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100 Advanced ChatGPT Commands (and Exactly When to Use Each One)

You’ve probably tried a few prompts like “Write a blog post about X” and got… something okay. But what if you could get ChatGPT to act like your strategist, editor, project manager, and growth partner—on demand? The difference isn’t luck. It’s the command.

This guide gives you 100 advanced commands you can use today to turn vague outputs into laser-focused results. Each command tells you when to use it and how to tailor it fast. Whether you’re a creator, entrepreneur, educator, or power user, you’ll learn how to make ChatGPT work like a pro—without the guesswork.

Here’s the secret: great prompts are not magic spells. They’re clear instructions, grounded in context, aimed at a specific outcome. Let’s make that your default.


How to Use Advanced Commands (Prompt Patterns That Work)

Before the list, a quick framework. Most high-performing commands include:

  • Role: who the model should “be” (e.g., product manager, writing coach).
  • Goal: the concrete outcome you want (e.g., 90-day plan, 10 ideas).
  • Context: constraints, audience, resources, and known inputs.
  • Format: how to deliver (e.g., table, bullets, JSON, outline).
  • Quality bar: criteria, examples, or a rubric to hit.
  • Questions: ask for clarifications before drafting.

Example template you can reuse: “Act as [role]. Goal: [what you want]. Context: [audience, constraints, inputs]. Deliver: [format and length]. Quality: [tone, must-have elements]. Before you start, ask me [#] clarifying questions.”

Pro tip: Always define “Done looks like…” to set the bar.


100 Advanced Commands for ChatGPT (By Use Case)

Strategy and Planning

1) Act as a strategic advisor. Goal: draft a 90-day plan for [initiative]. Context: [industry, resources, constraints]. Deliver: a week-by-week roadmap with owners, milestones, and risks. Ask 3 clarifying questions first.
Use when: you need a structured, realistic plan fast.

2) Run a MECE breakdown of [complex topic]. Output: non-overlapping categories and subcategories with brief definitions.
Use when: you want clean structure before you execute.

3) Conduct a SWOT + “so what?” analysis for [company/product]. For each item, add the implication and a suggested action.
Use when: you need analysis that leads to decisions.

4) Create a decision matrix for [choice A vs B vs C]. Criteria: [list]. Weight them and recommend a choice with rationale.
Use when: stakeholders need a transparent, data-driven pick.

5) Do a premortem for [project]. List 10 reasons it failed, early warning signs, and mitigations.
Use when: you want to de-risk before launch.

6) Backcast from the desired outcome [X in 12 months]. Map quarterly milestones, capabilities, and leading indicators.
Use when: you’re planning backward from success.

7) Build an OKR set for [team/quarter]. Include 3 Objectives and 3–4 measurable Key Results each, with baselines and targets.
Use when: aligning teams around outcomes.

8) Draft a one-page strategy memo: problem, insight, strategic bet, trade-offs, risks, next steps.
Use when: you need clarity and alignment.

9) Generate a stakeholder map for [initiative]. Identify power, interest, messaging, and engagement cadence.
Use when: gaining buy-in matters.

10) Create a risk register for [program]. Rank by probability/impact, assign owners, and add mitigation triggers.
Use when: you want proactive risk control.


Writing and Editing

11) Act as a writing coach. Rewrite [paste text] to improve clarity, flow, and tone for [audience]. Deliver side-by-side before/after with change rationales.
Use when: you want to learn while improving copy.

12) Outline-first drafting. “Create a detailed outline for [topic] with H2/H3s, bullet points, and key examples. Ask what to expand before writing.”
Use when: you need structure before prose.

13) Tighten and shorten. “Cut this to 40% length while keeping meaning: [paste]. Maintain a confident, friendly voice.”
Use when: editing for brevity.

14) Expand with evidence. “Expand this paragraph to 150 words with data points and one illustrative example: [text].”
Use when: padding light sections with substance.

15) Tone calibration. “Rephrase [text] in a tone that’s [confident, warm, plain-language]. Avoid jargon and passive voice.”
Use when: matching brand voice.

16) Headline ideation. “Generate 15 headlines for [piece] using different framing: curiosity, benefit, contrarian, number list.”
Use when: headline testing.

17) Email clarity. “Rewrite this email for skim-readers. Put the ask up top, bullets for context, and a clear next step: [email].”
Use when: busy recipients need the TL;DR.

18) Comparison frameworks. “Turn [two options] into a comparison table with criteria, pros, cons, and a recommendation.”
Use when: stakeholder clarity is key.

19) Style guide application. “Apply these voice rules [paste guide] to rewrite [text]. Keep key terms and product names intact.”
Use when: enforcing consistency.

20) Plain-language rewrite for accessibility. “Rewrite at a 7th-grade reading level without losing accuracy: [text].”
Use when: increasing comprehension, inclusivity.

21) Executive summary. “Summarize [long text] in 5 bullets with one action recommendation and one risk.”
Use when: briefing leaders quickly.

22) Visual-first brief. “Create a slide outline (title + 3 bullets each) for [topic]. Limit to 10 slides.”
Use when: turning ideas into a deck fast.


Research and Analysis

23) Synthesis with citations. “From these sources [paste], extract 5 key findings with direct quotes, sources, and a one-line implication each.”
Use when: grounded summaries.

24) Contradiction finder. “Identify conflicting claims in [texts]. For each, explain the discrepancy and what would resolve it.”
Use when: sorting signal from noise.

25) Assumption audit. “List implicit assumptions in this argument [text], rate their strength, and propose tests.”
Use when: stress-testing logic.

26) Analyst brief. “Explain [complex topic] to a smart layperson in 200 words, then add 3 deeper technical notes.”
Use when: layered explanations.

27) Opportunity scan. “From these customer quotes [paste], cluster themes and surface unmet needs with example quotes.”
Use when: qualitative analysis.

28) Quant prompt. “Given metrics [X, Y, Z], compute [ratio/trend] and interpret what it means for [goal].”
Use when: quick number sense.

29) Concept map. “Map [topic] into nodes and connections. Output as a bullet hierarchy with relationships.”
Use when: learning or planning.

30) Pros-Cons-Conditions. “List pros and cons of [option]. Add ‘works best when…’ conditions.”
Use when: nuanced trade-offs.

31) Debate both sides. “Argue for and against [position] in 150 words each, then give a balanced conclusion with a recommendation.”
Use when: sharpening thinking.

32) Research plan. “Design a 2-week research plan to answer [question]. Include methods, sources, sample questions, and deliverables.”
Use when: moving from curiosity to action.


Marketing and Growth

33) ICP/JTBD profile. “Draft an ideal customer profile with Jobs-To-Be-Done for [product]. Include pains, triggers, criteria, and anxieties.”
Use when: aligning messaging to real needs.

34) Value proposition designer. “Create a Value Proposition Canvas for [product] vs [competitor]. Add key proof points.”
Use when: sharpening positioning.

35) Messaging hierarchy. “Build a tiered messaging framework: category, brand, product, feature. Include one-liners and supporting proof.”
Use when: consistent comms across channels.

36) Campaign concepting. “Generate 5 campaign concepts for [goal/audience], each with big idea, channels, and sample creative.”
Use when: exploring angles quickly.

37) Hook library. “Write 25 hooks for [platform] about [topic], across curiosity, benefit, contrarian, story.”
Use when: social content volume.

38) Email sequence. “Draft a 5-part nurture sequence for [persona]. Include subject lines, preview text, and one CTA each.”
Use when: lifecycle marketing.

39) Landing page brief. “Outline a landing page: hero, trust cues, benefits, social proof, FAQ, CTA. Provide suggested copy.”
Use when: building high-converting pages.

40) Objection handling. “List top 10 objections for [offer] and craft empathetic rebuttals with proof.”
Use when: improving sales enablement.

41) Referral loop ideas. “Propose 5 referral mechanisms for [product], with incentive design and abuse safeguards.”
Use when: growth experiments.

42) ROI narrative. “Turn these results [metrics] into a crisp case study with setup, challenge, solution, outcome, and a quote.”
Use when: credibility-building assets.


SEO and Content Strategy

43) Topic cluster builder. “Generate a pillar page outline for [core topic] and 12 supporting articles with intent and titles.”
Use when: building semantic authority.

44) Keyword intent map. “Classify these keywords [list] by intent (informational, commercial, transactional, navigational) and suggest content types.”
Use when: matching content to searcher needs.

45) SERP feature brief. “For [keyword], suggest ways to target featured snippets, People Also Ask, and images. Include on-page structure.”
Use when: aiming for SERP features.

46) Content gap analysis (heuristic). “Given our pages [list] and competitor pages [list], identify gaps and quick-win topics.”
Use when: prioritizing content.

47) On-page brief. “Create an SEO brief for [topic]: H2/H3s, FAQs, internal links, schema suggestions, and E-E-A-T notes.”
Use when: guiding writers with clarity.

48) Internal linking plan. “Suggest internal links from and to [URL/topic], grouped by pillar and cluster.”
Use when: passing topical authority.

49) Snippet optimization. “Rewrite this intro to directly answer [query] in 40–55 words with a definition and benefit.”
Use when: featured snippet shots.

50) FAQ builder. “Create 10 FAQs (with concise answers) for [topic] based on searcher intent.”
Use when: enriching pages and capturing PAA.

51) Content refresh plan. “Audit [post] for freshness: outdated stats, broken links, thin sections. Suggest updates and new angles.”
Use when: boosting existing rankings.

52) Editorial calendar. “Plan 8 weeks of posts on [topic] with goals, target keywords, and formats.”
Use when: consistent publishing cadence.

Helpful resources:
– Google’s guidance on helpful content: Creating helpful, reliable content
– SEO fundamentals: Moz Beginner’s Guide to SEO


Sales and Customer Success

53) Discovery call script. “Draft a discovery call flow for [persona]. Include rapport, situational questions, pain probes, impact, next step.”
Use when: better conversations, not monologues.

54) Objection library. “Generate responses to [top 8 objections], each with empathy, reframing, and proof.”
Use when: preparing reps.

55) Call recap writer. “Turn these notes [paste] into a recap email with decisions, action items, and deadlines.”
Use when: clean handoffs.

56) Proposal scaffold. “Create a proposal outline for [offer]: goals, scope, timeline, investment, assumptions, and success criteria.”
Use when: faster proposals.

57) ROI calculator logic. “Build a simple ROI model for [solution] using inputs [A, B, C]. Provide formulas and an example.”
Use when: quantify value.

58) Renewal save script. “Draft a customer save playbook for [churn risk]. Include triggers, outreach templates, and offers.”
Use when: reducing churn.

59) Support macros. “Write 10 support macros for [common issues], with steps, tone, and links to help docs.”
Use when: consistent, fast support.

60) QBR template. “Design a Quarterly Business Review template with outcomes, usage trends, roadmap preview, and next steps.”
Use when: driving strategic relationships.


Product and UX

61) PRD draft. “Create a one-page PRD for [feature]: problem, goals, user stories, acceptance criteria, metrics, risks.”
Use when: starting structured.

62) User story workshop. “Turn these needs [paste] into user stories with acceptance criteria and edge cases.”
Use when: backlog grooming.

63) JTBD statements. “Convert [customer quotes] into Jobs-To-Be-Done statements with context, motivation, and expected outcomes.”
Use when: aligning teams to jobs.

64) UX microcopy variants. “Write 5 microcopy options for [UI element]. Tone: reassuring, succinct. Include do/don’t examples.”
Use when: reducing friction.
Reference: NN/g on microcopy and UX writing

65) Usability test script. “Create a moderated test script for [flow], with tasks, success criteria, and debrief questions.”
Use when: user testing prep.

66) Release notes. “Draft release notes for [update], with highlights, why it matters, and quick start steps.”
Use when: communicating change well.

67) Roadmap themes. “Group features into themes with outcomes and metrics. Highlight what we’re not doing (and why).”
Use when: prioritization and alignment.

68) Accessibility audit (heuristic). “Provide an accessibility checklist for [page/app] focusing on text, contrast, semantics, and keyboard nav.”
Use when: inclusive design.


Coding and Data

69) Pseudocode first. “Write pseudocode for [problem], then outline edge cases and test cases. Do not write code yet.”
Use when: planning before coding.

70) Explain this code. “Explain what this code does, step by step, and flag potential bugs or inefficiencies: [paste].”
Use when: understanding unfamiliar code.

71) Refactor for readability. “Refactor this function for clarity and maintainability. Add comments and meaningful names: [code].”
Use when: code quality.

72) Unit test generator. “Generate unit tests for [function] covering typical, edge, and error cases.”
Use when: testing coverage.

73) Docstring writer. “Add docstrings and usage examples to these functions in [language]: [code].”
Use when: developer experience.

74) API contract. “Draft an API spec for [endpoint] with method, params, request/response schemas, errors, and examples (JSON).”
Use when: aligning across teams.

75) SQL from natural language. “Write a SQL query to [goal] from tables [schema]. Include a brief explanation.”
Use when: quick analysis.

76) Regex builder. “Create a regex to match [pattern], explain each part, and give examples.”
Use when: text processing.

77) Performance checklist. “Provide performance considerations for [feature/stack], with profiling ideas and trade-offs.”
Use when: speed matters.

78) Data cleaning plan. “Outline steps to clean and normalize [dataset type], with transformations and validation checks.”
Use when: preparing data.

79) Error handbook. “List common errors for [framework], their typical causes, and fixes.”
Use when: shaving hours off debugging.

80) Migration plan. “Create a step-by-step migration plan from [tech A] to [tech B], with rollback strategy.”
Use when: reducing migration risk.
Resource: OpenAI Cookbook: prompt engineering patterns


Education and Learning

81) Lesson plan. “Design a 60-minute lesson on [topic] for [level]. Include objectives, materials, activities, and assessment.”
Use when: teaching with structure.

82) Explain like I’m 12, then 20, then expert. “Teach [topic] at three levels, each building on the last.”
Use when: scaffolding learning.

83) Socratic tutor. “Ask me guided questions to solve [problem]. Wait for my answer each time. Give hints, not solutions.”
Use when: active learning.

84) Spaced repetition cards. “Create 20 flashcards (Q/A) for [topic], grouped by difficulty.”
Use when: retention.

85) Practice problems. “Generate 10 problems on [topic] with step-by-step solutions and common mistakes to avoid.”
Use when: applied practice.

86) Study plan. “Build a 4-week study plan for [exam/topic], with daily tasks and checkpoints.”
Use when: structure beats willpower.

87) Concept map and analogies. “Explain [topic] using 3 analogies and a concept map outline.”
Use when: making ideas stick.

88) Feedback with rubric. “Assess this essay [paste] against [rubric]. Provide scores and actionable feedback.”
Use when: targeted improvement.

89) Lab/report template. “Create a lab report template for [subject], with sections and prompts for each.”
Use when: consistent academic work.

90) Reading guide. “Make a reading guide for [book/paper]: key questions, themes, and a 1-page summary.”
Use when: deeper reading.


Creativity and Personal Productivity

91) Constraint brainstorming. “Generate 20 ideas for [goal], each constrained by [budget/time/tool].”
Use when: constraints spark creativity.

92) Lateral thinking prompts. “Offer 10 ‘what if’ provocations for [problem] across substitution, combination, exaggeration.”
Use when: breaking mental ruts.

93) Ideation remix. “Combine ideas from [domain A] and [domain B] to solve [challenge].”
Use when: cross-pollination.

94) Decision journal. “Create a decision log template with context, options, predictions, and post-mortem fields.”
Use when: improving judgment.

95) Habit design. “Turn [desired habit] into a tiny habit using cue-action-reward. Suggest friction removers.”
Use when: behavior change.

96) Time blocking. “Design a weekly time-block schedule based on [priorities/hours]. Include buffer and deep work.”
Use when: operationalizing priorities.

97) Personal OKRs. “Create personal OKRs for [quarter], with measurable KRs and weekly check-in questions.”
Use when: staying accountable.

98) Travel itinerary. “Plan a 3-day itinerary in [city] for [interests/budget], with mapped clusters and backup options.”
Use when: efficient trips.

99) Resume bullet upgrade. “Rewrite these bullets with action, impact, and metrics. Use strong verbs and context: [bullets].”
Use when: making achievements pop.
Tip: Use guidance from Purdue OWL on concision

100) Negotiation prep. “Outline negotiation strategy for [situation]: interests, BATNA, anchors, concessions, and sample scripts.”
Use when: walking in prepared.


Pro Tips to Customize Outputs (and Get Consistent Quality)

  • Front-load context. Tell ChatGPT who it’s for, what constraints exist, and what “good” looks like.
  • Ask for questions. “Before you start, ask 3 clarifying questions.” This surfaces assumptions early.
  • Separate critique and creation. First ask for a critique. Then ask for a revision. Quality doubles.
  • Specify format. Tables, bullets, JSON, slide outline—formats force structure and reduce fluff.
  • Set length and tone ranges. “120–150 words. Plain language. Confident, friendly.” Clarity beats hope.
  • Provide examples. One good sample does more than 10 adjectives. Add “match this level of detail.”
  • Calibrate with a rubric. “Score your draft 1–5 on [criteria]. Improve anything below 4.”
  • Work iteratively. Treat ChatGPT as a collaborator. Revise, refine, and stack prompts.
  • Add constraints. Deadlines, budgets, or compliance rules force realistic solutions.
  • Keep ethics and safety in mind. Avoid sharing sensitive data; anonymize where needed. See: Google’s guidance on reliable content

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Vague goals. “Write about X” yields generic output. Specify audience, angle, and outcome.
  • Missing context. If you don’t provide constraints, it will assume ideal conditions.
  • Format ambiguity. You’ll get prose walls instead of usable assets.
  • One-shot prompts. Iteration wins. Ask for options, critique, and a final pass.
  • Over-styling commands. Descriptive voice cues beat “write like [famous person].”
  • Ignoring verification. For facts, verify with reputable sources or your own data.

Mini Examples (So You Can See the Commands in Action)

Example 1 — Strategy Roadmap
Command: “Act as a strategic advisor. Goal: draft a 90-day plan for launching a freemium tier. Context: B2B SaaS, 5-person team, $20k budget, must not cannibalize enterprise. Deliver: week-by-week roadmap with owners, milestones, risks. Ask 3 clarifying questions first.”
Output you’ll get: A realistic timeline, assigned roles, risk mitigations, and checkpoints.

Example 2 — SEO On-Page Brief
Command: “Create an SEO brief for ‘remote onboarding best practices’: H2/H3s, internal links, schema suggestions, and E-E-A-T notes. Tone: clear, practical.”
Output you’ll get: A ready-to-write outline and optimization checklist aligned with Google’s helpful content guidelines.

Example 3 — Research Synthesis
Command: “From these sources [paste], extract 5 key findings with direct quotes, sources, and one-line implications.”
Output you’ll get: A tight, citation-backed summary you can trust and act on.

Example 4 — Coding Pseudocode
Command: “Write pseudocode for deduplicating customer records by email and phone, then list edge cases and tests. Don’t write code yet.”
Output you’ll get: A blueprint that makes coding or delegating easy.

Example 5 — Writing Coach
Command: “Rewrite this intro for clarity and momentum. Keep the core idea. Add a compelling hook and cut jargon: [paste].”
Output you’ll get: A punchier opening that pulls readers in.


FAQ: Advanced ChatGPT Commands

Q: What makes a prompt “advanced”?
A: Advanced commands define role, goal, context, format, and quality criteria. They often include clarifying questions and iteration steps. The result is targeted, reusable, and consistent.

Q: Can ChatGPT browse the live web?
A: Depending on the model or tools you use, browsing may be available. If not, ChatGPT relies on its training data and your pasted inputs. Always verify time-sensitive facts with reliable sources.

Q: How do I avoid generic responses?
A: Provide context (audience, constraints), specify the format, and ask for options. Then request a critique and a final improved draft. Example: “Give me 3 options → critique them → produce a final.”

Q: Is it okay to ask for a specific writer’s style?
A: Better: describe the voice and qualities you want (e.g., concise, data-backed, warm), or provide your own style guide. This yields consistent results and avoids imitation pitfalls.

Q: How do I protect sensitive data?
A: Don’t paste confidential information. Anonymize or mask data. Keep compliance in mind. Share only what’s necessary for the task.

Q: What if the output sounds robotic?
A: Ask for shorter sentences, varied sentence openings, and concrete examples. Add a “human touch” directive like: “Include a brief personal note or empathetic line.”

Q: How do I ensure accuracy?
A: Ask for sources when summarizing, request uncertainty flags, and verify claims. For research-heavy tasks, use a citation-style prompt and cross-check with reputable outlets (e.g., academic journals, industry reports).

Q: What are good resources to improve my prompting?
A: Explore the OpenAI Cookbook for practical patterns, Moz’s SEO guides for search strategy, and NN/g’s UX research for user-centered messaging.


The Takeaway

Great results don’t come from hoping for magic—they come from clear, structured commands. Use the patterns and 100 prompts above to turn ChatGPT into your strategist, editor, researcher, and builder. Start with role + goal + context. Specify format. Iterate. You’ll get faster, sharper, more reliable work—every time.

Want more high-performing prompts and practical examples? Keep exploring guides like this—or subscribe for new playbooks, tested prompts, and real-world use cases delivered weekly.

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