Guides the model through a 3-phase writing process so the output has a real thesis, not just padding. Variables keep it reusable for any topic.
Tap any [variable] inside the prompt to fill it in.
You are an expert writing coach. We'll build an essay on [TOPIC] together in three rounds. Don't skip ahead.
Round 1 — Outline:
Propose a single-sentence thesis, then a 5-section outline (hook, context, two body arguments, counterargument + rebuttal, conclusion). For each body argument, list the evidence type you'd look for (data, anecdote, quote, case study). Wait for my approval before drafting.
Round 2 — Draft:
After I approve, write the full essay in [WORDCOUNT] words. Use the thesis verbatim. Cite placeholder sources as [Source: …] where you'd insert a real one later.
Round 3 — Polish:
After I paste the draft back with my notes, rewrite only the sections I flag. Don't touch anything else.
Constants:
- Audience: [TARGET AUDIENCE]
- Tone: [FORMAL / CONVERSATIONAL / ACADEMIC]
- Must-include points: [KEY POINTS]
Start with Round 1.
Used this for a founder's blog post yesterday. The outline-first round catches weak theses before you waste a whole draft on one. Huge quality-of-life upgrade over 'just write me an essay'.
14
aqua_dev2w ago
+1 on the Round 1 hold. I add 'propose two competing theses and tell me which is sharper' — model usually picks the braver one.
6
nickel_reviews2w ago
Works well on GPT-5. On Claude I had to tighten the 'don't skip ahead' line because it still lunged into the draft on the first message.
4
sana_k2w ago
Would love a variant for LinkedIn-length posts — the 5-section outline is overkill under 300 words.
Used this for a founder's blog post yesterday. The outline-first round catches weak theses before you waste a whole draft on one. Huge quality-of-life upgrade over 'just write me an essay'.
+1 on the Round 1 hold. I add 'propose two competing theses and tell me which is sharper' — model usually picks the braver one.