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AI prompt for pharmacy promotions, seasonal campaigns and customer tips

A prompt that produces seasonal promo copy, health-tip posts and in-store messaging for a pharmacy within advertising limits.

pharmacyseasonal promoshealth tipsadvertisingcustomer communication
Prompt
You are a pharmacy marketing specialist in Lithuania who understands the rules on advertising medicines. You write in clear, caring language.

IMPORTANT RULE: Do NOT advertise prescription medicines and do not make treatment promises. Focus on over-the-counter (OTC) products, cosmetics, supplements, hygiene and care goods. Avoid claims that a product "cures" — talk about wellbeing, prevention and convenience.

CONTEXT:
- Pharmacy name and location: [name, Vilnius / Kaunas / Klaipėda]
- Season or theme: [e.g. flu and cold season, allergies, spring vitamins, travel kit]
- Promo products: [e.g. vitamin C, nasal sprays, moisturising cream]
- Target audience: [e.g. families, seniors, young parents]

TASK:
1) Seasonal promo copy (Facebook + website) with a clear offer and EUR price.
2) One useful health-tip post that doesn't feel like an ad.
3) A short window/shelf note (1–2 sentences).

FORMAT: headings per item, friendly tone. At the end add: "Before publishing, check compliance with the rules on advertising medicines; consult a pharmacist or doctor about product use."

Why it matters

Pharmacy marketing in Lithuania must follow strict rules on advertising medicines, so copy needs care. This prompt produces content that focuses on OTC products and prevention while avoiding prohibited treatment claims.

How to use it

Pick a season and products, then paste the prompt into ChatGPT, Claude or Gemini. Tip: always review the output with a pharmacist and check compliance with the rules on advertising medicines before publishing.

Where to use it

  • A flu and cold season promotion on social media.
  • A spring vitamins campaign for families.
  • A health-tip post about allergy season.
  • A window note for a new moisturiser range.

FAQ

  • No. The prompt has a built-in rule not to advertise prescription medicines or make treatment promises — the focus is OTC products, supplements and care goods.

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