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Asking an AI to rewrite an email is not a workflow. It is a one-off trick. A workflow is a repeatable sequence: the same inputs, the same prompt structure, the same output format, run the same way every time. The difference matters. One-off prompts save a minute here and there. A workflow you actually stick with restructures your week.
Below are five workflows built for account management. Each one lists the exact steps, what you feed the AI, and what you get back. Pick one. Run it every day, or every week depending on the cadence, for a full week before adding a second. Stacking all five on day one is how workflows get abandoned by day three.
This is for Monday mornings when you open your CRM, scan a wall of accounts, and try to figure out where to start. The workflow turns a 45 to 60 minute session of manual scanning and mental prioritization into a focused 20-minute routine that ends with a prioritized action list and a 3-bullet summary ready for your manager. Once it is a habit, you stop spending half of Monday morning deciding what to work on.
What it replaces: 45-60 minutes of manual CRM scanning and mental prioritization with a focused 20-minute routine
Back-to-back calls with no prep time is where this pays off. You pull your notes, tickets, and usage data, paste them into a single prompt, and get a one-page brief with talking points and landmines in under 5 minutes instead of 20 to 25. At 5 calls a day, that is 75 to 100 minutes back in your schedule, every day.
What it replaces: Reduces pre-call prep from 20-25 minutes to under 5 minutes per call. For 5 calls per day, that's 75-100 minutes saved daily.
The follow-up email that sits in drafts for three hours is a reliability problem. This workflow takes your call notes, generates a structured follow-up with verified action items, and gets it sent within two hours of the meeting. What used to take 15 to 20 minutes per meeting is done in under 5, and sending faster signals to the client that you are on top of it.
What it replaces: Follow-up emails that used to take 15-20 minutes per meeting done in under 5 minutes. Sending faster also signals professionalism and reliability.
The full guide walks through every workflow with complete prompt templates. Get it for $29.
QBR prep tends to eat a full day: pulling metrics, writing narratives, building slides, then second-guessing the structure. This workflow compresses that to about 2 hours by generating the outline and section narratives from your exported data, then running the finished deck through a client-perspective review pass. For 5 quarterly accounts, teams report saving 30 or more hours per quarter.
What it replaces: Teams report cutting QBR creation from a full day to 2 hours. For 5 quarterly accounts, that's 30+ hours saved per quarter.
Renewals that sneak up at 30 days out are hard to save. This workflow starts the process at 120 days with automated project creation, then layers in AI-generated health summaries, proposal drafts, and objection prep at set intervals. It moves renewal management from reactive to proactive, catching at-risk accounts 90 days out instead of 30.
What it replaces: Systematizes renewals so nothing falls through the cracks. Moves renewal management from reactive to proactive, catching at-risk accounts 90 days out instead of 30.
The full Account Manager guide goes much further: 18 copy-paste prompts, honest reviews of 12 tools with current prices, a dos and don'ts chapter, and a 30-day plan to put it all into practice.
Get the full guide. $29One-time purchase. Instant download. Or see the full AI guide for account managers.