Independently researched from published sources. Last researched: April 2026. Results vary: this article teaches AI skills, not employment outcomes. See Terms and Privacy.
Most people type something vague into ChatGPT and get something vague back. These prompts are different. Each one is structured with placeholders, output constraints, and formatting instructions so the result usually needs a quick edit, not a rebuild.
They come from independently researched prompt sets built for executive assistants specifically. Not generic productivity tips. Each prompt was written around the actual tasks EAs handle: agendas, briefing docs, tone-sensitive emails, long reports that need to become short ones.
Pick one that matches something on your plate right now. Replace the bracketed placeholders with your real details. Paste it into ChatGPT or any similar tool. You should have a usable first draft within a couple of minutes.
Building an agenda from scratch for every meeting is slow, and the result often misses something: discussion questions, time allocations, or a clear decisions section. This prompt forces all of those into the output and locks the total time to your meeting length, so you get a complete draft agenda instead of a loose outline.
How to use it: Replace the bracketed fields with your meeting type, duration, attendee list, and purpose. Paste into ChatGPT and review the time allocations before sending to attendees.
Your exec walks into a meeting cold, and you both look bad. This prompt builds a one-page briefing with the person's background, company facts, talking points, and likely questions, all under 400 words. The structure means your exec can scan it quickly and walk in prepared.
How to use it: Paste in whatever you have: LinkedIn profile notes, previous meeting history, recent news about the contact. The prompt will organise it into a scannable one-pager your exec can review on the way to the meeting.
You draft an email that says the right things but sounds wrong for the recipient. Rewriting tone from scratch can be surprisingly hard to do quickly. This prompt keeps your facts intact and only adjusts word choice, structure, and tone, with a built-in explanation of what changed and why.
How to use it: Paste your draft email, pick the tone you need (diplomatic, urgent, warm, concise), and describe the recipient. Use the explanation line at the bottom to sanity-check the changes before sending.
Finding these useful? The full guide has 18 of them, plus tool reviews and a 30-day plan. Get it for $29.
A 30-page report lands in your inbox and your exec needs the highlights by lunch. Summarising it yourself means reading the whole thing and deciding what matters. This prompt extracts key findings, pulls out every significant number, flags risks, and generates questions your exec should ask, all without adding opinions that aren't in the source.
How to use it: Paste the full document or its key sections into the prompt. Review the output against the original to confirm nothing was invented, then forward the summary to your exec.
Compiling a weekly summary means pulling from calendars, emails, meeting notes, and project updates. Without structure, you either write too much or miss something important. This prompt organises everything into six sections with a hard 300-word cap, designed to take two minutes to read.
How to use it: At the end of each week, paste in your calendar highlights, meeting outcomes, project updates, and open issues. Check the output against your inputs, then send it to your exec on Friday afternoon or Monday morning.
Follow-up emails after meetings often get delayed or forgotten because writing them feels like re-doing the meeting. This prompt takes your raw notes, decisions, and action items and produces a clean email with a specific subject line, numbered action items with owners and deadlines, and a strict instruction to include nothing that wasn't actually discussed.
How to use it: Paste your meeting notes, attendee list, and any decisions or action items immediately after the meeting. Read the draft against your notes, then send it within the hour while details are still fresh.
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.
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