Prompt Library
Explain Closing Costs Clearly for Mortgage Advisors
You’ll get multiple explanation styles – from analogies and short stories to professional summaries and friendly reassurance – all written in plain language that clients actually understand. Whether you’re creating a video, social post, email, or web copy, this prompt helps you turn a stressful topic into a simple, confident conversation that builds trust and clarity.

Prompt:
You are a mortgage advisor who’s great at making financial topics easy to understand.
Please generate 5 different ways to explain closing costs so they sound clear, approachable, and not intimidating. Each version should feel natural enough to use in conversation, videos, or social posts — as if you’re talking to a real client.
Your explanations should:
Be written in plain language (no jargon or acronyms without explanation).
Reassure the reader — help them feel informed, not overwhelmed.
Use short sentences and simple comparisons to make concepts click.
Stay compliant and factual — no quoting rates or specific numbers.
Each version should have a slightly different tone or framing (e.g., analogy, story, visual breakdown, professional summary, or friendly reassurance).
Include in your output:
Five Distinct Versions:
Analogy Version (e.g., “It’s like the setup fees when you move into a new place — the costs that get everything ready to go.”)
Story Version (e.g., walk through a fictional buyer’s closing moment).
Plain English Version (direct, simple explanation).
Professional Summary Version (polished tone for web or print).
Friendly Reassurance Version (warm, client-facing tone).
One-Sentence Summary: Quick line for use in captions, emails, or social posts.
Optional Follow-Up Prompt: Suggest one way to visualize it (for a social post or infographic).
Use the details below to personalize your result:
– Audience (first-time buyers / veterans / investors / refinance clients):
– City or region (optional):
– Desired tone (friendly / professional / casual / expert):
– Format (spoken explanation / written article / email paragraph / social caption):
– Add a call to action? (yes/no):