Review posts drive most of an affiliate site’s commission. This is the prompt library specifically for that one format โ 30 tested Jasper prompts covering every section of a strong product review. Copy, paste, swap the brackets.
For prompts across all content types, see the broader 50+ Jasper Prompts library. For the review-writing workflow that wraps around these prompts, see Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links to Jasper. I earn a commission if you sign up โ at no extra cost to you. The 30 prompts below are the ones I actually use, refined over 14 months and 38 published affiliate reviews.
Most “Jasper prompt library” posts are recycled garbage. They give you 100 generic prompts that look impressive in a list but fall apart in real use. None of them have been used on a real affiliate campaign.
This is different. Every prompt below is one I run weekly. They’re segmented by the actual jobs an affiliate marketer needs to do. Copy them, paste them, swap in your tool name, ship a post.
Use them with Boss Mode commands inside Jasper’s document editor. They work in ChatGPT too with minor tweaks.
Section 1 โ Review Writing Prompts (10)
Prompt 1: The Verdict-First Intro
Write a 150-word opening for a review of [TOOL NAME]. Start with a one-sentence verdict ("Worth $X/month for [audience type]"). Follow with the specific cost, the audience it's right for, and one disqualifying scenario. Use my Brand Voice. End with a transition into the testing methodology section.Prompt 2: Methodology Bar Generator
Create a 3-line "How I Tested" callout for [TOOL]. Include: weeks tested ([N]), money spent (real number), specific use cases tested ([list 3 from my notes]). Format as a bulleted list with bold headers.
Prompt 3: Problem-Agitate-Solve Hook
Write a Problem-Agitate-Solve opening (200 words) for a review of [TOOL]. Problem: [main pain point your audience has]. Agitate: cost of NOT solving it (give specific number). Solve: position [TOOL] as the answer with one specific feature, not generic praise.
Prompt 4: Pros & Cons Block
Generate a balanced pros and cons block for [TOOL]. Pros: 5 specific advantages (no marketing fluff โ each must reference a specific feature or workflow). Cons: 3 honest weaknesses (real ones, not "could be cheaper"). Format as two parallel bullet lists.
Prompt 5: Use Case Walkthrough
Write a 350-word section titled "How I Use [TOOL] for [SPECIFIC USE CASE]." Open with the exact problem this use case solves. Walk through 3โ5 concrete steps. Include one specific output number (time saved, words generated, results achieved). End with a one-sentence verdict on this use case.
Prompt 6: “Where It Falls Short” Section
Write a 300-word "Where [TOOL] Falls Short" section. Cover 3 specific weaknesses: [list them]. For each, describe the limitation in concrete terms, then mention what alternative tool or workflow handles it better. Avoid hedging language. Be direct.
Prompt 7: Pricing Section with ROI Math
Write a 400-word pricing section for [TOOL]. List all current plans with monthly and annual costs. After the pricing table, include a "When this pays back" paragraph that calculates the ROI threshold based on time savings (assume $200/hour effective rate for the reader).
Prompt 8: Final Verdict Box
Generate a 4-sentence final verdict for [TOOL]. Sentence 1: declarative recommendation (yes/no/conditional). Sentence 2: who it's for. Sentence 3: who should skip it. Sentence 4: my own purchase decision (do I keep paying for it or not). Match my Brand Voice. No hedging.
Prompt 9: Comparison Aside
Write a 150-word "How [TOOL] Compares" mini-section. Compare against 2 named competitors. For each, give one sentence on what the competitor does better and one sentence on why someone might still pick [TOOL] over them. Direct, factual, no marketing language.
Prompt 10: Author Bio Box
Write a 120-word author bio box for the end of a review. Voice: confident, specific, founder-led. Include: my name (Mithun Srivastava), my testing methodology (4-week minimum, $2,400 spent total), one specific credibility marker, and one personal call-to-action ("Email me at admin@automatetoprofit.com if you want to talk").Section 2 โ Comparison Post Prompts (5)
Prompt 11: 30-Second Verdict for a Comparison
Write a "30-Second Verdict" block for comparing [TOOL A] vs [TOOL B]. Three lines, each starting "If you [audience condition]: pick [TOOL]." Cover three distinct audience scenarios. End with a one-line caveat ("If you're between these, see the breakdown below.").Prompt 12: Feature-by-Feature Comparison Table
Generate a markdown comparison table for [TOOL A] vs [TOOL B] across 8 dimensions: monthly cost, annual cost, free trial, output quality (1โ10), template count, integrations, customer support, and team features. Use specific numbers, not "yes/no" where possible.
