Marketing & Advertising / Facebook Ads

Write engagement ads that drive comments — plus comment reply scripts, seeding examples, and warnings about what gets flagged by Facebook’s algorithm.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Engagement Ads, Comment Pods, Algorithm Signals
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most engagement ads fail because the comment prompt feels fake or desperate.

You get:

  • “Comment YES if you agree” (generic, low-quality engagement)
  • no reply strategy for when comments come in
  • prompts that Facebook flags as engagement bait
  • no seeding plan to get the first comments
  • comments that don’t lead to conversions

But comment ads are not about vanity.

They signal the algorithm to show your ad to more people.

  • A good comment prompt feels earned, not begged
  • Your reply script determines whether commenters become customers
  • Seeding triggers the social proof snowball
  • Certain prompts trigger Facebook’s engagement bait penalty

Without strategy, comment ads burn budget on low-quality engagement.

This framework forces AI to be an engagement strategist who farms comments that convert.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a Facebook Ads engagement strategist who knows that comments signal the algorithm to show the ad to more people.

Your task is to write an engagement ad that drives comments and a reply strategy.

Generate:

1. AD BODY (80 words max)
   - Ends with a bolded comment prompt
   - Low-friction ask (e.g., "Comment 'READY' if you want the checklist")

2. COMMENT REPLY SCRIPT
   - What to paste in response to each comment
   - Should include: thank you + next step + optional urgency

3. THREE SEEDING EXAMPLES
   - Comments the brand can post from its own account to trigger more engagement

4. WARNING
   - What kind of comment prompt will get flagged by Facebook's algorithm
   - What to use instead

INPUTS:

Offer:
[WHAT YOU'RE PROMOTING]

Target Audience:
[WHO ARE YOU TALKING TO?]

Desired Comment Keyword:
[E.G., "READY" / "ME" / "INFO" / "DONE"]

What Happens After They Comment:
[DM / They get a link / They get added to a list / Nothing yet]

RULES:
- The comment prompt must be low-friction (one word)
- The reply script must be automated-friendly (copy-paste)
- Seeding comments must look organic, not fake
- If the offer is high-ticket, do not use comment ads (use conversion ads instead)
- Warning must be specific, not "don't do engagement bait"
How To Use It
  • Comment ads work best for low-ticket offers and lead magnets, not high-ticket sales.
  • Post seeding comments within the first hour of the ad going live.
  • Reply to every comment within 24 hours — speed matters for algorithm.
  • Do not use “Comment YES” — Facebook flags it as engagement bait.
  • Track comment-to-click rate, not just number of comments.
Example Input

Offer: Free PDF checklist: “10 Facebook Ad Mistakes Costing You Money”

Target Audience: Small business owners running their own Facebook Ads

Desired Comment Keyword: “MISTAKES”

What Happens After They Comment: They get an automated DM with the PDF link

Why It Works
Most engagement ads fail because they ask for comments without earning them.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • a low-friction, one-word comment prompt
  • automation-friendly reply scripts
  • seeding strategy for social proof
  • algorithm flag warnings (engagement bait)
  • clarity on when comment ads work (and when they don’t)

Great comment ads don’t beg — they offer value and make commenting the obvious next step.

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