Affiliate note: This AI workflow guide may include affiliate links. The checklist below is about prompt structure and review habits, not about naming one tool as the default choice.
A prompt template is useful when the same type of task keeps coming back. It gives employees a repeatable way to ask for a draft, summary, checklist, or rewrite without guessing what details the AI needs each time.
Two common problems are: the AI gives different quality answers every time, and my team does not know what details to include in a prompt. A good template reduces that inconsistency, but it still needs a human review step.
Use templates for repeatable tasks only
Do not turn every one-off question into a template. Start with tasks that happen often, such as drafting routine emails, summarizing meetings, rewriting internal instructions, grouping FAQs, or preparing first-pass checklists.
If you have not chosen the right first AI task yet, use the first AI task guide before building templates. A good template cannot fix a task that is too risky or unclear.
Prompt template checklist
- Task goal: State what the AI should produce, such as a draft reply, summary, outline, or checklist.
- Audience: Say whether the output is for customers, employees, managers, or internal notes.
- Source material: Provide only the information needed for the task.
- Tone: Choose a practical tone, such as concise, friendly, professional, or plain-language.
- Output format: Ask for bullets, table, email draft, checklist, or short paragraph.
- Do-not-include list: Name anything the AI should avoid, such as guarantees, pricing claims, or private details.
- Review rule: State that the output is a draft and should be checked by a person.
- Example: Include one short example if employees keep getting uneven results.
Example template
| Prompt part | Example wording |
|---|---|
| Task | Draft a short customer email reply. |
| Context | The customer asked about appointment availability next week. |
| Limits | Do not promise a time slot unless a human confirms it. |
| Format | Write 2 short paragraphs and one clear next step. |
Common template mistakes
- Asking for a good answer without defining what good means.
- Mixing several tasks into one prompt.
- Including more customer information than the task needs.
- Forgetting to tell employees what should be reviewed before use.
- Letting each employee rewrite the template until the process becomes inconsistent again.
How to test a prompt template
- Run three real but low-risk examples through the template.
- Mark what came out useful, wrong, missing, or too generic.
- Adjust the template only where the same problem appears more than once.
- Save the approved version in a shared place.
- Review the template monthly if the task changes.
When the template is ready
A prompt template is ready when different team members can use it and get a draft that is close enough to review, not rewrite from scratch. If every result needs heavy editing, the template needs clearer context, tighter limits, or a safer task.