X / Twitter field research · for camera · 2026-06-18
A ranked shot-list of the viral "fire your marketing agency, just use these prompts" genre on X — with the actual prompt text, verbatim, so Cory can run them on camera and tear them apart. Every card has a Where it breaks note. General examples first, then the (very thin) Dental/Local pickings.
★ Canonical — film this one first
Cleanest version of the whole genre: exact agency-kill claim + 10 fully-visible, copy-paste prompts + solidly viral. Perfect prompt-by-prompt teardown.
@charliejhills · 18 Mar 2026 · 470♥ / 93.7k views⌬ Likely origin (Jun 2025)
The "one mega prompt = free world-class agency" template that got copied verbatim by other accounts within a day (@Invessted). The progenitor.
@alex_prompter · 7 Jun 2025 · 452♥ / 74k views◎ Biggest reach (and the irony)
8.8M views. But the prompts need paid tools (SEMrush/Ahrefs/Cowork) and the author runs an agency (Alventra) — "fire your agency" as agency lead-gen.
@bloggersarvesh · 23 Mar 2026 · 3,592♥ / 8.8M viewsRanked usable-text-first (so you can actually run them), then by engagement. Gated and mega-viral ones flagged.
Claim, verbatim"GOODBYE to $20,000/month marketing agencies forever. Claude just replaced an entire marketing team in 10 minutes, completely free. Here are 10 prompts to take any business from zero brand presence to a full-blown marketing machine (save this):"
1. the Target Audience X-Ray You are a world-class brand strategist who has built audience profiles for Fortune 500 brands. My business is [describe your business]. Build me a hyper-detailed ideal customer profile, including: demographics; psychographics; their biggest fears; secret desires; where they hang out online; what content they consume; the exact emotional trigger that makes them buy. Skip generic fluff. Make it so specific it feels like I'm reading their diary. 2. the brand positioning weapon You are a positioning expert trained in al ries and jack trout's methodology. My business is [describe business]. My competitors are [list competitors]. Craft a positioning strategy that creates a category of one. Provide: unique value proposition; one-sentence positioning statement; three brand pillars; the one thing my audience should think of when they hear my name. Make it impossible to confuse me with anyone else. 3. The 90-day content engine You're a content marketing director building a 90-day content machine from scratch. My business is [describe business], and my audience is [describe audience]. Build a complete content strategy, including: five content pillars I should own; a weekly posting schedule for X, LinkedIn, Instagram, and TikTok; 30 content ideas with scroll-stopping hooks; the one viral format I should go all-in on. Design it to help me build authority in 90 days. 4. The Hook & Headline Factory You are the greatest direct-response copywriter alive, trained on Ogilvy, Halbert, and Schwartz. My product is [describe product/service]. Write: 20 scroll-stopping social media hooks; 10 email subject lines with 40%+ open-rate potential; 5 landing page headlines that feel impossible not to click. Every line must trigger curiosity, urgency, or a clear pattern interrupt. No generic lines. 5. the full funnel architect You're a conversion rate expert who's built 8-figure marketing funnels. My product is [describe product] at [price point]. Design a complete funnel from cold stranger to paying customer, including: Awareness content (what to publish and where); A lead magnet that captures emails; A 5-email nurture sequence (write all 5 emails in full); A sales page outline; Follow-up for people who didn't buy. Optimize every stage for maximum conversion. 6. The viral launch playbook You're a product launch strategist who has orchestrated launches generating $1M+ in the first week. I'm launching [describe product/service] on [date]. Build a complete 30-day launch plan, including: pre-launch hype strategy; waitlist growth tactics; launch week, hour-by-hour timeline; influencer outreach script; post-launch momentum strategy. Make it feel like the entire internet is talking about me. 7. The Ad Copy Dominator You are a performance marketing expert who has profitably spent $50M+ on paid ads. My product is [describe product] for [target audience]. Write 5 complete Facebook/Instagram ad variations. For each ad, include: Hook; Body copy; Headline; CTA. Then write 3 Google Search ads. For every ad, tell me the emotional trigger it's using and why it works. Optimize for clicks and conversions, not just impressions. 8. the email money machine You are an email marketing strategist with a track record of generating $40+ per subscriber per year. My business is [describe business]. Build me a complete email marketing system, including: a 7-email welcome sequence (write all 7 emails); 4 weekly newsletter templates; 3 promotional email frameworks; a re-engagement sequence for dead subscribers. Every email must include a killer subject line and one clear CTA. 9. the competitor teardown report You are a competitive intelligence analyst hired to expose every gap in my competitors' marketing. My competitors are [list 3-5 competitors]. For each competitor, analyze: positioning; content strategy; funnel; ad approach; biggest weakness; the opportunity they're leaving on the table. Then tell me exactly how to exploit every gap they've left open. 10. the full marketing strategy war room (master prompt) You are a CMO presenting a complete go-to-market strategy to the CEO and board. My business is: [describe your business in detail]. Pull everything into one unified plan: target audience; brand positioning; content strategy; funnel design; paid ads plan; email marketing system; KPIs to track; a 90-day execution roadmap with weekly milestones. Write it like a $100,000 marketing strategy document. Every recommendation must be specific and actionable.
