How To Make $300 a Week w/ ChatGPT

Here’s how I turned my ChatGPT into an automated website builder that sells to clients.

All Steps & Prompts Below

⤷ Step 1: Find Local Businesses

Use ChatGPT to help you research businesses in your area that don’t have websites or are using outdated ones.

This instantly builds a list of real businesses that are highly likely to need your service, saving hours of manual research.

⤷ Prompts included in comments below for easy copy paste.

⤷ Step 2: Build a Detailed Business Profile

Generate a professional profile for each business with site recommendations and branding insights.

👍Pros : This structured document will help create the website and better understand the needs of your client.

⤷ Step 3: Build the Website With ChatGPT + Replit (optional)

Use the business profile to create a functional, modern site.

👍Pros : The prompt ensures that the site is modern and up to date with tailwindcss styling.

Additional Tips:

Use Replit to build your demo sites, and share the link with business owners to show them live examples.

⤷ Step 4: Pitch and Sell the Website

Create a script for contacting businesses and selling their new site.

This copy and paste method provides a template you can tweak when contacting and selling to your business.

⤷ Check out all the finals for you to copy and paste to use in the comments below.

With ChatGPT, you’re now a one-person agency. Small businesses pay for fast, clean websites—especially if you find ones without any online presence. Just give them a call!

#chatgptprompts #lemon8challenge #moneyhacks #chatgpt #makemoneyonline

2025/7/22 Edited to

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Madelyn Zeigler's images
Madelyn Zeigler

@BowserBen1105

Deft Point Consulting's images
Deft Point ConsultingCreator

Step 1: Act as a business researcher and data analyst. Search Google for local businesses in [your city] across categories like restaurants, salons, gyms, and shops. For each business, perform the following: 1. Check if they have a website listed on Google or their social media profiles. 2. If a website is found, visit it and assess if it looks outdated (e.g., poor mobile responsiveness, outdated design, broken links). 3. Double-check with a secondary search using: ‘[business name] website’ to confirm website presence or absence. Return a detailed table with: Business Name, Address, Phone Number, Category, Website Status (No Website / Outdated / Good), and Notes (e.g., “Facebook page only” or “site loads slow”). Once at least 10 businesses with no website or outdated sites are identified, compile this list into a downloadable Excel (.xlsx) file with columns: Business Name, Address, Phone Number, Category, Website Status, and Notes.

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