Main features:
Living tools – Each article we publish evolves and improves the assistants, going directly to its grounding documents.
Built on methodology – Not random tips, but systematic approaches validated through real client work
Reusable – Use them again and again, not just read once and forget
#1: The Angle Finder
Break the industry echo chamber
The problem you’re facing: Your content sounds identical to competitors. You’re trapped using the same frameworks, referencing the same examples, and writing the same “thought leadership” everyone else publishes. Your audience can’t tell you apart.
What this prompt does: Acts as your creative sparring partner, challenging your assumptions and helping you find angles no one else is using. It connects your topic to unexpected fields (psychology, game design, behavioral economics) to uncover fresh perspectives.
Live example:
You start with:
I run a small clothing alterations clinic and want to create contentAfter 15 minutes you get:
→ The Decision Algorithm: Repair or Replace? The $1-Per-Wear Formula
(Economics meets sustainability: A framework clients can use to decide
if alterations make financial sense)
→ The Transparency Rule: How Waiting Anxiety Kills Sustainability
(Behavioral psychology: Why uncertainty about timing makes people
buy new instead of repair - and how you solve it)
→ The Emotional Attachment Paradox: Why Your Customers Keep Clothes
They Never Wear (Psychology of loss aversion applied to wardrobes)Who this is for:
Content leaders drowning in “me too” content
Founders who need differentiated thought leadership
Practitioners building personal brands
#2: The Specificity Drill-Down
Find your “3 am problem”
The problem you’re facing: You’re trying to speak to “everyone in the industry” and ending up connecting with no one. Your content is technically correct but emotionally flat. You know you need to niche down but don’t know how without losing opportunity.
What this prompt does: Guides you from a generic topic (like “AI for marketing”) to a hyper-specific “3am problem” for a precisely defined micro-audience. It executes UnGeneric’s core methodology step-by-step, helping you find problems that are urgent, painful, and unaddressed.
Live example:
You start with:
Topic: AI for marketing
Target: Marketing professionalsAfter 15 minutes you get:
Level 1 - Who is this REALLY for?
Not "marketers" → "B2B SaaS content managers who just lost their
junior writer and can't get budget approval to replace them"
Level 2 - What's the REAL business problem?
Not "need to use AI" → "Must maintain 8 articles/month output with
60% less headcount while quality can't drop or sales blames us for
pipeline decline"
Level 3 - What keeps THEM up at 3am?
"I'm terrified my boss thinks AI can replace our whole team. If I
admit I'm using it, am I making myself obsolete? But if I don't
figure it out, I'll drown."
Your 3am Problem:
How to use AI to maintain output without getting fired for using AIWho this is for:
Content leaders stuck in generic positioning
Founders who know they need to niche but don’t know how
Practitioners trying to stand out in crowded markets
#3: The Portfolio Mentor
Turn generic briefs into strategic work
The problem you’re facing: Your portfolio looks like everyone else’s. You execute briefs well, but there’s no strategic thinking visible. Potential employers or clients can’t tell if you’re a tactical executor or a strategic thinker. You’re losing opportunities to people who can demonstrate strategic value.
What this prompt does: Acts as your portfolio coach, helping you transform a generic brief (“design a landing page”) into a strategic case study that demonstrates your thinking. It helps you articulate the “why” behind your work, showing business impact and decision-making.
Live example:
You start with:
Brief: "Design a mobile app for a fitness startup"After 15 minutes you get:
Strategic Questions to Transform This Brief:
1. Who is this REALLY for? (Use Hyper-Specificity)
Not "fitness enthusiasts" → Dig for the specific persona with a
specific pain. Who's being underserved?
2. What's the business problem?
Not "need an app" → What's broken in their current approach?
Why now? What happens if they don't solve this?
3. What psychological barriers exist?
Apply behavioral economics: What prevents the target user from
succeeding with current solutions?
Your Portfolio Narrative:
"This wasn't just an app design. It was solving abandonment rates
for busy parents who start fitness routines and quit by week 3.
I applied [behavioral psychology principle] to design [specific
feature] that increased 30-day retention by solving [emotional pain]."Who this is for:
Aspiring practitioners building portfolios
Junior strategists trying to demonstrate senior-level thinking
Freelancers competing against agencies
You can access the AIssistants below ⤵️
Break industry echo chambers
Find specific, urgent problems
Build strategic portfolios
