GOODBYE to $500/hour business consultants forever.
Claude just built a complete go-to-market strategy in 15 minutes, completely free.
Here are 10 prompts to take any startup from raw idea to full execution plan: (Save this):
1/ The Ideal Customer Profile Builder
You are a customer research specialist who has built ICPs for 300 B2B and B2C companies.
I need a complete, specific, actionable ICP that I can use to guide every marketing, sales, and product decision.
Please provide:
- Demographic profile: Age, job title, company size, industry, geography, and income level -- only the details that directly affect buying behavior for my offer
- Psychographic profile: Core values, identity, how they see themselves professionally, what they are afraid of being seen as, and what they want to be known for
- Pain point hierarchy: Top 5 pains ranked by urgency -- which they will pay to fix today vs which they can tolerate
- Buying trigger: The specific event, moment, or realization that makes someone in this profile actively search for a solution right now
- Decision-making style: Do they buy fast or slow, do they need social proof, are they risk-averse or risk-tolerant, do they decide alone or involve a team
- Language map: The exact words and phrases they use to describe their problem -- not my language, their language
- Watering holes: The 10 specific places this person is reachable today (named subreddits, LinkedIn groups, newsletters, podcasts, communities, events)
- Objection profile: The top 5 reasons they hesitate to buy and what each objection is really about underneath
- First customer description: One specific person who fits this profile -- their job title, company type, situation, and the exact pain that makes them a perfect first buyer
- Message that opens the door: One sentence I could say to this person that makes them immediately want to know more
Format as a complete ICP document I can share with a sales team, designer, or copywriter.
My product or service:
[DESCRIBE WHAT YOU SELL]
Who I currently think my customer is:
[YOUR CURRENT ASSUMPTION]
2/ The Positioning Statement Builder
You are a positioning strategist trained in April Dunford's framework.
I need a positioning statement so specific that removing my company name still makes it obvious who wrote it.
Please provide:
- Draft positioning statement in this structure:
For [target customer] who [problem or desire], [product name] is a [category] that [key benefit]. Unlike [main alternative], we [key differentiator].
- So what test: After writing it, challenge every phrase. If any part could describe a competitor without changing a word, rewrite it until it is specific to me only
- Competitor differentiation matrix: How my positioning differs from the top 3 competitors on the 4 dimensions that matter most to my customer
- 3 positioning variations:
-- Version 1 for a cold email opening
-- Version 2 for a homepage hero section
-- Version 3 for a 30-second verbal pitch
- The one sentence version: Compress everything into under 15 words that still passes the so what test
- Validation question: One question to ask 5 potential customers to test whether this positioning actually resonates before I commit to it
My business:
[DESCRIBE WHAT YOU DO]
My target customer:
[WHO BUYS THIS]
My main alternative:
[WHAT CUSTOMERS DO TODAY WITHOUT ME]
My key differentiator:
[WHAT MAKES ME GENUINELY DIFFERENT]
3/ The 3-Tier Pricing Strategy Designer
You are a pricing strategist who has designed monetization models for SaaS, services, and physical products.
I need a 3-tier pricing structure with psychological anchoring logic built into every level.
Please provide:
- Tier 1 -- Entry: The lowest tier designed to remove every reason not to start. What it includes, what it excludes, and why the exclusions make Tier 2 obvious
- Tier 2 -- Core: The tier you actually want most customers on. Price it so the upgrade from Tier 1 feels like an obvious decision. What it includes and the anchoring logic that makes it feel like the smart choice
- Tier 3 -- Premium: Designed to make Tier 2 look reasonable by comparison. What enterprise or high-value buyers get that justifies a significant price increase
For each tier:
- Exact price point recommendation with reasoning
- The psychological anchor it creates relative to the other two tiers
- The customer profile most likely to choose this tier
- The upgrade trigger -- what event or realization causes someone to move from this tier to the next
After the 3 tiers:
- Annual vs monthly discount: Whether to offer annual pricing, at what discount percentage, and how to frame it to maximize uptake
- Price anchoring on the page: The exact order to display tiers (hint: never lead with the cheapest) and why
- Free trial logic: Whether to offer a free trial, for how long, and whether credit card upfront increases or decreases conversion for my product type
- One pricing mistake to avoid: The most common pricing error in my specific category and how to avoid it
My product:
[DESCRIBE WHAT YOU SELL]
My current pricing instinct:
[WHAT YOU WERE GOING TO CHARGE]
My target customer:
[WHO BUYS THIS]
4/ The 90-Day Go-To-Market Plan
You are a go-to-market strategist who has launched 50 products from zero to first revenue.
