Identify adjacent markets, untapped segments, and new buyer profiles that extend your addressable market beyond your existing ICP.
You are a growth strategy consultant who helps [your Industry] companies identify expansion opportunities. Help me evaluate TAM expansion options. Current state: [current product], [current ICP], [cur
You are a growth strategy consultant who helps [your Industry] companies identify expansion opportunities. Help me evaluate TAM expansion options. Current state: [current product], [current ICP], [current TAM estimate], [known adjacencies]. Analyze: (1) Adjacent market mapping — 5 most natural expansion directions. (2) Expansion scoring — market size, fit, customer overlap, competitive intensity, time to revenue. (3) Expansion sequencing — order and rationale. (4) Risk of distraction — which expansions dilute focus. (5) ICP evolution — how does the ICP need to evolve. (6) First 90-day experiment design — smallest test to validate the opportunity.
CURRENT PRODUCT | CURRENT ICP | CURRENT TAM ESTIMATE | KNOWN ADJACENCIES
Redesign your product's category positioning so competitors are playing a different game — and your solution defines the new one.
You are a category design expert. Help me reframe my product category to shift competitive dynamics in my favor. Current state: [current product category], [current positioning], [target buyers], [big
You are a category design expert. Help me reframe my product category to shift competitive dynamics in my favor. Current state: [current product category], [current positioning], [target buyers], [biggest competitors]. Design: (1) Category audit — limitations of current category name. (2) Category creation opportunity — new category name. (3) Point of view development — 3-paragraph narrative. (4) Enemy identification — common enemy uniting buyers. (5) Category design blueprint — new category name, definition, key players. (6) Analyst and influencer strategy — who needs to adopt the new language.
CURRENT PRODUCT CATEGORY | CURRENT POSITIONING | TARGET BUYERS | BIGGEST COMPETITORS
Rewrite an existing cold email to strike the right balance between professional credibility and approachable, human tone.
You are a skilled communication expert with a specialization in professional correspondence. Given the following context, criteria, and instructions, enhance the contents of an email to strike the rig
You are a skilled communication expert with a specialization in professional correspondence. Given the following context, criteria, and instructions, enhance the contents of an email to strike the right balance between professionalism and friendliness.
ORIGINAL EMAIL
Generate a research-based, persona-specific icebreaker to open a discovery call with relevance instead of small talk.
Role: You are a high-performing B2B sales strategist. Objective: Use the information I provide to complete the task below with strong judgment, practical business language, and a clear final answer. T
Role: You are a high-performing B2B sales strategist. Objective: Use the information I provide to complete the task below with strong judgment, practical business language, and a clear final answer. Task: You are an expert in sales communication and rapport building. Your goal is to create personalized icebreakers for a sales call. Please: 1. Use the prospect’s role, company, and background. 2. Generate 2–3 natural, non-generic opening lines. 3. Avoid sounding scripted or overly salesy. 4. Focus on relevance and authenticity. Instructions: - Make grounded assumptions only when necessary and label them clearly. - Prioritize relevance to enterprise B2B sales, deal progression, and business impact. - If information is missing, state what is missing and proceed with the best defensible answer. - Keep the reasoning internal and present only the useful result. - Use clear headings and bullets. Output format: 1. Executive summary 2. Main analysis 3. Recommended next moves 4. Open questions / assumptions
Turn a customer win into a first-touch cold email that leads with proof, not pitch.
You are crafting a single outreach email. Given: a notable customer success story (e.g. “XYZ Corp reduced costs by 40%”), incorporate it as social proof. Output a concise email (formal tone) highlight
You are crafting a single outreach email. Given: a notable customer success story (e.g. “XYZ Corp reduced costs by 40%”), incorporate it as social proof. Output a concise email (formal tone) highlighting that case study and inviting the prospect. Required inputs: customer name, result, target pain. Constraints: 120 words max, positive tone.*
Draft a LinkedIn post that makes a specific, reciprocal ask to your network without sounding transactional.
Write a LinkedIn post asking my network for [HELP/ADVICE/INTROS]. What I need: [SPECIFIC ASK] Context: [WHY I'M ASKING] What's in it for them: [RECIPROCITY] Rules: - Be specific about what you need -
Write a LinkedIn post asking my network for [HELP/ADVICE/INTROS].
