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5 ChatGPT Prompts To Get Your Dream Clients Begging To Work With You

5 ChatGPT Prompts To Get Your Dream Clients Begging To Work With You

Forbes25-06-2025
5 ChatGPT prompts to get your dream clients begging to work with you
Qualified leads flooding your inbox every morning. Not just any leads. Dream clients who already want what you sell. Most people follow up prospects and beg for attention. But not you. Sound dreamy? It's possible. With the right moves, you can have clients chase you instead of you chasing them.
Flip the script and start choosing who you work with. Get ChatGPT to help. Copy, paste and edit the square brackets in ChatGPT, and keep the same chat window open so the context carries through.
Use ChatGPT to become irresistible to your dream clients (without chasing)
Your time is precious. Following up wastes it. People who ghost you are stealing your energy and you need to take it back. Send them one final email that puts the power back in your hands. Tell them you're closing their file unless they respond by Friday. Keep it casual but firm. You have other options. Watch what happens when you stop chasing and start choosing.
"Based on what you know about my business and communication style, create a professional yet casual email template for prospects who have gone silent. The email should politely inform them I'm closing their account/inquiry unless they respond within [specific timeframe]
People want control over their buying journey. I discovered this when I emailed my mailing list asking what would help them sign up. Three options: a live demo, a 2-hour bootcamp, or done-with-you support. All they had to do was reply with their choice. That simple act of choosing created psychological commitment. Everyone who picked the bootcamp actually signed up when we offered it. Our most successful launch came from letting people choose their own adventure.
"Based on what you know about my ideal clients and their typical objections or hesitations, create an email template that offers 3 distinct ways they can learn more about working with me. Each option should require different time commitments and appeal to different learning styles. The email should ask them to simply reply with their preference. Make it conversational and easy to respond to. Ask for more detail if required."
Robert Cialdini nailed it in his book Influence. Give first. People feel compelled to give back. Find something valuable you can share with zero strings attached. A PDF guide, a video walkthrough, an insider tip they can use immediately. Stop playing small and 10x your reality by sharing freely without requiring opt-ins or forms. Just give. The karma you create comes back multiplied.
"Based on what you know about my expertise and the problems my ideal clients face, suggest 5 valuable lead magnet resources I could create and give away with no strings attached. Each should solve a specific problem my prospects face. Then create an ultra-casual email template for sending one of these resources without any signup requirements - just a direct link. The tone should be helpful and generous, not salesy. Ask for more detail if required."
Scarcity works when you mean it. Limited spots, expiring bonuses, or calendar constraints create natural urgency without lying. But fake deadlines destroy trust fast. Look at your actual capacity and communicate genuine limitations. Your honesty becomes the urgency. People respect boundaries. They move faster when they know the opportunity really will disappear.
"Based on what you know about my business model and capacity, identify 3 genuine scarcity factors I could communicate to prospects. These should be real limitations, not manufactured urgency. Then create messaging that communicates these constraints honestly while encouraging action. The tone should be matter-of-fact, not pushy. Ask for more detail if required."
Friction kills conversions. Every extra step loses prospects. Make running your business feel like a video game by stripping your onboarding process down to essentials. One form. One call. One decision. Remove every barrier between interest and action. The easier you make it, the more ideal clients say yes. Stop making people work to give you money.
"Based on what you know about my client onboarding process, identify unnecessary friction points that might stop dream clients from saying yes. Then create a streamlined 3-step process that makes it ridiculously easy to get started. Include specific language for each step that reduces anxiety and builds excitement about working together. Ask for more detail if required."
Dream clients are waiting to find you
Your inbox can overflow with perfect-fit prospects who already want what you offer. Reclaim your power from time wasters. Give options to create psychological commitment before they buy. Build reciprocity without strings. Introduce authentic urgency and frictionless onboarding to seal the deal.
You have everything you need to flip the script on client acquisition. Respect both your time and theirs. Your dream clients are waiting for someone exactly like you.
Access all my best ChatGPT content prompts.
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Best Minimalist Wallet for 2025 Tested By CNET Experts
Best Minimalist Wallet for 2025 Tested By CNET Experts