I need a week-by-week plan for the first 90 days with zero paid advertising budget.
Please provide:
- ICP restatement: My ideal first buyer in one sentence -- specific enough to find them by name today
- Channel ranking: The top 3 distribution channels for my ICP ranked by expected ROI in the first 90 days with reasoning for each
Month 1 -- Validation sprint (weeks 1-4):
- Week 1: Setup and first outreach -- what to build, who to contact, what success looks like
- Week 2: First conversations -- how many calls or demos to run, what to learn from each, what a green light looks like
- Week 3: First close attempt -- how to ask for money, what offer to make, how to handle the first objection
- Week 4: Debrief and iterate -- what to change based on weeks 1-3 before scaling anything
Month 2 -- System building (weeks 5-8):
- Which manual processes from month 1 to systematize
- First content or community play to begin compounding
- First referral or partnership conversation to initiate
Month 3 -- Momentum (weeks 9-12):
- How to convert early customers into case studies
- Outbound at scale using validated messaging from months 1 and 2
- The one metric that tells me I have product-market signal and can begin investing in growth
Weekly milestones: A specific measurable target for each of the 12 weeks
Daily non-negotiables: The 2 actions to take every single day in month 1
My product:
[DESCRIBE WHAT YOU SELL]
My ICP:
[WHO YOUR IDEAL BUYER IS]
Channels I have access to:
[LINKEDIN / X / EMAIL / COMMUNITIES / NETWORK / OTHER]
5/ The Partnership and Co-Marketing Opportunity Generator
You are a partnerships strategist who finds distribution leverage through other people's audiences.
I need 20 specific partnership and co-marketing opportunities I can pursue in the next 90 days.
Please provide:
- Partner type 1 -- Complementary products: 5 specific types of businesses whose customers are my exact ICP but whose product does not compete with mine -- include the partnership mechanic for each
- Partner type 2 -- Audience owners: 5 specific newsletter operators, podcast hosts, community leaders, or influencers in my niche who reach my ICP -- include the co-marketing format that works best for each
- Partner type 3 -- Referral partners: 5 types of professionals or service providers who regularly interact with my ICP and could refer them to me -- include the referral incentive structure to offer
- Partner type 4 -- Integration or tech partners: 5 platforms or tools my ICP already uses where an integration or official partnership would put me in front of buyers at the moment they need me
For each of the 20 opportunities:
- Specific partner description (not vague -- named or clearly typed)
- The partnership mechanic (co-promotion, integration, referral, bundle, guest content, joint event)
- What I offer them in return
- First outreach message in under 50 words
After the full list:
- Top 3 to pursue this week: Ranked by speed to first result
- The one partnership that could 10x my reach if it works
My product:
[DESCRIBE WHAT YOU SELL]
My ICP:
[WHO YOUR IDEAL CUSTOMER IS]
My niche:
[INDUSTRY OR CATEGORY]
6/ The Competitive Analysis Builder
You are a competitive intelligence analyst.
I need a complete competitive analysis that identifies gaps, threats, and quick-win opportunities I can act on this week.
Please provide:
- Competitor identification: The 5 most relevant competitors ranked by how directly they compete with me for the same customer
For each competitor:
- Business model: How they make money, who they serve, and at what price point
- Core strengths: Their 2 biggest competitive advantages I should not try to fight directly
- Core weaknesses: Their most consistent customer complaints and the strategic blind spots that create openings for me
- Customer segment they ignore: The specific buyer type they are underserving based on their positioning, pricing, or product focus
After all 5:
- Gap map: The competitive white space no one currently owns that my ICP would pay for
- Threat assessment: Which competitor is most likely to copy my model within 12 months if I gain traction -- and how to build defensibility before they do
- Quick-win opportunities: The 3 fastest moves I can make in the next 30 days to take customers from a specific competitor based on their known weaknesses
- The one thing to never compete on: The dimension where the incumbent is so strong that fighting them directly is a guaranteed loss
My product:
[DESCRIBE WHAT YOU SELL]
Competitors I know of:
[LIST NAMES OR DESCRIBE SIMILAR BUSINESSES]
7/ The Competitive Moat Builder
You are a business strategy advisor who helps early-stage founders build defensibility before they need it.
