Your AI is making your content invisible.
Not because it writes badly. Because it writes safely. Ask ChatGPT to summarize an article and it will produce a polished, agreeable précis that offends nobody and surprises nobody. The output is technically accurate and completely forgettable.
The problem is structural: most people prompt their AI to confirm what an article says, not to find where it fights with the crowd. The result is a feed full of content that agrees with other content, in increasingly fluent prose, at exponentially increasing volume.
If you want to be read, you need to stop prompting for summaries and start prompting for conflict.
There is a reliable body of research behind why contrarian content performs. Jonah Berger and Katherine Milkman's widely cited study, "What Makes Online Content Viral?" ( Journal of Marketing Research, 2012), found that content evoking high-arousal emotions — anger, awe, anxiety — is significantly more likely to be shared than content that merely informs or reassures. Agreement is a low-arousal state. Surprise and contradiction are not.
This is not a trick to manufacture outrage. It is a structural observation: the human brain is wired to pay attention to pattern breaks. An article that says "AI is changing content creation" registers as noise. An article that says "AI is making content creation worse, and here's the data" registers as a signal worth attending to.
The distinction matters because the mechanism is cognitive, not emotional. You are not trying to provoke readers. You are trying to interrupt the predictive pattern they've built from reading a hundred similar articles before yours.
When you ask an LLM to "summarize this article" or "give me the key takeaways," the model optimizes for coverage and balance. It is trained on human feedback that rewards thoroughness and penalizes controversy. The output tends to be accurate, neutral, and structurally indistinguishable from ten other summaries of the same piece.
This is the correct behavior for a research assistant. It is the wrong behavior for a content strategist.
What you need instead is an AI that deliberately excavates the friction points in a piece of content — the places where the author's argument runs against the grain of widely-held assumptions. Those friction points are your raw material for hooks, threads, newsletters, and takes that readers haven't already encountered.
The challenge is that you have to ask for this explicitly. The model will not do it by default.
Here is the exact prompt structure I use to turn any article, transcript, or book chapter into a set of ready-to-use contrarian angles. The design philosophy is simple: separate the analytical persona from the data being analyzed, parameterize everything that varies between uses, and constrain the output format so the results are immediately actionable.
## Persona & Context
You are a top-tier Content Strategist and Cognitive Analyst.
Your expertise lies in dissecting content to uncover contrarian viewpoints—ideas
that defy conventional wisdom but are strongly advocated by the author.
In today's attention economy, these cognitive conflicts and stark contrasts are
the key to capturing the audience's attention and creating viral narratives.
## Instructions & Steps
1. Thoroughly read and analyze the provided [Content].
2. Identify the widely accepted "common sense" or conventional beliefs held by
the [Target Audience] regarding the core subject.
3. Extract exactly [Viewpoint Count] disruptive viewpoints from the [Content]
that directly contradict these common sense beliefs (counter-cognitive points).
4. For each identified viewpoint, systematically detail:
- **The Conventional Wisdom**: What the public typically believes.
- **The Contrarian View**: What the author argues instead.
- **The Underlying Logic**: A brief explanation of the author's rationale.
- **The Disruption Factor**: Why this contrast is compelling and
how it grabs attention.
## Format & Constraints
- Present the final analysis adhering strictly to the specified [Output Format].
- Ensure the tone is analytical, objective, yet highly engaging.
- Do not hallucinate or invent viewpoints; strictly derive all insights
from the [Content].
- Maintain separation between instructions and the data being analyzed.
## Input Data
- Content: {{content}}
- Target Audience: {{target_audience}}
- Viewpoint Count: {{viewpoint_count}}
- Output Format: {{output_format}}
Most prompt templates collapse all instructions and data into a single block. This one deliberately separates them. The Persona & Context
section fires first, establishing a consistent interpretive frame before the model ever sees the raw content. The Instructions & Steps
section provides an ordered procedure, not a suggestion. The Format & Constraints
section closes off the hallucination escape hatch that collapses most content prompts: the model is explicitly told it cannot invent viewpoints.
The {{double-brace}}
variable syntax signals clearly where your input starts and the system's logic ends. When you paste this into a chat interface or a workflow tool, you replace those placeholders with the actual article, the audience type, and how many viewpoints you want. The separation is not cosmetic — it materially reduces the model's tendency to blend your source material with its own training-data assumptions.
Author's Comment:I originally built this for newsletter writing, where I needed to find the one counterintuitive angle in a 5,000-word research paper that my audience would actually want to discuss. The "Disruption Factor" field turned out to be the most valuable output — not because it tells youwhatto write, but because it tells youwhya specific contrast will land with a specific audience.
