BREAKING: Claude can now run your entire social media strategy like a $300/hour social media manager. For free.
Here are 7 prompts you should be using right now:
Save this before it goes viral.
1. Full Social Media Strategy
Prompt: "You are a social media expert who has grown brands from zero to millions of followers. Look at my business, niche, audience, competitors, and goals. Then create a complete social media strategy for me. Include brand positioning, content ideas, target audience strategy, and how I can make money. My details: [paste]."
2. Audience Psychology Breakdown
Prompt: "Analyze my target audience. Explain their biggest problems, desires, fears, and daily habits when they consume content. Then turn this into messaging ideas and content topics that will grab their attention and build trust."
Claude can now create a full presentation in under 120 seconds.
Use these 10 prompts instead and see the magic 👇
1. The Complete Presentation Blueprint
“Act like a presentation expert. Create a full presentation plan for [topic]. Define the goal, target audience, main message, slide order, and total number of slides. Make sure the structure is clear, engaging, and professional.”
2. Slide Structure & Flow Architect
“Design a slide-by-slide structure for a presentation on [topic]. For each slide, give a clear slide title and explain what the slide should show, so the presentation flows smoothly from start to finish.”
MY FRIEND APPLIED TO 45 JOBS. ZERO RESPONSES. ZERO INTERVIEWS.
Then I uploaded his resume to ChatGPT and received 13 responses in 8 days.
Here are the 7 prompts that made it possible:
1. Rewrite Your Resume for Max Impact
Prompt: “Here’s my background: [roles, skills, achievements with numbers].
Rewrite my resume for [specific role] in [industry/country].
Make it ATS-friendly, use strong action words, and focus on clear results with numbers. Keep it simple, professional, and matched to the job.”
2. Tailor Your Resume to the Job
Prompt: “Here’s the job description: [paste].
Here’s my resume: [paste].
Compare both.
Show missing skills or keywords. Rewrite my experience so it matches 80%–90% of the job requirements. Do not exaggerate. Keep everything honest and clear.”
Here are 7 simple prompts that can help you master English fast:
1. Daily Lesson Builder
Act like my personal English teacher.
Create a simple 20-minute daily lesson for me.
The lesson should include:
- 5–10 new vocabulary words with meanings and example sentences
- One small grammar topic explained in easy words
- 3–5 practice exercises (fill in the blanks, sentence correction, or multiple choice)
- A short reading paragraph to improve understanding
- 3 speaking questions so I can practice talking
- A short writing task (5–8 sentences)
- Corrections and simple feedback on my answers
Keep everything clear, practical, and easy to understand.
2. Conversation Partner
Chat with me in English like we’re friends sitting at a café.
- Keep the conversation natural and friendly
- Ask me simple follow-up questions
- Correct my mistakes politely
- Rewrite my sentence the right way
- Explain the correction in easy words
- Teach me better vocabulary or more natural phrases
- Encourage me to speak more
Help me improve my confidence and fluency step by step.
BREAKING: AI can now analyze any stock like a Wall Street analyst for free.
Here are 8 powerful Grok prompts that can replace a $2,000/month Bloomberg Terminal: (Save this for later)
1. The Ultimate Stock Deep Dive
Stop jumping between random websites. Use this prompt instead:
“Act like a professional Wall Street stock analyst. Only use real data from trusted sources like company filings and financial platforms. Mention the source and date for every number. If something is outdated or not available, clearly say that. Do not guess or make up data.
Now analyze: [STOCK NAME / TICKER]
1. Company Basics
– What does the company actually do? (simple explanation)
– How does it make money? Break down its main revenue sources with percentages.
– What is its biggest competitive advantage?
2. Financial Health (add source + date for each number)
– Revenue (last 12 months + latest quarter)
– Net profit and EPS
– Valuation ratios (P/E, forward P/E, P/S, PEG)
– Total debt and debt-to-equity ratio
– Free cash flow
– Compare the latest quarter with the same quarter last year
3. Stock Performance
– Price change over 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, and YTD
– 52-week high and low
– How it performed vs. the S&P 500
4. Analyst Opinions
– How many analysts cover it?
– Buy / Hold / Sell numbers
– Average, highest, and lowest price targets
– Latest upgrade or downgrade (with firm name and date)
5. Big Investors
– Top 5 institutional holders and recent position changes
– Any major hedge fund buying or selling
Present everything clearly with headings and tables where helpful. Add sources after every metric. Highlight any data older than 30 days.”
Use this once, and you’ll understand the stock better than most retail investors.
2. The Financial Statement Deep Dive
Big investors always read the financial statements first. Here’s a simple prompt to do the same:
“Act like a professional stock analyst. Use only real numbers from official filings (SEC reports, earnings releases, or trusted financial databases). Mention the exact source and reporting date for every figure. Do not guess. If something isn’t available, clearly say so.
Analyze the latest financial statements for: [COMPANY NAME / TICKER]
1. Income Statement
– Revenue for the last 4 quarters (exact numbers + YoY growth)
– Gross margin, operating margin, and net margin for each quarter
– Are margins improving, staying flat, or shrinking? By how much?
– R&D spending as a % of revenue (if relevant)
2. Balance Sheet
– Total assets vs. total liabilities
– Current ratio and quick ratio
– Cash and short-term investments
– Total debt + when that debt is due
– Goodwill as % of total assets (flag if above 30%)
3. Cash Flow
– Operating cash flow (TTM)
– Capital expenditures (TTM)
– Free cash flow (TTM) + FCF margin
– How cash is being used (buybacks, dividends, acquisitions, debt repayment, R&D)
– Is cash flow rising or falling vs. last year?
4. Warning Signs (check clearly)
– Revenue up but cash flow down?
– Debt rising faster than revenue?
– Accounts receivable growing too fast?
– Inventory building without sales growth?
– Large one-time adjustments vs. GAAP earnings?
– Any auditor changes or concerns?
5. Positive Signs
– Margins improving
– Free cash flow growing
– Debt going down or cash increasing
– GAAP and adjusted earnings closely aligned
6. Compare to Competitors
– Put key margins and ratios side-by-side with the top 3 competitors in a table
End with a simple summary: What story do these numbers tell? Is the company getting stronger or weaker?
Use clear headings, tables where helpful, and list the source and date next to every number.”
This is the kind of breakdown professional analysts do now you can do it in under a minute.