter) for the latest discussions about [STOCK TICKER/COMPANY] and analyze the sentiment.
Stock: [name and ticker]
Timeframe: [last 24-48 hours]
Based on what you find, provide: 1. Overall sentiment (bullish/neutral/bearish) 2. Key themes and narratives emerging 3. Notable investors or analysts discussing it 4. Any breaking news or catalysts mentioned 5. Shift in sentiment compared to last week 6. Retail vs. institutional sentiment indicators 7. Hype level assessment (organic vs. pump) 8. Momentum prediction: Building or fading?
Focus on actionable insights, not noise."
2. Spot Emerging Trends Before Wall Street
Prompt:
"Analyze current discussions on X about emerging trends in [SECTOR/INDUSTRY].
Identify: 1. What trends are gaining traction right now 2. Stocks being mentioned repeatedly 3. New products, technologies, or catalysts 4. Sentiment shift patterns 5. Early-stage companies getting attention 6. Comparison to mainstream media coverage (are we early?) 7. Key opinion leaders driving the narrative 8. Stocks positioned to benefit most
Here are 11 prompts to validate and launch a $10k/month side hustle:
1. Trend-Based Opportunity Scanner
"Scan X for trending business ideas and side hustles being discussed in the last 7 days. Look for phrases like 'making money,' 'side hustle,' 'passive income,' or 'business idea.' Rank them by mention velocity and positive sentiment. Filter out scams and crypto pumps."
This catches emerging opportunities before they're saturated.
2. Market Validation Through Social Listening
"Analyze X conversations about [your business idea] over the last 30 days. What are people complaining about? What solutions are they asking for? What gaps exist in current offerings? Show me the top 5 pain points mentioned most frequently."
Here are 7 prompts to spot 10x altcoins before they moon:
1. Real-Time Token Momentum Scanner
"Scan X for mentions of [$TOKEN] over the last 12 hours. Show me the volume of mentions, sentiment breakdown (bullish vs bearish), and which high-follower accounts are discussing it. Flag any sudden spikes in mentions compared to the 7-day average."
2. Influencer Activity Tracker
"Find all posts from verified accounts with 50K+ followers mentioning [$TOKEN] in the last 24 hours. Analyze their tone (bullish, neutral, bearish), engagement rates (retweets, replies), and any hints about listings, partnerships, or price targets."