Sales follow-up and proposals
Convert calls, notes, emails, and documents into follow-up drafts, next actions, proposal outlines, reminders, and pipeline updates.
AI workflow use cases
Use this page as a practical menu of opportunities. The best first AI workflow is repeated often, painful enough to matter, supported by useful information, reviewable by a human, and measurable after a short pilot.
Opportunity map
These are not generic chatbot ideas. Each one is a workflow pattern that can be mapped, piloted, reviewed, measured, and improved.
Convert calls, notes, emails, and documents into follow-up drafts, next actions, proposal outlines, reminders, and pipeline updates.
Organize incoming files, summarize what arrived, identify missing information, prepare request lists, and route exceptions for review.
Turn recurring updates, spreadsheets, meeting notes, and operating metrics into cleaner weekly or monthly reporting routines.
Support first drafts, research briefs, review checklists, precedent reuse, and client-ready outputs while experts keep final control.
Improve document intake, obligation tracking, workpaper preparation, audit response coordination, and exception dashboards.
Use approved knowledge, response patterns, issue summaries, and escalation rules to reduce repeated support work.
Bring email, meetings, decisions, research, reminders, tasks, and follow-up into a disciplined weekly rhythm.
Turn source examples, notes, articles, and ideas into briefs, drafts, review queues, publishing calendars, and LinkedIn posts.
Make proposals, memos, templates, case notes, presentations, and prior work easier to find, summarize, adapt, and reuse.
Selection discipline
Good advisory work separates attractive ideas from operationally useful workflows.
The workflow happens often enough and has a clear before-and-after measure: time, cost, quality, cycle time, or follow-up speed.
The opportunity is promising, but it needs better inputs, clearer ownership, safer review gates, or a narrower first scope.
The workflow is too sensitive, poorly understood, hard to measure, or dependent on data and systems that are not ready.
The idea sounds impressive but does not remove cost, delay, rework, quality risk, or client friction in a meaningful way.
Buyer fit
Reduce admin, reporting, follow-up, client service, and document workload without hiring a large team.
Improve research, drafting, review preparation, and knowledge reuse while protecting expert judgment.
Identify where AI can create leverage now and avoid spending on tools before the workflow is clear.
Build a personal operating system for clients, content, research, email, documents, and follow-up.
Choose one workflow
The diagnosis will turn that pain into a practical first move: map it, prioritize it, redesign it, or pilot it with the right controls.