Documents & Reports
AI is most useful for documents when it handles the hardest part of writing: starting. Getting from blank page to a structured first draft — even a rough one — removes the biggest blocker for most writers. AI also excels at rewriting for clarity, adapting tone for different audiences, and synthesising multiple sources into a coherent narrative. This page covers the prompt patterns and workflow for professional documents and reports.
Document Types and Best Approaches
| Document type | AI role | Your role |
|---|---|---|
| Executive summary | Synthesise a long doc into 1-page summary with key points and recommendation | Verify accuracy; add strategic framing |
| Research report | Structure methodology → findings → conclusions; draft each section from notes | Provide data and analysis; verify all claims |
| Status update / memo | Convert bullet notes into polished prose; adjust tone | Supply the facts; review tone for your audience |
| Proposal / SOW | Generate structure; draft standard sections (scope, deliverables, timeline) | Insert actual numbers, scope, and commercial terms |
| Technical documentation | Draft step-by-step instructions; structure API reference sections | Verify technical accuracy; test procedures |
Core Prompt Patterns
1. Notes → Structured Document
You are a professional business writer. I have rough notes from [CONTEXT].
Write a [DOCUMENT TYPE] for [AUDIENCE].
Structure: [Executive Summary / Background / Findings / Recommendations / Next Steps]
Tone: [formal / conversational / data-driven]
Length: approximately [N] words.
Important: use only the information in my notes. Do not add facts, statistics, or examples I have not provided.
My notes: [PASTE NOTES]
The "use only what I provide" instruction significantly reduces hallucination in document drafting.
2. Long Document → Executive Summary
Summarise the following document for [AUDIENCE — e.g., a CFO with 2 minutes to read].
Format:
- One paragraph (3 sentences max) summarising what this is and why it matters
- 3–5 key findings as bullet points
- One clear recommendation
Do not introduce information not present in the document.
[PASTE DOCUMENT]
3. Draft → Polished Rewrite
Rewrite the following draft to be [clearer / more concise / more formal / appropriate for non-technical readers].
Rules:
- Preserve all factual content exactly — do not add or remove information
- Use active voice
- Maximum sentence length: 25 words
- Target audience: [DESCRIBE]
[PASTE DRAFT]
4. Research Synthesis
I have gathered the following research from [N] sources. Synthesise them into a coherent [SECTION NAME] section for a report on [TOPIC].
Where sources agree: state the consensus directly.
Where sources conflict: note the disagreement and the strongest evidence on each side.
Do not present speculation as fact. If something is uncertain, say so.
Sources: [PASTE EACH SOURCE WITH A LABEL]
Tone and Audience Adaptation
One of AI's most practical document skills is rewriting the same content for different audiences. The base document stays the same; the language adapts.
Audience adaptation prompt:
Rewrite the following for [TARGET AUDIENCE]. They care about [THEIR PRIORITIES].
Replace technical terms with plain language. Lead with the business impact, not the methodology.
[PASTE ORIGINAL]
Useful pairs: engineer → exec summary / technical → customer-facing / English → simplified for non-native speakers
Maintaining Your Voice
AI-drafted documents often sound generic. These techniques help preserve your voice:
Voice preservation techniques
- Provide a style sample: "Write in a similar style to this previous doc I wrote: [PASTE]"
- Edit the AI draft in your own words — write the opening and closing sentences yourself
- Give specific tone instructions: "direct, no hedging, short sentences, no jargon"
- Avoid prompts like "write me a report" — be specific about voice from the start
Signs AI voice has crept in
- Sentences starting with "It is important to note that..."
- Overuse of words like "leverage", "utilize", "delve", "multifaceted"
- Excessive hedging: "may potentially", "could possibly"
- Formal boilerplate openers: "In today's rapidly evolving landscape..."
Checklist: Do You Understand This?
- What instruction dramatically reduces hallucination when using AI to draft a document from your notes?
- What four elements should you specify in a notes → document prompt?
- How do you adapt the same document content for two different audiences?
- Name four phrases that signal AI voice has taken over your document.
- What technique helps AI match your personal writing style?
- For a research report, what specific instruction do you give when sources disagree?