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
Every prompt opens with a fabricated résumé — "greatest direct-response copywriter alive," "$50M+ in ad spend," "$40+ per subscriber track record." The model has none of those; it just puts on the costume and writes with borrowed confidence.
It asks for things an LLM cannot know: "10 subject lines with 40%+ open-rate potential," competitor funnel teardowns (it can't see their funnels), "$1M-first-week" launch plans. It will assert the numbers you asked for.
Prompt #2 promises a "category of one" while you feed it only `[describe business]` — no brand voice, no real positioning inputs. Zero-input → interchangeable output. Run #1 and #10 back-to-back on a real dental client and watch the "diary-level" persona come out as the same LinkedIn-bro template.
Claim, verbatim"This is terrifying. I gave Claude 1 mega prompt and it handled: • Product strategy • Backend code • UI/UX design • Landing page copy • Go-to-market plan. All in one go. Here's the exact prompt I used (and what it built):"
(Copy and paste in Claude) <task> You are my all-in-one technical cofounder, product strategist, UI/UX designer, copywriter, and launch expert. We're building a SaaS startup together, step by step. Your role is to guide and execute each major milestone — but only continue after I review and approve the current step. </task> <product_idea> A [INSERT PRODUCT TYPE] SaaS that helps [TARGET USER] solve [PAIN POINT] using [SHORT TECH VALUE PROP] </product_idea> <instructions> Start by completing the first mission below. Once it's done, pause and ask: "Would you like to proceed to the next step, or revise this one?" Here's the full step-by-step sequence you'll execute one at a time: 1. Validate the target audience and define the core user problem 2. Propose a focused MVP feature list (prioritize essentials only) 3. Write backend code in [Python/FastAPI/etc] to implement the MVP 4. Describe the UI/UX structure (components + layout + flow) 5. Write Webflow-ready landing page copy (headline, value, CTA) 6. Draft Twitter launch thread + Product Hunt listing 7. Outline a 7-day content strategy for initial traction Be concise but complete. Use markdown headers to structure each output. Treat this like a collaborative startup sprint — you lead, I approve. </instructions>
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
Framing swap to call out: this is the genre's biggest hit, but it's a "build a SaaS" prompt, not an "agency killer." Marketing is two of seven steps — landing copy and a 7-day content list. Good demo of "one prompt does everything," weak as a marketing function.
The "go-to-market plan" has no market data, no channels, no budget, no media buying, no measurement. It's a tidy first draft of a doc — not strategy, distribution, or results. Use it to show how "handled the whole launch" collapses to a bulleted outline.
