Foundation Route

How to Build a Prompt That Generates Social Proof Copy From Reviews

You have 200 reviews sitting unused. One prompt turns them into testimonials, ad snippets, landing page quotes, and case study intros.

15 steps ~1h 15min For all professionals Free

A prompt that generates social proof copy from reviews takes raw customer feedback and reshapes it into polished testimonials, ad copy snippets, and landing page quotes. On aidowith.me, the Practical Prompts route walks you through building one in 15 steps over about 75 minutes. You'll start by categorizing your reviews into themes (speed, quality, support, value) and selecting 10 to 15 strong examples. The prompt extracts the most specific details (numbers, timelines, outcomes) and rewrites them in your brand voice while keeping the customer's core message intact. One prompt run produces 3 output formats: short testimonial (1 to 2 sentences), ad snippet (under 20 words), and case study intro (50 to 75 words). Testing on 10 real reviews shows the process takes under 2 minutes per review versus 15 minutes of manual writing. Teams using this approach report publishing 3x more social proof content per month because the bottleneck of rewriting disappears.

Last updated: April 2026

The Problem and the Fix

Without a route

  • You have 100+ reviews but extracting usable quotes takes hours of manual work
  • Marketing needs testimonials in 3 formats (ads, landing pages, emails) and each requires rewriting
  • Great customer feedback sits unused because nobody has time to turn it into copy

With aidowith.me

  • One prompt produces 3 output formats from a single review in under 2 minutes
  • Extracts specific numbers and outcomes so social proof reads as credible, not generic
  • A reusable prompt you run on any new review batch with zero setup each time

Who Builds This With AI

Marketers

Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.

Sales & BizDev

Prep calls, draft outreach, research prospects in minutes.

Managers & Leads

Reports, presentations, and team comms handled faster.

How It Works

1

Categorize and select reviews

Sort your reviews into themes (speed, quality, support, value). Pick 10 to 15 that contain specific details like numbers, timelines, or outcomes.

2

Build the multi-format prompt

Create a prompt that takes one review and outputs 3 formats: short testimonial, ad snippet, and case study intro. Set brand voice rules.

3

Test on 10 real reviews

Run the prompt on 10 selected reviews. Compare outputs to manually written versions. Adjust for tone and accuracy, then lock in the final prompt.

Turn Reviews Into Social Proof in 75 Minutes

Follow the route and build a prompt that converts raw reviews into publish-ready social proof.

Start This Route →

What You Walk Away With

Categorize and select reviews

Build the multi-format prompt

Test on 10 real reviews

A reusable prompt you run on any new review batch with zero setup each time

"We went from publishing 2 testimonials a month to 15. The prompt pulls out the best details and puts them in our voice. It takes 2 minutes per review."
- Growth Marketer, SaaS startup

Questions

The prompt is designed for positive and neutral reviews. For negative feedback, you'd use a separate response prompt. The route shows you how to extract constructive themes from mixed reviews that can feed product improvement stories or 'before and after' content. The route provides clear guidance at every step so you can move from setup to results without guesswork.

Yes. The prompt handles text from G2, Trustpilot, Google Reviews, app stores, and email feedback. Format doesn't matter because you paste the raw text. The route includes examples from 4 different review sources so you see how the prompt adapts to each style. The route provides clear guidance at every step so you can move from setup to results without guesswork.

The prompt preserves the customer's specific claims and numbers while adjusting sentence structure and word choice to match your brand. You set 3 to 5 brand voice rules during the build. The result sounds like the customer could have said it, but it fits your marketing context. The route provides clear guidance at every step so you can move from setup to results without guesswork.