I need to identify and begin building a real competitive moat before a well-funded competitor decides to copy me.
Please provide:
- Moat type assessment: Rate my current potential for each of the 5 moat types (network effects, switching costs, cost advantages, intangible assets, efficient scale) from 1 to 10 with reasoning
- Most buildable moat: The 1 or 2 moat types most realistic for my business at this stage and what building them actually looks like in practice
- 90-day moat actions: Specific things I can do in the next 90 days that begin creating defensibility -- even small, early actions that compound over time
- Incumbent attack scenario: If the largest player in my market decided to replicate exactly what I do with 10x my resources, where would I be most vulnerable and what would reduce that vulnerability
- Proprietary asset identification: Any data, relationships, process, or community I am building that gets harder to replicate over time and how to accelerate its growth
- Moat signal to investors: How to describe my defensibility strategy in 2 sentences that an investor would find credible at an early stage
My business:
[DESCRIBE YOUR PRODUCT AND MODEL]
My current unfair advantage:
[WHAT YOU HAVE THAT IS HARD TO COPY]
8/ The Revenue Model Stress Test
You are a financial model reviewer and startup advisor.
I need you to pressure-test my revenue model before I build a business around assumptions that will break at scale.
Please provide:
- Unit economics breakdown: Revenue per customer, cost to acquire that customer, and cost to serve them -- is the margin viable at small scale and does it improve or worsen at scale
- Break-even analysis: How many customers I need to cover fixed costs and how many months of runway that requires at my current burn rate
- Churn risk: Based on my business model, the most likely reason customers stop paying and how it affects lifetime value
- Concentration risk: If my first 5 customers represent more than 50% of revenue, what that dependency risk looks like and how to reduce it
- Pricing pressure scenario: If a competitor drops their price by 30% next quarter, whether my unit economics survive a matching price reduction
- Growth math: What customer growth rate is required to reach $10K, $50K, and $100K monthly recurring revenue -- and whether that rate is realistic given my channel plan
- Model vulnerability: The single assumption my entire revenue model rests on that, if wrong, would require a fundamental pivot
- Improvement lever: The one change to pricing, packaging, or cost structure that would most improve unit economics in the next 90 days
My revenue model:
[DESCRIBE HOW YOU MAKE MONEY]
My current pricing:
[WHAT YOU CHARGE]
My cost structure:
[ROUGH COST TO ACQUIRE AND SERVE A CUSTOMER]
9/ The Investor-Ready One-Pager Generator
You are a pitch deck advisor who has helped 100 early-stage founders raise their first round.
From my rough product description, build a complete investor-ready one-pager.
Please provide:
- Problem statement: One sentence on the problem -- specific, painful, and backed by a scale signal
- Solution: What I built, in plain language, without jargon
- Market size: How to frame TAM, SAM, and SOM credibly for my specific market without fabricating numbers
- Business model: How I make money, simply stated
- Traction section: How to present early signals credibly even if I have no revenue yet -- pilots, waitlist size, letters of intent, or notable customer conversations
- Competition slide logic: How to frame my competitive position without dismissing competitors or overclaiming differentiation
- Team section: How to present a small founding team in a way that instills confidence
- The ask: How to frame the funding amount, use of funds, and milestone it funds in a way that feels specific and accountable
- One-pager layout: The exact section order and word count per section for a single page that investors will actually read
- The sentence that closes it: The last line of the one-pager that leaves the reader wanting a meeting
Write the full one-pager in draft form based on the information I give you.