Claim, verbatim"AI just made marketing agencies irrelevant. You can now use any LLM like ChatGPT and Gemini or DeepSeek to plan campaigns, write copy, build funnels, and generate ads all in one prompt. Here's the exact mega prompt I use to make any LLM a world-class marketing agency for free:"
You are a world-class marketing strategist, copywriter, and creative director. Your task: develop a complete marketing strategy for: [Insert product/service/startup here] Include: • One-sentence positioning statement • ICP breakdown (jobs, pains, goals) • 3 core marketing channels with reasoning • Content ideas for each channel • Paid ad angles (hooks, CTAs, visuals) • Influencer/UGC script template • SEO plan (keywords, article topics, link strategy) • Email sequence (welcome + sales) • Launch campaign timeline • Key metrics to track + optimize Format cleanly. Make it feel like a $20K marketing brief.
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
The kicker is the last line: "Make it feel like a $20K marketing brief." Not be right — feel expensive. The prompt optimizes for the costume of strategy.
One paste, one output, the only input is a product description. No customer data, no budget, no analytics — so "3 core channels with reasoning" is reasoning from nothing. Genre origin: @Invessted reposted this word-for-word the next day (8 Jun 2025), which is the tell that it's a copy-paste template, not a discovery.
Claim, verbatim"We recently paid $8,500 for a single prompt. Sounds insane, but it automated 80% of our marketing workflows and saves us 20+ hours per week. Here's the exact mega prompt you can steal:"
You are not an assistant. You are a marketing automation architect who turns 10 hours of work into 10 minutes. Your job: Build ONE master prompt that automates 80% of the user's marketing workflows. CORE RULES: - One prompt replaces 10 manual tasks - If humans take 2 hours, AI does it in 2 minutes - No generic templates—everything is custom to their brand - Output must be copy-paste ready, not drafts THE PROCESS: STEP 1: BRAND INTELLIGENCE Ask the user these exact questions: "Answer these so I can build your automation system: 1. What's your business/niche? 2. Who's your target audience? 3. What platforms do you use? (Instagram, LinkedIn, X, email, etc.) 4. What takes most of your time? (content creation, emails, replies, etc.) 5. What's your brand voice? (professional, casual, witty, etc.) 6. What do you post about? (main topics/themes) 7. How often do you post? (daily, 3x/week, etc.)" STEP 2: BUILD THE MEGA PROMPT Once they answer, create their custom automation prompt with these sections: BRAND SYSTEM: You are [Business Name]'s marketing AI. Brand voice: [specific tone + style]. Audience: [exact avatar]. Core topics: [what they discuss]. Never say: [forbidden words]. Always include: [signature elements]. CONTENT ENGINE — DAILY AUTOMATION: When I say 'Generate today's content', create [Platform 1/2/3]: [format + structure]. WEEKLY AUTOMATION: When I say 'Plan this week', create a 7-day content calendar; Email newsletter; Content ideas for next week. REPURPOSING ENGINE: When I paste [content], transform it into 10 social posts (all platforms); 1 email newsletter; 5 quote graphics (text only); 1 thread version; Video script. CAMPAIGN BUILDER: When I say 'Campaign for [goal]', create a multi-platform launch sequence; day-by-day content plan; email series; social posts with timing. RESPONSE FORMAT: Always output as 📱 [PLATFORM]: [Ready-to-post content] / Best time: [when] / CTA: [call to action]. End with: 'Need changes? Tell me what to adjust.' QUICK COMMANDS: 'BATCH: 30 days' → Full month; 'TREND: [topic]' → Timely content; 'REPLY: [comment]' → Branded response; 'EMERGENCY: [news]' → Same-day content; 'CAMPAIGN: [offer]' → Launch sequence. STEP 3: DELIVER THE SYSTEM — give them YOUR CUSTOM MEGA PROMPT, USAGE EXAMPLES, and TIME SAVINGS (Before: [their current time]; After: 15–30 min daily. Weekly savings: 10–15 hours). STEP 4: REFINEMENT — "Use this for 7 days. Then tell me: what works perfectly / what needs tweaking / what's missing. I'll upgrade your prompt." NOW: Answer the 7 questions above and I'll build your custom marketing automation system.
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
The headline says they paid $8,500 for one prompt. Step 1 of that prompt is… asking YOU to answer 7 questions about your own business. You paid five figures to be interviewed by a chatbot, which then templates your own answers back at you.
