Tag: AI Tools for Writers

  • How To Make Your Articles 10x More Relatable

    How To Make Your Articles 10x More Relatable

    Most non-fiction writing is smart.

    But smart doesn’t always mean memorable.

    You’ve probably read an article that made solid points, dropped impressive stats, maybe even introduced a new framework. 

    But two minutes after reading it? Gone. 

    You can’t remember a thing it said.

    That’s because logic educates. Emotion persuades.

    And most content completely misses that second part.

    If your articles aren’t making people feel something, they’re not going to stick.

    And that’s the gap this prompt below in the article is built to close.

    It turns flat, purely informational writing into something readers actually feel by injecting story.

    The real reason good content doesn’t land

    People don’t share or save articles because they’re accurate. 

    They do it because something hit them emotionally. 

    A moment. A line. A story.

    That one part that made them feel seen, or reminded them of something they’ve experienced, that’s what makes it stick.

    The truth is, you can lay out the most airtight argument in the world, and still lose your reader halfway through if you never make them care.

    Why Story Works 

    You already know stories are powerful. Everyone does.

    But most people think telling a story means writing paragraphs of background, building tension, and going full “Once upon a time.” That’s not realistic for most articles. 

    And it’s not what readers want either.

    What actually works?

    One sharp moment, dropped in the right place, that connects emotionally then gets out of the way so the main point can land harder.

    That’s it.

    And that’s exactly what this prompt is built to do.

    What this prompt actually does

    First, it reads your draft. The whole thing. 

    Not just the words, but the tone, structure, and flow. 

    It figures out what kind of article you’re writing, and what message you’re trying to send.

    Then it identifies where a short, emotional story could elevate the point.

    Not every paragraph, just the moments where your message would hit harder with a little more weight behind it.

    Finally, it inserts short stories.

    We’re talking two to five sentences max that make your point feel more grounded, more human, and way more memorable.

    The prompt doesn’t hijack your content. It enhances it. 

    Your structure stays intact. Your voice stays consistent. 

    It just brings in a little emotional voltage.

    <System>
    You are a narrative integration specialist with deep expertise in persuasive writing, content strategy, and human psychology. Your role is to enhance non-fiction articles by strategically inserting relevant personal or real-world stories that amplify the message, build trust, and improve emotional resonance—without disrupting the article’s structure or intent.
    </System>

    <Context>
    You will receive a non-fiction article, blog draft, or outline focused on a topic such as entrepreneurship, leadership, personal development, innovation, or any thematic category. Your job is to identify opportunities where personal stories, anecdotes, or case studies can be integrated meaningfully to add emotional impact and depth.

    </Context>

    <Instructions>
    1. Analyze the structure and tone of the input article.
    2. Identify key points or transitions where a personal anecdote, customer story, or real-world analogy would naturally enrich the message.
    3. Insert brief but vivid stories or moments (2–5 sentences each) that support those ideas without overwhelming the reader.
    4. Ensure the story ties back clearly to the point being made, using reflective transitions or summary sentences.
    5. Maintain the professional and informational tone of the article, enhancing but not replacing its primary content.

    </Instructions>

    <Constraints>
    - Keep integrated stories under 100 words each.
    - Do not disrupt the logical flow or voice of the article.
    - Avoid clichés or unrelated motivational fluff.
    - Use language that is human, respectful, and inclusive.

    </Constraints>

    <Output Format>
    - Enhanced Article: The original article with integrated personal or real-world stories
    - Highlighted Changes: A bullet list of where and why each story was added

    </Output Format>

    <Reasoning>
    Apply Theory of Mind to understand both the author’s intent and the reader’s emotional landscape. Use Strategic Chain-of-Thought to identify the optimal insertion points for stories, ensuring narrative harmony without diluting the article’s focus.
    </Reasoning>
    <User Input>
    Reply with: "Please enter your article and indicate where you'd like personal stories integrated," then wait for the user to provide their draft or outline.
    </User Input>

    Who this is for

    If you write, this is for you.

    Entrepreneurs trying to share insights. 

    Coaches explaining a framework. 

    Content creators writing personal development breakdowns. 

    Even corporate professionals drafting reports or whitepapers, this works across the board.

    It doesn’t matter what your niche is. 

    If you’re writing content meant to persuade, lead, or educate, stories are your leverage point.

    And if you’re not sure where or how to use them, this prompt does the heavy lifting.

    How to use it

    Use it after your draft is done. Not before.

    Let your ideas breathe first. 

    Get your structure down. 

    Make your argument clear.

    Then, run the prompt. 

    Let it scan for moments where your content could go from informative to unforgettable.

    And here’s the most important part, don’t over-edit what it gives you. 

    If the story it drops in feels true, let it live. 

    That moment of emotional connection is the part most people skip and the part that separates forgettable content from content that moves people.


    Most people are busy trying to sound smart, but the people who win?

    They’re the ones who make their audience feel something.

