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12 Must-Try ChatGPT Prompts for Creative Ideas in 202612 Must-Try ChatGPT Prompts for Creative Ideas in 2026">

12 Must-Try ChatGPT Prompts for Creative Ideas in 2026

Alexandra Blake, Key-g.com
par 
Alexandra Blake, Key-g.com
16 minutes read
Blog
décembre 10, 2025

Begin by pairing a creative prompt with a clear intent and asking for five ideas in your niche. This article outlines twelve prompts you can try to spark ideas across pricing, demand, and creativity. Request ChatGPT to évaluer pricing models, demand signals, and potential customer pain points, then generate a structured plan with next steps. The immediate output gives you a concrete starting point you can test today.

To tailor prompts for coaching or online courses, use templates which ask for a quick persona, target outcome, and a 3-step action list. Customize the tone and depth, and request output in bullet form with measurable milestones. This helps you stay aligned with intention and keeps you from overproducing content.

Each prompt should clearly indicate who it’s for, what problem it solves, and how success will be measured. Identify the characteristics of ideas that appeal to your audience, and specify the output format you want–storyboard, shortlist, or product brief. Knowing these factors keeps you from chasing novelty while doing so.

Evaluate demand cues by asking ChatGPT to compare five market signals and to simulate uptake under different price points. Ask for an automatically generated scoring rubric and a two-page plan that you can share with teammates. This helps you move quickly from idea to testable concept.

Build a practical workflow: draft an initial prompt, run it, compare outputs, and revise. To start, use a weekly cadence to capture ideas online and offline. Try prompts that target different channels–blog ideas, social series, customer prompts–and measure output against your pricing or value proposition.

Maintain a living file of prompts you already tested and the results. Document the coaching notes, audience reactions, and any adjustments you made to customize the prompts. Over time, refine your plan based on what resonates and what converts, and keep the prompts aimed at ongoing improvement.

Prompts framework to spark creative ideas and drive lead-gen in 2026

Use a 12-week prompts framework that pairs 3 themes with 4 routines per week to grab attention and lands qualified leads. Each routine ends with a CTA hosted on your hosting page, keeping the funnel tight from awareness to capture.

Set up a centralized hosting hub and calendars that publish across channels: email, social, webinars, and landing pages. Budget for production, distribution, and testing; allocate amounts for A/B tests and creative experiments to maximize impact.

Build a lightweight analytics dashboard to track amount of engagement, leads, and conversion rates. Use a simple problem-solving oriented model to rotate prompts based on data. Intelligence-driven signals, when data is available, guide what lands with audiences and shape next moves).

Design assets that are animated or static as needed; craft prompts around healthy customer problems and actionable solutions. Keep content positive, useful, and credible. Position the creator persona to feel approachable and trustworthy.

Prompts framework skeleton includes themes-based prompts, routines prompts, problem-solving prompts, creative prompts, and animated prompts. Deploy these five buckets across calendars to sustain momentum and ensure coverage across channels.

Action plan: 1) define 6 themes aligned to buyer needs; 2) build a 12-week calendar with 4 routines per theme; 3) draft 3–5 prompts per routine focusing on value and clarity; 4) publish across hosting channels and landing pages; 5) monitor analytics on leads and engagement via the dashboard; 6) optimize weekly based on available data and reallocate budget to the best-performing prompts.

Idea Sprint: generate 12 product, feature, and experience ideas tailored to industries and user roles

Launch a real-time prompts-driven sprint that adapts to each industry and role to fuel rapid ideation.

