Everyone is sleeping on Grok 4.2 and it's not even close.
Here are 11 prompts that make it outperform ChatGPT for content creation, research, and brainstorming:
(Bookmark this before it blows up)
1. The Viral Content Reverse Engineer
Prompt:
"Analyze this piece of viral content: [paste the post/tweet/article]. Break it down into its exact viral mechanics: what psychological trigger does the hook use (curiosity gap, fear of missing out, identity validation, controversy)? What structural pattern does the body follow? What makes someone stop scrolling for this? What makes someone share it? Now using that exact blueprint, write me 5 original variations about [your topic] that trigger the same psychology but with completely fresh angles. Don't copy the tone — copy the architecture."
This is how top creators reverse-engineer what works. You're not copying content. You're stealing the invisible blueprint behind it.
2. The Contrarian Idea Generator
Prompt:
"I write about [your niche]. Give me 20 contrarian takes that would make my audience stop and think. Rules: each take must challenge a widely accepted belief in [niche], be defensible with real logic or evidence (not just edgy for the sake of it), create an immediate urge to either agree passionately or argue in the comments, and be expressible in 1-2 sentences maximum. Rank them from mildly spicy to extremely controversial. For the top 5, give me a one-paragraph argument defending each take so I can build a full post around it."
This prompt alone generates 2-3 weeks of content ideas in 60 seconds. The best content starts arguments. This manufactures them.
3. The Deep Research Synthesizer
Prompt:
"I'm researching [topic]. Act as a senior research analyst with 20 years of experience. Give me a comprehensive briefing that covers: the current state of [topic] as of 2026 with key data points and statistics, the 3 competing schools of thought and who the major voices behind each are, what most people get wrong about this topic and why, the 5 most important recent developments that aren't common knowledge yet, where this field is heading in the next 2-3 years based on current trajectories, and the 3 best primary sources I should read for deeper understanding. Write it like an intelligence briefing — dense, factual, no filler. Cite specific names, numbers, and events wherever possible."
This gives you a McKinsey-level research brief in 2 minutes. I used to spend 4 hours on Google getting worse results.
4. The Content Multiplier
Prompt:
"Here's a piece of content I created: [paste your blog post, newsletter, video script, or thread]. Now transform it into all of the following formats while keeping the core message intact but adapting the style for each platform: 1) a Twitter/X thread (8-12 tweets, hook-first, one idea per tweet), 2) a LinkedIn post (professional tone, personal story angle, clear takeaway), 3) a short-form video script under 60 seconds (pattern interrupt opener, fast pacing, strong call-to-action), 4) an email newsletter edition (conversational, one reader speaking to another, curiosity-driven subject line), 5) 5 standalone tweets that each work as their own post. Don't just summarize — reimagine the content natively for each platform."
One piece of content becomes 9+ pieces across 5 platforms. This is how creators who seem to be everywhere actually do it.
5. The Brainstorm Expander
Prompt:
"I have a rough idea: [describe your idea in 1-2 sentences]. Your job is to make it 10x better. First, give me 5 different angles I could take this idea that I probably haven't considered — think different audiences, different formats, different emotional hooks. Second, for each angle, give me a one-sentence hook that would make someone stop scrolling. Third, poke holes in my original idea — what's weak about it, what's been done before, and what would make a reader scroll past it? Fourth, combine the strongest elements from all 5 angles into one ultimate version of this idea that's better than anything I started with. Be my creative director, not my yes-man."
This is the difference between posting a good idea and posting a great one. It catches blind spots you can't see yourself.
6. The Source Hunter
Prompt:
"I'm writing about [topic] and I need to back up my claims with real evidence. Find me: 5 specific statistics or data points with their original sources that support [your argument], 3 real-world case studies or examples (companies, people, events) that prove this works in practice, 2 expert quotes or positions from recognized authorities in this field, 1 counterargument that challenges my position and the best rebuttal to it, and 1 surprising or lesser-known fact about this topic that would make a reader say 'I didn't know that.' For every claim, tell me where to verify it. If you're not 100% certain about a stat, say so and suggest where I can find the accurate number."
This turns a weak opinion post into an authoritative piece backed by real evidence. It's the difference between content that gets liked and content that gets trusted.
