Business Plan Executive Summary
Generate a structured, professional executive summary from your business idea's key details. Investor-ready format.
The Prompt
You are a seasoned startup advisor and business writer. Write a compelling executive summary for the following business: Business name: [BUSINESS NAME] Industry: [INDUSTRY] Problem being solved: [THE CORE PROBLEM] Your solution: [HOW YOU SOLVE IT] Target market: [WHO YOUR CUSTOMERS ARE AND MARKET SIZE] Revenue model: [HOW YOU MAKE MONEY] Traction (if any): [CUSTOMERS, REVENUE, USERS, PARTNERSHIPS] Funding needed (if applicable): [AMOUNT AND USE OF FUNDS] Founding team (brief): [KEY FOUNDERS AND RELEVANT EXPERIENCE] Format the executive summary with these sections: 1. The Opportunity (2–3 sentences) 2. The Problem (2–3 sentences) 3. Our Solution (3–4 sentences) 4. Market Opportunity (2–3 sentences with size) 5. Business Model (2–3 sentences) 6. Traction & Milestones (2–4 sentences) 7. The Ask (if fundraising — 1–2 sentences) Total length: 350–500 words. Professional tone, no fluff.
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Prompt Details
- Category
- Business
- Use case
- Writing a compelling executive summary for investors or lenders
More Business Prompts
Sales Objection Handler
Use case: Preparing responses to common sales objections
Generate confident, empathetic responses to the most common sales objections for your product. Includes scripts and frameworks.
You are a sales coach and trainer with 15 years of experience coaching B2B sales teams. Build an objection handling guide for: Product/Service: [WHAT YOU SELL] Typical deal size: [PRICE POINT] Sales context: [Inbound / Outbound / Demo / Proposal stage] Ideal customer: [ICP DESCRIPTION] Generate responses for these 6 common objection categories (or use the ones I list): Objections to handle: 1. "It's too expensive" / "We don't have budget" 2. "We're already using [competitor]" 3. "We need to think about it" 4. "Send me some information" 5. "Now's not a good time" 6. [YOUR SPECIFIC OBJECTION] For each objection: - **Acknowledge** — Validate without agreeing (1 sentence) - **Clarify** — The question to ask to understand the real concern - **Respond** — Your reframe or evidence-based response - **Redirect** — How to move the conversation forward - **Script** — A verbatim response you could say on a call End with: The top 3 objections that kill most deals for this product and a coaching note on each.
Inclusive Job Description Writer
Use case: Writing clear, attractive, and bias-free job descriptions
Generate a well-structured job description that attracts qualified candidates while using inclusive language and avoiding common biases.
You are an HR specialist and talent acquisition expert focused on inclusive hiring practices. Write a job description for: Role title: [JOB TITLE] Company: [COMPANY NAME] Department: [TEAM OR DEPARTMENT] Location/Remote: [OFFICE / REMOTE / HYBRID] Seniority level: [JUNIOR / MID / SENIOR / LEAD] Employment type: [FULL-TIME / CONTRACT] Salary range (optional): [RANGE] Key responsibilities: [LIST 5–8 CORE DUTIES] Must-have skills: [3–5 REQUIREMENTS] Nice-to-have skills: [2–3 PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS] Team size and structure: [TEAM CONTEXT] Why someone would want this job: [WHAT MAKES IT EXCITING] Structure the JD as: 1. **About [Company]** (2–3 engaging sentences) 2. **The Role** (2–3 sentences on impact, not just duties) 3. **What You'll Do** (5–8 bullet points using action verbs) 4. **What You Bring** (must-haves clearly separated from nice-to-haves) 5. **What We Offer** (compensation, benefits, culture) 6. **How to Apply** Rules: - Use inclusive language (avoid gendered terms) - Focus on impact, not just task lists - Keep requirements realistic to avoid qualified candidates self-selecting out