top of page
Search

This Underrated ChatGPT Infographic Prompt Saved Me Hours (Try It Once)

  • Writer: MyGoodStack
    MyGoodStack
  • Jul 13
  • 2 min read

Updated: 4 days ago


Ever stare at a blank screen thinking, “There’s got to be a faster way to summarize this page”?

Same.


We all know ChatGPT is powerful, but sometimes we forget how simple prompts can unlock big results. This one’s been a game-changer.


The Problem: Too Much Info, Not Enough Time


Let’s say you’re researching a website for ideas, insights, or content. It could be a landing page, blog post, or even a product page. You want the key points fast, but without wading through every word.


You could skim and hope you catch the main ideas. Or copy chunks into ChatGPT and ask for a summary. But that’s clunky.


Here’s what works better.



This ChatGPT Infographic Prompt That Actually Works


I asked ChatGPT:


“Summarize this website as an infographic. Use clear headings and bullet points. Make it easy to turn into a visual.”


That’s it. Simple, right?


But the result? Super structured, readable, and ready to use. You can drop it into design tools like Canva, Notion, or even turn it into a carousel post.


And it’s not limited to just websites. You can use the same prompt for blog posts, reports, guides, and tutorials.



Want to know which prompts actually work (and which are just myths)? See this breakdown of real ChatGPT prompt myths.



A Real Example: Mindful.org



This is a long beginner’s guide to mindfulness. Instead of reading all 2,000+ words, here’s what this ChatGPT Infographic prompt gave me in seconds.


“Infographic listing 12 mindfulness meditation benefits, summarizing key points from Mindful.org, created using a ChatGPT infographic prompt

That’s clean. That’s scannable. And most importantly, it saves time without losing value.



Why This Prompt Works So Well


When you frame your prompt around visuals, ChatGPT naturally breaks the info into digestible parts:


  • Clear sections with headlines

  • Bullet points that are easy to design

  • Language that fits slide decks or infographics


It’s not just summarizing. It’s structuring.



How You Can Use It Right Away


Here are a few ways to put this into action:


  • Research competitors and summarize their sites

  • Turn long blog posts into bite-sized visual posts

  • Grab ideas from tutorials and format them into guides

  • Convert product pages into visual cheat sheets


And if you’re short on time? This trick will do the heavy lifting in seconds.



Try It with Your Own Link


Next time you’re reading something useful but long, copy the URL and try this:


“Summarize this website as an infographic. Use clear headers and bullet points. Make it useful for a visual format.”


You’ll get back something that’s not just easier to read, but easier to use.



Your Turn


Found this helpful? Try it with a site you like and see what comes back.


Want more time-saving AI tricks?

Join MyGoodStack for weekly tools and tips that actually work — no fluff, no hype.

bottom of page