    That’s what builds trust. 

    That’s what builds loyalty. 

    That’s what gets remembered.

    This prompt won’t turn you into a storyteller overnight. 

    But it’ll get you 80% of the way there with 5% of the effort.

    Try it. See what happens when your content starts resonating instead of just informing.

  • This ChatGPT Prompt Fixes Your Article Transitions Like a Pro

    This ChatGPT Prompt Fixes Your Article Transitions Like a Pro

    Have you ever read an article that felt like a car with no shocks?

    Jumps around. Slams the brakes. No flow.

    You’re not sure how you got from one point to the next. You just know it didn’t feel good. And guess what? Your readers feel that too.

    Most people stop reading because the flow is broken.

    That’s where the prompt I have given below comes in.

    I built it to solve one thing, awkward transitions in long-form content.

    What’s actually broken in most articles?

    Most people think bad writing is about typos, weak arguments, or not enough data.

    Wrong.

    The real killer? Abrupt transitions.

    Paragraphs that jump between ideas with zero handoff

    Sections that feel like totally different articles stitched together

    Openings and conclusions that don’t echo the middle

    You might not even notice it when you’re writing. 

    But your reader does. They feel it when the ride gets bumpy.

    It’s like talking to someone who keeps changing topics mid-sentence.

    Eventually, you just check out.

    Why you need an editorial assistant 

    When you’re deep in your own content, you lose perspective. 

    That’s why great writers have great editors.

    But here’s the problem:

    • Good editors are expensive
    • They take time
    • They don’t work 24/7

    So I built a prompt that is your editor but specifically for transitions.

    It doesn’t rewrite your whole article. It doesn’t mess with your voice. It just helps your content glide.

    What this prompt actually does

    Alright, let’s break it down.

    This prompt reads your full article (you paste it in) and spots all the clunky transition points where your ideas shift but don’t connect smoothly

    For each one, it gives you:

    • A short transitional phrase
    • A complete transitional sentence
    • A full mini paragraph to smooth it out

    You choose what fits. You keep your voice. You stay in control.

    And on top of that, it explains why each fix works so you learn the craft over time.

    How to Use It in 4 Steps

    It’s super easy.

    Finish your article draft and then

    1. Paste this exact prompt into ChatGPT, give it the full article, and get the suggestions
    <System>
    You are a professional editorial assistant with deep expertise in flow and structure. Your job is to improve how sections of an article connect, by identifying awkward or abrupt transitions and suggesting improved transitional elements.
    </System>

    <Context>
    The user will provide a full article or draft of long-form content. Your role is to read the entire text, analyze where transitions between sections or ideas are weak, abrupt, or missing, and suggest multiple forms of better transitions.
    </Context>

    <Instructions>
    1. Carefully read the entire article and note where topic, tone, or narrative shifts occur.
    2. For each identified transition point, suggest:
    - A short transitional phrase (5–8 words)
    - A complete transitional sentence
    - A short transitional paragraph (2–3 sentences)
    3. Each suggestion should maintain the article’s tone, voice, and intent.
    4. After each set of suggestions, explain briefly why the transition improves the flow or clarity.
    5. Do not rewrite or restructure the original article — only identify and enhance transition points.

    <Constraints>
    - Avoid generic phrases or clichés.
    - Maintain stylistic consistency with the original content.
    - Only provide transitions where the shift is abrupt or unclear.
    - The final output should be formatted clearly for editing ease.

    <Output Format>
    Transitions Identified:
    1. [Excerpt or location of awkward transition]
    - Suggested Phrase: ...
    - Suggested Sentence: ...
    - Suggested Paragraph: ...
    - Comment: ...

    2. [Next excerpt or location]
    ...
    </Output Format>

    <Reasoning>
    Apply Theory of Mind to analyze the user's request, considering both logical intent and emotional undertones. Use Strategic Chain-of-Thought and System 2 Thinking to provide evidence-based, nuanced responses that balance depth with clarity.
    </Reasoning>
    <User Input>
    Reply with: "Please paste your full article, and I will analyze and improve its transitions for smoother flow."
    </User Input>

    2. Scan the suggested transitions

    Use what works. Ignore what doesn’t.

    3. Apply. Learn. Get better.

    Over time, you’ll start writing smoother drafts from the start.

    Who this is for

    If you’re writing more than 500 words at a time, this prompt is for you.

    It’s built for:

    • Bloggers who want readers to actually reach the end
    • Marketers who need long-form content that sells
    • Newsletter writers making sense every week
    • Authors and essayists looking for that final layer of polish
    • Even students writing academic stuff with structure issues

    If you write stuff that people actually read (or skim), this helps.

    You can have great ideas, killer data, and smart takes…But if your article doesn’t flow, people bounce.

    This ChatGPT prompt fixes that.

    So next time you hit publish, do your readers a favor.

    Run it through your AI editorial assistant first.

    Your words deserve better flow.

    And now you’ve got the tool to make it happen.