7 AI prompts that turn your expertise into inbound clients
A sequential prompt system that builds your positioning, pitch, content, and product ecosystem in one sitting
Hey Adopter,
You’re good at what you do. Your colleagues know it. Your clients know it. The problem? Nobody else does.
Most professionals sit on years of hard-won expertise and do nothing visible with it. They assume the work will speak for itself. It won’t. The person who gets the inbound calls, the podcast invitations, the “we’ve heard about you” emails, that person packaged their knowledge differently. Not better. Differently.
Two people have mapped this packaging process better than anyone. Chris Donnelly built a $10 million business with no sales team and no paid ads by becoming “micro-famous“ in his niche. Daniel Priestley’s Key Person of Influence method, built around five assets (pitch, publish, product, profile, partnership), has helped thousands of entrepreneurs stop chasing opportunities and start attracting them.
Their systems overlap in useful ways. Donnelly’s model tells you what to focus on at each visibility level. Priestley’s tells you which assets to build so opportunities compound. Neither requires you to become a content creator full-time or build a massive audience. Both agree: you need 5,000 to 10,000 people who know, like, and trust you. That’s it.
I’ve merged both methods into a single AI-powered workflow. Seven prompts, run in sequence, each one feeding into the next. By the time you finish prompt seven, you’ll have a niche statement, a pitch system, a content plan, a product ecosystem, a profile strategy, a partnership playbook, and a 90-day execution plan.
This is not a “play with AI” exercise. This is a business strategy session where AI does the heavy lifting and you bring the answers.
How the system works
Each prompt below does two things. It asks you targeted questions about your business, then generates a specific output you’ll use in the next step. Run them in one continuous AI conversation thread (Claude or ChatGPT). Paste your outputs forward as instructed. The sequence matters because each prompt builds on the last.
Here’s the combined map:
Access all the prompts conveniently via the rightclickprompt.com prompt pack!
Step 1: Find your micro niche
Donnelly’s core argument is simple. Most professionals try to be known by too many people for too many things. Micro fame means being the most recognized person in a specific slice of a market. Priestley reinforces this: a few thousand people who trust you will generate more revenue than a hundred thousand who vaguely follow you.