"Automated 80% of our workflows / saves 20+ hours / 10–15 hours weekly" — all asserted by the prompt itself, never measured. The whole thing is a content-formatting macro dressed as automation. Great visual: read the "$8,500" line, then scroll to "Answer these 7 questions."
Claim, verbatim"AI just killed the marketing department. You can now use Claude 4 for market research, content creation, writing viral ads, SEO optimization, and campaign planning. Here's the exact mega prompt we use to automate our entire marketing workflow:"
<Task>
Act as a full-stack AI marketing strategist for a startup preparing to launch a new product or service. You will handle market research, positioning, messaging, content creation, email copywriting, and SEO ideation.
</Task>
<Inputs>
<product>{Describe your product or service here}</product>
<target_audience>{Who is the product for? (demographics, psychographics, industry, etc.)}</target_audience>
<goal>{e.g. "generate leads," "build awareness," "launch product," etc.}</goal>
<tone>{e.g. "casual and fun," "bold and punchy," "professional and clear"}</tone>
</Inputs>
<Instructions>
Given the product, target audience, and goal:
1. Customer Insight & Research — Generate an ICP; identify pain points, goals, decision drivers; suggest 3 positioning angles.
2. Messaging & Conversion Copy — Write a hook-driven landing page (headline, subheadline, CTA); 3 viral headline variations; a messaging matrix: [Pain Point → Promise → Proof → CTA].
3. Content Creation — Generate a 7-day content plan (Twitter + LinkedIn); daily post titles, themes, tone; 1 short-form video concept if relevant.
4. Email Marketing — Write 3 cold email variations: Value-first pitch; Problem-agitate-solution; Case-study / social proof style.
5. SEO Strategy — Suggest 1 SEO topic cluster; 5 blog post titles targeting mid-to-high intent keywords; a pillar + supporting post structure.
6. Output Format — Use clear section headers; markdown formatting; do not explain your reasoning — just give the final, polished outputs.
This should be delivered as a comprehensive marketing kit, ready to deploy.
</Instructions>
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
The tell is step 6: "do not explain your reasoning — just give the final, polished outputs." It's literally engineered to suppress the model's uncertainty and hand you confident copy with no working shown — exactly the wrong setting if you care whether the strategy is right.
"Market research" with no sources, "SEO ideation" with no keyword data, "viral headlines" declared viral in advance. Cleaner XML than most, same hollow core.
Claim, verbatim"TURN YOUR AI AGENTS INTO AN EFFICIENT MARKETING AGENCY WITH THIS ONE PROMPT (BOOKMARK THIS). Stop using AI agents as chatbots and build a system."
You are my AI marketing agency: strategist, copywriter, media buyer, SEO specialist, content planner, CRO analyst, email marketer, and brand advisor. Your job is to help me grow efficiently with clear strategy, fast execution, and measurable results. Business context: - Business name: - Website: - Product/service: - Target audience: - Main offer: - Price point: - Location/market: - Brand voice: - Current marketing channels: - Monthly budget: - Main goal: leads / sales / awareness / retention - Timeline: Operate like an agency. For every request: 1. Ask only the most important missing questions. 2. Make practical recommendations, not generic advice. 3. Prioritize high-ROI actions. 4. Give me ready-to-use assets: ad copy, landing page copy, email sequences, social posts, SEO briefs, campaign ideas, scripts, and offers. 5. Explain why each recommendation matters. 6. Include KPIs, testing ideas, and next steps. 7. Be concise, direct, and conversion-focused. When planning campaigns, always include: Target audience; Core message; Offer angle; Funnel stage; Channel strategy; Creative concepts; Copy variations; Budget allocation; Testing plan; Success metrics. Start by auditing my business from the context I provide, then create a 30-day marketing action plan with quick wins and scalable strategies.
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
"You are my AI marketing agency: strategist, copywriter, media buyer, SEO specialist, content planner, CRO analyst, email marketer, brand advisor." One chatbot wearing eight hats — with no ad account, no analytics, no tools. A media buyer that can't buy media; a CRO analyst with nothing to test against.
It even instructs itself to give "measurable results" and "Success metrics" — but it can't measure anything; it can only print the words "Success metrics." Good one to run live and ask it to actually buy the ads.
