AI Prompt for a Meeting Recap Email

Rice Queen RecipesJune 12, 20266 min read

AI Prompt for a Meeting Recap Email

Turn meeting notes into a useful recap with decisions, action items, owners, and next steps.

When to use this prompt

Use this after a meeting when your notes are scattered and you need a clean summary. It is most useful when you have the facts but need structure, wording, prioritization, or a second-pass review. It is not meant to replace your judgment; it is meant to turn a blank page into a draft you can improve.

What this helps with

This guide gives you a reusable prompt, a stronger power version, realistic example inputs, edit instructions, follow-up prompts, and a checklist for deciding whether the output is good enough to use. The goal is not a clever one-liner. The goal is a repeatable workflow you can use any time this situation comes up.

Prompt strategy

Better AI results usually come from context, constraints, examples, and iteration. Tell the AI who the output is for, what the stakes are, what facts it may use, what tone you want, and what format you need. Then ask it to critique or revise the answer instead of accepting the first draft.

Setup time

3 minutes. Use time: 8 to 15 minutes. Tools: ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot, or another general AI assistant. Result: a practical draft, plan, checklist, or decision aid you can edit before sending, posting, saving, or sharing.

What you need

meeting notes; attendees; decisions; tasks; deadlines. If you do not have every item, write unknown or ask the AI to show placeholders. For privacy, replace real names with [Name], order numbers with [Order Number], and sensitive details with short descriptions.

Copy this prompt

Act as a practical writing and thinking assistant for this situation: Use this after a meeting when your notes are scattered and you need a clean summary.
Before writing the final answer, identify the goal, the audience, the missing context, the emotional tone, and the safest level of detail.
Use only the information I provide. If a detail is missing, use a clear placeholder instead of inventing it. Inputs I may provide: meeting notes, attendees, decisions, tasks, deadlines.
My rough request: Turn these meeting notes into a clear recap email. Include decisions, action items, owners, deadlines, and open questions. Keep it easy to scan. Notes: [paste notes].
Return your answer in this format:
1. Best draft or recommendation
2. Why this version works
3. What I should verify before using it
4. Two alternate versions: shorter, warmer, firmer, simpler, or more professional depending on the situation
Keep the language natural, specific, and easy to edit. Avoid hype, fake certainty, and private details.

Example input

Team discussed launch. Maya owns landing page by Friday. Jon will check pricing. Decision: beta starts June 20. Need legal review.

Example output

Subject: Launch Meeting Recap. Decisions: beta launch is planned for June 20. Action items: Maya will finish the landing page by Friday; Jon will review pricing; legal review is still needed. Open question: final approval timing. This is only a starting point. A good final answer should sound like you, include the right facts, and make the next action easy for the reader or for your future self.

Follow-up prompts

- Revise the answer to make it client-facing. Keep the same facts and explain what changed.
- Revise the answer to turn it into a table. Keep the same facts and explain what changed.
- Revise the answer to make it shorter. Keep the same facts and explain what changed.
- Revise the answer to separate urgent tasks. Keep the same facts and explain what changed.

Advanced version

After giving me the first answer, score it from 1 to 10 for clarity, usefulness, tone, and risk. Then rewrite it once using the highest-impact improvement. If there are tradeoffs, explain them in plain language. If the task involves a decision, show the safest option, the fastest option, and the option most likely to preserve the relationship.

Make it fit you

make it client-facing; turn it into a table; make it shorter; separate urgent tasks. You can also ask for a version for a text message, email, phone script, checklist, table, manager update, customer reply, family conversation, or one-page plan.

Troubleshooting

if owners are missing, ask it to label them unassigned; if it invents deadlines, ask it to use unknown instead; if it is too long, ask for executive summary first. If the answer feels generic, add one concrete detail. If it sounds too polished, ask for plain language. If it is too confident, ask it to separate facts from assumptions.

Quality checklist

Does the answer use only the facts you supplied? Is the tone right for the person who will read it? Is the next step obvious? Can a stranger understand the situation without extra context? Did you remove private names, account numbers, medical details, financial details, or confidential workplace information?

Safety note

Do not paste passwords, banking details, card numbers, government ID numbers, medical records, private legal documents, confidential customer data, or anything you would not want stored by an online service. Replace private names with placeholders when possible.

Final check

AI can help you get unstuck, but you are still the editor. Read the answer out loud, check facts, remove anything that sounds unlike you, and make sure the final version is honest. For legal, medical, financial, employment, safety, or high-stakes situations, use the AI output as preparation only and verify with a qualified person.

Related AI Prompts

More prompts for the same kind of task.