Independently researched from published sources. Last researched: April 2026. Results vary: this article teaches AI skills, not employment outcomes. See Terms and Privacy.
Many EAs who try AI start with a one-off prompt. Paste an email, get a draft. That helps once. A workflow is different: a fixed sequence of steps you run the same way each time, with specific prompts at each stage. The time savings compound because you stop reinventing the process every morning.
The five workflows below cover the tasks that eat the most EA hours: morning prep, inbox management, meeting briefings, weekly summaries, and board meeting packages. Each one lists exact steps and the time it replaces.
Pick one. Run it for a full week before adding another. The habit matters more than the tool. One ground rule first: check your company's AI policy, and keep confidential material out of public AI tools unless you have anonymised it.
Every EA knows the morning where the calendar is a mess, the inbox is overflowing, and your executive walks in asking what's first. This routine replaces that reactive scramble with three fixed blocks: a calendar scan, an inbox triage pass, and a short daily brief. Once it's habit, your executive is briefed before their first meeting and you start the day ahead of it instead of chasing it.
What it replaces: 60-90 minutes of reactive morning scrambling with a focused 20-minute routine that has your executive prepared before their first meeting.
Meeting prep is invisible work until your executive walks into a room unprepared. This workflow makes prep repeatable: gather context, run the background research, generate the brief, then add the relationship history and sensitivities AI has no way of knowing. The real value is that every meeting gets the same level of prep, not just the high-profile ones.
What it replaces: Consistent, thorough meeting prep in 15 minutes that previously took 45 minutes of research and formatting. Your executive walks in prepared every time.
Email is the task that expands to fill whatever time you give it. This system swaps constant checking for two focused passes a day, with AI drafting replies you then read, personalise, and verify before sending. Your executive's inbox stays clean and responsive, and you stop context-switching between email and everything else on your list.
What it replaces: EA email management goes from 2+ hours of reactive inbox checking to 30 minutes of focused batch processing. Your executive's inbox stays clean and responsive.
The full guide walks through every workflow with complete prompt templates. Get it for $29.
The weekly summary is one of those deliverables that always takes longer than it should because you're compiling from five different sources and formatting from scratch. This workflow fixes the structure once, so each week is just gathering inputs and adding the context AI doesn't have: internal politics, shifting priorities, relationship dynamics. Quality stays consistent week to week, which matters when your executive relies on it to plan their week.
What it replaces: A polished weekly summary in 30 minutes that previously took 1.5-2 hours of compiling, formatting, and writing. Delivers consistent quality every week.
Board prep is high-stakes, detail-heavy work where one wrong number gets noticed. This system structures the collection, assembly, and distribution into defined blocks, and ends with a review pass that verifies every figure against source data. You get consistent, professional output every quarter without the scattered scramble.
What it replaces: Board meeting prep compressed from 2 full days of scattered work to 4 focused hours. Consistent, professional output every quarter.
The full Executive Assistant guide goes much further: 18 copy-paste prompts, honest reviews of 15 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 read more about what's inside.