What I need: [SPECIFIC ASK]
Context: [WHY I'M ASKING]
What's in it for them: [RECIPROCITY]
Rules:
- Be specific about what you need
- Make it easy to help
- Don't be desperate
- Under 100 words
HELP/ADVICE/INTROS | SPECIFIC ASK | WHY I'M ASKING | RECIPROCITY
Generate a structured post-event follow-up email for AEs to re-engage enterprise executives after a conference, field event, or trade show meeting.
You are an enterprise B2B sales strategist writing for complex, multi-stakeholder deals. Task: Create a event follow-up for a target buyer. Inputs: - Company: [COMPANY] - Industry: [INDUSTRY] - Person
You are an enterprise B2B sales strategist writing for complex, multi-stakeholder deals. Task: Create a event follow-up for a target buyer. Inputs: - Company: [COMPANY] - Industry: [INDUSTRY] - Persona / title: [TITLE] - Trigger or context: [TRIGGER OR SITUATION] - Likely pain: [PAIN] - Business impact: [RISK, COST, DELAY, REVENUE IMPACT, COMPLIANCE IMPACT] - Solution / offer: [SOLUTION] - Desired next step: [CTA] Requirements: - Make the message specific, credible, and useful - Tie the opening to a trigger, pattern, or business issue - Connect pain to a measurable business consequence - Use plain language, no hype, no buzzwords, no generic personalization - Keep the core message concise and written for a busy executive or functional leader - If relevant, include 2 subject line options or 2 message variants Output: 1. Final version 2. Why this angle should work 3. One lighter CTA option and one stronger CTA option
COMPANY | INDUSTRY | TITLE | TRIGGER OR SITUATION | PAIN | RISK, COST, DELAY, REVENUE IMPACT, COMPLIANCE IMPACT | SOLUTION | CTA
Generate a first-touch cold email for enterprise AEs to reach C-suite buyers with a situation-specific hook and clear business impact framing.
You are an enterprise B2B sales strategist writing for complex, multi-stakeholder deals. Task: Create a executive outreach for a target buyer. Inputs: - Company: [COMPANY] - Industry: [INDUSTRY] - Per
You are an enterprise B2B sales strategist writing for complex, multi-stakeholder deals. Task: Create a executive outreach for a target buyer. Inputs: - Company: [COMPANY] - Industry: [INDUSTRY] - Persona / title: [TITLE] - Trigger or context: [TRIGGER OR SITUATION] - Likely pain: [PAIN] - Business impact: [RISK, COST, DELAY, REVENUE IMPACT, COMPLIANCE IMPACT] - Solution / offer: [SOLUTION] - Desired next step: [CTA] Requirements: - Make the message specific, credible, and useful - Tie the opening to a trigger, pattern, or business issue - Connect pain to a measurable business consequence - Use plain language, no hype, no buzzwords, no generic personalization - Keep the core message concise and written for a busy executive or functional leader - If relevant, include 2 subject line options or 2 message variants Output: 1. Final version 2. Why this angle should work 3. One lighter CTA option and one stronger CTA option
COMPANY | INDUSTRY | TITLE | TRIGGER OR SITUATION | PAIN | RISK, COST, DELAY, REVENUE IMPACT, COMPLIANCE IMPACT | SOLUTION | CTA
Generate a trend-led cold email for enterprise executive prospects that connects an industry shift to a specific business risk or impact.
You are an enterprise B2B sales strategist writing for complex, multi-stakeholder deals. Task: Create a industry trend outreach for a target buyer. Inputs: - Company: [COMPANY] - Industry: [INDUSTRY]
You are an enterprise B2B sales strategist writing for complex, multi-stakeholder deals. Task: Create a industry trend outreach for a target buyer. Inputs: - Company: [COMPANY] - Industry: [INDUSTRY] - Persona / title: [TITLE] - Trigger or context: [TRIGGER OR SITUATION] - Likely pain: [PAIN] - Business impact: [RISK, COST, DELAY, REVENUE IMPACT, COMPLIANCE IMPACT] - Solution / offer: [SOLUTION] - Desired next step: [CTA] Requirements: - Make the message specific, credible, and useful - Tie the opening to a trigger, pattern, or business issue - Connect pain to a measurable business consequence - Use plain language, no hype, no buzzwords, no generic personalization - Keep the core message concise and written for a busy executive or functional leader - If relevant, include 2 subject line options or 2 message variants Output: 1. Final version 2. Why this angle should work 3. One lighter CTA option and one stronger CTA option
COMPANY | INDUSTRY | TITLE | TRIGGER OR SITUATION | PAIN | RISK, COST, DELAY, REVENUE IMPACT, COMPLIANCE IMPACT | SOLUTION | CTA
Generate an ultra-short, direct LinkedIn outreach message that cuts through noise with a single clear reason to respond.
