FIT Blog

10 Copy-Paste Prompts That Save SMBs Hours (No Cost or Automation Required)

Written by FIT Assistant | Jan 2, 2026 11:40:23 PM

Back to work after the holidays usually means the same thing for small businesses: too much to do, not enough time, and a pile of “small” tasks that quietly eat the week.

If AI has felt confusing, risky, or overhyped — here’s the simplest way to start:

Use AI as a drafting and summarizing assistant before you try to automate anything.
No tools. No integrations. No complicated setup. Just copy/paste prompts that reduce busywork immediately.

Below are 10 prompts you can save today and reuse all year.

The simple rule (so you don’t get burned)

AI is best at:

  • drafting (emails, outlines, SOP first drafts)
  • summarizing (meetings, long threads, documents)
  • reformatting (bullets → table, messy notes → clean plan)

AI is not a good “set it and forget it” replacement for judgment.
For anything important: you review, you send.

How to use this post (2 minutes)

  1. Pick one prompt below
  2. Replace the [brackets]
  3. Paste into ChatGPT (or your preferred tool)
  4. Copy the output into your email/doc and do a quick human edit

10 prompts you’ll reuse all year

1) Inbox triage (fast clarity)

Use when: your inbox is chaos.

Prompt

You are my executive assistant. I’m going to paste an email thread.
Summarize it in:

  1. What’s happening (2–3 bullets)
  2. What they need from me (1–2 bullets)
  3. Suggested reply (under 120 words, friendly-professional)
    If anything is unclear, list the questions I should ask.

2) “Write the email I don’t want to write”

Use when: you’re stuck or avoiding a reply.

Prompt

Draft an email reply that is [tone: warm / firm / neutral] and [length: short / medium].
Goal: [what you want the recipient to do].
Context: [paste 3–6 bullets of facts].
Constraints: don’t overpromise; include a clear next step; avoid jargon.

3) Meeting notes → action list (the weekly multiplier)

Use when: meetings happen, but follow-through slips.

Prompt

Turn these notes into:

  • A short summary (max 5 bullets)
  • Action items table with: Owner | Task | Due date | Risk/Blocker
  • A follow-up email I can send to attendees
    Notes: [paste notes]

4) “Turn my messy idea into a plan”

Use when: you have ideas, but no structure.

Prompt

Turn the following into a practical plan.
Output: 1) goals, 2) assumptions, 3) 10-step checklist, 4) risks, 5) first 3 actions I should take this week.
Keep it simple and realistic for a small business.
Idea: [paste]

5) Customer support reply (consistent, faster)

Use when: you answer the same questions repeatedly.

Prompt

Write a customer support reply to this message: [paste].
Tone: [friendly / professional / empathetic].
Include: a clear answer, next steps, and one question if needed to proceed.
Keep it under 150 words.

6) Quote/proposal first draft (stop starting from scratch)

Use when: you send quotes or proposals often.

Prompt

Create a first-draft proposal for: [service].
Customer: [industry + size].
Problem: [3 bullets].
Scope: [bullets].
Output format: sections for Overview, Scope, Timeline, Responsibilities, Assumptions, Next Steps.
Tone: clear, confident, not salesy.

7) SOP / process draft (so knowledge isn’t trapped in someone’s head)

Use when: “only one person knows how to do this.”

Prompt

Help me write a simple SOP for this process: [describe process].
Ask me up to 7 questions first to fill gaps.
Then produce: Purpose, When to use, Step-by-step checklist, Common mistakes, and a short “definition of done”.

8) Hiring: job post that actually attracts the right person

Use when: job posts are too vague or too long.

Prompt

Write a job posting for a [role] at a small business.
Must include: 5 responsibilities, 5 requirements, 3 “success looks like” bullets, and a short screening question set.
Company vibe: practical, friendly, high ownership.
Location: [remote/hybrid/on-site].
Notes: [paste anything special]

9) “Turn this into a LinkedIn post (3 versions)”

Use when: you want consistency without overthinking.

Prompt

Turn this idea into 3 LinkedIn posts:
Version A: educational
Version B: story + lesson
Version C: short punchy tips
Include a strong first line and a simple call-to-action at the end.
Idea: [paste]

10) Weekly wrap-up (one page you can send to your team)

Use when: you want alignment without another meeting.

Prompt

Create a weekly update from these notes.
Output:

  • Highlights (max 5 bullets)
  • Metrics (if any)
  • Risks / blockers
  • Next week priorities (max 5 bullets)
  • Decisions needed from leadership
    Notes: [paste]

The “safe use” checklist (obvious, but worth reading once)

If you’re using public AI tools:

  • Don’t paste sensitive client data, passwords, financial details, or confidential agreements.
  • Use AI for drafts and summaries, not final decisions.
  • If it gives a specific fact, verify it (or ask it to cite a source you provide).

A simple January goal (that actually sticks)

Pick one workflow:

  • Inbox replies
  • Meeting summaries
  • Proposal drafts
  • SOP drafts

And make it your “AI assist” habit for 2 weeks.

That’s how real adoption happens in small businesses: one repeatable win at a time.

Want a version of this tailored to your business?

If you want, I can build a company-specific prompt pack based on your services, tone, and processes — so your whole team gets consistent outputs.

Reply with:

  • your industry
  • your most annoying weekly task
  • and who does it today

…and I’ll suggest the best “first win” to target.

Next week, we’ll share how to turn one of these prompts into your first repeatable AI workflow.