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I Used AI Prompts for Executive Assistants for 30 Days — Here's What Changed

I Used AI Prompts for Executive Assistants for 30 Days — Here's What Changed

By day 3, I had already saved two hours.

Not from AI doing my job for me. From stopping the blank-page problem. Every time I opened a new email thread, a meeting recap, a calendar conflict message — I used to stare at the screen for 30 to 90 seconds before typing a single word. Multiply that by 40 interactions a day, and you're losing a real chunk of your morning before lunch.

I'm an executive assistant. My job is to make other people's time frictionless. The irony is that my own workflow was full of friction.

So for April 2026, I ran a deliberate experiment: 30 days using a structured AI prompt library built specifically for EA work. Not generic ChatGPT prompts from a blog. A system with prompts organized around the actual tasks in my role: email drafting, meeting prep, scheduling communications, research briefings, and travel logistics.

Here's what actually changed.

Week 1: The Email Problem Disappeared

EA inboxes are not inboxes. They're decision queues. Every message requires a judgment call — who needs to know, how urgent is it, how do I phrase this so my exec isn't pulled in until it's necessary.

With the right prompts, that judgment-to-draft loop collapsed. I had a "conflict resolution email" prompt, a "polite decline on behalf of executive" prompt, and a "meeting confirmation with agenda" prompt. The output wasn't perfect. I'd adjust the tone, add specifics. But the structural thinking was done. I was editing, not composing from scratch.

Result in week 1: 47 emails drafted with AI assistance. Average time per email dropped from ~4 minutes to ~90 seconds.

Week 2: Meeting Prep Became Repeatable

Every Monday I prep briefings for 3 to 6 meetings my exec has that week. Background on attendees, context on previous conversations, talking points, and a suggested agenda. This used to take me 45 minutes per briefing if I was fast.

I built a prompt template that pulls in the attendee name, company, the meeting goal, and any prior context I paste in. The AI structures the briefing. I check it for accuracy and add the details only I would know.

Result in week 2: Meeting prep time cut from ~45 minutes per briefing to ~15 minutes. My exec mentioned the Monday briefs "felt tighter" — he didn't know why.

Week 3: I Stopped Dreading the Hard Messages

The worst part of EA work isn't the volume. It's the emotionally loaded communications: declining an important person's request, nudging a vendor who's overdue, telling a VIP the exec can't make it after all.

These messages don't have a formula. But they have a structure. Acknowledge, explain (without over-explaining), offer an alternative, close warmly. The prompts gave me that structure in seconds, then I made it human.

I sent a message my exec had been avoiding for two weeks. She hadn't written it because she didn't know how to start. I handed her a draft in 8 minutes.

Week 4: I Started Using It Proactively

By the end, I wasn't just using prompts reactively. I was running Friday end-of-week summaries, drafting next week's priorities memo, and generating questions for vendor review calls before they happened.

The shift was mental. I stopped thinking "this is too much to do" and started thinking "what's the prompt for this."

What I Actually Used

14 categories. About 80 prompts total. The ones I used most:

  • Email response frameworks (polite decline, conflict escalation, VIP follow-up)
  • Meeting prep template (briefing + agenda + background)
  • Scheduling conflict resolution scripts
  • Travel coordination communications
  • End-of-week summary template
  • Research request framing (when my exec needs info fast)

Is It Worth It?

Here's the honest math: I saved approximately 8 to 10 hours in the first month. Not from AI replacing judgment — from AI eliminating the blank-page delay and the structural guesswork. My work quality went up because I was spending mental energy on the 20% that required real thought, not the 80% that was repetitive framing.

If you're an EA and you're still writing every email from scratch, you're leaving time on the table.

The prompt library I used is the Executive Assistant AI Toolkit on Gumroad. 80+ prompts structured around real EA workflows — email, meetings, scheduling, research, travel. If you want to try it, use code LAUNCH30 for 30% off. Limited uses remaining, so grab it while it's active.


The experiment is over. The prompts stayed.

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