How to Use AI for HR Small Business
How to Use AI for HR and Hiring
in a Small Business
You run your business without an HR department. That means every job ad, every rejection email, every difficult conversation with a member of staff, and every policy update lands on your desk alongside everything else. Here are five prompts that handle the writing — so you can handle the people.
Small business owners are accidental HR managers.
Nobody handed you a manual. You figured out hiring by trial and error — mostly error. You have written job ads that attracted the wrong people, sent rejection emails that felt brutal or dishonest, and had staff conversations that went badly because you spent forty minutes trying to find the right words and then abandoned the whole thing until it got worse.
This is not a failure of management skill. It is a failure of time and tools. Large companies have HR professionals, legal templates, and trained managers. Small businesses have you, at 9pm, staring at a blank page trying to figure out how to tell someone their lateness is becoming a problem without making next Monday morning at work unbearable.
ChatGPT removes the blank page. It does not make HR decisions for you — it drafts the words that let you make those decisions clearly, kindly, and professionally. Here are the five prompts that cover every HR writing task a small business faces.
The HR Problem Every Small Business Shares
Large companies have entire HR departments. They have templates for every situation, legal teams to review communications before they go out, and trained managers who have had difficult conversations hundreds of times.
Small businesses have you. And the HR writing — the job ad, the rejection, the conversation that has been put off for three weeks — competes with every other demand on your time. It often loses.
The consequences are real: a vague job ad that brings in twenty applications from the wrong people. A candidate who never heard back and tells their network. A staff issue that escalated because the conversation kept getting delayed. A policy change that caused unnecessary friction because the message was badly worded.
ChatGPT does not make HR decisions. It does the writing that allows those decisions to be communicated clearly, fairly, and professionally — every time, in minutes.
The 5 Prompts That Cover Every HR Writing Moment
Copy these, fill in the brackets with your specific situation, and paste into ChatGPT at chat.openai.com. Always read the output and apply your own judgment before sending.
1. The Job Advertisement
You are a recruitment copywriter who specialises in writing job advertisements for small businesses that attract the right candidates and filter out the wrong ones. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. What we do: [one sentence]. Location: [TOWN/CITY]. The role: [ROLE TITLE — e.g. Chef de Partie / Senior Bookkeeper / Receptionist / Delivery Driver / Marketing Coordinator / Retail Assistant / Site Supervisor]. What this person will actually do day to day: [list 4–6 specific, honest tasks — e.g. preparing and plating a section of 30–40 covers per service / managing bank reconciliations and payroll for 15 staff / handling inbound calls and managing the appointment diary / managing Instagram and email content for our shop]. The three things that will make this person succeed in this role: [be specific and honest — e.g. reliable and punctual — we cannot afford last-minute no-shows / comfortable working independently without constant supervision / calm under pressure during busy service periods / genuinely interested in [industry], not just looking for any job]. What we offer: [hours / pay / any genuine benefits — e.g. £X per hour / £X,000 salary / flexible hours / free parking / staff discount / opportunity to grow with a small team / consistent shift pattern]. What makes working here different from a bigger employer: [one honest sentence — e.g. you will actually know your manager / decisions get made quickly / your input matters / we close on Sundays]. How to apply: [e.g. send a CV and one paragraph about yourself to [email] / WhatsApp [NUMBER] / apply via [platform]]. Format: Job ad suitable for Indeed, LinkedIn, Facebook Marketplace, or a local jobs board. Under 300 words. Honest and direct. Tone: Straight-talking — the voice of a real business owner who knows exactly what the job involves and what kind of person will thrive in it. Not a corporate HR template. Not a list of generic competencies. The kind of ad that attracts someone who actually wants this specific job.
2. The Rejection Email
You are a professional HR communications specialist. Write a rejection email to send to a job applicant who has not been successful. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. Role they applied for: [ROLE TITLE]. Candidate name: [FIRST NAME if known, or “the candidate”]. Stage they reached: [e.g. they applied but were not shortlisted / they came to interview but were not selected / they were a strong second choice but we went with another candidate]. Is there anything genuinely positive I can honestly acknowledge: [optional — e.g. their CV showed relevant experience / they interviewed well but another candidate had more direct experience / I was genuinely impressed by their enthusiasm / nothing specific — keep it brief and neutral]. Would I consider them for a future role: [e.g. yes, and I want to keep the door open / no — do not encourage re-application / unsure, keep it general]. Ask: Write a professional, kind rejection that closes the door clearly without being harsh, gives the candidate enough information to understand the outcome, and protects my reputation as an employer. Format: Email with subject line. Under 120 words. Professional and warm. Tone: Respectful and direct — the voice of a business owner who values the candidate’s time and has the decency to close the loop properly. Never vague (“we have decided to pursue other candidates” without any context). Never falsely encouraging. Never cold or bureaucratic.
