AI Communications

25 Prompts for Building PR Tools in Lovable

Editorial TeamBy Editorial Team6 min read
25 prompts for creating pr tools in lovable explained
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Lovable builds from a description. The quality of what you get back depends on the quality of the prompt you give it.

Below are twenty-five prompts a communications team can paste directly into Lovable to build real tools. Each one is a complete starting point. Lovable will generate the first version; you refine it by conversation from there.

> Quick answer. These twenty-five Lovable prompts let communications teams build real web tools — press rooms, campaign microsites, crisis hubs, investor relations pages, and internal trackers — without a developer. Each prompt is a complete, copy-paste starting point. Paste it into Lovable, adjust the specifics to your brand, and refine the result by conversation.

A note before you start: a strong first prompt names the purpose, the sections, the primary action, and the look. Vague prompts produce vague sites. Every prompt here is built that way — copy it, adjust the specifics to your brand, and run it.

Press & media tools

1. Corporate press room

> Build a corporate press room with a press release list in reverse chronological order, individual pages for each release, an executives section with photos and bios, a downloadable company fact sheet, a brand assets section, and a media contact section with a working contact form. Clean, professional, easy to scan. Add a search bar for releases.

2. Media contact portal

> Build a media contact portal where journalists can submit interview and information requests. Include a form for name, outlet, deadline, and request details, routed to a media relations inbox. Show our key contacts with names, titles, and email addresses below the form.

3. Digital media kit

> Build a digital media kit page with the company logo in multiple formats, brand colors, executive headshots, product images, a boilerplate description, and key company facts — all downloadable. Organized, branded, fast.

4. Press release archive with search

> Build a searchable press release archive. Each release has a title, date, summary, and full text on its own page. Add filters by year and by topic, and a search bar.

5. Coverage highlights page

> Build a press coverage page that displays selected media coverage as cards with the outlet name, headline, date, and a link to the original article. Add a filter by outlet and by year.

Campaign tools

6. Product launch microsite

> Build a single-page product launch microsite. Hero section with headline, subheadline, and one call-to-action button; a three-item feature section; a founder quote; a press logo strip; and an email signup form as the primary goal. Modern, clean, lots of white space.

7. Campaign landing page with lead capture

> Build a campaign landing page with a strong hero, a short value section, and a lead capture form collecting name, email, and company. The form is the primary goal. Add a thank-you state after submission.

8. Gated research download page

> Build a landing page offering a research report download. Include a summary of the report's findings, three highlighted statistics, and a form that collects name and email before unlocking the download.

9. Live campaign dashboard

> Build a campaign results dashboard showing key metrics as large clear numbers — media placements, total reach, engagement, and key wins — with a section for highlighted coverage. Designed for a client or executive to open at any time.

10. Event registration page

> Build an event page with event details, date, location, an agenda section, a speakers section with photos and bios, and a registration form. The registration form is the primary action.

11. Petition or pledge page

> Build a single-purpose advocacy page with a clear headline stating the cause, a short explanation, a running count of supporters, and a form to sign on with name and email.

Crisis & reputation tools

12. Crisis communications hub

> Build a crisis response hub with the official company statement at the top, a frequently-asked-questions section, a section for factual corrections, a media contact, and a running updates feed with timestamps. Calm, clear, fast to read.

13. Statement page

> Build a clean single-page site that displays an official company statement with a clear headline, the statement text, the date and time it was issued, and a media contact. No clutter — the statement is the entire page.

14. Fact-correction page

> Build a page that addresses inaccurate claims. For each item, show the claim and then the verified fact, side by side, clearly labeled. Add a media contact at the bottom.

15. Issue FAQ hub

> Build a frequently-asked-questions hub on a specific issue. Group questions by theme, make each one expandable, and write answers in plain, direct language. Add a search bar.

Investor relations tools

16. Investor relations page

> Build an investor relations page with sections for company financial highlights, leadership, key facts, downloadable documents, and an investor contact. Professional, clean, easy to navigate.

17. Earnings hub

> Build an earnings hub that displays the latest quarterly results, a summary of key figures as clear numbers, links to download the full materials, and an investor contact. Add an archive of prior quarters.

18. Shareholder resource center

> Build a shareholder resource page with key dates, downloadable documents, a frequently-asked-questions section, and a contact for investor inquiries.

Internal & measurement tools

19. Executive visibility tracker

> Build an internal dashboard to track an executive's media presence. Let me add entries with outlet, headline, date, type of mention, and a link. Show totals and a simple month-over-month view.

20. Media coverage log

> Build an internal media coverage log where I can add each placement with outlet, headline, date, journalist, sentiment, and a link. Add filters by outlet, by date, and by sentiment, and show a summary count at the top.

21. Campaign reporting tool

> Build an internal tool to log campaign results. Let me enter placements, reach, and engagement, and have it display running totals and a simple summary view I can screenshot for a client report.

22. Editorial calendar

> Build a content calendar where I can add planned content with a title, date, channel, owner, and status. Show it as a calendar view and a list view, with filters by channel and status.

23. Media list manager

> Build an internal media database where I can add journalists with name, outlet, beat, email, and notes. Add search and filters by outlet and by beat. (Note: keep this internal — it holds contact data.)

24. Spokesperson briefing hub

> Build an internal briefing page for a spokesperson ahead of an interview. Include the key messages, approved talking points, likely questions with suggested answers, and background facts. Clean and fast to read on a phone.

25. Awards and recognition tracker

> Build an internal tracker for industry awards and recognition. Let me add each item with the award name, date, status, deadline, and notes, and show upcoming deadlines at the top.

How to iterate from here

Every prompt above produces a first version. The build happens in the refinement:

  • "Match the brand — use these colors and this font."

  • "Move the contact form higher."

  • "Make this work well on mobile."

  • "Add structured data so this page is readable by search and AI engines."

And before anything goes public: test every form end to end, check it on a phone, add privacy and cookie language, and — for public-facing tools — confirm it is structured to be found and cited by AI engines. Building the tool is fast. Making it work, and making it visible, is the job. (More: How AI-Generated Landing Pages Affect SEO and GEO.)

Continue:

Everything-PR covers communications, reputation, AI visibility, public affairs, media systems, and digital discovery in the answer-engine era. Publishing since 2009. Thirty verticals. Original reporting, research, and analysis. Every page reported, sourced, and built to be cited.

Editorial Team
Written by
Editorial Team

The Everything-PR Editorial Team produces reporting, research, and analysis across thirty verticals — communications, reputation, AI visibility, public affairs, media systems, and digital discovery in the answer-engine era. Publishing since 2009.

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