  1. Healthcare – Clinical-Workflow Navigator: For Chief Nursing Officers and frontline clinicians, build a prompts-driven assistant that sits inside the EHR. It provides an editor to craft encounter notes, auto-generates orders, and pops up evidence-based checklists at key points. Real-time prompts guide decisions, routes to labs or referrals, and presents patient education pages for awareness. Examples and papers are included to accelerate adoption, and the system highlights gaps while tracking time spent per prompt to avoid miss and over-asking.
  2. Finance – Compliance Guardrails Console: For Compliance Officers and risk managers, create a module that prompts whether a transaction or document meets policy, with templates for audit-ready papers. Integrate with core systems to auto-fill fields, present exact controls, and route issues to the right approver. Include prompts for risk flags, example scenarios, and real-time dashboards that surface action items across campaigns and regulatory changes.
  3. Education – Curriculum Pathway Editor: For Curriculum Designers and Teachers, deliver a creator page that suggests learning paths aligned to standards. It offers real-time prompts to draft module goals, select resources, and generate student-friendly pages. Use research-backed examples and a library of papers to inform design, and provide editors that assemble units with gaps mapped and awareness checks for learners.
  4. Retail – Store Experience Concierge: For Store Managers and Sales Associates, deploy a storefront assistant that suggests next-best actions during customer flows. Real-time prompts surface product details, upsell ideas, and quick checklists for POS and inventory, with pop-ups that explain promos and campaigns. Integrate with POS and stock systems, include examples from successful campaigns, and route customer requests to the right channel.
  5. Manufacturing – Quality Assurance Coach: For Plant Managers and QA leads, implement a prompts-driven QA station that analyzes sensor feeds and paper forms in real time. It suggests corrective actions, creates inspection notes via an editor, and delivers guided routes to fix defects. Provide visuals on dashboards, highlight gaps in process control, and embed papers and SOPs for quick reference during shifts.
  6. Hospitality – Guest Experience Optimizer: For General Managers and Front Desk teams, craft prompts that anticipate guest needs and propose service recoveries. Real-time prompts trigger micro-interventions, pop-ups with service scripts, and pages for guest preferences. Include examples of ideal responses, integrate with PMS systems, and track action outcomes to boost satisfaction and awareness across the team.
  7. Logistics – Ops Route Planner: For Dispatch Coordinators and Logistics Analysts, deliver a routing assistant that proposes routes, tracks real-time traffic, and flags bottlenecks. Use prompts to generate action lists, convert plans into workflows, and present pages with ETA promises. Integrate with TMS and telematics, surface examples of efficient routes, and reveal gaps between plan and execution to improve throughput.
  8. Product & Software – Hypothesis Sprint Engine (powered by trengos): For Product Managers and UX Researchers, offer a broad prompt toolkit to generate 12- to 24-hour experiment ideas. Include a prompt editor to craft hypotheses, leverage examples from prior studies, and pull in research papers. Real-time data and feedback flows let teams decide whether to pursue experiments, with exact routing to experiments, metrics, and action items that transform product thinking.
  9. Energy & Utilities – Field Asset Assistant: For Field Engineers and Asset Managers, deploy a prompts-driven field guide that reads sensor data and utility maps. It suggests checks, fills in standard forms, and provides pop-ups with safety and maintenance steps. Include pages showing asset health, route recommended maintenance, and provide quick access to procedures and papers for issues found in the field.
  10. Marketing & Advertising – Campaign Studio Prompter: For Brand Managers and Digital Directors, create a studio that proposes broad, data-backed campaign ideas. Real-time prompts optimize media mixes, drafts briefs, and guides content editors through asset creation. Include examples from prior campaigns, papers on audience signals, and pop-ups that remind teams to include accessibility and compliance checks.
  11. Agriculture – Farm Operations Planner: For Farm Supervisors and Agronomists, offer field prompts that help design crop plans, irrigation schedules, and harvest logistics. Real-time prompts align field data with soil reports and weather papers, present route options for equipment, and generate pages with task lists for crews. Provide insights into crop health, gaps in irrigation, and action lists to maximize yield efficiently.
  12. Public Service – Citizen Services Companion: For Policy Analysts and frontline caseworkers, build a citizen-facing assistant that prompts on eligibility rules and service options. It surfaces examples of successful outreach, integrates with case-management systems, and uses pop-ups to guide staff through calls and visits. Routes requests to the right program, tracks outreach campaigns, and includes pages with FAQs to raise awareness and reduce follow-up asks.