My product:
[DESCRIBE WHAT YOU BUILT OR ARE BUILDING]
My traction so far:
[ANY EARLY SIGNALS -- REVENUE, USERS, PILOTS, WAITLIST]
My team:
[WHO IS BUILDING THIS]
10/ The Complete Startup Launch System (Master Prompt)
You are a founding team advisor who has taken 25 companies from raw idea to funded and growing.
Synthesize everything into one complete, executable startup launch document I can act on starting today.
Please provide:
- Idea clarity: My business in one sentence that a 12-year-old and a sophisticated investor would both understand immediately
- ICP in one line: The single most specific description of my ideal first customer -- named role, named pain, named context
- Positioning in one line: What I do, for whom, and why it is different -- under 15 words
- Pricing summary: My 3-tier structure with the core tier highlighted
- 30-day action plan: Exactly what to do in the first 30 days -- week by week, specific daily actions, and the single metric that determines if month 1 was a success
- First 5 customers: Who they are, where to find them, and the exact first message to send each one
- Top 3 risks right now: The 3 most likely ways this fails in the next 6 months and the specific action that reduces each risk
- The one thing: If I can only do one thing in the next 7 days to maximize the chance of making money, what is it and exactly how do I do it
- 90-day success definition: What specific, measurable outcome at day 90 would prove I have something worth continuing to build
Format as a clean one-page execution brief with no fluff, no hedging, and no open questions left unanswered.
My idea:
[FULL CONTEXT -- PRODUCT, MARKET, STAGE, BACKGROUND]
My biggest uncertainty right now:
[WHAT YOU ARE MOST UNSURE ABOUT]
R.I.P. rewatching lectures to find the key concepts.
Gemini can now read a full transcript, identify every testable idea, and build your study system.
Here are 8 prompts for turning any course, lecture, or textbook into exam-ready knowledge (Save for later):
1/ The Exam Concept Extractor
You are an expert exam designer and subject tutor. I will paste a lecture transcript or textbook chapter.
Your job is to find every concept that is likely to be tested.
Please provide:
- Ranked concept list: A bullet list of all key concepts, ordered from most exam-relevant to least, with 1–2 lines explaining why each is testable
- Definition check: A one-sentence, precise definition for each concept in simple language
- Formula and rule flags: Clearly mark any item that is a formula, rule, or process that is likely to be asked directly
- “Professor favorite” guesses: 5 concepts that are unusually emphasized, repeated, or nuanced that an instructor is most likely to build tricky questions around
- Dependency tags: For each concept, note if it depends on understanding another concept first
Focus only on what can realistically appear on an exam, not every minor detail.
At the end, create a “Top 20% concepts” list that covers what would likely drive 80% of the exam score.
Content to analyze:
[PASTE LECTURE TRANSCRIPT OR CHAPTER]
2/ The Smart Practice Question Generator
You are a senior instructor creating exam questions to test real understanding, not memorization.
From the concepts or chapter I give you, generate a practice set at increasing difficulty.
Please provide:
- Level 1 (basic recall): 5 questions that test simple definitions and facts
- Level 2 (conceptual understanding): 5 questions that test explaining ideas in your own words or comparing concepts
- Level 3 (application): 5 scenario-based or numerical questions where the concept must be applied to a concrete example
- Level 4 (exam-level challenge): 5 difficult questions that combine multiple concepts or include common traps
For each question:
- Provide the model answer
- Add a short note: “What this question is really testing”
Keep wording similar to how a real exam might phrase it.
Source content for questions:
[PASTE CONCEPT LIST OR CHAPTER SUMMARY]
Here are 8 prompts to unlock stock trading automation:
1/ The Daily Trade Idea Generator
You are a professional equity trader with 20 years of experience across technical analysis, momentum trading, and macro-driven setups. I need 5 high-probability trade ideas built from today's live market conditions.
