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Most product managers have tried pasting a question into ChatGPT or Claude and getting something back. That is a one-off prompt, not a workflow. The difference matters. A prompt gives you a single output you have to evaluate from scratch every time. A workflow gives you a sequence of steps you repeat, with AI handling the parts it is good at (first drafts, clustering, reformatting) and you handling the parts it is bad at (prioritisation, politics, judgment).
The five workflows below are drawn from how PMs actually use AI during a normal week. Each one lists concrete steps, the tools involved, and the kind of time difference you can expect once it is a habit. None of them require technical skills beyond copy and paste.
Pick one. Run it for a full week before adding another. A workflow only pays off once it becomes a habit, and habits form faster when you are not juggling five new processes at once.
This one pays off the moment you have a feature brief sitting in your queue and a stakeholder asking when the PRD will be ready. The workflow splits the work into what AI does well (structuring a first draft from raw context, stress-testing edge cases) and what only you can do: the prioritisation calls and the capacity constraints AI cannot see. Once it is a habit, PRD creation drops from 4-6 hours to about 30 minutes, and the edge case step means fewer surprises in engineering review.
What it replaces: PRD creation reduced from 4-6 hours to 30 minutes. A PM reported cutting PRD time by 60% using this workflow.
If you spend Monday or Friday writing slightly different status updates for executives, engineers, and sales, this workflow replaces that grind. It generates three audience-specific drafts from the same data pull, then you add the names, nuance, and sensitive framing AI cannot handle. The result can be 45 minutes of focused communication instead of 2-3 hours of repetitive writing, and fewer "what is the status?" messages in your Slack.
What it replaces: 2-3 hours of weekly status reporting with 45 minutes of focused communication. Eliminates 'what is the status?' Slack messages from stakeholders.
Synthesis is where interview data dies. You finish five interviews, mean to write up the themes, and three weeks later you still have not. This workflow can move you from transcripts to a stakeholder-ready deck in about an hour, instead of the 6-8 hours manual synthesis usually takes. AI clusters themes and extracts quotes without recency bias, so the last interview does not dominate your findings the way it tends to when you synthesise manually.
What it replaces: Synthesising 5+ user interviews reduced from a full day (6-8 hours) to about 1 hour. Themes are more consistent because AI does not suffer from recency bias.
The full guide walks through every workflow with complete prompt templates. Get it for $39.
The time sink in sprint planning is rarely the meeting itself. It is the missing acceptance criteria, the vague stories, and the "what does this story mean?" discussions that eat the clock. This workflow pre-drafts user stories with acceptance criteria and surfaces complexity factors before the room convenes. Planning meetings can drop from 2-3 hours to under an hour, and engineering estimates improve because stories arrive clearly defined.
What it replaces: Sprint planning meetings reduced from 2-3 hours to under 1 hour. Engineering estimates are more accurate because stories arrive with clear acceptance criteria.
Every release needs three sets of notes: customer-facing, internal for sales and support, and technical for API consumers. Writing them separately takes about 3 hours. This workflow generates all three from the same Jira export in 30 minutes, then you add the context AI cannot know, like which customers care about a specific fix and which support reps should reach out proactively.
What it replaces: Triple-audience release notes created in 30 minutes instead of 3 hours. Ensures sales, support, and customers all get the right level of detail without the PM writing three separate documents from scratch.
The full Product Manager guide goes much further: 17 copy-paste prompts, honest reviews of 13 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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