3 AI Prompts to Build Digital Products That Sell ($7,582/Month)
ChatGPT can build you a digital product in minutes. It can make it look polished. It can write the guide, outline the template, and even help you create a sales page.
But here is the problem: ChatGPT does not automatically know if your product is positioned correctly, priced correctly, or tied to a transformation people actually want to buy.
That is why so many creators end up with beautiful digital products that nobody buys.
In this episode, Jillian shares three AI prompts that fix the parts ChatGPT usually misses: the transformation, the purchasing trigger, and the price plus product scope. These are the pieces that can turn a generic idea into a product someone understands, wants, and is willing to pay for.
Watch the full video:
Table of Contents
Show Notes:
- MiloTree
- Start with a free MiloTree account
- Upgrade to a paid MiloTree plan
- FREE: Download Jill’s AI prompts for creating products that sell
- Watch this episode on YouTube
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Why ChatGPT Builds the Wrong Product Beautifully
AI is powerful, but it is not a business strategist unless you teach it to think like one.
If you type, “Create a digital product about meal prep,” ChatGPT will give you a clean outline. It might even write the whole thing. But it will not automatically know if the product is too broad, if the price makes sense, or if the name makes someone picture a better version of their life.
That is where creators get stuck. They confuse finished with sellable.
A finished product has pages, modules, worksheets, or templates. A sellable product has a clear customer, a painful problem, a specific transformation, and a price that matches the outcome.
This is the same idea Jill teaches in why ebooks are dead and transformational digital products sell better. Information alone is not enough anymore. AI can create information for free. Your product has to move someone from stuck to successful.
Prompt 1: Turn Information Into a Transformation
If you have watched Jill’s videos before, you have heard her say this: stop selling information. Sell the transformation.
An information product tells people what to know. A transformational product moves them from one state to another.
For example, “Meal Prep Guide” sounds like information. “The 7-Day Meal Prep Jumpstart: Go From Overwhelmed to a Full Freezer by Sunday” sounds like a transformation.
Same niche. Same general topic. Very different buying decision.
Use this prompt to help ChatGPT uncover the transformation inside your idea:
I want to sell a digital product.
I’m good at: [skill]
I help: [audience]Type: [digital download, workshop, coaching, membership, freebie, or “any”]
Infer my audience’s biggest pain point. Then give me 3 product ideas. Each must promise a clear
transformation, not just information: the buyer goes from a stuck “before” to a confident “after.” Test: if the name doesn’t make someone picture their life improving, rewrite it. Weak: “50 Healthy Recipes.” Strong: “7-Day Meal Prep Jumpstart.”
For each: a name with a number or timeframe (under 50 characters), the before and after in one line
each, and the problem it solves.
The goal is not to create the biggest product. It is to create the clearest result.
For more examples of turning a simple idea into a sellable offer, read how to find your first digital product idea in three questions.
CTA: Want MiloTree to do this for you? Create a free MiloTree account and run the AI Product Finder. It gives you three product ideas with names, pricing, what is included, and how long each one should take to build.
Prompt 2: Find the Purchasing Trigger That Makes People Buy
Every digital product that sells taps into at least one of six purchasing triggers:
- make money,
- save money,
- save time,
- move toward happiness,
- move away from pain, or
- raise social status.
Most creators bury the trigger. They name the product after the topic instead of the result.
“Meal Prep Guide” names the topic. “7-Day Meal Prep Jumpstart” points to saving time and moving away from the pain of dinner stress.
This matters because the name is already doing part of the selling. Before someone reads your sales page, they see the name. Before they understand every detail, they feel whether the offer solves a problem they actually care about.
Use this prompt to find the trigger inside your product:
My product: [product or idea]
For: [audience]
Transformation: [before to after, one line]
Products sell on 6 triggers: make money, save money, save time, move toward happiness, move away
from pain, raise social status.
Tell me: (1) which 1 or 2 triggers are dominant for this audience and why; (2) 3 rewritten names (under 50 characters) where the trigger is obvious; (3) one name to avoid because it hides the trigger or sounds like generic info.
Example: not “Meal Prep Guide” but “7-Day Meal Prep Jumpstart.”roduct name so the dominant trigger is obvious to a buyer.
If your product does not hit one of these triggers clearly, that does not mean the idea is bad. It means the positioning needs work.
Jill talks more about using AI to uncover what people will actually pay for in these 5 AI prompts to build a $5,000/month digital product business.
