Contracting Prompt Pack

A starter set of carefully written prompts for common contracting tasks — letters, summaries, takeoffs, site reports, and more.

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Copy a prompt below

الوصف

Most of the value in AI for contracting comes down to the quality of the prompt. A vague prompt produces vague output. A specific, well-structured prompt produces something you can actually use.

This pack contains the prompts I reach for most often, organised by task. Each one is written to be plug-and-play — fill in the bracketed values, paste it into your AI tool, and you'll get a useful first draft.

These work in any general chat-based AI tool: ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Mistral, etc. Local models will give simpler results but the structure still helps.

1. Drafting a client letter

Write a formal letter from [Your firm name] to [Client name] regarding [topic in one sentence].

Context: [2–3 sentences of background — project name, what's happened, the outcome you want]

Tone: formal but warm, in the style used between regional consultants and contractors. No filler. Avoid corporate jargon. Around [200] words.

End with a clear ask or next step.

2. Summarising a tender document

I'm pasting a tender document below. Produce a one-page summary with the following sections:

  • Project at a glance: 3 sentences max.
  • Key deadlines: bid submission, queries, clarifications, expected award.
  • Scope: bullet list, max 10 items.
  • Unusual or risky clauses: liquidated damages, performance guarantees, payment terms, scope exclusions, anything restrictive.
  • Bid/no-bid considerations for a small contractor: 3–5 honest points.

Be conservative — flag anything that might be a problem rather than waiting to be sure.

[Paste tender document]

3. Daily site report from bullets

Convert the bullets below into a formal daily site report for [project name], [stage].

Format: header (date, site, weather, supervisor on duty), then sections — Progress, Manpower, Materials, Issues, Variations or Notes. Keep it under 350 words.

Tone: professional and neutral. Don't soften or amplify the severity of any item — preserve the wording I used. Don't invent numbers.

Flag anything that might be contractually significant in a separate "Notes" line for me to review.

Bullets: [paste your dictated notes]

4. RFI response

Draft a response to the following RFI from [consultant name].

Our position: [one sentence — what we want to convey]

Constraints: [any specifications or contract clauses we want to refer to, or "no specific reference"]

Tone: respectful, technically precise, brief. Around 150 words. Don't volunteer information beyond what's needed.

RFI: [paste RFI]

5. Risk register, first pass

I'm starting a project with the following description: [project type, location, value, duration, key stakeholders, any unusual conditions].

Produce a first-pass risk register with 12–15 items, in a markdown table with columns: Risk, Likelihood (Low/Medium/High), Impact (Low/Medium/High), Owner, Mitigation.

Bias toward risks that are common in regional contracting projects of this size. Don't include generic risks that apply everywhere.

6. Email triage

Below are [number] emails from today. For each one, give me: sender, one-line subject summary, urgency (Now / Today / This week / Whenever), and the suggested action ([reply, forward to X, no action, schedule]).

Don't reply to any of them — just triage.

Emails: [paste]

7. Estimating sanity check

Below is a draft cost estimate I've put together for [project description]. Don't redo the maths. Instead:

  • Flag any line items that look unusually high or low for this kind of project in [country/region].
  • Flag any line items that might be missing for this project type.
  • List the top 3 risks to the estimate (price volatility, scope ambiguity, etc.).

Estimate: [paste]

8. Pre-bid kickoff brief

Produce a 1-page kickoff brief for our internal team based on the following tender summary. Sections: project overview (3 lines), our angle (3 bullet points — what we're competing on), required inputs (which team members we need from, with deadlines), and 3 questions to clarify with the client before we commit.

Tender summary: [paste]

لمن هذا

Engineers, project managers, and admin staff in small to mid-size contracting firms who use chat-based AI tools and want better results out of them.

كيف تستخدمه

  1. Pick the prompt that matches your task.
  2. Replace the bracketed [placeholders] with your actual values.
  3. Paste into your AI tool.
  4. Read the output critically. Edit. Fact-check any numbers, dates, or contractual phrasing.
  5. Tweak the prompt for next time based on what you needed to fix.

The prompts that get added to your routine are the ones that save you ten minutes more than they cost. Be ruthless about which ones you keep.

البيانات والأمان

Before you paste anything into any AI tool, run through the 5 data questions. For confidential client documents, anonymise them first or use an AI tool with a no-training, no-retention configuration.

These prompts themselves are generic and contain no client data. The risk is what you paste with them.