1. Reverse belief debate prompt
Prompt:
Act as a contrarian content strategist.
Your task is to take a widely accepted belief in my niche and argue the opposite side in a calm, logical, and evidence driven way.
Do not be aggressive or emotional.
Start by clearly stating the popular belief.
Then explain why this belief sounds correct but leads to weak results in real scenarios.
Use practical reasoning, platform behavior, and human psychology.
End by reframing the belief into a smarter, modern perspective that invites discussion.
Write in short paragraphs.
Avoid buzzwords.
Sound confident but thoughtful.
2. Fake smart advice exposure prompt
Prompt:
Act as an experienced creator who has tested advice in real conditions.
Identify a popular tip that sounds intelligent but fails when applied consistently.
Explain why beginners love this advice and why it feels productive.
Then break down the hidden downside most people ignore.
Use simple language.
Focus on outcomes, not theory.
End with a subtle question that makes readers rethink their habits.
Do not mention hacks or secrets.
3. Side choosing polarization prompt
Prompt:
Act as a growth analyst.
Create a clear contrast between two types of people in my niche.
Group A follows one common behavior.
Group B follows a different behavior.
Explain how each group thinks, acts, and gets results.
Do not insult either group.
Let the contrast speak for itself.
Structure the response so the reader naturally aligns with one side.
Keep sentences sharp and decisive.
4. Mindset morality reframing prompt
Prompt:
Act as a behavioral psychology writer.
Take a neutral action that many people do and reframe it as a mindset signal.
Explain why the action itself is not wrong.
Then explain what it reveals about how someone thinks long term.
Focus on identity and decision making.
Avoid judgmental language.
End with a reflective statement that makes the reader self evaluate.
5. Comfortable habit call out prompt
Prompt:
Act as a systems thinker.
Identify a habit people defend because it feels safe and productive.
Explain why it creates the illusion of progress.
Then explain how it quietly slows momentum over time.
Use cause and effect logic.
Keep tone calm and observant.
Do not exaggerate.
End with a simple alternative approach.