Talia Daneshrad
112 posts

Talia Daneshrad
@taliadaneshrad
I make people hungry on the internet | SMM @GoldenSteerSteakhouse | Sharing food marketing secrets + AI marketing tips
Katılım Ağustos 2021
151 Takip Edilen20 Takipçiler

I built 7 Claude Skills that replaced 6+ hours of weekly marketing work.
Now I’m giving them all away.
The Founder Skills Vault:
→ Viral Content Generator
→ Content Pillar Generator
→ LinkedIn Content Analyzer
→ Lead Magnet Idea Generator
→ LinkedIn-to-X Converter
→ Warm DM Strategist
→ Lead Qualifier
This isn’t a prompt pack.
These are production-grade tools that run inside Claude.
It’s the same system I used to grow 7,000+ followers in 3 months.
Want it?
→ Like + RT
→ Comment “FOUNDER”

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I just had Claude Cowork:
1. Analyze a large document with all my data and brand educational information
2. Turn that data into 5-6 scripts that are tailored for social media
3. Using those scripts, give me 4-5 options of viral hooks to go along with those scripts
4. Put all of that into my project folder on Notion.
This all happened in the span on 10 minutes while I was working on other things on the side. A fully automated process.
Now, it isn't perfect and there are tweaks I need to make. But just seeing what this tool can do gives me the opportunity to develop easier and more efficient systems to get it to run the way I need it to.
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The secret to creating better marketing content with AI:
First, stop trying to write "mega-prompts" for your marketing content. It’s actually making your output worse.
We’ve been told that the more context we pile into a single message, the better the AI will perform. But in reality, you’re just creating a "noise" problem. The AI gets overwhelmed by competing instructions, just like a human assistant would if you screamed ten different to-do list items at them while they were trying to drink their morning coffee.
If you want high-level results, you have to be a better manager.
I’ve started treating every AI chat like a meeting. We don't do everything at once. We move in stages.
For my latest food marketing project, I didn't ask for "a social media plan." I asked for a brainstorm. Then I asked for video concepts based on that brainstorm. Then I asked for the copy.
By breaking the "big task" into smaller, logical steps, the AI stays focused on the specific goal of that moment. You get better creativity, fewer hallucinations, and copy that actually feels useful.
The "secret" to better AI content isn't a better prompt—it's a better process.
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“Some days, all I focused on was just trying to be a little better than I was the day before.”
— The Let Them Theory, Mel Robbins
Late to this book, but better late than never.
I get so stuck sometimes thinking about everything I want to do and everything I need to do that I end up feeling frozen, like I’m moving in circles and nothing is good enough.
But this reminded me that getting 1% better every day still counts. When it feels small, it adds up.
Even writing this tweet, I know it isn’t perfect, but just posting it makes me feel proud of myself.
Small progress every day will always do more than random big bursts.
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I turned a messy kitchen photo (the first image) into a polished brand asset (the second image) in exactly 60 seconds.
The secret wasn't a complex prompt. It was actually about doing less.
I used to try and cram 5 different requirements into one AI prompt. I wanted the lighting changed, the background swapped, and the objects moved all at once. That’s usually when the AI gets confused and gives you something unusable.
For this Golden Steer shot, I stopped trying to do everything at once and went step-by-step:
First, I just told it the vibe: "make this cleaner and more polished."
Once it understood the context, I gave one direction at a time.
I asked to remove the extra steak, then to center the tomahawk.
Then I swapped the metal tray for a wooden board.
The final touch was the best part. I gave it a reference photo of the exact parsley we use in our restaurant and asked it to add it in.
The whole process took about 60 seconds. By breaking it down, the AI actually followed the brand guidelines. For content creators, this is a massive win. You can take a raw, "real-life" photo from the kitchen or the office and turn it into high-end marketing collateral without needing a Photoshop degree.


