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Workflows

These workflows are designed for copy, run, review. They are not magic prompts and they are not safe to use without checking the output.

Each workflow includes:

  • who it is for
  • work problem
  • inputs
  • copy-ready Codex instruction
  • expected output
  • human review checklist
  • failure modes
  • source boundary

Starter Set

Workflow Best for Typical input Output
Daily work brief Daily planning Tasks, calendar, notes, email snippets Prioritized brief
Meeting notes to action list Meeting follow-up Notes or transcript Actions, decisions, questions
Research to decision memo Decision support Research notes and sources Decision memo
Spreadsheet cleanup plan Workbook hygiene Spreadsheet description, sample rows, goals Cleanup plan
Review-ready deck outline Deck planning Objective, audience, evidence Slide outline
Workflow audit and automation spec Process improvement Current process notes Audit and automation spec
Monthly finance review Finance review P&L/export notes, budget, variance notes Review pack
Vendor comparison brief Vendor selection Vendor notes, criteria, sources Comparison brief
Campaign brief builder Marketing planning Goals, audience, offer, constraints Campaign brief
Customer support triage summary Support operations Ticket exports or summaries Triage summary
Policy/process rewrite Process clarity Existing policy/process text Rewritten draft
PRD or project-spec draft Product or project planning Goals, users, constraints, risks Draft spec

How To Use These

  1. Replace bracketed placeholders with your real inputs.
  2. Tell Codex what files or pasted material it may use.
  3. Ask it to flag missing evidence instead of filling gaps.
  4. Review every factual claim, number, date, owner, and recommended action.
  5. Keep sensitive or regulated work inside your approved tools and approval process.

Contribute A Workflow

Use the workflow submission form or open a PR. A workflow is more likely to be accepted when it is narrow, copy-ready, reviewable, and honest about where it fails.