Please provide:
- Market context: Current macro backdrop, overnight futures movement, and pre-market sentiment from X that is driving bias today
- Trade 1 through 5: For each setup provide the ticker, directional bias (long or short), the technical or fundamental trigger, entry price, stop loss, and profit target
- Setup type label: For each trade, classify as momentum, breakout, reversal, earnings play, or macro-driven
- Risk-reward ratio: Calculate the exact R/R for each setup and flag anything below 2:1 as low priority
- Timeframe: Specify whether each setup is intraday, swing (2-5 days), or positional (2-4 weeks)
- Conviction rating: Rate each setup High / Medium / Low based on confluence of signals
- Invalidation level: The exact price level that cancels the thesis for each trade
- X sentiment check: What is the real-time crowd sentiment on X for each ticker and whether it confirms or contradicts the technical setup
- Sector correlation: Whether the broader sector is aligned with the individual trade direction
- Top pick: The single highest-conviction setup from the five and the one reason it stands above the rest
Use real-time data from X and current market feeds. Flag every setup as analysis, not financial advice. Never fabricate price levels.
Format as a pre-market trade brief with all 5 setups in a clean table followed by the top pick with full reasoning.
My trading style: [DAY TRADER / SWING TRADER / POSITION TRADER]
Markets I trade: [US EQUITIES / OPTIONS / CRYPTO / FOREX / FUTURES]
Risk per trade: [DOLLAR AMOUNT OR PERCENTAGE OF PORTFOLIO]
2/ The Real-Time Sentiment Scanner
You are a quantitative sentiment analyst who reads X in real time to find institutional and retail positioning shifts before they show up in price action.
Please provide:
- Ticker sentiment score: For each stock I give you, analyze the last 6 hours of X posts and rate sentiment from -10 (extremely bearish) to +10 (extremely bullish) with a confidence level
- Volume of mentions: How many posts, replies, and quote posts are discussing this ticker in the last 6 hours vs. the 7-day average -- a spike in volume is itself a signal
- Influential accounts: What verified analysts, fund managers, or high-follower traders are saying about this ticker today and whether their bias is consistent or conflicted
- Retail vs. institutional language: Whether the sentiment is coming from retail crowd behavior (emojis, hype language, short-term calls) or more institutional-style analysis (macro context, earnings frameworks, valuation language)
- Sentiment velocity: Is sentiment improving or deteriorating over the last 2 hours -- the direction of change matters more than the absolute level
- Contrarian signal check: If sentiment is at an extreme (above +8 or below -8), flag it as a potential contrarian setup where the crowd is likely wrong
- News catalyst detection: Any breaking news, analyst upgrades or downgrades, insider activity reports, or regulatory filings driving the sentiment shift
- Options flow correlation: Whether unusual options activity reported on X confirms or conflicts with the sentiment reading
- Crowd positioning risk: If retail sentiment is heavily one-directional, assess the squeeze potential in either direction
- Actionable output: For each ticker, a one-line trading implication based purely on the sentiment picture
Use only real-time data from X and public financial news sources. Cite sentiment with specific post examples where possible. Flag every reading as a sentiment snapshot, not a price prediction.
Format as a sentiment dashboard with a score, volume reading, and one-line trade implication per ticker.
Tickers to scan: [LIST YOUR WATCHLIST]
Scan window: [LAST 2 HOURS / 6 HOURS / 24 HOURS]
Claude just replaced 6 weeks of strategy analysis into 8 minutes completely free.
Here are 12 prompts to go from completely clueless to completely boardroom-ready in every business decision: (Save this):
## 1. The MECE Issue Tree Builder
You are a strategy consultant breaking down a messy business problem into a clean, structured issue tree. Use the MECE principle (Mutually Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive) so every part of the problem is covered exactly once with no overlaps.
Here is what I need:
- Problem statement: Rewrite my problem as one clear, specific sentence. Remove any vague or emotional language.
- MECE explained: Briefly tell me what MECE means, why breaking it leads to bad analysis, and how to check each branch.
- Level 1 branches: Give me 2 to 4 top-level categories that together cover 100% of the problem with zero overlap.
- Level 2 branches: Under each Level 1 category, give me 2 to 4 sub-issues that are also MECE and fully cover that category.
- Level 3 branches: For the most important Level 2 issues, go one level deeper into root causes or key questions to investigate.
- Overlap check: Point out any place where branches overlap and show me how to fix it.
- Gap check: Point out anything the tree misses and tell me where to add it.
- Priority call: Which branch most likely holds the root cause or the biggest opportunity, and why?
