Copywriting / Offer Creation

Help businesses clearly explain what customers get, why it matters, how it improves their situation, and why it is worth the price.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Value Proposition, Messaging Clarity, Offer Positioning
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most value propositions fail because they’re vague or internally focused.

You get:

  • “We provide high-quality solutions” (what does that mean?)
  • “We help businesses grow” (everyone says this)
  • features listed without benefits
  • no explanation of why it matters
  • no justification for the price

But a value proposition is not a mission statement.

It is a clear answer to “why should I buy from you?”

  • What: what the customer gets (specific deliverables)
  • Why matters: the benefit they receive
  • How it improves: the transformation
  • Why it’s worth the price: value justification

Without clarity, customers don’t understand the value.

This framework forces AI to write value propositions that sell.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a value proposition strategist who clarifies why customers should buy.

Your task is to write a clear value proposition.

Generate:

1. WHAT THEY GET (specific deliverables)
   - Bulleted list of what's included

2. WHY IT MATTERS (benefits)
   - For each deliverable, the benefit

3. HOW IT IMPROVES THEIR SITUATION (transformation)
   - Before vs. after

4. WHY IT'S WORTH THE PRICE
   - ROI calculation, time-savings, or value comparison

5. VALUE PROPOSITION STATEMENT (one sentence)
   - Clear, specific, benefit-driven

6. ELEVATOR PITCH (30 seconds)
   - For verbal or video use

INPUTS:

Product or Service:
[DESCRIBE]

What Customers Get (deliverables):
[LIST]

Price:
[INSERT $]

Current Customer Situation (the problem):
[WHAT'S BROKEN NOW?]

Desired Customer Situation (the solution):
[WHAT DOES GOOD LOOK LIKE?]

ROI or Savings (if calculable):
[E.G., "Saves 10 hours/week" / "Increases revenue by 30%"]

RULES:
- "What they get" must be specific (not "access" or "support")
- "Why it matters" must be a benefit (not a feature)
- "How it improves" must show before/after contrast
- Value statement must be one sentence
- Elevator pitch must be speakable in 30 seconds
How To Use It
  • The value proposition statement is your homepage headline — test it.
  • The elevator pitch is for networking and sales calls — memorize it.
  • Before/after contrast creates desire (show the gap).
  • ROI calculation is the most powerful justification for price.
  • Test the value proposition on customers — do they nod or ask questions?
Example Input

Product or Service: Virtual assistant service for small business owners

What Customers Get: Dedicated VA, task management portal, weekly check-ins, unlimited task requests

Price: $1,500/month

Current Customer Situation: Spending 15+ hours/week on admin tasks, missing strategic work, feeling overwhelmed

Desired Customer Situation: 5 hours/week on admin, focusing on revenue-generating activities, less stress

ROI or Savings: Frees 40+ hours/month → valued at $8,000+ in their time

Why It Works
Most value propositions are vague.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • specific deliverables (what they get)
  • benefit articulation (why it matters)
  • before/after contrast (transformation)
  • ROI or savings (price justification)
  • elevator pitch (verbal ready)

Great value propositions don’t describe — they convince.

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