7. The Headline Workshop
Prompt:
"I'm writing about [topic] for [platform]. Generate 30 headlines/hooks using these proven frameworks: 5 using curiosity gaps (make the reader desperate to know the answer), 5 using specific numbers (tangible, quantified promises), 5 using contrarian openings (challenge something the audience believes), 5 using fear of missing out (what they're losing by not reading), 5 using identity hooks (make the reader feel seen or called out), and 5 using before/after transformation (clear outcome promise). After all 30, pick the top 3 that you think would get the highest click-through rate and explain why each one works psychologically. The topic is: [your specific topic or angle]."
I used to spend 45 minutes writing one headline. This gives me 30 options in 30 seconds and the top 3 are usually better than anything I'd have written myself.
8. The Audience Mind Reader
Prompt:
"My target audience is [describe your audience: age, profession, goals, frustrations]. Get inside their head completely. Tell me: the 5 things they secretly worry about at 2am related to [your niche], the 3 things they want but are embarrassed to admit, the exact language and phrases they use when talking about [topic] with friends (not corporate speak — real words), the content they're tired of seeing in [niche] and why it annoys them, the one piece of content that would make them screenshot it and send it to a friend saying 'this is literally me', and the emotional trigger that would make them stop scrolling — is it aspiration, fear, validation, curiosity, or anger? Give me specific examples for each, not generic marketing speak."
Every piece of viral content starts with understanding exactly what your audience is thinking. This prompt downloads their brain.
9. The Content Calendar Architect
Prompt:
"Build me a 30-day content calendar for [platform] in [niche]. Rules: every post must have a specific angle, not just a topic (not 'talk about productivity' but 'why your morning routine is actually making you less productive'). Alternate between these content types across the month: educational (teach something), contrarian (challenge a belief), personal story (relatable experience), tactical (step-by-step how-to), curated (best resources/tools), and engagement bait (questions, polls, hot takes). For each day give me: the content type, a ready-to-use hook (first line), the core angle in one sentence, and the best time to post it. Make sure no two consecutive posts use the same content type."
30 days of content planned in 2 minutes. No more staring at a blank screen wondering what to post.
10. The Idea Cross-Pollinator
Prompt:
"I write about [your niche]. Take concepts and frameworks from these completely unrelated fields and apply them to my niche in unexpected ways: evolutionary biology, game theory, behavioral economics, military strategy, and stand-up comedy. For each field, give me: one core principle or framework from that field, how it directly applies to [your niche] in a way nobody has written about before, and a full post concept (hook + 3-sentence outline) built around this cross-pollination. The goal is to give me ideas that feel genuinely original — not the recycled takes everyone in my niche is posting. I want my audience to think 'I've never thought about it that way before.'"
This is where breakthrough content comes from. The best ideas in any niche are stolen from other niches. This automates that creative theft.
11. The Content Audit Roast
Prompt:
"Here are my last 10 posts: [paste your recent content or describe it]. Roast them. Be brutally honest. For each post tell me: what worked and why (be specific, not just 'good hook'), what was weak and exactly how to fix it, whether the hook was strong enough to stop a scroll or if it was generic, whether the structure held attention or lost it somewhere in the middle, and what a top 1% creator in my niche would have done differently with the same topic. After analyzing all 10, identify: the patterns in my best-performing content that I should double down on, the recurring mistakes I keep making, and the content type that's clearly my strongest (and the one I should stop forcing). End with a specific 5-point improvement plan for my next 10 posts."
This is the prompt most people are afraid to use. But the creators who grow fastest are the ones who get honest feedback. This gives you a $5,000 content consultant for free.
Recap — the 11 prompts that make Grok 4.2 a content machine:
→ Prompt 1 — reverse engineers viral content
→ Prompt 2 — generates contrarian ideas
→ Prompt 3 — does deep research in 2 minutes
→ Prompt 4 — multiplies one post into 9+ pieces
→ Prompt 5 — turns rough ideas into great ones
→ Prompt 6 — finds real evidence and sources
→ Prompt 7 — writes 30 headlines in 30 seconds
→ Prompt 8 — reads your audience's mind
→ Prompt 9 — builds a 30-day content calendar
→ Prompt 10 — steals ideas from other fields
→ Prompt 11 — audits and improves your content
Most people use AI to write generic posts.