- Hypothesis per branch: For each Level 1 branch, write one clear guess about what the analysis will probably find.
- Visual layout: Describe the full tree structure clearly enough that I can rebuild it in PowerPoint or Miro right away.
Give me the full issue tree with all three levels, overlap and gap checks, and hypotheses for each branch.
My messy problem: [DESCRIBE YOUR BUSINESS PROBLEM IN ANY FORM]
## 2. The Five Forces Industry Analyzer
You are a strategy consultant running a full Porter's Five Forces analysis for a client looking at a new market. Give me a complete, evidence-based picture of how attractive this industry is.
Here is what I need:
- Force 1, Threat of New Entrants: Look at capital needs, brand loyalty, regulations, scale advantages, distribution access, and how existing players would fight back. Rate it High, Medium, or Low with supporting evidence.
- Force 2, Supplier Power: Look at how many suppliers exist, switching costs, supplier concentration, risk of suppliers selling direct, and how much volume matters. Rate with evidence.
- Force 3, Buyer Power: Look at buyer concentration, price sensitivity, switching costs, risk of buyers making it themselves, and how standard the product is. Rate with evidence.
- Force 4, Threat of Substitutes: Look at what alternatives exist, their price and performance compared to ours, how easy switching is, and how willing buyers are to switch. Rate with evidence.
- Force 5, Competitive Rivalry: Look at number and size of competitors, how fast the industry grows, how different the offerings are, exit barriers, and cost structures. Rate with evidence.
- Industry attractiveness score: Give a weighted score from 1 to 10 across all five forces and explain what it means for profit potential.
- Dominant force: Which single force matters most for margins in this industry, and why it outweighs the rest?
- Action per force: For each force, give one specific move a smart company would make to reduce the threat or take advantage of it.
- Best position: Based on everything above, where is the most defensible and profitable spot in this market?
Format this as a consulting-style report with force ratings, evidence, and ranked recommendations.
Industry: [YOUR INDUSTRY OR MARKET]
My position: [ENTERING AS / COMPETING AS]
BREAKING: AI can now analyze any stock like a Wall Street analyst (for free).
Here are 10 insane Grok prompts that replace $2,000/month Bloomberg terminals: (Save for later):
1/ The Complete Stock Breakdown
Stop Googling stock tickers and reading garbage articles. Use this:
"You are a senior equity research analyst at a top-tier investment bank with access to Bloomberg, FactSet, and SEC filings. Cite every metric with its source and date. If data is unavailable or potentially outdated, say so explicitly. Do not estimate or fabricate any numbers.
Give me a complete analysis of [STOCK TICKER / COMPANY NAME].
Step 1 — Company Overview:
→ What the company does in plain English
→ Business model and all revenue streams broken down by percentage of total revenue
→ Key competitive advantage in one sentence
Step 2 — Key Financials (cite source and date for every number):
→ Revenue (TTM and most recent quarter)
→ Net income and EPS
→ P/E ratio, forward P/E, P/S ratio, PEG ratio
→ Debt-to-equity ratio and total debt
→ Free cash flow (TTM)
→ Year-over-year comparison vs. same quarter last year
Step 3 — Stock Performance:
→ Price movement: 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, YTD (with exact % change)
→ 52-week high and low
→ Performance vs. S&P 500 over the same periods
Step 4 — Wall Street Consensus:
→ Number of analysts covering this stock
→ Buy / Hold / Sell breakdown
→ Average, highest, and lowest price target
→ Most recent analyst upgrade or downgrade (with firm name and date)
Step 5 — Institutional Activity:
→ Top 5 institutional holders and their position changes last quarter
→ Any notable hedge fund activity (new positions or exits)
Format with clear markdown headers, tables where appropriate, and source citations after every metric. Flag any data that may be more than 30 days old."
In 30 seconds you'll know more than 95% of retail investors.
2/ The Financial Statement Deep Dive
Every hedge fund manager reads financial statements. Now you can too:
"You are a senior equity research analyst at a top-tier investment bank. Cite every financial metric with its exact source (SEC filing, earnings report, or financial database) and reporting date. Do not estimate any numbers. If a metric is unavailable, state that clearly instead of guessing.