Write a LinkedIn message in the Hemingway style. Context: - Target: [NAME, TITLE at COMPANY] - Why I'm reaching out: [SPECIFIC REASON] - What I offer: [MY VALUE PROP] Hemingway LinkedIn Rules: - Under
Write a LinkedIn message in the Hemingway style. Context: - Target: [NAME, TITLE at COMPANY] - Why I'm reaching out: [SPECIFIC REASON] - What I offer: [MY VALUE PROP] Hemingway LinkedIn Rules: - Under 25 words total - No greeting beyond their name - One sentence about them - One sentence about why - Period at the end, not a question mark - No "I'd love to connect" or "Hope you're well" The message should look like it was written by someone who doesn't have time for pleasantries because they're too busy doing important work. Example: "Sarah - Saw your post on pipeline efficiency. We helped Acme cut their sales cycle by 40%. Worth a conversation."
NAME, TITLE AT COMPANY | SPECIFIC REASON | MY VALUE PROP
Generate a TAM, SAM, SOM market sizing breakdown mapped to your specific product category and target segment.
Map the total addressable market for [PRODUCT] in [MARKET] by [SEGMENT]. Provide: (1) TAM/SAM/SOM breakdown with methodology, (2) top 20 account types by fit, (3) geographic concentration, (4) growth
Map the total addressable market for [PRODUCT] in [MARKET] by [SEGMENT]. Provide: (1) TAM/SAM/SOM breakdown with methodology, (2) top 20 account types by fit, (3) geographic concentration, (4) growth rate and timing factors. Cite data sources.
PRODUCT | MARKET | SEGMENT
Generate concise, punchy objection responses formatted with em-dashes for direct, confident delivery.
Help me respond to this objection in Hemingway style: Objection: "[THE OBJECTION THEY RAISED]" Context: - My product: [WHAT I'M SELLING] - Their company: [COMPANY NAME] - The truth: [WHY THIS OBJECTIO
Help me respond to this objection in Hemingway style: Objection: "[THE OBJECTION THEY RAISED]" Context: - My product: [WHAT I'M SELLING] - Their company: [COMPANY NAME] - The truth: [WHY THIS OBJECTION DOESN'T HOLD] Hemingway Objection Rules: - Acknowledge in one sentence max - State the counter-fact directly - Provide one piece of evidence - End with forward motion - Total response: Under 40 words Structure: 1. [One sentence acknowledgment] 2. [The counter-truth] 3. [One proof point] 4. [Next step] Do not: - Over-explain - Apologize - Hedge with "I understand, but..." - Use multiple examples (one strong one beats three weak ones) Confidence comes from brevity. If you believed your response, you wouldn't need many words.
THE OBJECTION THEY RAISED | WHAT I'M SELLING | COMPANY NAME | WHY THIS OBJECTION DOESN'T HOLD | ONE SENTENCE ACKNOWLEDGMENT | THE COUNTER-TRUTH | ONE PROOF POINT | NEXT STEP
Structure a concise one-page proposal with pricing that gives prospects a clear path to yes.
You need to send a concise proposal. Given: prospect [Company], solution summary, and pricing range, outline a one-page proposal: sections (Executive Summary, Solution Details, Pricing, Next Steps). R
You need to send a concise proposal. Given: prospect [Company], solution summary, and pricing range, outline a one-page proposal: sections (Executive Summary, Solution Details, Pricing, Next Steps). Required inputs: [Company], solution bullets, price range. Constraints: Headings with brief bullet content.*
COMPANY
Generate a personalized cold outreach email with a strong opening line and clear CTA written from an AE's point of view.
Draft a prospecting email to possible new customers for our company. The email should be written from the perspective of a Sales Account Executive and be designed to be easily personalized for each po
Draft a prospecting email to possible new customers for our company. The email should be written from the perspective of a Sales Account Executive and be designed to be easily personalized for each potential customer. Highlight the benefits of our services, any new products and services we offer, the support structure we provide during the onboarding process, and the long-term advantages of partnering with us. Ensure the email is structured for readability and actionability, using clear headers, bullet points, and a call to action. Include placeholders for the recipient's name, company, and specific pain points.
Draft a targeted email that challenges the status quo and reopens the door when a prospect claims they're already covered.
Create an email that handles the "already have a solution" objection. Focus on what they're missing with their current setup, not why their choice is bad.
