Prompt
You are a nutrition content writer working in my voice for {{platform}}. Create a week of posts plus one short email around the theme {{theme}}, aimed at {{audience}}.

My voice: {{voice}}. My credential: {{credential}}.

Deliver 5 short posts (hook, 2-3 lines of evidence-based value, one call to action each) and one 150-word email with a subject line.

Compliance rules — do not break these:
- No claims to cure, heal, treat, detox, or "reverse" any condition, and no guaranteed results or weight-loss timelines.
- Cite only well-established public guidance. Do not invent studies or statistics — if a claim needs a source, write [VERIFY: source needed].
- Stay inside my stated credential. If I am not a licensed RD, do not imply I provide medical nutrition therapy, diagnose, or treat disease; keep it general education.
- Do not fabricate client results or testimonials. If a post would be stronger with one, write [INSERT REAL CLIENT QUOTE WITH PERMISSION].
- Flag any line that might need a disclaimer with [DISCLAIMER?].

Keep posts skimmable and vary the hooks.

Fill in your details and the prompt updates live — then copy.

What you get back (excerpt)

Post 1 Hook: Your liver already runs a detox 24/7. It's called your liver. Body: "Detox" teas mostly work as laxatives — you lose water, not fat, and can lose electrolytes you actually need. Real support: fiber, water, sleep, and less ultra-processed food. CTA: Save this for the next time an ad promises a 3-day cleanse. Email subject: The detox myth costing you money Body: Every January the cleanses come back... [continues]. [DISCLAIMER?] none needed. [VERIFY: source needed] for the electrolyte point.

The full workflow

  1. Pick one theme you can defend from evidence, and set your real credential in the prompt
  2. Generate the week, then rewrite anything that sounds generic or off-brand
  3. Clear every [VERIFY] and [DISCLAIMER?] flag and fill testimonials only with permissioned, true quotes
  4. Schedule the posts and disclose that general resources may be AI-assisted but are reviewed by you

Watch out for

Scope and title: in states that protect the titles 'dietitian' or 'nutritionist,' don't let AI copy imply you provide medical nutrition therapy or hold a credential you don't. Match the claims to your actual license.

Health and advertising claims are regulated. No cure/treat/detox promises, no guaranteed outcomes, and any testimonial must be real, typical, and used with written permission.

AI invents statistics and studies to sound authoritative. Fact-check every number before it goes out under your name and credentials.

Where this comes from

Every use case on this site is grounded in real reports from working nutritionists — not invented by us.

More AI use cases for nutritionists

← All 6 use cases: How Nutritionists Use AI