Showing 689 prompts
Turn a Data Analysis Into a Clear Narrative Report
You are a data communication specialist. I have completed an analysis with these key findings: [DATA_FINDINGS]. My audience is [NON_TECHNICAL_AUDIENCE] who are not data-literate. Write a narrative report that: translates each finding into plain-language insight, connects the data to the business question we are trying to answer, uses the most powerful number from each finding as an anchor, avoids jargon and passive voice throughout, and ends with 3 clear recommendations that follow logically from the data. Under 500 words.
Write an Internal Announcement for a New Initiative
Act as an internal communications writer. I am launching a new initiative: [INITIATIVE_NAME] aimed at [INITIATIVE_GOAL] for [TARGET_TEAM_OR_COMPANY]. The launch date is [LAUNCH_DATE] and the key people involved are [KEY_PEOPLE]. Write an internal announcement that: creates genuine excitement without hyperbole, explains clearly what is changing and what is not, tells people exactly what they need to do (if anything), provides a resource or contact for questions, and is appropriately concise for a company-wide communication. Under 250 words.
Write a Client-Facing Project Update Report
You are a client communications specialist. I need to send a project update to my client [CLIENT_NAME] for [PROJECT_NAME]. The project status is [STATUS] and the key progress this period is [KEY_PROGRESS]. There is one issue I need to flag: [ISSUE_TO_FLAG]. Next period's planned activities are [NEXT_ACTIVITIES]. Write a professional client update that: opens with the headline status clearly, presents progress positively but factually, addresses the issue honestly with a mitigation plan, and closes with clear next steps and milestones. Under 300 words. Confident and accountable.
Set Expectations With a New Client
Act as a client management communication coach. I have just onboarded a new client [CLIENT_NAME] for [SERVICE_OR_PROJECT]. I want to set clear expectations upfront to prevent misalignment later. Write a client onboarding communication that covers: the scope of what is and is not included, communication norms (how often, which channels, response times), how decisions and approvals will be handled, what success looks like and how it will be measured, and what I need from them to deliver successfully. Warm, professional, and confidence-inspiring. Under 350 words.
Write a Proposal Email to a Potential Client
You are a client proposal writing specialist. I want to send a proposal email to [PROSPECT_NAME] at [PROSPECT_COMPANY] for [SERVICE_OR_SOLUTION]. Their stated problem is [CLIENT_PROBLEM] and my solution is [MY_SOLUTION]. The investment is [PRICE_OR_RANGE]. Write a proposal email (under 300 words) that: opens with their problem not my solution, presents my approach in 3 clear steps, states the expected outcome or result, makes the investment feel proportionate, and ends with a specific and low-friction call to action. Confident, client-centric, and not salesy.
Write a Scope Change or Variation Request to a Client
You are a professional services communication specialist. Work has expanded beyond the original scope of [ORIGINAL_SCOPE] and I need to raise a scope change request with my client [CLIENT_NAME]. The additional work required is [ADDITIONAL_WORK] and the impact on timeline and cost is [IMPACT]. Write a scope change communication that: references the original scope agreement, describes the additional work factually, explains why this is out of scope, states the cost and timeline impact clearly, and invites a conversation rather than demanding approval. Professional and non-confrontational. Under 250 words.
Write a Workplace Wellness or Mental Health Check-In Message
You are a people management and wellbeing communication coach. I am concerned about [TEAM_MEMBER_DESCRIPTION] who has shown signs of [OBSERVED_SIGNS] (e.g. reduced engagement, increased absences, changes in behaviour). I want to check in with them in a way that is: genuine and caring, non-intrusive and non-clinical, opens the door without forcing conversation, and maintains professional boundaries. Write a brief check-in message (under 80 words) and a conversation opener if they agree to talk. Also advise when to involve HR.
Write a Concise Executive Briefing Document
Act as an executive communication specialist. I need to brief [EXECUTIVE_TITLE] on [BRIEFING_TOPIC] before a meeting in [TIME_AVAILABLE]. They have limited time and low tolerance for lengthy documents. Write a one-page executive briefing document covering: the situation in 2 sentences, 3 key facts or data points they must know, the decision or input required from them, the recommended course of action, and the risk of inaction. Every sentence must earn its place — eliminate all filler language.
Write a Newsletter for Internal Team Communication
You are an internal communications specialist. I want to create a regular internal team newsletter for [TEAM_NAME] sent [FREQUENCY]. The goal is to keep the team informed, connected, and engaged. Here are this issue's key items: [THIS_ISSUES_CONTENT]. Write a newsletter issue that: has a warm opening from me as the leader (2 sentences), covers team news in a scannable format, includes one learning or inspiration item, highlights a team member contribution, and ends with an upcoming dates section. Tone: human, direct, and energising. Under 400 words.
Write a Job Posting That Attracts the Right Candidates
Act as a talent attraction and employer branding specialist. I need to write a job posting for a [JOB_TITLE] role at [COMPANY_NAME]. The key responsibilities are [KEY_RESPONSIBILITIES], the must-have qualifications are [MUST_HAVES], and the nice-to-haves are [NICE_TO_HAVES]. Our culture can be described as [CULTURE_DESCRIPTION]. Write a job posting that: leads with what makes this role exciting (not a legal disclaimer), uses plain and inclusive language, separates must-haves from nice-to-haves clearly, describes the team and working environment honestly, and closes with a compelling reason to apply. Under 400 words.
Proofread and Elevate a Piece of Professional Writing
Act as a professional editor. Here is a piece of writing I have drafted: [DRAFT_WRITING]. It is a [DOCUMENT_TYPE] intended for [AUDIENCE_TYPE]. Review it and: correct any grammatical or punctuation errors, identify and fix sentences that are unclear or over-long, flag any passive voice that weakens the writing, suggest 3 specific word or phrase upgrades that increase impact, and assess the overall tone — is it appropriate for [AUDIENCE_TYPE]? Return the fully edited version followed by a brief editorial summary.
Draft an Internal Project Kickoff Meeting Agenda
Write a professional project kickoff meeting agenda for [PROJECT_NAME] involving [TEAM_MEMBERS]. The meeting will last [DURATION]. Ensure there's a section for goals, roles, risks, and next steps.