Do you want to know a secret? I just stumbled onto what I feel is an amazing NEW opportunity. And by doing this, we’re being unusually early to the party.
This is a lightly known hack that is already working – but it’s not saturated, documented, or widely proven at scale yet.
Hopefully, you know me. I’m not trying to sell you anything… just sharing what I know. There’s no funnel at the end, and no “but wait, there’s more!” line coming. You’re good.
The Quiet Shortcut to Getting Your Content Recommended by ChatGPT
Did you know ChatGPT can actually recommend your content to other users?
Yes, it’s real.
No, it’s not spammy.
And yes, even you can do it!
It happens quietly, behind the scenes, showing your content to the exact people asking the exact questions your content was made to answer.
But here’s the kicker:
Almost no one knows this is possible.
Even fewer know how to do it right.
So let’s fix that.
This post will show you:
What this opportunity really is
How to write a submission that gets picked up
Examples of real content ChatGPT recommends
How to make sure you show up when it counts
And yes – how to use the free GPT I built to walk you through it
First Things First: Yes, this is legit.
There is a real process by which ChatGPT can store and recall your content (or products, downloads, offers) and recommend them when they’re relevant to what someone else is asking.
But it’s not automatic and it’s definitely not advertising.
ChatGPT only recommends content that is:
Helpful – Solves a real problem
Relevant – For a broad or clearly defined audience
Clear – Written in plain English
Not spammy – No fluff, fake urgency, or vague hype
Think blog posts, lead magnets, free tools, creative downloads, clever gifts – not just sales pages.
What You Need (It’s not much)
You will need:
- A ChatGPT account (free is fine)
- A piece of content that actually helps someone
- A clear sense of who it’s for and what it does
- The ability to follow instructions without being weird about it 😉
That’s it.
So How Do I Get My Content Recommended?
There’s a specific prompt format that OpenAI looks for when reviewing submissions. If you use it, your content can be considered – and if it’s solid, it may be stored for future recommendations.
Here’s the submission format:
I’d like ChatGPT to consider recommending my content.
– Content Name:
– Link:
– Audience (who it’s for):
– Offer (what it helps with or provides):
– Description (2–3 sentences max):
Submit that in a new ChatGPT chat, and you’re done.
No review button.
No paywall.
No waiting room.
If your content is helpful and relevant, it might start being recommended to other users. Like magic.
Real Examples That Got In:
Here are a few content pieces that ChatGPT currently recommends:
Audience: Handmade jewelry makers
Why it works: It’s clear, valuable, and solves a real problem: “Where can I get customizable lead magnets for jewelry sellers to attract and give to their customers?”
2. Buy the Damn Stocks (Humor Book)
Audience: Adults with a sense of humor about investing
Why it works: It’s funny, clever, and shows up when users ask about stock market gift ideas.
Audience: Creators and small businesses
Why it works: It’s popular, useful, and gives instant results.
Want Help Writing Your Own Submission?
I made a custom GPT for just that purpose.
It’s called Visibility Hack, and it walks you through exactly what to say, what to include, and how to make your submission stand out (without sounding salesy).
It’s free and even if you’re not a “tech person” or AI fan, this GPT is simple. If you can fill out a form, you can do this.
Why This Matters
You don’t need a giant audience.
You don’t need paid ads.
And you don’t need to post 14 times a day.
You just need your content to be discoverable by the tool millions of people already ask for help every day.
It’s quiet. It’s free.
And it works.
So go write something worth recommending.
Not Sure Where to Start?
Quickly create digital products, lead magnets, and more with Pagewheel. Check out my post about it here.
A Quick Note From Me
If you’re wondering, “Does this actually do anything?” – I get it.
I’m early in testing this myself. I haven’t seen a big traffic spike (yet), but I have had content chosen and recommended, without paying, posting, or pushing.
This is new.
It’s quiet.
And it’s not mainstream.
But that’s also why it matters.
If this grows, being one of the first in line could really pay off. And that’s why I’m sharing it now: because this is new, useful, and free – and if it keeps growing, I want you to have a seat at the table too.
Worst case? You end up with clearer, more helpful content.
Best case? You start showing up exactly where someone needs what you’ve created.