CNET

timea minute ago

  • CNET

Best Minimalist Wallet for 2025 Tested By CNET Experts

If you want specific materials then some wallets may not be suitable for you. The number of cards you need will determine the size and shape of your minimalist wallet. CNET staff -- not advertisers, partners or business interests -- determine how we review products and services. If you buy through our links, we may earn a commission. Are you still using a bulky wallet that's packed full of receipts from who knows when and looks like it's about to burst at the seams? If so, it may be time to upgrade your wallet to something more minimal, sleek and stylish. With everything being done digitally nowadays, there's little reason to keep all those receipts like before, you know, "just in case." And if you don't carry cash, there's no good reason to have those old-fashioned wallets anymore. Modern wallets seem to be trending toward simplicity and minimalism, with card slots for an ID, credit cards and a couple of other items. These wallets tend to be highly durable, with some offering RFID protection, and are secure enough to pass a vigorous shake test. I've spent hours testing a variety of wallets to evaluate their feel, fit and functionality. Based on that experience, I can confidently say the options below are the best minimalist wallets available. Whether you're seeking a robust metal design or a luxurious full-grain leather wallet, you'll find the perfect choice below. Massive wallets like the one George Costanza carried around are a thing of the past. Sony Pictures Home Entertainment What's the best minimalist wallet? For our money, the Ridge wallets are the best minimalist wallets you can buy. Sure, they aren't the cheapest, but they are sturdy, good-looking and can be customized to fit your needs well. Although there are plenty of bifold and trifold thin wallet options, we're mostly focused on one-panel design wallets here. 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Best minimalist wallet of 2025 Sarah Tew/CNET Photo Gallery 1/1 Sarah Tew/CNET Best overall minimalist wallet Ridge Wallet Pros Made from titanium Keeps your cards tight and safe Adjustable design Cons Can be pricey for the best version Of all the rugged, minimalist wallets I tested, I found the Ridge to be the most flexible, ironic for a wallet made of titanium (or aerospace-grade aluminum if you pick a different color). The sandwich design of the Ridge wallet securely accommodates one card as easily as it can 12, and the durable but pliable money clip holds one bill as tightly as a bigger wad. The cutout provides quick access to all of your cards, and the tough elastic strap that holds everything together inspires confidence. This wallet is almost comically overdesigned, and you can use the included screwdriver to disassemble the pieces, remove the money clip and bring the money strap to the exterior. Ridge makes this wallet in China but backs it with a lifetime guarantee against manufacturing defects, which seems about right for the price. This burnt titanium Ridge wallet is probably my favorite color, although it's a little pricier than some of the other color variants, which start at $95. ... Show more Get it now $95 at Amazon Ekster Photo Gallery 1/1 Ekster Best mechanical minimalist wallet Ekster Cardholder Pros Elegant design Great mechanism Low profile Cons Some scratches already The Ekster's mechanics, along with its slim profile and lightweight materials, make it an elegant solution. The button used to raise the cards is really well done, with a hefty feel of a mechanism that will last as long as the wallet. The money belt is tight, keeping his small cash pile safe, and the wallet is plenty big enough for a few cards and Ekster's neat little Finder Card, so I could track it if the wallet did get lost. 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The entire front of the wallet slides up to help fan the cards out with a spring-loaded action that is satisfyingly mechanical. Like all metal wallets, the Groove wallet is RFID blocking, so you can have some peace of mind on that score. It's rugged too, so dropping it doesn't pop your cards out; at least it hasn't yet. ... Show more Get it now $75 at Amazon James Bricknell / CNET Photo Gallery 1/1 James Bricknell / CNET Best Magsafe minimalist wallet Bluebonnet Magsafe Pros Incredibly strong magnet Quality leather wallet Very low profile against the phone Cons Pricey for a two-card wallet I always thought that having your wallet and phone together was risky, but I am far more likely to lose my wallet in a back pocket than I am to lose my phone in my hand. The Bluebonnet Magsafe wallet holds only one or two cards, but it sticks to the back of the iPhone so well you would think it was part of the case. 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Vought won't rule out more rescissions funding cuts before September
Vought won't rule out more rescissions funding cuts before September

CBS News

time2 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Vought won't rule out more rescissions funding cuts before September

Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought said his office is considering more options to claw back funding approved by Congress and isn't ruling out sending more bills to lawmakers with further cuts before September. Vought confirmed on CBS News' "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" Sunday that "we are looking to do [a] rescissions package" to take back some funding from the Education Department. A rescissions bill is the president's request to rescind funding already appropriated by Congress. Last week, President Trump signed a bill clawing back foreign aid, NPR and PBS funding, becoming the first president in decades to receive approval for such a measure. "We're thrilled that we had the first rescissions package in decades, and we've got the process moving again," Vought said of the $10 billion clawback. Asked to confirm there'd be no rescissions package before September, as Congress attempts to fund the government and head off a shutdown, Vought responded, "Not here to say that. We're looking at all of our options, we will look at it and assess where the Hill is, what are the particular funding opportunities that we have?" Asked about National Institutes of Health funding for research into heart disease and cancer that has yet to be released, Vought replied, "We're going through the same process with the NIH that we did with the education." He alleged NIH had wasted funds, claiming "$2 million for injecting dogs with cocaine that the NIH spent money on, $75,000 for Harvard to study blowing lizards off of trees with leaf blowers." He vowed to go "line by line to make sure the NIH is funded properly" and said funding would be released "when we are done with that review." Vought's use of rescissions measures to amend government spending is seen by Democrats and some Republicans as a backdoor method of infringing on Congress' constitutional power of the purse. "Rescissions is just a Washington name for double cross," Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, also on "Face the Nation," said after Vought's interview on the program. "They support one thing one day — the president even signs off — and then they come back and say they change their mind." But the OMB director argued, "We have the ability and the executive tools to fund less than what Congress appropriated" under the Impoundment Control Act, which enables the president to delay spending funds appropriated by Congress, and he didn't rule out a legal battle over the executive branch's authority to revise lawmakers' spending downward, if it "could find waste" by an agency. Vought has also caused GOP Senate Majority Leader John Thune some headaches with a comment he made Thursday suggesting the appropriations process must be "less bipartisan." But this put Thune in a bind as he oversees negotiations to avoid a government shutdown in October, since Republicans hold a slim majority of 53 - 47 in the Senate, and most legislation must reach a 60-vote threshold. "It's going to take 60 to fund the government," Thune said in response to Vought's remark, and he added, "we plan to move [appropriations] bills that will have cooperation from the Democrats." Van Hollen said it was ironic that Vought is "calling for these deep cuts to education, NIH, when he has asked for an increase for his OMB budget." And referring to reduction-in-force — or RIF — staff cuts the administration wants across the government, Van Hollen added, "He asked for a 13% increase for his OMB budget. He's asked for more people to join the OMB staff while he's talking about RIF-ing people at other departments." The Maryland senator said that Democratic senators, as they negotiate funding government operations, are "asking for four Republican senators just to publicly declare that when they say they're gonna fund the Veterans Affairs Department, that they actually mean it."

Teens increasingly turning to AI for friendship as national loneliness crisis deepens
Teens increasingly turning to AI for friendship as national loneliness crisis deepens

Fox News

time2 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Teens increasingly turning to AI for friendship as national loneliness crisis deepens

A new study shows that a third of American teenagers prefer chatting with artificial intelligence companions over having real friends. Common Sense Media's report, titled "Talk, Trust, and Trade-Offs: How and Why Teens Use AI Companions," revealed that the most widespread uses of AI are aged 13-17. The report explained further that the "use of AI companions is not a niche interest, but rather mainstream teen behavior" and that teens "find conversations with AI companions to be as satisfying or more satisfying than those with real-life friends." "AI companions are emerging at a time when kids and teens have never felt more alone," Common Sense Media Founder and CEO James P. Steyer said in the press release. "This isn't just about a new technology — it's about a generation that's replacing human connection with machines, outsourcing empathy to algorithms, and sharing intimate details with companies that don't have kids' best interests at heart. Our research shows that AI companions are far more commonplace than people may have assumed — and that we have a narrow window to educate kids and families about the well-documented dangers of these products." Although nearly half of teens used AI companions as a tool, the report also stated that 33% of teens use AI companions for social interactions and emotional support. For example, teens would use them for living out relationships, emotional support, role-playing, romantic interactions and friendship. A writer at Daze who cited the study raised awareness about the loneliness epidemic among young people and that it could lead to an invasion of privacy. "Some teenagers are telling AI their most intimate problems and secrets, which poses another problem – it's not a good idea to entrust this information to tech companies, some of whom have an extremely lax approach to data privacy. Would you really want Sam Altman or Elon Musk to have access to the contents of your teenage diary?" James Greig wrote in Daze. He added that it underscores a "larger crisis of youth loneliness" as teenagers stopped hanging out at malls and going to the movies, "which has corresponded with rising rates of depression and anxiety." "Being able to speak to an AI companion might alleviate the feeling of loneliness, and some people may find it helpful, but if it's becoming a replacement for socializing in the real world, then it risks entrenching the problem," Greig added.

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