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Module 3 · Lesson 7
2:14 / 8:02
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In progress Lesson 7 of 10 8 min Beginner

Write better prompts for work

Apply the Role · Context · Task · Format formula to your actual job, with ready-to-use templates.

Most people write prompts like search queries — a few keywords and hope. The fix is a simple, repeatable formula you can apply to any work task: tell the model who it is, what you need, and how you want the answer.

Templates for common work scenarios

Email drafting

"You are a professional business writer. I am a [role] at a [company type]. Write a [type of email] to [recipient] about [topic]. Tone: [tone]. Length: [word count]."

Meeting prep

"I have a meeting with [who] about [topic]. Give me 5 sharp questions to ask and 3 key points I should make. Format: two numbered lists."

Summarisation

"Summarise the following into: (1) key decisions, (2) action items, (3) open questions. Use bullet points. [paste content]"

Key takeaways
  • A good prompt has context (who you are), task (what you need), and format (how you want the output).
  • Always specify your role — it dramatically changes output quality.
  • Use constraints to keep the AI focused: word limits, tone, audience level.
  • Iterate — great prompts are rarely written perfectly on the first try.
Example prompt
You are a professional work planner. My role is [your job title].

Today's date is [date]. My top 3 priorities are:
1. [priority 1]
2. [priority 2]
3. [priority 3]

Create a structured daily plan in bullet points, grouped by
morning, afternoon, and end-of-day. Keep it concise and actionable.

Quick knowledge check

Answer before marking this lesson complete
+50 XP

In the prompt "Summarise into: (1) decisions, (2) action items, (3) open questions" — which element is this an example of?

Role
Context
Task
Format
Pick the option that matches the output structure.

Finished the lesson?

Pass the check above, then mark complete to earn +50 XP and unlock Lesson 8.