Best use case
Use this when you need a structured carousel outline output quickly, but still want control over audience, tone, constraints, and final review.
Copy-ready carousel outline prompt generator with variables, usage tips, quality checks, and safety notes.
| Variable | What to enter |
|---|---|
| {topic} | Add your real topic. |
| {audience} | Add your real audience. |
| {platform} | Add your real platform. |
| {goal} | Add your real goal. |
| {voice} | Add your real voice. |
Use this when you need a structured carousel outline output quickly, but still want control over audience, tone, constraints, and final review.
A strong carousel prompt should define the audience, promise, slide count, hook angle, evidence, and CTA before asking for slide copy.
| Slide | Job | Prompt instruction |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hook | State the painful problem or surprising result in one line. |
| 2-3 | Context | Explain why the problem happens and who it affects. |
| 4-6 | Steps | Give one action per slide with a concrete example. |
| 7 | Proof/checklist | Add a mini checklist, mistake list, or before/after. |
| 8 | CTA | Ask for a save, reply, download, or next action. |
Direct answer: For most educational carousels, use 7-9 slides: hook, context, 3-4 steps, checklist/proof, and CTA.
Before you run the prompt, define the audience stage, the desired action, the content boundary, and one example of a good answer. This extra context helps the model avoid generic social copy and produce a result that can be edited into a real post faster.
This Omellody prompt page was expanded on May 28, 2026 from an internal social-content prompt utility pattern. No external repository text was copied.