Gemini Brand Story Writer Prompt
You are a brand strategist who has crafted origin stories for startups that went on to raise $10M+ and attract cult foll
Category
📣 Marketing
Difficulty
Intermediate
Models
3
Last Updated
2026-06-28
Works with
📄 Example output
⚠️ Common Mistakes
❓ FAQ
⚙️ Fill in your variables
📋 Prompt
You are a brand strategist who has crafted origin stories for startups that went on to raise $10M+ and attract cult followings.
Company: [company name]
Founder: [founder background]
Problem noticed: [problem you noticed]
Mission: [mission]
Task: Write a complete brand story in 3 formats:
FORMAT 1 — THE FULL ORIGIN STORY (500–700 words):
- The moment the founder noticed the problem
- Failed attempts (what they tried that didn't work)
- The insight that changed everything
- What they built and why it matters
- Where it's going (mission)
FORMAT 2 — THE ELEVATOR PITCH VERSION (100 words):
- Problem → Founder insight → What they built → Impact
FORMAT 3 — THE ONE-LINER:
- For Twitter bio, investor pitch, business card
- Under 20 words
Story principles: Make the customer the hero, not the founder. The founder is the guide. The company is the tool. The outcome is the story.
Company: [company name]
Founder: [founder background]
Problem noticed: [problem you noticed]
Mission: [mission]
Task: Write a complete brand story in 3 formats:
FORMAT 1 — THE FULL ORIGIN STORY (500–700 words):
- The moment the founder noticed the problem
- Failed attempts (what they tried that didn't work)
- The insight that changed everything
- What they built and why it matters
- Where it's going (mission)
FORMAT 2 — THE ELEVATOR PITCH VERSION (100 words):
- Problem → Founder insight → What they built → Impact
FORMAT 3 — THE ONE-LINER:
- For Twitter bio, investor pitch, business card
- Under 20 words
Story principles: Make the customer the hero, not the founder. The founder is the guide. The company is the tool. The outcome is the story.
FORMAT 1 — FULL STORY
Everyone told [Founder Name] the same thing: 'AI tools are going to save you hours every day.'
So in early 2024, he tried. He opened ChatGPT with a specific goal — a well-structured SEO article for a client — and spent the next 45 minutes writing, rewriting, and arguing with an algorithm about what 'informative' meant. The output was fine. It wasn't good.
He asked around. His friends — marketers, developers, writers, traders — all reported the same thing. Not that AI was bad. That they weren't getting the results they'd seen other people get. They knew AI worked. They just couldn't figure out why it worked for them.
The answer, when he eventually found it, was embarrassingly simple: the prompt.
The same idea, expressed differently, produced completely different results. The people getting extraordinary AI output weren't smarter — they just knew how to write instructions. They'd developed, through hundreds of hours of experimentation, the specific framing that unlocked the model.
Most people don't have 200 hours to spend becoming a prompt engineering expert.
ToolsNova's AI Prompt Library was built for those people. Not as a shortcut — but as a starting point. 200+ prompts written by practitioners in each field, tested with real models, shown alongside example outputs so you know what to expect before you use them.
The library launched in 2026. Within four months, it had served 50,000 professionals across 80 countries. Not because AI is magic — but because the right instructions make it useful.
FORMAT 2 — ELEVATOR PITCH
Most people get mediocre results from AI not because the tools are bad, but because they don't know how to instruct them. ToolsNova solves this with a free library of 200+ professional-grade prompts — written by practitioners, tested across models, available instantly. For professionals who want to use AI well, without becoming prompt engineering experts.
FORMAT 3 — ONE-LINER
'200+ free expert AI prompts for writing, SEO, coding, and trading — use instantly, no signup.'
Everyone told [Founder Name] the same thing: 'AI tools are going to save you hours every day.'
So in early 2024, he tried. He opened ChatGPT with a specific goal — a well-structured SEO article for a client — and spent the next 45 minutes writing, rewriting, and arguing with an algorithm about what 'informative' meant. The output was fine. It wasn't good.
He asked around. His friends — marketers, developers, writers, traders — all reported the same thing. Not that AI was bad. That they weren't getting the results they'd seen other people get. They knew AI worked. They just couldn't figure out why it worked for them.
The answer, when he eventually found it, was embarrassingly simple: the prompt.
The same idea, expressed differently, produced completely different results. The people getting extraordinary AI output weren't smarter — they just knew how to write instructions. They'd developed, through hundreds of hours of experimentation, the specific framing that unlocked the model.
Most people don't have 200 hours to spend becoming a prompt engineering expert.
ToolsNova's AI Prompt Library was built for those people. Not as a shortcut — but as a starting point. 200+ prompts written by practitioners in each field, tested with real models, shown alongside example outputs so you know what to expect before you use them.
The library launched in 2026. Within four months, it had served 50,000 professionals across 80 countries. Not because AI is magic — but because the right instructions make it useful.
FORMAT 2 — ELEVATOR PITCH
Most people get mediocre results from AI not because the tools are bad, but because they don't know how to instruct them. ToolsNova solves this with a free library of 200+ professional-grade prompts — written by practitioners, tested across models, available instantly. For professionals who want to use AI well, without becoming prompt engineering experts.
FORMAT 3 — ONE-LINER
'200+ free expert AI prompts for writing, SEO, coding, and trading — use instantly, no signup.'
🏆
💡 Pro Tips
Best model for this prompt
Claude
Claude (Opus 4 / Sonnet 4)
The best brand stories make the founder's struggle feel universal — not 'my specific problem' but 'the problem most people in this situation have'
Include a specific moment of failure or doubt — stories without friction are forgettable
'Why now?' is the most underused element in brand stories — the timing of a solution's emergence is often the most compelling part
Your one-liner is the hardest to write — spend as long on 20 words as you do on 700
Making the founder the hero — the customer's transformation is the story; the founder is the guide
Generic founding stories ('we saw a problem in the market') — every brand story says this; the specific moment is what makes it yours
Missing the mission — a brand story without a forward-facing vision ends in the past
Writing for yourself instead of the audience — what the founder found fascinating about the journey is rarely what makes customers care
- How do I find my founding moment if I can't remember a specific one?Ask yourself: What was the worst version of the problem you're solving? What's the moment you decided something had to be different? The founding moment is often more mundane than founders expect — it doesn't need to be dramatic to be compelling.
- Should my brand story mention specific failures?Yes — selectively. The failure should be one that's universally relatable and that makes your solution feel more earned. Avoid failures that make your team look incompetent; focus on failures that highlight the genuine difficulty of the problem.
- How long should a brand story be?500–700 words for a full About page origin story. 100 words for pitch and social use. Under 20 words for a one-liner. The ratio at which people actually read each format: almost everyone reads the one-liner, 30% read the elevator pitch, 8% read the full story.
- Should I update my brand story as the company evolves?The founding moment doesn't change — but the 'what we built' and 'where we're going' sections should evolve with your actual product and mission. Revisit your brand story annually to ensure it reflects who you actually are now.