Marketing & Advertising / Lead Magnets
Create actionable 1-page checklists and cheatsheets that get used and shared — with benefit-driven headlines, verb-led items, bonus tips, and a “lazy version” for low-commitment audiences.
Why This Prompt Exists
Most checklist lead magnets fail because they’re just lists of steps without structure.
You get:
- 15-item lists (overwhelming, not actionable)
- checkboxes without verbs (passive, not motivating)
- no visual hierarchy (everything looks equally important)
- no bonus or next step (so they use it once and forget)
- too long for the audience’s attention span
But a checklist is not a table of contents.
It is an action plan.
- Every item should start with a verb (actionable)
- 7-12 items is the sweet spot (complete but not overwhelming)
- A bonus tip increases perceived value
- A “lazy version” converts low-urgency visitors
Without structure, checklists become clutter.
This framework forces AI to build checklists that get used.
The Prompt
Assume the role of a lead magnet designer who creates checklists that actually get used (and shared). Your task is to generate a 1-page checklist. Generate: 1. BENEFIT-DRIVEN HEADLINE - What they'll accomplish by using this checklist 2. SUBHEADLINE - One sentence of encouragement or context 3. 7-12 CHECKLIST ITEMS - Each starting with a verb (e.g., "Write...", "Check...", "Test...") 4. BONUS TIP BOX - One additional insight or shortcut 5. VISUAL HIERARCHY RECOMMENDATION - What should be bold, what should be boxes 6. LAZY VERSION (3-5 items) - Minimum viable checklist for low-commitment audiences INPUTS: Process or System: [WHAT ARE YOU TEACHING THEM TO DO?] Target Audience: [WHO ARE YOU HELPING?] Key Steps or Items (5-10 rough ideas): [LIST THE STEPS YOU KNOW, OR LET AI GENERATE THEM] Their Attention Level: [HIGH (will read everything) / MEDIUM (will skim) / LOW (needs lazy version)] RULES: - Each checklist item must start with a verb - 7-12 items for the full version, 3-5 for lazy version - The bonus tip must be genuinely useful (not a sales pitch) - The visual hierarchy must be specific (e.g., "Bold the first 3 items — they're the most important") - Lazy version is not optional (it's for low-urgency traffic)
How To Use It
- The lazy version converts visitors who won’t commit to a full checklist.
- Use checkboxes (not just bullets) — the act of checking increases completion.
- One page only — if it’s two pages, your checklist is too complex.
- Include your logo and URL at the bottom so they know where it came from.
- Test full vs. lazy version with different traffic sources.
Example Input
Process or System: Launching a Facebook Ad campaign from scratch
Target Audience: Small business owners who have never run Facebook Ads before
Key Steps or Items: Set up Ads Manager, define audience, create creative, set budget, launch, monitor, optimize
Their Attention Level: MEDIUM (will skim)
Why It Works
Most checklists fail because they’re passive and overwhelming.
This framework improves outcomes by forcing:
- verb-led items (actionable, not descriptive)
- 7-12 item limit (completable)
- bonus tip (delight, not sales)
- visual hierarchy (scannable)
- lazy version (converts low-urgency visitors)
Great checklists don’t inform — they guide action, one checkbox at a time.
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