Free resource

AI Prompt Templates & Worksheets for Business Owners

Ready-to-use AI prompt templates and worksheets for common small business situations — follow-up emails, customer communication, operations planning, and more. Built around the B.R.I.E.F. framework.

Part of the free guide series · No account needed · Works with ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini

Most people get bad results from AI because they write bad prompts. Not because AI is hard — because vague questions get vague answers. The templates on this page are built on a simple idea: the more context and structure you give AI, the better the output you get.

This page gives you two things: the B.R.I.E.F. framework (for structuring any prompt) and ready-to-use prompt templates for situations that come up in every small business. Use them as-is or adapt them to your business.

If you want to go deeper — the AI Prompting Foundations guide walks through the full method with worked examples. This page is the quick-reference version.


The B.R.I.E.F. Framework: How to Write a Prompt That Actually Works

Every effective AI prompt has five components. Together they eliminate the ambiguity that produces generic, useless output. Fill in all five, and you will get a response you can actually use.

B
Background
The relevant situation for this specific request. Not your entire business history — just what AI needs to understand to answer this question. "I sent an estimate three days ago and have not heard back."
R
Request
Exactly what you are asking AI to do. A verb and an output. Not "help me with" but "write a," "summarize the," "list three," "rewrite this so it." Be specific about what you want produced.
I
Intent
Why this matters and what problem it solves. When AI understands the purpose behind the request, the output is better aligned with what you actually need. "The goal is to re-engage without coming across as desperate."
E
End Result
What a good answer looks like. Format, length, depth, structure. "A short paragraph I can send as a text message" is different from "a 3-email sequence with subject lines." Tell AI what you are going to do with this.
F
Focus
Constraints and things to avoid. Tone, audience, limits. "Keep it under 120 words," "sound like a real person not a marketing department," "do not mention price." Head off the most common failure modes before they happen.
The framework is a thinking tool, not just a prompting tool

If you cannot fill in "Intent," you do not know what you are trying to accomplish. If you cannot fill in "End Result," you cannot evaluate whether the answer is good. The discipline of filling in the framework is what separates people who get useful AI output from people who keep getting generic responses.


Ready-to-Use AI Prompt Templates

These templates use the B.R.I.E.F. structure. Replace the bracketed text with your specifics. They work with ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or any other AI chat tool.

Follow-up
Re-engaging a prospect who went quiet after an estimate
Background: I run [type of business]. I sent an estimate to [type of customer] [X days] ago and have not heard back. They seemed interested during the initial conversation. Request: Write a 3-step follow-up sequence I can use over text and email. Intent: I want to re-engage without being pushy. They probably did not say no — they are just busy or comparing options. End Result: Three short messages with timing suggestions. Include what each one is trying to accomplish. One text and two emails. Focus: Friendly and direct. No pressure tactics. Keep each message under 100 words. Sound like a real person, not a marketing department.
Swap in your specifics: business type, customer type, timeline. The more detail in the Background, the better the output.
Customer communication
Asking a happy customer for a review
Background: I run [type of business]. I just finished a job for a customer who expressed satisfaction. My Google rating is [X stars] and I want to improve it. Request: Write a short text message and email I can send asking for a Google review. Intent: I want to make it easy for them to say yes. Happy customers often mean to leave reviews but forget — I just need to make it frictionless. End Result: One text (under 80 words) and one email (under 150 words). Include the Google review link as [LINK] so I can fill it in. Focus: Warm and genuine. Do not sound desperate or scripted. Do not offer anything in exchange for the review.
Best sent within 24 hours of job completion when the positive experience is fresh.
Writing & content
Rewriting a business description or About page
Background: Here is my current business description: [paste current text]. I serve [target customer type] in [location or industry]. Request: Rewrite this to be clearer and more compelling. Intent: I want potential customers to immediately understand what I do, who I serve, and why I am the right choice. The current version is too generic. End Result: One version at 50 words (for Google listing or tagline) and one version at 150 words (for website or marketing materials). Focus: Plain, confident language. No buzzwords like "passionate" or "dedicated." Speak to what the customer cares about, not what I am proud of.
After getting the output, read it out loud. If it sounds like you, it is done. If it does not sound like you, tell AI: "That is too formal — make it sound more like [your actual voice]."
Operations
Creating a simple process or checklist
Background: I run [type of business]. One of my recurring processes is [describe the process — e.g. onboarding a new client, doing a site visit, closing a job]. Right now this process lives in my head and sometimes things get missed. Request: Turn this into a simple step-by-step checklist I can use every time. Intent: I want to make sure nothing falls through the cracks and any team member could follow this process without asking me. End Result: A numbered checklist with clear, plain-language steps. Group related steps into phases if it helps. Keep it on one page. Focus: Practical and specific. Do not include anything I would not actually do. Flag any steps where I would need to add details specific to my business.
This is one of the highest-value uses of AI for small business — turning tribal knowledge into a repeatable process takes 10 minutes instead of a full day.
Problem solving
Getting advice on a specific business problem
Background: [Describe your situation in 2-4 sentences. Include: what you do, who your customers are, and what the specific problem is.] Request: Before you answer, ask me 3 clarifying questions that would help you give me better advice. Then give me your best recommendation. Intent: I want specific, actionable advice — not general suggestions I could find anywhere. I need something I can actually act on this week. End Result: 3 questions first, then your recommendation in plain language with 2-3 concrete next steps. Focus: Be direct. Tell me what you actually think, including if there is something obvious I am probably missing. Do not soften your answer to avoid disagreeing with me.
The "ask me questions first" instruction produces dramatically better advice. It forces AI to surface what information it actually needs, and the questions often reveal what you had not fully thought through.

Business Context Worksheet

The templates above get better when AI already knows your business. Fill this out once, generate a summary, and paste it at the start of any AI session. It replaces five minutes of back-and-forth context-setting every time.

Your industry, what you sell or do, and how long you have been operating. One to three sentences.
Demographics and what they care about. What makes them easy — or hard — to work with.
Where is your business strong? What do customers consistently compliment?
Where does the business slow down, break, or cost more time and money than it should?
Main lead sources and roughly what percentage comes from each.
CRM, scheduling, invoicing, communication tools. Also note what you are paying for but not really using.
One or two specific, concrete outcomes — not "grow my business" but an actual number or behavior change.
How to use this summary

Copy the generated summary and paste it at the start of any AI conversation: "Here is context about my business: [paste summary]. I am going to ask you some questions — use this to give me relevant answers." Then use one of the prompt templates above.


Where to go from here

These templates and worksheets are a starting point. Once they become automatic, the next level is building a more complete prompt architecture — context that goes deeper, frameworks that fit your specific workflows, and a system you can reuse across everything you do with AI.

Free guide
AI Prompting Foundations
The full B.R.I.E.F. method with worked examples, timing framework, and interactive worksheet.
Paid guide — $69
The Prompt Architecture
The complete prompting system — deeper context framework, 5 business-specific templates, before/after comparisons, cheat sheet.