Copywriting / Blog Content

Use storytelling, personal experiences, case studies, or customer situations to make educational blog content more compelling.
Difficulty: Intermediate → Advanced
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Narrative Blogging, Case Studies, Personal Essays
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most educational blog posts are dry and forgettable.

You get:

  • bullet points of advice (no emotional connection)
  • no narrative arc (just information)
  • abstract lessons without concrete examples
  • generic advice that applies to everyone (so no one)
  • posts that inform but don’t inspire action

But stories are how humans learn.

A story is worth a hundred bullet points.

  • The protagonist: someone the reader relates to
  • The struggle: a problem they recognize
  • The turning point: the moment of change
  • The lesson: what to learn from it

Without story, your blog is forgettable.

This framework forces AI to tell stories that educate and engage.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a narrative blogger who teaches through story.

Your task is to write a story-driven blog post.

STRUCTURE:

1. THE HOOK (2-3 sentences)
   - Start with an interesting moment or question

2. THE BACKSTORY (2-3 paragraphs)
   - Context and characters

3. THE STRUGGLE (2-3 paragraphs)
   - The problem or conflict

4. THE TURNING POINT (1-2 paragraphs)
   - What changed

5. THE LESSON (1-2 paragraphs)
   - What the reader should learn

6. THE ACTION (1 paragraph)
   - How to apply the lesson

Generate:

1. HEADLINE (intriguing, not clickbait)

2. FULL POST (800-1,200 words)

3. KEY TAKEAWAY (one sentence)

INPUTS:

Story Type:
[PERSONAL EXPERIENCE / CUSTOMER CASE STUDY / FOUNDER STORY / ANALOGY]

The Protagonist:
[WHO IS THE MAIN CHARACTER?]

The Problem or Conflict:
[WHAT WAS THE STRUGGLE?]

The Turning Point:
[WHAT CHANGED?]

The Lesson:
[WHAT SHOULD READERS LEARN?]

Target Audience:
[WHO IS READING?]

RULES:
- Start with action, not exposition (in media res)
- Show, don't tell — use sensory details
- The turning point must be specific (not "then I realized")
- Connect the story explicitly to the lesson
- The action step must be practical
- Avoid moralizing ("the lesson here is...") — let the story speak
How To Use It
  • The best stories are true — use your own experiences or real customer stories.
  • Start in the middle of the action (not “once upon a time”).
  • Sensory details (what you saw, heard, felt) make stories immersive.
  • The lesson should feel earned, not tacked on at the end.
  • Test the story on someone who doesn’t know the outcome — do they care what happens next?
Example Input

Story Type: Personal experience

The Protagonist: A freelance designer who almost quit freelancing

The Problem or Conflict: Couldn’t find consistent clients, doubted their skills, considered going back to a full-time job

The Turning Point: A mentor suggested they specialize in one industry instead of being a generalist

The Lesson: Specialization makes you more valuable, not less marketable

Target Audience: Freelancers struggling to find consistent work

Why It Works
Most educational blogs are dry and forgettable.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • action-first opening (engagement)
  • relatable protagonist (empathy)
  • specific struggle (tension)
  • concrete turning point (clarity)
  • explicit lesson + action (utility)

Great story-driven blogs don’t just inform — they make readers feel something, then teach them what to do.

Build Better AI Systems

Subscribe for advanced prompt engineering, AI copywriting tools, blog content frameworks, and practical strategies for writers and marketers.