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@AlexAndBooks_ Reading deep work right now. It’s incredible. So many little pieces of information that are actually actionable
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Two of my favorite Naval quotes, and honestly some of the most useful and grounding ones, especially right now with AI and X.
Every day I hop on X and feel completely overwhelmed by what everyone else is posting. It seems like everyone is ahead of me: building agents, launching tools, creating all kinds of things with AI. I bookmark everything, I comment on posts begging for guides, all chasing how other people are making money with AI.
These two quotes brought me back down to earth.
The AI space is basically a comparison trap on steroids right now. Everyone's showing you their results, never their starting point.
The people actually winning with AI aren't copying everyone else's playbook; they're figuring out what they are specifically good at, and using AI to go deeper into that. The tool is the same for everyone. Your edge is you.
And all those bookmarks and guides you're collecting? I believe that's just procrastination wearing a productive mask. I do it too.
The best way to learn AI right now isn't to consume more: it's to pick one thing, build it badly, and figure it out as you go.
Right now, I'm currently trying to build social media agents that help streamline my processes: creating captions, creating Canva graphics, coming up with post ideas. Each requires it's own agent and own instructions.


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Read this twice, slowly.
Most of the pressure we carry comes from measuring ourselves against others.
But that comparison only makes sense if you are trying to be them.
You are not in the running for anyone else's life.
Your version of things, the way you think, the way you show up, cannot be undersold or outbid.
The real work is quieter than competition.
It is finding the people, the problems, the places that were waiting for exactly you.
Save this for the next time you forget what you are actually looking for.

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One thing food marketing taught me: ambiance is part of the product. That means your content strategy can't just live in the food photography. It has to capture atmosphere: the lighting, the history, the energy of the room on a Friday night. For us that looks like leaning into the 60+ year story of the restaurant as much as the menu. Followers don't just want to see what's on the plate. They want to feel like they're already there.
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today i learned something that's going to change how i create branded content forever.
you can use Gemini to generate on-brand images. but most people are doing it wrong.
they just type a prompt and hope for the best. the image comes out random, off-brand, nothing like what you actually wanted.
the fix? a style guide.
before you ask Gemini for any image, you feed it your brand elements: colors, fonts, aesthetic, vibe. once it understands your brand, every image it generates actually looks like YOU.
here's the proof:
i was creating a graphic breaking down the ingredients in one of our drinks. the grapefruit kept coming out way too bright, totally off-brand.
then i pulled our style guide, asked Gemini to recreate it using that — and the difference was insane. (swipe to see both 👇)
here's the exact prompt i used to build the style guide + how to use it to generate specific images:
1. Creating the style guide:
You are a brand strategist with 10+ years of experience developing creative and brand aligned style guides for […]. Your expertise includes visual identity, brand messaging, consumer engagement, and graphic design.
We want to develop a comprehensive brand style guide that captures our ethos, style, and overall aesthetic and resonates with our target audience [x]
Generate 3 distinct style guide concepts that reflect different creative and strategic directions for my company
2. When you find the one you like:
We would like to go ahead with Number 3. Please provide us with the final detailed and comprehensive style guide including deep depth on all elements and instructions in all the needed elements
3. To create an image with it:
Copy and paste style guide:
Using our style guide, please create 3 different images for [X...]
save this. your brand consistency just got a whole lot easier.
i attached my example below


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I never run out of content to post anymore.
Built an automation that monitors 50+ news sources, scores articles for relevance, and writes social posts automatically.
It finds trending topics in my niche before they explode everywhere else.
Saves me 15-20 hours monthly and keeps me ahead of every trend.
Comment "NEWS" and I'll DM it to you (must be following)