Analyze the most recent financial statements for [COMPANY NAME / TICKER].
Step 1 — Income Statement Analysis:
→ Revenue for last 4 quarters with exact figures and YoY growth rates
→ Gross margin, operating margin, and net margin for each quarter
→ Trend direction: Are margins expanding, stable, or compressing? By how much?
→ R&D spend as a percentage of revenue (if applicable)
Step 2 — Balance Sheet Health:
→ Total assets vs. total liabilities
→ Current ratio and quick ratio
→ Cash and short-term investments on hand
→ Total debt and debt maturity schedule (when is debt due?)
→ Goodwill as a percentage of total assets (flag if >30%)
Step 3 — Cash Flow Reality Check:
→ Operating cash flow (TTM)
→ Capital expenditures (TTM)
→ Free cash flow (TTM) and FCF margin
→ How they're spending cash: buybacks, dividends, acquisitions, debt repayment, R&D
→ Is cash flow growing or declining vs. previous year?
Step 4 — Red Flags (check each one explicitly):
→ Revenue growing but cash flow declining? ⚠️
→ Debt growing faster than revenue? ⚠️
→ Accounts receivable growing faster than revenue? ⚠️
→ Inventory buildup without revenue growth? ⚠️
→ Frequent one-time charges or adjusted earnings that differ significantly from GAAP? ⚠️
→ Auditor changes or qualified opinions? ⚠️
Step 5 — Green Flags:
→ Improving margins quarter over quarter
→ Growing free cash flow
→ Decreasing debt or increasing cash reserves
→ Consistent GAAP and non-GAAP earnings alignment
Step 6 — Competitive Context:
→ Compare all key margins and ratios to the company's top 3 competitors in a table
End with a plain English summary: What story are these financials telling? Is this company getting healthier or weaker? Use a table format with clear column headers and cite the source of every number."
This is what analysts at Goldman Sachs do every morning. Now it takes you 60 seconds.
BREAKING: Claude can now grow any YouTube channel like a top creator coach (for free).
Here are 10 insane prompts that take you from 0 to monetized authority in 90 days: (Save for later)
1/ The Channel Positioning Blueprint
You are a YouTube growth strategist who has built 50+ channels from zero to monetization. I need to define my channel's exact position in the market before I upload a single video.
Please provide:
- Niche clarity: Based on my topic, identify the 3 most viable sub-niches I could own — from broadest to most specific with audience size estimates for each
- Competitor audit: The top 10 channels in my niche ranked by subscribers, upload frequency, average views, and engagement rate
- Gap analysis: Topics, formats, and audiences that current top channels are underserving or ignoring entirely
- Positioning statement: One sentence defining what my channel is, for whom, and why it is different from every other channel in this space
- Unique angle: The specific perspective, format, or insight style that only I can bring based on my background and experience
- Audience persona: Detailed profile of my ideal viewer (age, occupation, frustrations, aspirations, what they watch, why they would subscribe to me)
- Channel promise: The transformation or value a viewer gets from watching my channel consistently that they cannot get elsewhere
- Content pillar design: 3-5 core topic categories my channel will own, with content volume estimates per pillar
- Monetization alignment: How this positioning sets up long-term revenue (AdSense, sponsorships, courses, affiliate, memberships)
- Name and branding direction: Channel name options, visual style recommendations, and tone of voice guidelines
Format as a channel strategy document with positioning statement, competitor gap map, and content pillar breakdown.
My topic or expertise: [WHAT YOU KNOW OR WANT TO TEACH]
My background: [RELEVANT EXPERIENCE OR CREDENTIALS]
My target audience: [WHO YOU THINK YOU'RE MAKING THIS FOR]
2/ The Viral Title and Thumbnail System
You are a YouTube click-through rate specialist who has tested 10,000+ titles and thumbnails. I need a repeatable system for creating titles and thumbnails that get clicked every time.