3. The Onboarding Welcome Message
You are an employee experience specialist for a small business. Write a welcome message to send to a new hire on or just before their first day. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. What we do: [one sentence]. Location: [TOWN/CITY]. New hire’s name: [FIRST NAME]. Their role: [ROLE TITLE]. Their start date: [DATE]. Practical information to include: [list what they need to know — e.g. arrival time and who to ask for / what to wear / where to park / whether to bring anything / who their direct manager will be / what their first day will broadly involve]. One thing I genuinely want them to know about working here: [e.g. we are a small team and everyone matters / there will be a lot to take in at first but we take onboarding seriously / no question is a stupid question in the first few weeks / I chose them because X and I want them to feel confident about that choice]. Any specific reassurance: [optional — e.g. they mentioned they were nervous about [X] / it is their first job in this sector / they are relocating for this role]. Ask: Write a welcome message that makes them feel genuinely expected and valued before they arrive, gives them the practical information they need, and sets the tone for a professional relationship built on respect. Format: Email (subject line + under 180 words) or WhatsApp (under 100 words). Write both. Tone: Warm, professional, and genuinely welcoming — the voice of a manager who chose this person carefully and wants them to succeed. Never corporate. Never make it sound like an automated HR system. Sign it with your name.
4. The Difficult Conversation Starter
You are an HR communications specialist who helps small business managers open difficult conversations with staff professionally and without causing unnecessary conflict. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. My name: [YOUR FIRST NAME]. I am the [ROLE — e.g. owner / manager / director]. Staff member’s name: [FIRST NAME]. The issue I need to raise: [describe honestly — e.g. they have been late to work 4 times in the last 3 weeks / their work quality has dropped noticeably in the last month / they have been visibly disengaged and their attitude is affecting the team / they missed a deadline that caused a problem with a client / there is a personal hygiene issue I have been putting off addressing]. What I know or suspect is behind it: [optional — e.g. I have no idea / I think they may be going through something personal / I suspect they are unhappy in the role / there is no obvious reason I can identify]. What I want to achieve from this conversation: [e.g. I want to understand if there is something I should know / I want to set clear expectations going forward / I want to give them a fair warning before the situation becomes a formal matter / I simply want to open the door and see how they respond]. Ask: Write a short, structured message or conversation opener that raises the issue directly but fairly, invites a response, and frames this as a conversation rather than a formal complaint. Format: Either a short email requesting a private meeting (under 100 words, do not go into detail in writing) or an opening script for a face-to-face conversation (under 150 words). Specify which format is better for my situation. Tone: Calm, direct, and respectful — the voice of a manager who takes people seriously enough to address issues rather than ignore them, and who wants to resolve this, not escalate it. Not aggressive. Not passive. Not vague to the point of the employee not understanding what the conversation is about.
5. The Team Policy Update
You are an internal communications specialist for a small business. Write a team update about a policy change or new procedure. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. Team size: [approx NUMBER]. I am the [ROLE]. What this update is about: [describe clearly — e.g. a change to our holiday booking process / a new policy on phone use during shifts / an update to our overtime arrangements / a new procedure for handling customer complaints / a change to how we process end-of-day reports / a reminder about punctuality following a recent pattern]. What is changing and why: [be honest and specific — e.g. we are moving to an online booking system for holidays because the paper rota was causing confusion / we need to tighten up phone use during service because it has been affecting quality / we are updating our overtime policy to comply with new guidance]. When this takes effect: [DATE or “from [DAY] this week”]. What (if any) action the team needs to take: [e.g. please confirm you have read this by replying / please ask me any questions before [DATE] / no action needed, for information only]. Ask: Write a team message that explains the change clearly, gives a brief reason why (without over-explaining), confirms when it takes effect, and closes by inviting questions if needed. Format: WhatsApp group message (under 130 words, readable on a phone) or team email (subject line + under 200 words). Write both. Tone: Direct, clear, and respectful — the voice of a manager who communicates like a real person, not a corporate policy document. Warm but efficient. No jargon. No defensiveness. Never start with “As per my previous message” or “Going forward.”
The Framework That Makes Difficult Communication Easier
Every prompt above follows the same five-part structure. For HR communication specifically, the Ask and Tone elements are the most critical. The Ask must name exactly what type of communication you need — a conversation opener, not a formal warning; a rejection, not a vague non-response. The Tone must eliminate the register that makes HR communication feel either aggressive or cowardly.
For the full CRAFT Method walkthrough with worked examples, read: Prompt Engineering for Beginners: A Plain English Guide.
Your Next Step
You have a role to fill and an ad that has been sitting half-drafted for two weeks. A candidate who applied last month and never heard back. A staff issue that has been getting quietly worse because you have been putting off the conversation.
Pick the prompt that matches the thing that has been sitting undone the longest. Open ChatGPT. Fill in the brackets with the specific details of your situation. Paste. Read what comes back. Adjust where it needs adjusting. Act on it.
Every small business owner I have shown these to has the same reaction. Not amazement at the technology. Something more practically useful.
“I had been putting that conversation off for three weeks. It took me four minutes to know exactly what to say.”
If you want the complete system — the full CRAFT Method, 20 done-for-you AI specialist personas, and prompt templates for every piece of writing your business produces — it is all inside the AI Frustrated to Fluent ebook. One read. Works the same day.