These prompts use AI to think like a strategist, research like an analyst, and create like a top 1% creator.
Bookmark this. Share it with a creator who needs it.
What do you create content about?
Drop your niche in the replies and I'll tell you which 3 prompts to start with first. 👇
I don't get why most people don't use NotebookLM for studying.
Let me show you 7 prompts that turn it into a personal professor (and save you from failing your next exam):
1/ The Lecture Note Processor
You are a university professor creating a comprehensive study guide. I just attended a lecture and need you to transform my raw notes into a structured learning resource.
Please provide:
- Core concepts summary: Identify and explain the 5-7 main ideas from this lecture in order of importance
- Key terminology definitions: Every technical term, concept, or vocabulary word defined in simple language
- Concept relationships: How do these ideas connect to each other, what's the logical flow, what builds on what
- Real-world applications: 3 practical examples of how these concepts apply outside the textbook
- Common misconceptions: What students typically misunderstand about this topic and why
- Memory aids: Create mnemonics, analogies, or mental models for complex concepts
- Self-test questions: 5 questions I should be able to answer if I truly understand this material (with answers)
- Gap identification: What wasn't clear in my notes that I should review or ask about
Format as a structured study guide with clear sections, visual hierarchy, and retention-focused explanations.
My lecture notes: [PASTE YOUR NOTES OR UPLOAD LECTURE SLIDES]
2/ The Textbook Chapter Breakdown
You are an expert tutor breaking down complex material into digestible chunks. I need to master this textbook chapter before my exam.
Please provide:
- Chapter overview: What is this chapter actually about in 2-3 sentences
- Learning objectives: What should I be able to do after studying this chapter
- Concept hierarchy: Main topics → subtopics → supporting details organized in outline format
- Key formulas or frameworks: Every important equation, model, or process with when and how to use it
- Difficult sections identified: Flag the 3 hardest concepts in this chapter and explain why they're challenging
- Simplified explanations: Take the most complex idea and explain it like I'm 12 years old
- Connection to previous material: How does this chapter relate to what I learned before
- Practice problem walkthrough: Step-by-step solution to example problems with reasoning explained
- Chapter summary: Distill everything into 10 bullet points I can review the night before the exam
Format as a chapter mastery guide with clear structure, emphasis on exam-relevant material, and active recall triggers.
Source material: [UPLOAD CHAPTER PDF OR PASTE CHAPTER TITLE/TOPIC]
BREAKING: AI can now do market research like McKinsey (for free).
Here are 12 insane Claude Opus 4.6 prompts that replace $5,000 consultant: (Save for later)
1/ Market Sizing & TAM Analysis
You are a McKinsey-level market analyst. I need a Total Addressable Market (TAM) analysis for [YOUR INDUSTRY/PRODUCT].
Please provide:
• Top-down approach: Start from global market → narrow to my segment
• Bottom-up approach: Calculate from unit economics × potential customers
• TAM, SAM, SOM breakdown with dollar figures
• Growth rate projections for the next 5 years (CAGR)
• Key assumptions behind each estimate
• Comparison to 3 analyst reports or market research firms
Format as an investor-ready market sizing slide with clear methodology.
Context: My product is [DESCRIBE PRODUCT], targeting [TARGET CUSTOMER] in [GEOGRAPHY].
2/ Competitive Landscape Deep Dive
You are a senior strategy consultant at Bain & Company. I need a complete competitive landscape analysis for [YOUR INDUSTRY].
Please provide:
• Direct competitors: Top 10 players ranked by market share, revenue, and funding
• Indirect competitors: 5 adjacent companies that could enter this market
• For each competitor, analyze: pricing model, key features, target audience, strengths, weaknesses, and recent strategic moves
• Market positioning map (price vs. value matrix)
• Competitive moats: What makes each player defensible
• White space analysis: Gaps no competitor is filling
• Threat assessment: Rate each competitor (low/medium/high threat)
Format as a structured competitive intelligence report with comparison tables.
My company: [DESCRIBE YOUR BUSINESS AND POSITIONING]
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.
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]