Claim, verbatim"Claude can now build a complete marketing strategy for any business in 2 hours. 7 prompts that replace a $10,000/month marketing agency: (Save this before it goes viral)"
1. Ideal Customer Avatar — Act like a market research analyst. Build a detailed customer avatar for my [business/product]. Include demographics, psychographics, pain points, desires, objections, where they spend time online, and what language they use to describe their problems. 2. Competitor Teardown — Act like a competitive intelligence analyst. Analyze my top 5 competitors in [niche]: [list them]. Break down their positioning, messaging, pricing, content strategy, strengths, and weaknesses. Find the gaps I can exploit. 3. Content Engine — Act like a content marketing director. Build a 30-day content calendar for [business] across LinkedIn, X, Instagram, and email. Include content pillars, post types, hooks, posting schedule, and repurposing strategy. Goal: authority building and lead generation. 4. Email Funnel Architect — Act like an email marketing expert. Build a complete email funnel for [business]. Include opt-in offer, welcome sequence (5 emails), nurture sequence (weekly), and sales sequence. Write every subject line and email body. 5. Ad Copy Creator — Act like a performance marketer. Write 10 ad variations for [product/service] across Meta and Google. Include headlines, body copy, and CTAs. Create 3 angles: pain-point driven, benefit-driven, and social proof driven. 6. Conversion Rate Optimizer — Act like a CRO consultant. Audit my landing page: [paste URL or copy]. Identify every friction point, weak CTA, missing trust signal, and conversion killer. Then rewrite the page copy to maximize conversions. 7. SEO Keyword Roadmap — Act like an SEO strategist. Identify the 30 highest-value keywords for [business/niche]. Organize them into pillar topics and supporting content clusters. Include search intent, estimated difficulty, and the type of content I should create for each.
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
This exact "7 prompts that replace a $10,000/month marketing agency (Save this before it goes viral)" was posted the same week by a string of tiny accounts — @FamimFarhaz, @Ai_with_waqas, @maxpostingx — with identical text and a Claude-logo graphic. Show two side by side: the "discovery" is a chain letter.
Pattern of every prompt: "Act like a [role]. Build me [deliverable]. Include [list]." No real data goes in (#7 asks for "estimated difficulty" with no SEO tool; #2 teardowns competitors it can't see), and nothing comes back to verify it worked.
Claim, verbatim"Claude can now build a complete marketing strategy for any business in 2 hours. Here are 4 prompts that replace a $10,000/month marketing agency. 🧵"
Claude Prompt 1 — My business is [describe] and I sell [product] to [audience]. Help me build a complete ideal customer profile. Include: demographics, psychographics, daily frustrations, what they've already tried and why it failed, what they wish existed, where they spend time online, what words they use to describe their problem, and what would make them buy immediately without hesitation. Then write a one paragraph summary I can use as the foundation for every piece of marketing I create. Claude Prompt 2 — I want to run paid advertising for my business [describe it] targeting [ideal customer] with a budget of [$X per month]. Build me a complete paid marketing strategy. Include: which platform to advertise on first and why, how to structure my campaigns for awareness vs conversion, what my ad creative and copy should focus on based on my customer profile, how to set up retargeting to capture people who didn't buy the first time. Give me realistic expectations for results. Claude Prompt 3 — Here is my ideal customer profile: [paste]. Help me build a complete messaging strategy for my business [describe]. Include: a core brand message that speaks directly to my customer's pain, a unique value proposition, 3 different taglines for different contexts, the key emotional triggers my marketing should activate, and the biggest objections my customer has buying with a messaging response to each one. Make every word feel like it was written for my specific customer. Claude Prompt 4 — My business is [describe it] selling [product] at [price point] to [ideal customer]. Build me a complete marketing funnel from first touch to purchase. Include: how a cold audience first discovers me, the email or follow up sequence that nurtures them toward buying, and CTA that converts them to a paying customer, and a post-purchase strategy that turns one-time buyers into repeat customers and referrals. Map out every step with specific actions and messaging for each stage.
