CHATGPT + FACEBOOK = VIRAL GROWTH MACHINE 🔥 Use these 5 prompts to explode your reach 👇👇
1️⃣ Pick one clear outcome (so your post knows what to do)
Principle: Facebook does not reward “nice posts”, it rewards posts that create a clear action, like comment, share, save, or click.
Strategy: Decide the win before you write. One post, one job. If you want shares, make it useful. If you want comments, make it debatable or personal.
Why it works: People engage faster when the ask is obvious. Confused readers scroll. Clear readers react.
Example: A “3 mistakes” checklist gets saves. A “hot take” gets comments. A “before and after” story gets shares.
Common mistake: Trying to get everything at once, and ending up with a post that feels like nothing.
Starter move: Choose your win condition for today and write it at the top of your notes.
Prompt:
“Act as a Facebook growth writer. My audience is [audience]. My goal for this post is [comments/shares/saves]. The topic is [topic]. Give me 10 angles that match the goal, and label each angle as comment, share, or save.”
👉 Do this now: Pick one angle that matches your goal and commit to it for this post only.
2️⃣
Lead with a pattern break (to stop the scroll fast)
Principle: Your first 2 lines are the real headline. If they do not create curiosity or recognition, the rest does not matter.
Strategy: Use one of three openers, a bold contrast, a specific promise, or a sharp question. Keep it simple and human.
Why it works: A pattern break earns a pause. The pause earns a read. The read earns engagement.
Example: “Most ‘consistency’ advice is trash (here is what I do instead).” Or “If you are stuck at 200 views, this is usually why.”
Common mistake: Starting with a long intro, credentials, or vague motivation.
Starter move: Draft 5 opening lines, then pick the one that feels most “hard to ignore” without being fake.
Prompt:
“Write 15 Facebook hook options for this topic: [topic]. Audience: [audience]. Tone: friendly, direct, not hype. Use these hook styles: contrast, specific promise, question, myth bust, and ‘I was wrong about…’. Keep each hook under 14 words.”
👉 Do this now: Choose the best hook and delete the other 14 so you do not overthink.
3️⃣
Make it ‘saveable’ with a simple micro framework (so it spreads)
Principle: People share feelings, but they save clarity. If your post helps someone think better, it travels.
Strategy: Turn your idea into a tiny framework. 2 to 5 parts max. Name it simply. Keep each part short.
Why it works: Frameworks reduce mental work. Readers can reuse them, teach them, and pass them along.
Example: “The Clean Post Test: Specific, Believable, Useful.” Then explain each in one line.
Common mistake: Writing a list that is too long, too broad, or too obvious.
Starter move: Take your idea and force it into a 3 part structure: Problem, Principle, Next move.
Prompt:
“Turn this idea into a simple 3 to 5 part framework a beginner can remember: [idea]. Then rewrite it as a Facebook post with 1 to 2 sentences per paragraph. Add a short name for the framework. No fluff.”
👉 Do this now: Write your framework name and 3 parts on one line, like a label.
4️⃣
Add proof without flexing (to build trust fast)
Principle: People do not need your life story. They need a reason to believe the idea will work for them.
Strategy: Use proof types that feel grounded, a quick example, a small before and after, a lesson from a mistake, or a simple “I noticed” observation.
Why it works: Proof lowers risk. When risk feels lower, people engage more and argue less.
Example: “When I changed my hooks from vague to specific, I got more replies, not just views.” (No numbers needed.)
Common mistake: Making big claims, dropping random stats, or sounding like you are selling too hard.
Starter move: Add one “because” sentence that explains cause and effect.
Prompt:
“Rewrite this Facebook post to include credibility without bragging. Use one of these proof styles: small example, lesson learned, before and after, or ‘what I noticed’. Keep it simple and believable. Here is the draft: [paste draft].”
👉 Do this now: Add one proof sentence that starts with “because”.
5️⃣
End with one clean action (to trigger comments and shares)
Principle: Engagement is often a follow through problem. Readers liked it, but you did not give them the next step.
Strategy: Use one call to action that matches your goal. For comments, ask a binary or specific question. For shares, ask who it helps. For saves, promise a future use.
Why it works: People act when the action is easy. Open ended asks feel like homework.
Example: “Which one are you fixing this week, hook or structure?” Or “Send this to a friend who overthinks posting.”
Common mistake: Asking three questions, or ending with “thoughts?” which is too vague.
Starter move: Write 3 CTA options, pick the simplest one, and commit.
Prompt:
“Give me 12 CTA options for a Facebook post about [topic]. Goal: [comments/shares/saves]. Make them specific and easy to answer. Include 4 binary questions, 4 ‘choose one’ prompts, and 4 ‘tag/share/save’ prompts.”
👉 Do this now: Paste your CTA under your last line and stop editing.
6️⃣
The Real Timeline (Based on real world pacing):
Days 1 to 3: Pick one topic lane, write 3 hooks, and test one framework style you can repeat.
Week 1: Publish 3 to 5 posts with the same goal (comments or saves) so you learn what your audience reacts to.
Weeks 2 to 4: Keep the winners, cut the rest, and refine your hooks and endings based on real replies.
Months 2 to 3: Build a small library of repeatable post formats you can rotate without burning out.
🔥 The Truth
Most people do not struggle with “content”. They struggle with decision overload.
They open ChatGPT, ask for “a viral post”, then get a generic draft, then they tweak it forever, then they post late, then they learn nothing.
The real bottleneck is not the tool. It is the lack of a clear win condition and a repeatable way to package ideas.
If you can pick one goal, use one format, and run small tests, you will grow faster than someone chasing random trends.
You do not need perfect prompts. You need fewer choices, cleaner posts, and better feedback from real humans.
i want you to keep this simple.
you do not need 50 new ideas. you need one good idea, written in a way people can grab and share.
the fastest path is to choose a goal for the post, then build the post around that one job.
if you are nervous about being “too basic”, remember this, clear beats clever on facebook most days.
try this once, then look at the comments and saves, not just the views.
if you want, you can even recycle the same framework next week with a new example.
you are not trying to be viral. you are trying to be understood.
start with one post today. make it clean. make it easy to react to. then learn from what happens.
⚡️ Quick Start
10 minutes: Pick your goal, generate 10 angles, choose 1, write 5 hooks, pick 1.
15 minutes: Turn the idea into a 3 part framework, add 1 proof sentence, add 1 clear CTA, then post.
That’s it. No perfect plan needed. Just start.
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Angel Fletcher
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CHATGPT + FACEBOOK = VIRAL GROWTH MACHINE 🔥 Use these 5 prompts to explode your reach 👇👇
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