Prompt 3: Price the Product Based on the Outcome, Not the Format
Creators often price based on format. A short guide feels like $17. A template pack feels like $27. A course feels like $97.
But buyers do not pay because something is long. They pay because the outcome is valuable.
If your product helps someone make money, grow a business, save expensive time, or solve a painful problem, it can usually command a higher price. If it is a hobby, lifestyle, or nice-to-have product, the price may need to be lower.
The trick is to match the price to the promise.
Use this prompt:
My product: [idea]
Type: [digital download, workshop, coaching, or membership]
For: [audience]
Transformation: [before to after]PRICE. Price by outcome value, not format.
Downloads/workshops, high-value (make money, grow a business): $27–$127
Downloads/workshops, lifestyle, hobby, wellness: $17–$37
Coaching: $47–$147 by value
Membership: $17–$47/month
Give me the exact price to test first and one line on why it signals “worth it” for this niche.
DOABILITY. I’m a beginner and won’t finish anything overwhelming. Redesign this as
something I can ship fast: a short guide, template pack, 60-minute workshop, checklist, or
quick-start plan. No 200-page books or 12-week courses.Give me the final format, 3 concrete deliverables, and realistic build hours.
This prompt does two important jobs. First, it helps you avoid underpricing a product that solves a valuable problem. Second, it keeps the product small enough to actually finish.
This is where products often die. A creator starts with a simple idea, then turns it into a 200-page ebook, a six-module course, or a massive template library. The scope gets bigger, the launch gets delayed, and nothing ever goes live.
A better first product might be:
- a short guide,
- a checklist,
- a template pack,
- a 60-minute workshop,
- a simple spreadsheet, or
- a focused coaching session.
Small does not mean weak. Small means finishable.
For another example of using price and positioning to build a bigger business, read how a $27 product can grow into an $11,000/month digital product strategy.
The $7,582/Month Example
In the video, Jill walks through a simple example: a coach who helps women navigate a midlife career change.
Her first product is a $47 offer called The Midlife Career Reset: Find Your Next Move in 30 Days.
That name works because it does not just describe the topic. It describes the buyer’s future. She is not buying “career advice.” She is buying clarity, relief, and a next step.
Here is the math Jill shares:
- 110 sales of a $47 product = $5,170
- 40 buyers add a $19 transferable skills worksheet order bump = $836
- 8 buyers add a $197 private 90-minute career strategy session = $1,576
Total: $7,582/month.
This is not magic. It is a product ladder. The first product solves an immediate problem. The order bump adds a useful next tool. The upsell gives buyers access to the creator’s personal help.
If you want to build this kind of structure, read how to create a digital product stack that turns one offer into a bigger business.
Why MiloTree Makes This Easier
You can run these prompts in ChatGPT. They will help you think more strategically before you build.
But if you want the easier version, MiloTree has this functionality built in for free.
Inside MiloTree, the AI Product Finder asks you three questions and gives you three product ideas fully spec’d out:
- product name,
- suggested price,
- what is included,
- who it is for,
- the transformation, and
- how long it should take to build.
Then you pick the product you like best and it loads into your MiloTree dashboard, set up and ready to sell.
You still need to create the product and upload it, but MiloTree helps there too. The Product Roadmap gives you a step-by-step plan for building it, with AI prompts to help you create it faster and personalization prompts so it does not sound like generic AI.
CTA: Start with a free MiloTree account to test your first product, freebie, or social pop-up. If you want unlimited products, unlimited freebies, order bumps, upsells, and funnels, upgrade to a paid MiloTree plan.
Your Action Plan
Here is what Jill wants you to do next:
- Copy the first prompt.
- Run it in ChatGPT.
- Look for the product idea with the clearest transformation.
- Use the second prompt to find the strongest purchasing trigger.
- Use the third prompt to price it and shrink the scope so you can finish it.
- Set it up in MiloTree and start testing.
You were probably not stuck because you could not create a digital product. You were stuck because you were guessing.
The guessing is what changes today.
CTA: If you want the prompts Jill mentions in the video, grab the free AI prompts here. If you want MiloTree to generate your product ideas for you, sign up for MiloTree free. And if you are ready to build without limits, choose a paid MiloTree plan.
Other Episodes You Will Like:
- Your first digital product idea in 3 questions
- Why ebooks are dead and what creators should sell instead
- 5 AI prompts to build a $5,000/month digital product business
- How to turn your personal experience into income with AI
- The digital product stack strategy for creators