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
Same "$10,000/month agency in 2 hours" hook as @Cypher_Ai1, posted the same day — another clone. Prompt 2 literally asks the model to "give me realistic expectations for results" for a paid-ads budget it has no benchmark data for. It will make a number up and call it realistic.
Everything hinges on `[describe]` placeholders. Prompt 1 asks it to invent "what would make them buy immediately without hesitation" from one sentence about your business — confident customer fan-fiction.
Claim, verbatim"🚨BREAKING: Claude can now build The complete marketing strategy for Your business in 1 hour. Here Are 7 prompts that replace a $20,000/month marketing agency:"
1. The "Avatar-Psychology" Deep-Dive — Act as a Master Consumer Psychologist. My business sells [Product/Service] to [Target Audience]. Build a comprehensive profile of my ideal customer avatar. Identify their 3 deepest 'Insurmountable-Fears,' their top 3 'Unspoken-Desires,' and the exact 'Internal-Monologue' they have at 2 AM regarding the problem my product solves. 2. The "Category-of-One" Positioning Matrix — Act as Alex Hormozi. Analyze my product: [Describe Product] against my main competitors: [List Competitors]. Help me construct a 'Grand-Slam-Offer' that alters the competitive landscape. How do I restructure my pricing, create an irresistible premium tier, and introduce an un-copiable 'Risk-Reversal' guarantee? 3. The "Hook-to-Conversion" Ad Script Engine — Act as a Direct-Response Copywriter. Write 3 distinct 60-second video ad scripts for [Product/Service]. Use 3 different visual opening styles: 1. The Contrarian Statement, 2. The Direct Problem Agitation, and 3. The Visual Pattern-Interrupt. Include exact visual directions, pacing cues, and a frictionless 'Call-to-Action' for each script. 4. The "Omnichannel-Traffic-Multiplier" System — Act as a Media Buying Director. I have a monthly marketing budget of [Amount]. Design a hyper-efficient asset-distribution map across Meta, Google, and TikTok for [B2B/B2C Niche]. Show me how to split the budget between Top-of-Funnel prospecting (Cold) and Middle/Bottom-of-Funnel retargeting (Warm) to achieve maximum ROAS. 5. The "Frictionless-Lead-Magnet" Funnel Architect — Act as a Conversion Rate Optimization (CRO) Expert. Map out a 3-step online acquisition funnel for my service business. Detail the exact structural layout and copywriting beats for: 1. The High-Value Opt-In Page, 2. The VSL value-delivery bridge, and 3. The seamless Calendly booking or low-ticket checkout page. 6. The "Indoctrination-and-Retention" Email Sequence — Act as a Retention Marketing Specialist. Write a 5-part automated email onboarding sequence for a lead who just downloaded my digital asset. Day 1: The Delivery & Origin Story. Day 2: The Core Myth Shattered. Day 3: Case Study & Proof. Day 4: The Core Offer Pitch. Day 5: The Logic vs. Urgency Close. 7. The "Unit-Economics" Growth Audit — Act as a Fractional CMO. I will paste my current marketing performance metrics: [Insert CAC, LTV, Click-Through-Rate, Conversion Rate, and Ad Spend]. Audit my metrics and identify the primary operational constraint. Tell me precisely whether I have a Creative Problem, a Landing Page Problem, or an Offer Problem, and give me 3 immediate structural adjustments.
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
Same template, bumped to "$20,000/month" and dressed up with hyphenated jargon ("Insurmountable-Fears," "Omnichannel-Traffic-Multiplier"). Prompt 2 is "Act as Alex Hormozi" — celebrity cosplay produces a caricature of his vocabulary, not his judgment.
It also exposes the gap nicely: prompt 7 ("Fractional CMO" audit) is the only one that needs real numbers (CAC, LTV, ROAS) — proving the other six run on vibes. Diagnosing "Creative vs Landing Page vs Offer problem" from pasted metrics with no traffic context is a coin-flip dressed as analysis.
Claim, verbatim (paraphrased context)"Claude can fully replace your $10k/month SEO agency… these 20 prompts are the other 90%… the actual prompts you paste into Claude Cowork and get real output from." (A separate post: "> costs $20/month > replaces your $10k/month SEO agency > 20 free prompts in the article below.")
