Showing 208 prompts
Write a Professional Bio for an Internal Company Profile
Act as a professional bio writer. I need to write a bio for my company's internal directory, intranet, or team introduction page. I am a [CURRENT_ROLE] in [DEPARTMENT] with [YEARS] years at [COMPANY_NAME]. My main responsibilities are [MAIN_RESPONSIBILITIES] and outside work I enjoy [PERSONAL_INTEREST]. Write a bio (under 120 words) that is professional but human — colleagues should feel they know me a little and understand what I do. Include a fun or personal detail that makes me approachable.
Write an Email Pushing Back on an Unreasonable Request
Act as an assertive communication coach. My [REQUESTER_TYPE] has asked me to [UNREASONABLE_REQUEST] and this is unreasonable because [REASON]. I want to push back professionally without damaging the relationship or appearing uncooperative. Write an email that: acknowledges the request and the underlying need, explains my constraint clearly without over-apologising, proposes an alternative or partial solution, and invites a conversation to find a workable path forward. Assertive and constructive — not passive or aggressive. Under 180 words.
Write a Thank You Message to a Colleague or Team
You are a workplace culture and communications coach. I want to write a genuine thank you message to [RECIPIENT_NAME_OR_TEAM] for [SPECIFIC_CONTRIBUTION]. The impact of their contribution was [IMPACT]. Write 3 versions: a brief Slack message (under 50 words), a personal email (under 120 words), and a public recognition message suitable for a team meeting or company channel (under 80 words). Each should be specific about what they did and why it mattered — not a generic 'great work' message.
Write a Cold Internal Email to a Cross-Functional Team
Act as an internal communications strategist. I need to email [DEPARTMENT_NAME] — a team I have no prior relationship with — to request [WHAT_I_NEED] for [PURPOSE]. My project is [PROJECT_CONTEXT]. Write a cold internal email that: establishes quick context (who I am and why I am reaching out), makes a specific and reasonable ask, explains the benefit or urgency without being demanding, and makes it easy for them to respond or escalate internally. Under 160 words. Warm and collegial.
Write a Response to a Complaint Email From a Client
You are a client relations communications coach. I have received this complaint email from a client: [COMPLAINT_EMAIL]. The facts of the situation are: [ACTUAL_FACTS]. Write a professional response that: acknowledges their experience without admitting liability where inappropriate, expresses genuine empathy, provides a clear explanation or resolution, outlines the next step or remedy, and closes in a way that rebuilds confidence. Under 220 words. Tone: calm, accountable, and client-centric.
Manage Email Overload With Smart Templates
Act as a productivity and communications coach. I receive approximately [NUMBER] emails per day and spend [HOURS] hours a day on email. The most common types of emails I send repeatedly are: [COMMON_EMAIL_TYPES]. Create a set of 5 smart email templates I can use with minimal personalisation for the most frequent scenarios. Each template should have: a subject line formula, a 3-part structure (context, content, close), and clear [PLACEHOLDER] markers I can fill in within 60 seconds. Templates should sound human, not automated.
Write a Compelling Executive Summary Slide
Act as a business communication specialist. I need to write an executive summary slide for a presentation on [PRESENTATION_TOPIC] to [AUDIENCE_TYPE]. The full presentation covers: [FULL_PRESENTATION_SUMMARY]. The single most important message is: [KEY_MESSAGE]. Write the content for a one-slide executive summary that: contains no more than 5 bullet points, each under 12 words, leads with the recommendation or conclusion (not the background), uses language that resonates with a [AUDIENCE_LEVEL] audience, and could stand alone if the rest of the deck was not seen.
Prepare for Tough Questions After a Presentation
Act as a presentation preparation coach. I am delivering a presentation on [PRESENTATION_TOPIC] to [AUDIENCE_TYPE] and I want to prepare for the toughest questions they might ask. Based on my content summary: [CONTENT_SUMMARY], generate the 8 most challenging questions a sceptical audience member might ask, provide a strong, evidence-based response framework for each, advise on how to handle a question I genuinely do not know the answer to, and give me a phrase to use when I need time to think before responding.
Write a Meeting Minutes Template
You are a business documentation specialist. I need a reusable meeting minutes template for [MEETING_TYPE] meetings attended by [TYPICAL_ATTENDEES]. Design a clean, professional minutes template that captures: meeting metadata (date, attendees, facilitator), agenda items with discussion summaries, decisions made with rationale, action items with owner and deadline, items parked for follow-up, and next meeting details. The template should be completable during the meeting itself and take under 5 minutes to finalise and distribute afterward.
Request Feedback From Your Manager or Peers
You are a professional development coach. I want to proactively request feedback from [FEEDBACK_SOURCE] (my manager, peer, or client) on [SPECIFIC_AREA]. I want feedback that is genuinely useful — not vague reassurance. Write a feedback request message that: gives specific context so they can give targeted feedback, asks 2–3 precise questions (not 'any feedback?'), signals that I am genuinely open to honest input, and makes it easy for them to respond in under 10 minutes. Also write the follow-up message to send after I receive the feedback.
Write Your Own Performance Self-Review
You are a career performance coach. I need to write my self-review for my annual performance appraisal. My role is [CURRENT_ROLE] and my key achievements this year are [KEY_ACHIEVEMENTS]. My development areas are [DEVELOPMENT_AREAS] and my goals for next year are [NEXT_YEAR_GOALS]. Write a compelling self-review that: leads with impact not activity, uses specific numbers and outcomes wherever possible, is honest about development areas without underselling the progress made, and positions my goals as ambitious but achievable. Under 400 words. Confident but not arrogant.
Give Upward Feedback to Your Manager
You are a professional communication coach. I want to give feedback to my manager [MANAGER_NAME] about [FEEDBACK_TOPIC] which is impacting my ability to [WORK_IMPACT]. This feels risky because [CONCERN]. Help me plan and script a conversation that: frames this as a request not a complaint, uses factual and impact-based language, makes a specific and reasonable ask for change, and respects the power dynamic while still being direct. Write a script for how to open this conversation and how to handle 2 likely defensive responses.