The four-field structure per viewpoint gives you four different content assets from a single pass:
Conventional Wisdom → Contrarian View is your hook. The "everybody thinks X, but this paper argues Y" structure works in Twitter threads, newsletter subject lines, LinkedIn opening lines, and article titles. You don't need to embellish it — the raw contrast does the work.
The Underlying Logic is your body section. It gives you the author's actual argument chain, which you need to write anything more substantial than a one-liner. If you're producing a 1,500-word piece, this is the scaffolding.
The Disruption Factor is your distribution signal. It tells you which platform to prioritize and which audience segment will engage most strongly. A disruption rooted in professional identity plays differently on LinkedIn than one rooted in technical anxiety plays on Hacker News.
Running this prompt on three or four different pieces simultaneously gives you a week's worth of distinct angles in about thirty minutes. More importantly, those angles are grounded — they trace back to actual source material, which means you're not manufacturing controversy, you're surfacing it.
The prompt works. The harder discipline is fighting your instinct to soften the contrarian framing before you publish it.
A common failure pattern: the AI surfaces a sharp, uncomfortable contrast between conventional wisdom and an author's argument. The writer then edits the hook to make it "more balanced" and "more fair to both sides." The result is a piece that reads like everything else in the feed.
If the source material genuinely supports the contrarian view, the framing is not irresponsible — it is accurate. The goal is not provocation for its own sake. The goal is precision: saying exactly what the author argued, in the sharpest possible terms, to an audience who holds the opposite assumption.
That is a harder skill than prompt engineering. The prompt is just the retrieval mechanism.
Practical Pitfall: Watch the "Viewpoint Count" parameter.Ask for five viewpoints from a short article and the model will start fabricating. Two to three is the right ceiling for most content under 3,000 words. For long-form research papers or book chapters, four is reasonable. Beyond that, the quality degrades fast.
A prompt this structured — with distinct sections, multiple parameters, and a specific analytical persona — is worth preserving. Pasting it into a chat window every time you need it introduces copy errors and drift. Over a few weeks of casual editing, the carefully tuned Format & Constraints
block tends to get abbreviated, and then results get noticeably sloppier.
Prompt Vault solves this directly. It's a local, privacy-first prompt manager that stores your templates in-browser, supports {{variable}}
syntax for parameterized prompts, and lets you fill in placeholders with one click before copying to any AI interface. The Cognitive Analyst prompt above maps exactly to Prompt Vault's variable system: {{content}}
, {{target_audience}}
, {{viewpoint_count}}
, and {{output_format}}
become interactive fields that you fill out fresh each run without ever touching the underlying template structure.
The practical benefit: the prompt stays intact, and you stop burning cognitive overhead on template management. You can try it at Prompt Vault.
This prompt sits in the middle of a larger workflow, not at the end of one. The contrarian viewpoints it surfaces are raw material — they still need to be shaped into the format appropriate for your output channel.
If you're writing for a blog, the best use of these outputs is as hooks for pieces that then go deeper into the underlying logic. If you're working in social formats, each Conventional Wisdom → Contrarian View
pair is essentially a standalone thread opener. For newsletters, the Disruption Factor field often tells you which one of your three or four viewpoints will drive the most replies.
The limiting factor is usually not idea generation — it's knowing which type of emotional response each angle is engineered to trigger. For that layer, the breakdown in 5 Emotion Triggers of Viral Titles: Engineer CTR With AI is the cleanest framework I've found for mapping contrarian angles to the specific neuroscience-backed emotion that makes them shareable. The two approaches compose well: the Cognitive Analyst gives you the what, and the emotion trigger framework tells you the why for each platform.
This is not a system for generating fake controversy. Every viewpoint the prompt extracts must be derivable from the source material — the Format & Constraints
section makes that explicit. If the model starts inventing contrarian views that aren't in the content, the output fails the basic test: it's not grounded, it's hallucinated.
The discipline is to run the prompt on content that genuinely contains interesting friction — authors who argue something uncommon, research that contradicts intuition, practitioners who document what the theory gets wrong. Not every piece of content has good contrarian angles. That's fine. Three pieces a week that do are worth more than thirty that don't.
The AI is the analyst. You still have to choose the source material worth analyzing.
Run the Cognitive Analyst prompt on the last three articles you bookmarked but never finished reading. Not because they weren't good — because you ran out of time or attention. The prompt will tell you in under two minutes whether there's something worth writing about in each one.
If none of the three surfaces a contrarian angle worth using, they probably weren't that interesting to begin with. If one of them does, you have a piece to write this week that no one else is writing — because they're all still asking their AI to summarize the same content into agreement.