Prompt 13: Job-Specific Winner Section
Write a 250-word section titled "[JOB] โ Which One Wins?" Compare how [TOOL A] and [TOOL B] handle [specific job]. Include actual results from my testing notes: [paste your comparison data]. End with a one-sentence verdict naming the winner and the time/cost difference.
Prompt 14: The “What I Actually Pay For” Section
Write a 200-word section titled "What I Actually Pay For Today." Be specific: which tool I currently subscribe to, which plan, total monthly cost, and which job each handles. End with a forward-looking sentence ("Will I switch? Only if [condition]").Prompt 15: Edge Case Tiebreaker
Write a 150-word "Edge Cases" section for [TOOL A] vs [TOOL B]. Cover 3 unusual scenarios where the standard recommendation flips: [list 3 edge cases like "non-native English writers", "agency teams", "API-first workflows"]. One sentence verdict per scenario.
Section 3 โ Email Sequence Prompts (5)
Prompt 16: Welcome Email + Lead Magnet Delivery
Write a 200-word welcome email delivering [LEAD MAGNET]. Subject line should promise the lead magnet by name. Body: 1) thank them, 2) deliver the link, 3) tell them what to expect from future emails (frequency + topic), 4) one sentence about who I am. End with a P.S. driving them to a related blog post.
Prompt 17: Soft-Sell Email 3 of 5
Write email #3 of a 5-email sequence promoting [TOOL/PRODUCT]. Tone: helpful, no hard sell. Open with a story or specific scenario where [TOOL] solved a problem. Body: explain the mechanism (why it works), not just the feature. End with a soft CTA: "Worth checking out if you [audience signal]." 250 words.
Prompt 18: Objection-Handling Email
Write an objection-handling email for [TOOL]. Lead with the most common objection ("[TOOL] is too expensive" or "I can use [free alternative] instead"). Acknowledge the objection honestly. Then explain when the objection is valid and when it isn't. End with a non-pushy CTA: "If [condition X], it's still worth it. If not, here's what I'd buy instead."Prompt 19: Last-Day-of-Promo Email
Write a final-call email for a [DEAL TYPE] ending in 24 hours on [TOOL]. Subject line: short, urgency-driven, no all-caps. Body: 1) state the deal, 2) state the deadline, 3) one specific reason it's worth grabbing now, 4) PS: who should NOT buy this. Tone: confident, not panicked.
Prompt 20: Re-Engagement Email for Inactive Subscribers
Write a 150-word re-engagement email for subscribers who haven't opened the last 3 sends. Subject: honest question. Body: ask if they still want to hear from me, what they'd want me to write about next, or if they should be unsubscribed. End with two CTAs: "Yes, keep me on" and "No thanks โ please remove."
Section 4 โ SEO & Outline Prompts (5)
Prompt 21: SERP-Aware Outline Generator
Generate an outline for a 2,500-word article targeting "[KEYWORD]." Use the top 10 SERP results [paste URLs or summary] as input. Identify 3 H2s every competitor covers (must-have), 2 H2s only the top 3 cover (advantage), and 2 H2s no one covers but should (differentiation). Output as a clean H2/H3 hierarchy.
Prompt 22: Featured Snippet Optimizer
Rewrite the answer to "[QUESTION]" as a 50-word paragraph optimized for the featured snippet. Open with a direct one-sentence answer. Follow with 2โ3 supporting sentences. Use the question phrasing in the first 10 words. Avoid filler.
Prompt 23: People Also Ask Generator
Generate 8 "People Also Ask" style questions for [TOPIC]. Mix question types: 4 informational ("what is", "how to"), 2 commercial ("is X worth it", "should I"), 2 comparison ("X vs Y"). Each question must be a question someone would actually type into Google.Prompt 24: Internal Link Suggestion
Suggest 5 internal links to add to this article based on the following list of my published posts: [paste list]. For each suggestion, give: anchor text (keyword-rich, not "click here"), exact placement (H2 or paragraph reference), and why this internal link makes contextual sense.