Campaign Angles: eight lead-gen prompts to uncover messaging, incentives, and channel tactics across buyer stages

Run a two-week sprint that tests eight prompt-based campaigns across buyer stages, using a chatbot-assisted workflow to capture opt-in leads and export results as a download-ready report. Focus on clear messages, novel incentives, and channel-specific tactics that move customer interest toward a decision window.

  1. Prompt 1 – Awareness messaging for listeners

    Create five novel opening lines that state the core problem in under eight seconds and position your solution as the simplest path forward. Include a clear opt-in incentive (a free checklist or quick guide) and tailor variants for two channels: website chatbot greetings and a short email intro. Example: use a compelling hook, then invite the listener to download the guide to learn more.

    • Channel tweak: test on-site chatbot vs. email intro to see which lands higher engagement.
    • Metrics: opt-in rate, click-through rate, and time to click.
  2. Prompt 2 – Consideration messaging by stage

    Draft three sets of messages that detail benefits, use cases, and potential ROI across two buyer stages. Keep messages clear and actionable, and embed a drag-and-drop landing-page element to collect basic details with a single opt-in click. Include a concrete example for each stage and a link to a downloadable asset that deepens understanding.

    • Channel plan: email nurture plus chatbot follow-up for curiosity-driven leads.
    • Metrics: engagement depth, asset downloads, and subsequent form submissions.
  3. Prompt 3 – Incentive design aligned to buying intent

    Propose three incentive structures that align with user intent: a quick-start checklist for early interest, a case-study bundle for evaluation, and a limited-time trial for readiness to buy. Describe the necessary terms and how each incentive lands in two channels: opt-in email and in-chat offers. Include an example copy snippet for each incentive.

    • Means of delivery: automated email link and in-chat card with a download button.
    • Metrics: incentive redemption rate, time-to-decision, and sales-qualified leads created.
  4. Prompt 4 – Channel tactics by stage

    Map two channels to each buyer stage and specify the messages, cadence, and creative approach for every channel pair. Focus on how a network of touchpoints–email, chatbot, social, and retargeting–works together to move a person from awareness to interest to intent. Provide concrete examples of sequence flow and a sample opt-in form.

    • Cadence example: 3 touchpoints in week 1, 2 in week 2, with a clear CTA at each step.
    • Metrics: channel contribution to opt-ins and the share of leads that progress to sales-ready status.
  5. Prompt 5 – Objection handling and messaging adjustments

    Identify five common objections at each stage and craft concise responses that reframe the problem, emphasize value, and prompt an opt-in for deeper detail. Include a sample conversation showing how a chatbot can defuse a concern and guide the user toward a download or demo. Keep messaging customer-focused and actionable.

    • Example: turn a price worry into a value-based benefit with a brief ROI calculator link.
    • Metrics: objection-resolve rate, sentiment shift, and downstream conversions.
  6. Prompt 6 – Lead capture UX optimization

    Design a friction-minimized opt-in experience using a drag-and-drop form that requires only essential fields. Provide two variants: a light form on the landing page and a shorter chat prompt within the chatbot. Include a clear permission statement and a brief value proposition to maximize completion rate.

    • UX detail: auto-fillability, mobile-friendly fields, and visible progress indicators.
    • Metrics: form completion rate, bounce rate, and average time to opt-in.
  7. Prompt 7 – Creative asset mapping to buyer stages

    List three asset types (checklists, case summaries, ROI calculators) and assign them to specific stages. Ensure assets are novel yet practical and linked to a direct opt-in path. Include a brief network of assets that supports ongoing engagement and a sample download path to illustrate the journey from list to action.

    • Asset distribution: website, email, and chatbot library.
    • Metrics: asset utilization rate and downstream lead quality.
  8. Prompt 8 – Measurement, iteration, and automation

    Define success metrics for the eight prompts: SMS-like clarity of messages, opt-in rate, and channel performance. Propose a lightweight automation plan that triggers follow-ups when a lead lands in a given stage, with a simple example workflow. Outline a minimal dashboard to monitor listeners, conversions, and potential revenue impact.

    • Sample metrics: landing-page conversion rate, chat engagement depth, and sales-ready lead share.
    • Outcome: a practical, repeatable cycle that informs ongoing creativity and adjustments.

Content Factory: templates for multi-format ideas (blogs, videos, emails, social posts) in a single prompt

Use one prompt to automate a four-format idea pack: blogs, videos, emails, and social posts, all anchored to a single concept and a shared structure that speeds production.

Design the prompt to request the core concept, audience, business goals, and tone, then require a four-format output that keeps a gateway between formats and aligns on keywords, examples, and a consistent message.

Template blueprint: Topic, Audience, Objective, Core idea, Tone. Formats: Blog (Title, Intro, 3 sections, Conclusion, Keywords). Video (Hook, Outline, Visual cues, Narration, CTA). Email (Subject, Preheader, Body sections, CTA). Social posts (Platform-specific variants, Hook, Visual cue, Hashtags). Output: Drafts ready for editing, plus a brief follow-up plan and testing ideas.

Example started: Topic: Boosting repeat purchases in retail; Audience: store owners and managers; Objective: increase repeat visits; Core idea: simple value adds and timely tips; Tone: friendly and practical.

Four outputs with details: Blog: 900-1100 words; Video: 3-4 minutes; Email: 180-220 words; Social posts: four variants with 1-2 short lines each and platform notes.

Implementation tips: run this across teams, assign a project, use dedicated sessions, set a kickoff, plan follow-up reviews.

Metrics to gauge effectiveness: view counts, engagement, click-through, lead generation; use these to refine; keep relationships with audience.

By starting with a premium-ready template and designed structure, businesses can streamline content operations, lift efficiency, and care for audience across channels.

Validation Prompts: quick checks for resonance, feasibility, and risk before testing

Start with a 5-minute resonance check on each prompt to weed out ideas that fail to connect with recent conversations and real-world needs.

Then proceed to a 10-minute feasibility screen focusing on structure, resources, and time to deliver, with a clear plan to resolve constraints under tight schedules and limited budgets. Use learning loops to refine your approach as you gather early feedback from the team, and keep an eye on productivity metrics across the organization.

Finally, run a quick risk test to surface ethical, legal, or reputational concerns and establish guardrails before any testing with audiences.

Aspect Checklist Exemple d'invite
Résonance Vérifier l'alignement avec les problèmes, le langage et l'intention de la personne cible. Noter de 0 à 10 ; passer à l'étape suivante si ≥7. Comparer avec les conversations et les commentaires récents ; s'assurer qu'il peut être résumé en 1 à 2 phrases pour des présentations rapides. Dans des conversations récentes, quels sont les deux points de friction qu'un fondateur mentionne lorsqu'il affine les supports d'apprentissage ? Suggérez 3 variantes linguistiques et un concept en 2 phrases qui résonnerait avec ce public et un concept de courte vidéo mettant en scène des personnages et une narration Lyro.
Faisabilité Estimer le temps, le budget et les besoins techniques nécessaires. Confirmer que les ressources existent pour réutiliser ; valider avec la capacité de la machine ou de l'équipe. Viser une série de 5 vidéos en moins de 14 jours en utilisant les modèles actuels et une bibliothèque d'actifs existante. Pouvons-nous réutiliser trois webinaires précédents pour créer une série de 7 vidéos avec 2 personnages Lyro et 3 vidéos de présentateur en 14 jours en utilisant notre pile technologique actuelle et l'intégration HubSpot ?
Risque Identifier les risques juridiques, de confidentialité, de réputation ou de conformité. Noter les mesures d'atténuation et les seuils ; attribuer un score de risque (0–5) et un critère go/no-go. Révélez trois risques potentiels liés à la monétisation des conversations utilisateur ; proposez des mesures d’atténuation et un seuil de validation avant de procéder à un test en direct.
Plan d’implémentation Définir des étapes concrètes pour un cycle de validation rapide : attribuer des responsables, fixer un déploiement de 7 jours, définir des indicateurs dans HubSpot et faire correspondre les ressources à des actions traçables. Élaborer un plan de diffusion sur 7 jours pour 3 vidéos avec des personnages de type Lyro et 1 court webinaire, avec un tableau de bord pour suivre l'engagement dans HubSpot.
Mesures et suivi Définir les indicateurs clés de performance (engagement, conversions, rétention), établir un tableau de bord et relier les résultats aux connaissances acquises et aux gains de productivité. Créer un modèle de mesure pour évaluer la résonance et la conversion après les trois premières vidéos ; inclure une fenêtre de 14 jours et relier les résultats à une amélioration de la productivité de l'équipe.

Utilisez ces invites pour révéler rapidement des informations exploitables, puis adaptez les questions de suivi pour différents publics, réutilisez les résultats dans les webinaires et suivez les progrès dans des tableaux de bord centralisés. Gardez à l'esprit les conversations avec les concurrents afin d'affiner la structure et de garantir que votre approche reste ancrée dans les signaux récents du marché, sans dériver dans la théorie.

Calendar Planner : un calendrier d'idéation trimestriel avec des invites, des responsables et des étapes clés

Calendar Planner : un calendrier d'idéation trimestriel avec des invites, des responsables et des étapes clés

Établissez un rythme trimestriel avec des responsables, des incitations et des jalons clairs afin de maintenir le travail de la marque concentré et mesurable. Enregistrez les progrès chaque semaine dans un tableur partagé et considérez les webinaires comme des expériences en direct afin de valider rapidement les idées.

Q1 – Focus : clarté de la persona, alignement de la marque et tests initiaux de génération de leads. Prompts : 1) Définir 2 personas acheteurs pour l'industrie et cartographier 5 points d'interaction par persona ; 2) Créer un framework d'histoire de marque qui peut guider les campagnes sur tous les canaux ; 3) Concevoir 2 campagnes de génération de leads qui qualifient les prospects via un webinaire et un flux d'encouragement WhatsApp. Propriétaires : Priya (Marque) et Omar (Croissance) en tant que co-responsables. Jalons : feuille de persona publiée ; framework de marque approuvé ; 1 webinaire pilote produit ; 1 flux d'encouragement WhatsApp configuré ; prévision des dépenses préparée et enregistrée ; enregistrement conservé dans le tableau de bord.

Q2 – Focus : mesurer l’impact et intégrer les données sur les systèmes ; séparer les processus pour les expériences et les rapports. Prompts : 1) Cartographier le parcours client complet du premier contact à la conversion ; 2) Intégrer le CRM avec la plateforme de webinaire ; 3) Effectuer 2 tests A/B sur la proposition de valeur, les pages d’atterrissage et les CTA ; également : personnaliser la copie par persona. Responsables : Chen (CRM) et Maya (Contenu) avec Suki (Événements) comme support. Jalons : 2 tableaux de bord intégrés ; processus distincts pour le suivi post-webinaire ; mise à jour du score de qualification des prospects ; 1 rapport prêt pour la direction ; redéfinition des dépenses documentée ; bien que nous maintenions des règles de qualité strictes.

Q3 – Focus : créativité et réseautage pour stimuler l’engagement. Pistes : 1) Organiser 3 webinaires ou sessions en direct courts pour engager l’audience ; 2) Faire appel à un seul collaborateur de l’industrie pour du contenu en marque partagée ; 3) Améliorer les indicateurs d’interaction (commentaires, partages, temps passé sur la page) de 20%. Responsables : Elena (Contenu) et Raj (Partenariats) avec Zoe (Communauté) en tant que conseillère. Jalons : 3 scripts de webinaire publiés ; 1 accord de collaboration signé ; ligne de base des indicateurs d’engagement établie ; dépenses budgétaires mises à jour pour le prochain trimestre ; opportunités de réseautage introduites.

Q4 – Focus : enregistrer les résultats et façonner les plans de l’année prochaine. Questions : 1) Documenter les 5 meilleures campagnes en fonction du ROI ; 2) Créer un calendrier trimestriel pour l’année prochaine ; 3) Actualiser une persona basée sur les apprentissages. Responsables : Lina (Analytics) et Omar (Growth) avec Priya (Brand) en tant que relectrice. Jalons : rapport final publié ; calendrier de l’année prochaine approuvé ; actualisation de la persona terminée ; voici un aperçu concis des jalons.