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I spent 3 hours yesterday testing different AI prompt structures specifically for food captions. What I found was a massive gap between "robotic marketing speak" and "actually makes you hungry."
The secret? The "Chef + Critic" prompt method.
If you just ask for a caption, you get: "Come try our yummy pasta! 🍝" (Hard pass).
Instead, I started using this 2-step prompt:
"Act as a Michelin-star chef. Describe the technical preparation and mouthfeel of [Dish Name]."
"Now, act as a food critic for a local paper. Take those technical details and turn them into a 3-sentence punchy caption that emphasizes the contrast between the spicy glaze and the cold dipping sauce."
The difference in output was night and day. Specificity is what drives cravings. If your AI prompts don't include instructions for "mouthfeel," "temperature contrast," or "aromatic notes," you're leaving engagement on the table.
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Everyone says AI is the "great equalizer" that will let anyone do marketing. They’re wrong.
AI is actually an amplifier.
If you’re a junior who doesn't understand brand voice, AI helps you produce mediocre fluff at 10x speed.
If you’re an expert who knows how to judge quality and spot "hallucinations," AI makes you a literal powerhouse.
The gap between "okay" and "excellent" is getting wider, not smaller. The tool doesn't replace the expert; it just gives the expert a bigger lever.
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I mapped out 50 ways to make money with AI in 2026.
Not theory. Not hype. Real business models with revenue paths and MVP scope.
Organized into 5 categories: vertical agents, content tools, data infrastructure, edge AI, and services.
Each idea shows exactly what to build and how to monetize it.
Saved me 3 weeks of research when I was figuring out what to launch.
Comment "IDEAS" and I'll DM it to you (must be following)

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🚨 Claude Opus 4.6 is insanely powerful.
But 90% of people are using it like ChatGPT.
That’s crazy.
I’ve spent months testing it for:
• Automation workflows
• Agent building
• Research
• Content systems
• Business ops
And the difference between “basic prompts” and elite prompts is night and day.
So I’m giving away my 500 Mega Prompts List for Claude Opus 4.6.
These are the exact prompts I use to:
→ Automate repetitive tasks
→ Build AI agents
→ Generate high-leverage content
→ Analyze data like a consultant
→ Save 10+ hours per week
No fluff. Just plug-and-play frameworks.
If you want it:
Comment “Send”
I’ll DM it to you. 🔥

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I never run out of content to post anymore.
Built an automation that monitors 50+ news sources, scores articles for relevance, and writes social posts automatically.
It finds trending topics in my niche before they explode everywhere else.
Saves me 15-20 hours monthly and keeps me ahead of every trend.
Comment "NEWS" and I'll DM it to you (must be following)

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R.I.P Media planners.
This AI agent generated $2B+ with Ads — and just killed manual creative research forever...
→ No more doom-scrolling Meta Ad Library for hours
→ No more watching competitor videos one by one
→ No more "inspo folders" you never open again
→ No more creative briefs built from gut feeling
Just one prompt → full competitive intelligence in 60 seconds.
Here's how it works:
→ Category Crawler (scrapes competitor ads, Reddit, search trends automatically)
→ Visual Ad Dissector (breaks down hooks, pacing, copy, angles, offer framing)
→ Ad Account Connector (compares what the market is doing vs. what YOU'RE doing)
→ Gap Finder (identifies winning patterns your brand hasn't tested yet)
→ Brief Generator (outputs production-ready scripts and creative briefs instantly)
Results from teams using it:
• 20+ hours of manual research → 60 seconds
• Competitors’ ads, found from over 150M+ ads.
• Production-ready scripts and briefs — no guesswork
It also has a free Competitor Intel report:
Enter your website and get competitors' ads, best hooks, winning angles, and gap analysis against your own ads.
Like + comment "ADS" + repost, and I'll DM you the link.
(must be following)
English

I never run out of content to post anymore.
Built an automation that monitors 50+ news sources, scores articles for relevance, and writes social posts automatically.
It finds trending topics in my niche before they explode everywhere else.
Saves me 15-20 hours monthly and keeps me ahead of every trend.
Comment "NEWS" and I'll DM it to you (must be following)

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