How to Stop Drowning in Emails with ChatGPT : The Small Business Quick-Start Guide
How to Stop Drowning in Emails with ChatGPT:
The Small Business Quick-Start Guide
The average small business owner loses eight hours a week to email. That is one full working day spent writing, reading, triaging, following up, and drafting responses — most of it repetitive, most of it taking far longer than it should. These five ChatGPT prompts cut that time in half. No Zapier. No integrations. No paid plan. Works for any email client.
Here is something most guides about AI and email get wrong.
They assume you need a complex integration — Zapier connecting Gmail to OpenAI, automated workflows, API keys, custom rules. For small business owners, that is completely unnecessary and often more trouble than it saves.
The simple approach works better: open ChatGPT, copy the email that is causing you a problem, paste it in with one of the prompts below, and get a summary, a reply, or an action plan in under 60 seconds. No setup. No subscription. No technical knowledge required.
The only difference between this and a complex integration is that you copy and paste instead of having it happen automatically. For most small business owners handling 20-50 emails a day, the copy-paste workflow is faster to start, costs nothing, and gives you complete control over exactly what the AI sees.
Before you start
Go to chat.openai.com and create a free account if you do not have one. Two minutes, no payment required. All five prompts below work on the free plan.
5 prompts that cut your email time in half
👉 Prompt 1 — The Email Triage Prompt
When you open your inbox in the morning and have no idea where to start. Copy 10-20 subject lines from your unread emails, paste them in, and get a clear priority order in 30 seconds — without opening a single email.
I run [brief description — e.g. "a plumbing business in Leeds" / "a hair salon in Bristol" / "a small cleaning company in Glasgow"]. Below are the subject lines from my unread emails. Please sort them into three groups: URGENT — needs my attention today IMPORTANT — needs attention this week but not today CAN WAIT — low priority, can deal with later or archive After sorting, give me a suggested order to deal with the urgent ones. Subject lines: [paste your unread subject lines here — one per line]
👉 Prompt 2 — The Thread Summariser
For any long email chain you have completely lost track of. Copy the entire thread, paste it in, and get a 3-bullet summary with a clear action point — instead of reading 11 replies backwards.
Please summarise the following email thread in plain English. Give me: 1. What this conversation is about (1 sentence) 2. Where things currently stand (2-3 sentences) 3. What I need to do next, if anything (specific action or "no action required") Keep it brief. I just need to understand the situation quickly. Email thread: [paste the full email thread here]
👉 Prompt 3 — The Difficult Reply Writer
The email you have been putting off for three days. The awkward customer, the disputed invoice, the complaint you do not know how to handle without making it worse. Paste it in, describe the situation, and get a professional reply that handles it diplomatically — ready to send in 2 minutes.
You are a professional business email writer helping a small business owner draft a difficult reply. My business: [Your business name], a [brief description — e.g. "sole trader plumber in Leeds" / "hair salon in Manchester"]. The situation: [Describe what has happened — e.g. "A customer is unhappy because their appointment was rescheduled at short notice. They are threatening to leave a bad review." / "A supplier is chasing payment on an invoice I'm disputing because the work wasn't completed to standard."] What I want to achieve: [e.g. "Acknowledge their frustration, offer a goodwill gesture, and keep their business" / "Push back on the invoice professionally without damaging the relationship"] Write a reply of under 120 words. Tone: professional, warm, confident — not defensive, not grovelling. Sound like a real business owner who takes their reputation seriously.
👉 Prompt 4 — The Batch Reply Template
You get the same customer question 15 times a week. “What are your prices?” “Are you available on Saturday?” “Do you offer gift vouchers?” Use this prompt to write a reusable reply template once — and stop writing the same email from scratch every single time.
You are a professional email writer helping a small business owner create a reusable reply template. My business: [Your business name], a [brief description — e.g. "hair salon in Sheffield" / "dog grooming business in Cardiff" / "freelance bookkeeper"]. The question I get asked all the time: [e.g. "customers asking about my prices" / "people enquiring about availability" / "requests for gift vouchers"] My answer: [Write out the key information you want to include — prices, availability, how to book, whatever is relevant] Write a warm, professional reply template of under 100 words. Include a [Customer name] placeholder where personalisation is needed. It should sound like a person who enjoys their work — not a form letter. I will save this and use it every time this question comes up.
👉 Prompt 5 — The Inbox Zero Planning Prompt
When you come back from a holiday or a few days away and face an inbox you do not know how to tackle. Copy all your unread subject lines, paste them in, and get a clear action plan instead of feeling overwhelmed.
I run [brief description of your business]. I've been away for [X days] and have [X] unread emails. Below are all the subject lines from my unread inbox. Please create an action plan: REPLY NOW — urgent, needs response today REPLY THIS WEEK — important but not urgent DELEGATE — if you were my assistant, you would handle this DELETE/ARCHIVE — no action needed, safe to clear NEEDS MORE INFO — I need to open this to know what to do After sorting, give me a suggested sequence: what to deal with in what order to feel back in control by end of today. Subject lines: [paste all unread subject lines here]
Make these prompts even faster with memory
Once you have set up ChatGPT memory with your business context, every email prompt becomes significantly shorter. Instead of explaining that you run a plumbing business in Leeds with a professional but warm tone, ChatGPT already knows it. You just paste the email and say “write a reply in my usual tone.”
That is a 5-minute setup that pays back every single time you use ChatGPT for email from that point forward. If you have not done it yet, the guide is linked in the sidebar.
Gmail user? There is a faster option
If your business runs on Gmail or Google Workspace, Gemini AI is built directly into your inbox — no copy-pasting required. Gemini reads your actual emails in the side panel and can summarise, draft, and prioritise without you leaving Gmail. See our Gemini for Gmail guide for the complete setup.