Open Chrome and go to Google Maps. Search '[service] in [city]' for these 3 keywords... extract their primary category and all secondary categories. Put everything in a spreadsheet... [produce a] prioritized list of categories... [Thread continues with ~20 prompts: competitor review teardown; review-response templates (3 variations each for 5/4/3/1–2 star reviews); GBP posts calendar; services-section optimization; keyword-gap audit (SEMrush); money-page audit (GSC); service+city page builder (SEO title/meta/H1/FAQ/CTA templates); backlink audit (Ahrefs); citation audit; entity optimization (schema JSON-LD); content-gap analysis; monthly performance report.]
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera) — the headline irony
This is the single biggest post in the genre (8.8M views), and the cleanest gotcha: (1) it's not "$20 vs $10k" — the prompts depend on SEMrush + Ahrefs + Cowork subscriptions; (2) the full set is gated behind an article/newsletter; and (3) the author owns a marketing agency (Alventra). "Fire your $10k agency" is literally his agency's lead magnet. The genre eating itself — put his bio on screen.
Claim, verbatim"I just replaced a $820K marketing team with 7 AI agents that cost $37/month. My client fired everyone yesterday. […] Your marketing agency has 6 months left. Tick Tock."
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
The purest example of the genre's business model: a maximalist claim ("$820K team → $37/month," "your agency has 6 months") with the goods locked behind engagement-bait. You can't run what you can't see. Use it to make the point that the loudest posts are often the emptiest — the number ($820K) is the product, the prompts are the bait.
Claim, verbatim"My client asked for a full brand strategy. 3 weeks. $8,000 budget. I opened Claude. Pasted one mega-prompt. Had the entire strategy in 14 minutes. Here are the prompts that replaced the process 👇 (Save for later)"
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera) — the bait-and-switch
The headline sells "full brand strategy." Open the prompts and they're website / front-end build prompts — site architecture, design systems, component logic, Figma, responsive behavior. None of that is brand strategy (positioning, audience, messaging, narrative). The claim and the payload don't match. Easiest on-camera gotcha in the set: read the headline, then read the eight titles.
Searched 2025-01 → now with the engagement bar dropped to zero, across dentists, dental, orthodontists, med spas, chiropractors, plumbers, HVAC, roofers, realtors, restaurants, gyms, salons, law firms. The niche is nearly empty.
⚠ Honest finding: the dental "fire your agency + here are the prompts" post basically doesn't exist on X
There is no post for dentists / dental practices / orthodontists / med spas / chiropractors / plumbers / HVAC that both says "drop your marketing agency" and shows the actual prompts. What exists instead: (a) general SMB prompt packs sold on Gumroad (gated, no visible prompts, near-zero engagement), and (b) dental/local agencies posting about "get recommended by ChatGPT" — i.e. the opposite message. The two closest hits with any visible prompt text are below.
Angle for Cory: the trope you're debunking is overwhelmingly general-guru content. For dental specifically, nobody's even made the viral claim yet — so the video can say "they're aiming this at generic 'business owners'; here's what happens the moment you point it at a real dental practice with HIPAA, state-board ad rules, and patient data."
Claim, verbatim"Most luxury realtors don't need better homes. They need better marketing. 🏡 Realtors: Get 100+ premium ChatGPT prompts here ↓"
PROMPT 01 — Luxury Property Listing Description Write a compelling and luxurious property description for a [property type] located in [location]. Highlight the premium features, lifestyle, and unique selling points that would appeal to high-net-worth buyers. Example: Write a compelling and luxurious property description for a modern oceanfront villa located in Malibu, California. Highlight the premium features, lifestyle, and unique selling points that would appeal to high-net-worth buyers. PROMPT 02 — Headline for Luxury Listing Create a captivating headline for a luxury real estate listing that grabs attention and makes buyers curious. Example: Breathtaking Oceanfront Estate with Unrivaled Views
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
The only niche-specific (realtor) post with any visible prompt — and it's a Gumroad teaser: 2 shown, "100+" behind a paywall. The two visible prompts are pure fill-in-the-blank copy ("Write a luxurious description for a [property type]"). For real estate that risks Fair Housing language problems the moment it "describes the lifestyle/buyer" — a tidy parallel to the dental compliance point.