Prompt 25: Title Tag & Meta Description Generator
Generate 5 title tag options and 5 meta description options for an article about [TOPIC]. Title tags: 50โ60 chars, must include primary keyword, must include emotional or specific hook. Meta descriptions: 140โ155 chars, must include primary keyword, must include a specific number or year, must end with implicit CTA.
Section 5 โ Social & Short-Form Prompts (5)
Prompt 26: Twitter Thread from a Blog Post
Convert this blog post into a 7-tweet Twitter thread: [PASTE POST OR SUMMARY]. Tweet 1: hook (the one number/insight that would make me click). Tweets 2โ6: one key insight each, max 280 chars. Tweet 7: CTA to read the full post. Use line breaks for readability. Don't use hashtags.
Prompt 27: LinkedIn Long-Form Post
Write a 250-word LinkedIn post for affiliate marketers about [TOPIC]. Open with a contrarian or specific hook. Use 1-line paragraphs. Include 1 specific number or anecdote. End with a question to drive comments. No hashtags in the body, 3 hashtags at the end.
Prompt 28: Pinterest Description Pack
Generate 5 Pinterest descriptions for a pin promoting [BLOG POST URL]. Each description: 100โ150 chars, includes 1 keyword from this list [paste keywords], includes a benefit-driven hook, ends with an implied CTA. Vary the angles (educational, curiosity-gap, list-based, beginner-friendly, contrarian).
Prompt 29: YouTube Title + Description for Tool Walkthrough
Generate a YouTube title (60 chars max) and description (300 words) for a video titled "[VIDEO TOPIC]." Title: include keyword, year, and emotional hook. Description: open with timestamps, include 2 affiliate links labeled clearly, link to my main blog post, end with subscribe CTA.
Prompt 30: Comment Reply for Engagement
Write 3 reply variations to this blog comment: "[PASTE COMMENT]." Tone: helpful, founder-voice, never defensive. Each reply: 30โ60 words, addresses the commenter's actual point, adds one specific insight, ends with an implicit invitation to continue the conversation.
How to Use These Prompts
- Save them somewhere accessible. Notion database, Google Doc, or copy them into Jasper as snippets.
- Always include your testing data. Every prompt that says [paste your notes] is the difference between AI slop and real first-hand content.
- Iterate. The prompt that works for one tool review will need 10% tweaking for the next. Save your tweaks.
- Don’t stack them blindly. Use them section by section, not all at once. Stack-running creates incoherent output.
If a specific prompt isn’t producing what you need, the issue is almost always the input data, not the prompt itself. AI is a force multiplier โ feed it nothing, get nothing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will these prompts work in ChatGPT too?
Yes, with one tweak: replace “use my Brand Voice” with “match the tone of [paste 1 of your existing posts].” ChatGPT doesn’t have native Brand Voice training, so you provide the example each time. Or use a Custom GPT with your style baked in.
Should I save these as Jasper templates?
Yes โ Jasper allows custom templates. Convert each prompt into a template with input fields for [TOOL NAME], [USE CASE], etc. Saves 30+ seconds per use. Worth doing once.
How do I avoid AI-detection flagging on output?
Inject specific numbers, anecdotes, and screenshots after the AI writes. AI detectors flag uniform sentence rhythm and generic transitions. Adding personal data breaks those patterns. Don’t use “humanizer” tools โ they hurt readability.
Can I share these prompts with my team or VAs?
Yes. They’re written to be paste-and-run. If you have a team, save them in a shared Notion/Confluence with example outputs so writers can match expectations.
Why aren’t there 100 prompts here?
Because 30 prompts cover 95% of an affiliate marketer’s actual workflow. The 100-prompt lists you find elsewhere are filler. These are the ones I run.
Related Reading
- Full Jasper AI Review 2026
- How to Use Jasper for Affiliate Reviews โ My 5-Step System
- Jasper Pricing 2026 โ What’s Worth Paying For
If a prompt stops working, email me at admin@automatetoprofit.com โ I update this library every quarter based on real feedback.
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