Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Author Like a Boss

42 members • $17

Story Hacker AI

1.6k members • $67/month

1 contribution to Get Grounded | Calm Marketing
AI Prompts for Writing Sales Content That Doesn't Sound Salesy
Sales copy written by AI out of the box tends to sound like a parody of a sales page. Urgency language, benefit bullets, calls to action every other paragraph. 💡 But AI is actually useful for sales writing if you give it the right constraints. The key is telling it explicitly what not to do. Here are 5 prompts built for the kind of selling that fits this community: When you need to write a sales email for an offer: "Write a sales email for [describe your offer in one sentence]. The reader is a realistic entrepreneur who is skeptical of hype and tired of being sold to. Do not use urgency or scarcity. Do not use the words 'transform,' 'game-changer,' 'invest,' or 'journey.' Explain what it is, who it's actually for, what they'll be able to do after, and how to buy it. Keep it under 350 words." When you need to write a social post about an offer without it feeling like an ad: "I want to write a social post that mentions [offer] without it feeling like a pitch. Help me write something that leads with a real insight or honest observation about [topic your offer solves], then mentions the offer naturally at the end as an option for people who want to go deeper. No call-to-action language. No 'link in bio' at the start." When you need to explain your pricing without apologizing for it: "I charge [price] for [offer]. Help me write 3 sentences that explain the value of this without using the word 'investment,' without comparing it to a cup of coffee, and without over-justifying it. Just plain, honest framing of what they get and what it costs." When you want to follow up with someone who expressed interest but didn't buy: "Write a follow-up message to someone who showed interest in [offer] but didn't purchase. Don't create artificial urgency. Don't guilt them. Just check in honestly, offer to answer questions, and make it easy to say no if it's not the right time. Keep it under 100 words." When you need a FAQ that doesn't feel defensive: "Here are the most common questions I get about [offer]: [list them]. Write honest answers to each one. Don't over-explain or get defensive. If the answer is 'it depends,' say that and explain what it depends on."
AI Prompts for Writing Sales Content That Doesn't Sound Salesy
🔥
1 like • May 21
Thanks, @Dana Sacco. This is very useful. I know from my own personal experience that if something sounds too salesy, I look the other way.
1-1 of 1
J P
1
4points to level up
🔥
@66926617
Just a curious person.

Active 2h ago
Joined May 17, 2026
Powered by