Please provide:
- Title formula bank: 12 proven title formulas for my niche with fill-in-the-blank templates (curiosity gap, number list, transformation promise, controversy, speed promise, authority challenge)
- Emotional trigger analysis: Which emotions drive the most clicks in my specific niche (fear, curiosity, desire, urgency, FOMO, aspiration)
- Power word library: 30 high-CTR power words that are specifically effective in my niche with context for when to use each
- Title length optimization: Optimal character count for desktop vs mobile, where to front-load the hook
- A/B test pairs: For my next 5 video topics, write 3 title variations each and rate which is most likely to win and why
- Thumbnail concept guide: For each title, describe the ideal thumbnail composition (facial expression, text overlay, background, color psychology, focal point)
- CTR benchmark targets: What CTR to aim for at each channel size and how to diagnose underperforming titles
- Clickbait line: How to be intriguing without being misleading — where the line is and how to stay on the right side of it
- Pattern interrupt tactics: How to make my thumbnail visually disruptive in a sea of similar content
- Title-to-thumbnail alignment: How to ensure the title and thumbnail tell a consistent story that delivers on the click
Format as a title and thumbnail playbook with formula templates, example titles, and thumbnail concept briefs for each.
My niche: [YOUR CHANNEL TOPIC]
My video topics this month: [LIST 3-5 UPCOMING VIDEO IDEAS]
Here are 8 prompts that expose Airbnb pricing tricks:
1/ The Same Listing Price Hunter
You are a travel research analyst who specializes in finding price discrepancies across booking platforms. I need you to find every place this exact Airbnb listing appears online and what it costs on each.
Please provide:
- Cross-platform search strategy: Exact steps to find this same property on VRBO, Booking .com, Expedia, Hotels. com, TripAdvisor, and direct host websites
- Search methodology: How to use the property name, host name, address clues, photo reverse search, and description keywords to identify the same listing elsewhere
- Price extraction: For each platform found, the nightly rate, cleaning fee, service fee, and total for my exact dates side by side
- Fee structure comparison: How each platform's fee breakdown differs for the same underlying property price
- Platform loyalty benefits: Whether any platform offers cashback, points, or member discounts that reduce the effective price further
- Direct booking detection: How to identify if this host operates a direct booking website or Instagram/Facebook listing where they likely charge less (no platform commission)
- Host contact strategy: If direct booking is possible, how to ethically and safely reach the host outside the platform
- Best deal calculator: After comparing all sources, the true lowest cost for this exact stay including all mandatory fees
- Risk assessment: What protections I lose on cheaper platforms and whether the savings justify the tradeoff
Format as a price comparison report with a platform-by-platform table and a clear "best total price" recommendation.
Airbnb listing details: [PASTE LISTING URL, TITLE, OR DESCRIPTION]
My travel dates: [CHECK-IN / CHECK-OUT]
Number of guests: [GUEST COUNT]
2/ The Dynamic Pricing Decoder
You are a revenue management analyst who has studied Airbnb's pricing algorithm in depth. I need to understand exactly why this listing is priced the way it is and when it will be cheaper.
Please provide:
- Algorithm factors: The 12 variables Airbnb's algorithm uses to set nightly prices (demand signals, local events, competitor pricing, booking window, host settings, seasonal patterns)
- Demand triggers: What is driving this listing's current price up — local events, peak season, last-minute premium, or artificially high base price
- Price history pattern: How to access or estimate this listing's price history using AirDNA, Wheelhouse, and Price Labs data
- Optimal booking window: At what point before check-in does this type of listing typically drop in price (e.g., last-minute discount window, 6-week booking sweet spot)
- Day-of-week pricing: Which check-in days and stay durations trigger lower algorithmic prices for this market
- Seasonal calendar: Month-by-month price patterns for this destination and when this specific listing category is cheapest
- Demand calendar: How to use Google Trends, local event calendars, and conference schedules to find low-demand windows
- Price alert strategy: Exactly how to set up tracking so I am notified the moment this listing drops to a target price
- Negotiation window: When is the host most likely to accept a lower offer (days out, vacancy gap, slower market periods)
Format as a pricing intelligence brief with a calendar showing cheapest booking windows and a target price recommendation.
Listing location: [CITY / NEIGHBORHOOD]
Listing type: [ENTIRE HOME / PRIVATE ROOM / TYPE OF PROPERTY]
My flexible date range: [EARLIEST TO LATEST I CAN TRAVEL]