Claim, verbatim"I built 600+ AI prompts to help founders, freelancers, and small business owners get more done in less time."
1. Act as a senior marketing strategist. My business is [BUSINESS]. My audience is [AUDIENCE]. Create a 30-day content plan with post ideas, hooks, and CTAs. 2. Act as a sales consultant. My offer is [OFFER]. My ideal customer is [CUSTOMER]. Write a cold outreach email that feels personal and avoids generic sales language. 3. Here's everything on my plate this week: [TASKS] Organize it into a realistic plan, identify the 3 highest-impact priorities, and tell me what to drop. 4. I'm deciding between [OPTION A] and [OPTION B]. Create a weighted decision framework and score each option based on impact, risk, effort, and upside. 5. Turn these bullet points into a professional email. Keep it concise, clear, and end with a specific next step. 6. Convert these meeting notes into: • Summary • Action items • Owners • Deadlines • Follow-up email 7. I'll describe how I complete a task. Turn it into a step-by-step SOP someone else could follow without asking questions. 8. Review my weekly tasks and identify the top 3 processes that should be automated or delegated first. 9. Create a client onboarding process for my business that includes every step from signed contract to project kickoff. 10. Act as my operations advisor. Review my business and identify the biggest bottleneck limiting growth right now.
⚡ Where it breaks (for camera)
This is what "600+ prompts" actually looks like: prompt #1 is "Act as a senior marketing strategist. My business is [BUSINESS]. My audience is [AUDIENCE]. Create a 30-day content plan." Three placeholders and a verb. No brand, no data, no voice — it's a fortune cookie. Run it for a dental practice and you'll get the same generic calendar you'd get for a food truck. Perfect cold-open for the teardown.
Pull these individual lines out for quick on-camera hits. Each is verbatim, with the fastest way to puncture it.
@travishilton17 · prompt #1 of "600+"
Act as a senior marketing strategist. My business is [BUSINESS]. My audience is [AUDIENCE]. Create a 30-day content plan with post ideas, hooks, and CTAs.
The killThree placeholders and one verb. No brand voice, no data, no positioning. Same output for a dentist, a SaaS, or a food truck. A "strategy" that knows nothing about you.
@charliejhills · prompt #4, "Hook & Headline Factory"
You are the greatest direct-response copywriter alive, trained on Ogilvy, Halbert, and Schwartz. […] Write 10 email subject lines with 40%+ open-rate potential.
The killIt has no track record and cannot predict open rates. "40%+" is a number it says because you asked — confidence cosplay, not a forecast.
@Eshika43 · prompt #2, "Category-of-One"
Act as Alex Hormozi. […] construct a 'Grand-Slam-Offer' that alters the competitive landscape.
The killImpersonating a celebrity gives you his vocabulary, not his judgment. You get Hormozi-flavored Mad Libs, not an offer that survives contact with your market.
@aigleeson · Step 1 of the "$8,500 prompt"
"Answer these so I can build your automation system: 1. What's your business/niche? 2. Who's your target audience? 3. What platforms do you use? […]"
The killThe "$8,500 prompt" opens by making you do the work. You paid five figures to fill out a form.
@RoundtableSpace · the one-prompt "agency"
You are my AI marketing agency: strategist, copywriter, media buyer, SEO specialist, content planner, CRO analyst, email marketer, and brand advisor.
The killEight jobs, one chatbot, zero tools. A "media buyer" with no ad account and a "CRO analyst" with nothing to test. It can describe these jobs; it can't do any of them.
@sickdotdev · prompt #1
[…] what would make them buy immediately without hesitation. Then write a one paragraph summary I can use as the foundation for every piece of marketing I create.
The killIt invents your customers' deepest psychology from one sentence about your business — then you're told to build all your marketing on that guess. Confident fan-fiction as a foundation.
How many prompts people say it takes: