Most social media content is produced reactively — whatever seems timely, whatever fills the slot, whatever can be assembled in fifteen minutes before the scheduled post time. The result is an account that posts regularly without growing, engages sporadically without building community, and never quite achieves the clarity of voice that makes an audience choose to follow and stay. The right Claude prompts for social media replace reactive posting with deliberate strategy — giving you a system for creating platform-native content, building a consistent voice, and turning a social media presence into an actual audience asset.
Below are 10 prompt patterns for every dimension of social media content — from content strategy to caption writing to community engagement to analytics interpretation. Each includes a ready-to-use example, an explanation of why it works, and a tip for getting even more from it.
Why Claude Prompts for Social Media Matter
Social media growth is a content strategy problem masquerading as a consistency problem. Most people who struggle with social media think they need to post more. What they actually need is a clearer answer to why anyone should follow them, what value they deliver reliably, and how each platform’s algorithm and culture shapes what works. Claude can help you build that strategic foundation and then execute against it with platform-appropriate content that sounds like you rather than like a generic content machine.
The prompts below are designed around that principle. They extract your specific expertise, audience, and goals before generating anything — because social media content that is not grounded in a specific value proposition for a specific audience is just noise at scale.
1. The Social Media Strategy Builder
Before writing a single post, you need strategic clarity on who you are trying to reach, what you offer them, and which platforms and content types will do that work most efficiently. This prompt builds that foundation.
"Help me build a social media strategy. My business or personal brand: [describe what you do and who you serve]. My goals: [e.g. generate leads, build brand authority, grow a community, drive traffic to my website]. My target audience: [describe specifically — demographics, interests, problems they have, platforms they use]. My current situation: [describe your existing presence, follower counts, what has worked or not worked]. Build a strategy covering: (1) the 1-2 platforms where I should focus first and why — based on where my audience is and what content I can realistically produce, (2) my core content value proposition — the single reason someone should follow me, (3) 3-4 content pillars that deliver that value consistently, (4) a realistic posting frequency for each platform, (5) the one metric that should determine whether this strategy is working."
Why it works: Platform selection before content production is the most important strategic decision and the one most people skip. Spreading thinly across five platforms produces mediocre presence everywhere; focusing on one or two where your audience concentrates builds real traction. The single-metric instruction forces the discipline of knowing what success looks like before you start, which is what separates strategy from activity.
2. The Content Calendar Architect
A content calendar is only useful if it is organised around content pillars, not around arbitrary variety. This prompt builds a structured monthly content calendar that balances your content pillars, platform requirements, and audience needs.
"Build a 4-week social media content calendar for [platform or platforms]. My content pillars: [list 3-4 content themes]. My posting frequency: [X times per week per platform]. My audience: [describe]. My business goal this month: [specific goal — e.g. promote a launch, grow email list, increase brand awareness]. For each week, provide: (1) the weekly theme that ties the posts together, (2) a specific post idea for each scheduled slot with content type (educational, entertaining, promotional, engagement-bait), (3) one high-effort anchor post per week that anchors the calendar, (4) 2-3 lightweight filler posts that are low effort but maintain cadence, (5) one post per week specifically designed to generate comments or saves. Format as a table by day."
Why it works: The distinction between anchor posts and lightweight fillers is the most practical element of sustainable content production. Most creators burn out trying to make every post excellent. A calendar that explicitly designates some posts as low-effort fillers gives you permission to conserve creative energy for the high-impact pieces. The comments-or-saves instruction targets algorithmic signals — both indicate high-quality engagement that platforms reward with wider distribution.
3. The Platform-Native Caption Writer
Each social media platform has a distinct culture, optimal caption length, and vocabulary of engagement. This prompt writes captions that are genuinely native to the platform you are posting on — not generic copy adapted from a press release.
"Write a caption for [platform: Instagram / LinkedIn / X / TikTok / Facebook] for the following content: [describe the post — what the image or video shows, or what the text post is about]. My audience: [describe]. My brand voice: [describe — e.g. conversational and direct, educational and warm, witty and irreverent]. The goal of this post: [awareness / engagement / conversion / community building]. Write 3 caption variations — one short (under 50 words), one medium (100-150 words), one that uses the full platform potential (story-led for Instagram, thought-leadership format for LinkedIn, thread opener for X). Include relevant hashtags for each and a clear call to action where appropriate."
Why it works: Three variations at different lengths lets you test what resonates with your specific audience rather than committing to a single format. The full-platform-potential instruction — a story-led approach for Instagram, thought-leadership format for LinkedIn — ensures the output is calibrated to platform culture rather than adapted from a generic template. Brand voice description is the most important input: without it, the caption could belong to anyone.
4. The Viral Hook Generator
The first line of any social media post determines whether anyone reads the rest. On most platforms, only the first one to three lines are visible before the ‘read more’ cut-off. This prompt generates opening hooks that stop scrolling and earn the click.
"Generate 10 opening hooks for a social media post about [topic or content]. My audience: [describe]. Platform: [X]. For the hooks, write two of each type: (1) bold contrarian statement — challenges a common belief in my industry, (2) specific number or result — leads with a concrete data point or outcome, (3) relatable pain or situation — describes something my audience has experienced, (4) curiosity gap — implies a revelation without giving it away, (5) direct address — speaks directly to a specific person in my audience. Rate each hook on its likely scroll-stop power and explain why the top 2 would work best for this audience."
Why it works: The five-type structure prevents all ten hooks from being variations on the same approach. Contrarian hooks work for audiences who are experienced enough to be tired of conventional wisdom. Relatable-pain hooks work for audiences earlier in their journey. Specific-number hooks work when the audience is results-oriented. Knowing which type fits your audience is the insight that comes from the rating instruction — it turns ten options into a prioritised shortlist.
5. The LinkedIn Thought Leadership Post Builder
LinkedIn rewards a specific format: a strong personal or professional insight, delivered in a readable long-form format, with line breaks that create white space and a closing that prompts discussion. This prompt writes LinkedIn posts that match that format and earn organic reach.
"Write a LinkedIn thought leadership post about [topic or professional insight]. My professional background: [brief summary]. My target LinkedIn audience: [describe — industry, seniority, interests]. The core idea I want to communicate: [describe the insight, lesson, or perspective — include any personal story or specific experience that grounds it]. Structure the post as: a bold opening hook (1-2 lines), a brief personal story or context that makes the insight credible (3-5 lines), the core insight or framework (3-5 lines), specific practical takeaway (2-3 lines), a question to generate comments (1 line). Use short paragraphs and line breaks throughout. No hashtag spam. Maximum 1300 characters."
Why it works: The personal-story-that-makes-the-insight-credible instruction is the most important structural element. LinkedIn posts that lead with abstract wisdom perform poorly; those that ground the same wisdom in a specific experience the author lived through perform significantly better because they signal authenticity and make the insight memorable. The character limit instruction keeps the output within LinkedIn's optimal engagement zone.
6. The Instagram Carousel Script
Instagram carousels consistently outperform single-image posts for reach and saves. They require a specific structure: a cover slide that earns the swipe, content slides that each deliver a discrete piece of value, and a final slide that converts the engagement into action. This prompt scripts a complete carousel.
"Write an Instagram carousel script on the topic: [topic]. My audience: [describe]. My goal for this carousel: [awareness / saves / follows / link clicks]. Create a [8-10] slide carousel with: Slide 1 (cover): A bold headline that makes someone stop and swipe — it should promise a specific, valuable outcome. Slides 2-8: Each slide should contain one discrete point, written in 1-3 lines maximum, with a micro-hook at the start of each slide that makes the reader want to swipe to the next. Slide 9 (summary): A recap of the key points in 3-5 bullet points. Slide 10 (CTA): A direct call to action with a save prompt and a comment prompt. Also write the caption for the post and 10 relevant hashtags."
Why it works: The micro-hook at the start of each interior slide is the element most carousel scripts omit and the one most responsible for completion rate. Instagram’s algorithm rewards carousels that are swiped all the way through — completion rate is a key signal. Each slide needs to earn the next swipe, not just deliver content. The save prompt in the CTA slide targets one of the highest-value engagement signals for Instagram reach.
7. The Community Engagement Response Writer
Engagement rate is as important as follower count, and it is built in the comments. This prompt writes thoughtful, on-brand responses to comments and messages that deepen the relationship with your audience rather than just acknowledging them.
"Help me write responses to the following comments on my [platform] post. My brand voice: [describe — professional, warm, witty, direct]. My goal in responding: [build community / show expertise / drive conversation / humanise the brand]. Comments to respond to: [paste 3-5 real comments]. For each response: (1) acknowledge the comment specifically — not generically, (2) add value beyond the acknowledgement — a further insight, a question, or a piece of information that extends the conversation, (3) keep it under 3 sentences unless the comment warrants more, (4) stay completely in character with my brand voice. Flag any comment that is negative or critical and write a separate response strategy for it."
Why it works: The add-value-beyond-acknowledgement instruction is what transforms comment responses from courtesy to community building. A response that simply says ‘thank you!’ ends the conversation. A response that adds an insight or asks a follow-up question continues it — which generates more comments, which signals high engagement to the algorithm, which extends the post’s reach. The negative-comment-strategy flag ensures you are prepared for the comments that most creators handle worst.
8. The Content Repurposing Machine
Creating content from scratch for every platform and every format is the fastest route to burnout. Repurposing one piece of high-quality content into multiple platform-native formats is the most efficient content strategy available. This prompt systematically repurposes a single asset across platforms.
"Repurpose the following piece of content into multiple social media formats. Original content: [paste a blog post, podcast summary, newsletter, YouTube transcript, or any long-form content]. My active platforms: [list — e.g. LinkedIn, Instagram, X, TikTok]. For each platform, create: (1) a native post that extracts the most platform-appropriate insight from the original, (2) a caption and any relevant hashtags, (3) a content type recommendation — should this be a carousel, a short video script, a thread, a single image post. Do not simply summarise the original — extract the single best idea and expand it in a way that is native to each platform's culture and audience expectations."
Why it works: The do-not-summarise instruction is the most important constraint. Repurposed content that is simply a shorter version of the original performs poorly because it lacks the specificity and native format that each platform rewards. Extracting the single best idea and expanding it platform-natively produces content that feels original on each platform rather than obviously recycled. This is how high-volume creators maintain quality across channels without producing everything from scratch.
9. The Social Media Audit and Improvement Plan
Understanding why your current social media presence is or is not growing requires honest assessment against clear criteria. This prompt audits your existing presence and produces a prioritised improvement plan based on what the data and content suggest.
"Conduct a social media audit and give me an honest improvement plan. My presence: Platform: [X]. Follower count and growth rate: [describe]. Engagement rate: [average likes, comments, shares per post as a percentage]. Top 3 performing posts: [describe them — content type, topic, what made them perform]. Bottom 3 performing posts: [describe them]. My current posting frequency: [X times per week]. What I am trying to achieve: [goal]. Based on this: (1) identify the pattern in what my best-performing content has in common, (2) identify the pattern in what underperforms, (3) diagnose the primary reason my account is or is not growing, (4) give me 3 specific changes to make in the next 30 days, (5) identify the content type I am not using that would most improve my performance given my goals."
Why it works: The pattern-in-best-performing-content question is the most valuable diagnostic. Most creators know their top posts but have never articulated what they have in common. Once the pattern is explicit — original personal insight performs better than shared industry news; video outperforms static images; posts published on Tuesday morning outperform Sunday evening — it becomes a replicable formula rather than a lucky accident. The unused-content-type instruction identifies the format gap most likely to unlock growth.
10. The Brand Voice and Tone Guide Builder
Consistency of voice across all social media content is what builds brand recognition over time. This prompt builds a practical brand voice and tone guide from your existing content — one you can use to brief writers, check your own output, or use as a reference for future AI-assisted content creation.
"Help me define my social media brand voice and tone. I will share examples of content I have published that I felt represented me well: [paste 3-5 examples of your best-performing or most authentic posts]. My brand values: [list 3-4 values]. My audience: [describe]. My business type: [personal brand / company / creator]. From the examples and context, define my brand voice as: (1) 3-5 voice adjectives with a brief explanation of what each means in practice — not just 'professional' but 'professional meaning we use industry terminology without jargon, we cite evidence, and we do not use exclamation marks', (2) 3 things my voice always does, (3) 3 things my voice never does, (4) a sample rewrite of a generic industry post in my specific voice, (5) a one-sentence voice statement I can share with anyone creating content for my brand."
Why it works: The practical-meaning instruction for each voice adjective is what transforms a generic brand voice exercise into something operationally useful. Most brand voice guides say things like ‘authentic’ and ‘engaging’ without explaining what that means when someone is staring at a blank caption field. Describing what each adjective means in practice — what you do and do not do as a result — turns the guide into a decision tool rather than an aspiration document.
How to Get the Most Out of These Prompts
The most effective sequence is to start with the Social Media Strategy Builder and Brand Voice Guide before touching any content creation prompts. Strategy and voice are the inputs that make every content prompt produce genuinely useful output rather than generic alternatives. Once those foundations are set, the Content Calendar Architect gives you the structure, and the Platform-Native Caption Writer and LinkedIn or Instagram format prompts fill it with content calibrated to your specific voice, audience, and goals.
Save the prompts that match your weekly content workflow as reusable templates in Chat Smith so you can deploy the Hook Generator before every post, the Caption Writer for every scheduled slot, and the Repurposing Machine whenever you publish a long-form piece — all in one click without rebuilding the prompt each time.
Common Social Media Mistakes Claude Helps You Avoid
Using these prompts steers you away from the most consistent social media failures. Posting without a strategy produces activity without growth — the account stays busy but the audience never builds. Writing captions without platform awareness produces content that works on one platform and falls flat on another. Responding to comments generically produces a comment section that feels corporate rather than connected. Repurposing content by summarising it produces posts that feel recycled rather than native. Producing every post at the same effort level produces burnout that leads to abandonment.
Each prompt in this guide addresses one of these failure modes. The Strategy Builder addresses activity without direction. The Platform-Native Caption Writer addresses platform-blind content. The Community Engagement Response Writer addresses generic interaction. The Repurposing Machine addresses recycled rather than reimagined content. The Content Calendar distinguishes anchor from filler posts. The pattern is the same across all of them: specificity of audience, platform, and voice is what separates social media content that builds something from content that just fills space.
Final Thoughts
A social media presence that actually grows is built on three things: a clear value proposition for a specific audience, content that is genuinely native to each platform, and the consistency that comes from having a system rather than relying on inspiration. These 10 Claude prompts for social media give you that system — one that produces better content faster, in your own voice, calibrated to the platforms and audiences that matter to your goals. Start with the Strategy Builder. Set the voice. Build the calendar. The consistency that used to require a full content team is now achievable with the right prompts and thirty minutes a week.
How Chat Smith Supercharges Your Social Media Workflow
A consistent social media programme involves strategy, content planning, caption writing, engagement, repurposing, and performance analysis — each at different stages and different cadences every week. Keeping all of those prompts organised and instantly deployable is exactly where Chat Smith comes in. Chat Smith is an all-in-one AI platform that lets you save every social media prompt as a reusable template, organise them by platform or content type, and launch any prompt in one click across Claude, GPT, Gemini, and other leading models.
Instead of rebuilding your LinkedIn post prompt every Monday morning or hunting for your carousel script before a product launch, Chat Smith gives you a clean, searchable library of your best-performing prompts. You can run the same hook generator across multiple models to compare which produces the highest-quality options, share your social media prompt library with a virtual assistant or marketing team, and build a content system that becomes faster and more consistent with every piece of content you produce.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Will Claude-generated social media content sound like me?
It will sound like you in proportion to how much of your voice you give it. Claude calibrates to the examples, adjectives, and dos-and-don’ts you provide. The more specific your brand voice input, the more distinctive and authentic the output. The Brand Voice and Tone Guide Builder prompt is specifically designed to extract your voice from your own best content and codify it in a way that every subsequent prompt can reference — which is what makes the output feel like you rather than like generic AI content.
2. How many hashtags should I use on each platform?
Best practices shift as platforms update their algorithms, but broadly: Instagram currently performs well with 3-5 highly relevant hashtags rather than 30 generic ones. LinkedIn hashtags are less impactful than the content itself — 3-5 relevant tags. X hashtags are most effective when used contextually within the text of the post rather than stacked at the end. TikTok hashtags help with discovery — a mix of niche and broader tags works well. The Platform-Native Caption Writer prompt includes hashtag recommendations calibrated to each platform.
3. What is the best time to post on social media?
The best time to post is when your specific audience is most active, which varies by platform, industry, and audience demographics. Most platforms provide this data in their native analytics. As a general starting point: LinkedIn performs best Tuesday through Thursday between 8am and 10am in your audience’s timezone. Instagram sees high engagement in the early morning and early evening. X engagement is distributed more evenly but peaks around news cycles. TikTok tends to favour evening posting. Use the Social Media Audit prompt to identify your own peak engagement times from your historical data.
4. How long does it take to grow a social media following?
Meaningful organic growth — an audience that engages, converts, and refers — typically takes 6-12 months of consistent, strategic posting on most platforms. Viral moments can compress this timeline but rarely produce the durable, engaged audiences that sustained strategy builds. The most reliable predictor of growth is not posting frequency but content quality and strategic consistency: a clear value proposition, a recognisable voice, and content that earns saves and shares rather than just likes. The Social Media Strategy Builder prompt is designed to establish that foundation before optimising for frequency.