Create an email that handles the "already have a solution" objection. Focus on what they're missing with their current setup, not why their choice is bad.
Generate a structured 30-minute demo outline with a clear narrative arc and a specific call to action tailored to your product and company.
You have 30 minutes to demo [Product] to [Company]. Given product name and prospect’s main pain, outline the demo: Intro, 3 feature highlights (with benefits), recap, CTA. Output bullets for each segm
You have 30 minutes to demo [Product] to [Company]. Given product name and prospect’s main pain, outline the demo: Intro, 3 feature highlights (with benefits), recap, CTA. Output bullets for each segment. Required inputs: product, pain point. Constraints: Max 6 bullets.*
PRODUCT | COMPANY
Generate a differentiated positioning narrative that frames your solution against your top three competitors using your actual wins and buyer context.
You are a brand strategist who specializes in [Your Industry/Solution Category] positioning. Help me craft a narrative that creates clear separation from competitors. Current state: [current positioni
You are a brand strategist who specializes in [Your Industry/Solution Category] positioning. Help me craft a narrative that creates clear separation from competitors. Current state: [current positioning statement], [top 3 competitors], [target buyer], [primary differentiators], [biggest customer wins]. Deliver: (1) Positioning audit — where does the current narrative sound like everyone else in the category? (2) Category narrative — what story about the market makes our solution the obvious answer, rather than a better version of existing solutions? (3) Enemy framing — what are we positioning against (not just competitors, but the old way, the status quo, or a flawed belief)? (4) Proof architecture — what 3-5 claims can be made that are specific, differentiated, and provable? (5) Messaging hierarchy — one-line positioning, 3-sentence elevator pitch, and 2-minute narrative. (6) Test: how would each of the top 3 competitors respond to this narrative, and where does it still break down?
CURRENT POSITIONING STATEMENT | TOP 3 COMPETITORS | TARGET BUYER | PRIMARY DIFFERENTIATORS | BIGGEST CUSTOMER WINS | Your Industry/Solution Category
Map your solution's gains, pain relievers, and products directly against your ICP's jobs-to-be-done, challenges, and desired outcomes.
**Role**: Expert-Level Business Strategist **Goal**: Develop a Value Proposition Canvas to clearly align the value your product or service offers with the needs, pain points, and goals of your Ideal C
**Role**: Expert-Level Business Strategist **Goal**: Develop a Value Proposition Canvas to clearly align the value your product or service offers with the needs, pain points, and goals of your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP). The canvas will help refine your product-market fit and craft messaging that resonates with your target audience. --- ### **Rules** 1. **Initial Context Gathering**: Begin by asking clarifying questions: - Who is the Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)? (e.g., role, industry, business size, specific challenges) - What are the ICP’s main goals and desired outcomes? - What pain points or challenges are they experiencing? - What solutions or features does your product/service offer? - What differentiates your solution from competitors? 2. **Step-by-Step Process**: - Take a deep breath and go step-by-step to ensure each section of the canvas is thoughtfully completed. - Focus on the customer perspective first (Jobs, Pains, Gains) before addressing the value your product provides. 3. **Validation**: After completing the canvas, evaluate each section to ensure clarity and alignment with customer needs. --- ### **Value Proposition Canvas Framework** ### **Step 1: Customer Segment (Right Side of the Canvas)** 1. **Customer Jobs**: - What functional tasks does your ICP need to accomplish? - What emotional needs or social aspirations are they trying to fulfill? - Example: *“Streamline reporting processes” (functional), “Feel confident in decision-making” (emotional).* 2. **Pains**: - What challenges, risks, or obstacles do they face? - Example: *“Time wasted on manual data entry,” “High costs of inefficiency.”* 3. **Gains**: - What benefits, outcomes, or aspirations do they desire? - Example: *“Save time,” “Achieve accuracy in reports,” “Gain recognition as a leader in their organization.”* ### **Step 2: Value Proposition (Left Side of the Canvas)** 1. **Products & Services**: - What specific solutions does your product/service offer? - Example: *“Automated reporting tool,” “Real-time analytics dashboard.”* 2. **Pain Relievers**: - How does your solution address the ICP’s challenges or eliminate obstacles? - Example: *“Reduces manual work by automating workflows.”* 3. **Gain Creators**: - How does your solution deliver benefits or exceed expectations? - Example: *“Improves accuracy by 95%, enabling better decision-making.”* ### **Step 3: Align and Prioritize** - Match Customer Jobs, Pains, and Gains with your Products, Pain Relievers, and Gain Creators. - Identify the strongest overlaps and prioritize them for marketing and messaging. --- ### **Output Format** 1. **Customer Segment**: - **Jobs**: [List functional, emotional, and social jobs.] - **Pains**: [List key challenges and risks.] - **Gains**: [List desired outcomes and benefits.] 2. **Value Proposition**: - **Products & Services**: [List the offerings that address the ICP’s needs.] - **Pain Relievers**: [List features or benefits that alleviate challenges.] - **Gain Creators**: [List enhancements or outcomes that add value.] 3. **Alignment Summary**: - Highlight the strongest matches between customer needs and your solution’s value. - Example: *“Our automated reporting tool aligns perfectly with the ICP’s need to reduce manual work and improve accuracy, while also delivering the desired gain of time savings.”* 4. **Next Steps**: - Validate the canvas with customer interviews or feedback. - Use insights to refine product positioning and messaging.
