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Best AI prompts for content creation (2026) — multi-channel without mush

Repurpose with explicit transforms: audience, length, CTA, proof, and banned phrases. The prompts here treat each channel like a different product, not a resize job.

Introduction

Good prompts turn a generic AI output into something you can use. For Content Creation, we've gathered prompts that match this use case, plus the tools and workflows that go with them. Copy, tweak, and run them in your preferred AI tool.

Updated 2026·Tested tools·Real workflows

Quick answer

Reprompt for the container: LinkedIn ≠ blog ≠ email.

Keep a single facts block, then run separate prompt templates per channel that specify length, hook style, link rules, and emoji policy. Consistency is in the facts, not identical sentences.

How to use this page (step by step)

  1. Centralize product truths once (features, proof, objections).
  2. Define channel constraints (char limits, link count, tone ladder).
  3. Generate channel A, then prompt: ‘same facts, rewrite for channel B constraints’.
  4. Have channel owners edit for native feel—do not skip this.
  5. Archive winning pairs (blog → LinkedIn) as reusable macros.

Real use case example

A small media team publishes a long interview. They extract quotes into a facts block, then run prompts for a newsletter edition, a LinkedIn carousel outline, and a short video script. Total time drops, but each piece sounds intentional because prompts enforced format—not because they copied paragraphs.

Workflow: how the stack runs in practice

  1. Source content intake → facts block.
  2. Channel planning sheet (goal + CTA each).
  3. Parallel prompt runs per channel.
  4. Owner review per channel.
  5. Schedule + tag UTMs; learn which transforms work.

When to use this playbook

  • You repurpose hero content weekly.
  • Multiple people touch publishing and need shared facts.

When not to use it

  • You expect zero human editing on brand voice.
  • Channels have conflicting compliance rules you have not documented.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Pasting the same long post to every network.
  • Skipping CTA customization per channel.

Pro tips

  • Add channel-specific ‘banned buzzwords’ lists to prompts.
  • Use bullet ‘must include’ and ‘must avoid’ lines—models follow them better than essays.

FAQ

How do we keep brand voice?

Examples beat adjectives. Paste three on-brand snippets into every prompt and ask the model to imitate structure, not wording.

One brief or many prompts?

One facts block, many channel prompts. The facts block is the contract; each channel prompt is the container rules (length, CTA, links, tone).

How do we prevent factual drift across channels?

If numbers change, update the facts block first, then re-run channel prompts. Never patch individual posts ad hoc without updating the source block.

Best prompts

Structured prompts you can use for Content Creation. Each includes role, context, task, and output format.

Suggested tools

AI tools that work well with Content Creation prompts.

Recommended workflows

Workflows that use these prompts for Content Creation.

Recommended AI stacks

Combine tools, prompts, and workflows into a full stack.

Build a custom AI stack for your goal using the Stack Builder. We recommend combining the tools, prompts, and workflows above into one workflow tailored to your industry and budget.

Build your AI stack →

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