LIST FUNCTIONAL, EMOTIONAL, AND SOCIAL JOBS. | LIST KEY CHALLENGES AND RISKS. | LIST DESIRED OUTCOMES AND BENEFITS. | LIST THE OFFERINGS THAT ADDRESS THE ICP’S NEEDS. | LIST FEATURES OR BENEFITS THAT ALLEVIATE CHALLENGES. | LIST ENHANCEMENTS OR OUTCOMES THAT ADD VALUE.
Generate a dual-method market sizing analysis combining top-down and bottom-up approaches to validate opportunity size before building your territory plan.
Analyze the market size for [PRODUCT] in [MARKET] within [GEO]. Provide both top-down (industry reports) and bottom-up (accounts × ACV) approaches. Include: TAM, SAM, SOM, growth rate, and key sizing
Analyze the market size for [PRODUCT] in [MARKET] within [GEO]. Provide both top-down (industry reports) and bottom-up (accounts × ACV) approaches. Include: TAM, SAM, SOM, growth rate, and key sizing assumptions.
PRODUCT | MARKET | GEO
Run a structured must-have/nice-to-have scorecard on any opportunity after discovery to surface qualification gaps before they stall your deal.
Build a deal qualification scorecard I can complete after a discovery call to decide whether to invest full sales cycle resources. Score each item 0, 1, or 2: MUST-HAVE (deal killer if 0): - Is there
Build a deal qualification scorecard I can complete after a discovery call to decide whether to invest full sales cycle resources. Score each item 0, 1, or 2: MUST-HAVE (deal killer if 0): - Is there a confirmed, explicit business pain? (0=no/1=implicit/2=explicit+quantified) - Is there budget or potential budget? (0=no/1=possible/2=confirmed) - Is there a decision timeline in the next [X MONTHS]? (0=no/1=vague/2=confirmed) - Am I talking to someone with influence? (0=no/1=influencer/2=decision maker) NICE-TO-HAVE (bonus points): - Is there competitive urgency? (0=no/1=possible/2=confirmed) - Do I have a champion? (0=no/1=potential/2=active) - Is the ICP a strong fit? (0=poor/1=acceptable/2=ideal) Scoring: 10-14 = Fully qualify. 6-9 = Conditional — define criteria to advance. Under 6 = Disqualify or nurture. Output: Completed scorecard + recommendation for my specific deal. Call notes: [PASTE]
X MONTHS | PASTE
Generate tailored discovery questions that help a prospect articulate their future-state vision and quantify the cost of inaction.
Generate a 'future state' closing sequence for the end of a discovery call with [JOB TITLE] at [COMPANY]. After uncovering their pain, use these steps to help them articulate and own the vision of suc
Generate a 'future state' closing sequence for the end of a discovery call with [JOB TITLE] at [COMPANY]. After uncovering their pain, use these steps to help them articulate and own the vision of success: Step 1 — Paint the picture: 'If we solved [CONFIRMED PAIN] completely, what would be different about your day/quarter/year?' Step 2 — Quantify: 'And if you had to put a number on what that change would be worth — time, money, headcount — what would you say?' Step 3 — Lock in: 'So what you're describing is essentially [RESTATE THEIR VISION] — is that right?' Step 4 — Bridge: 'That's exactly what [CUSTOMER TYPE] has been able to achieve. Let me show you how.' Write out the full verbal script for each step.
JOB TITLE | COMPANY | CONFIRMED PAIN | RESTATE THEIR VISION | CUSTOMER TYPE