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55+ copy-paste ChatGPT prompts that draft your emails, intake summaries, client explainers, and marketing content in minutes. Built for lawyers — no tech skills needed.
A complete guide with 10 sections covering every aspect of your practice.
What it is, how to use it safely as a lawyer, account setup, and the 5 best prompting techniques for legal work.
8 prompts for inquiry responses, intake summaries, consultation prep, onboarding emails, and conflict-check follow-ups.
10 prompts for demand letters, engagement letters, clause explanations, contract checklists, issue spotting, and document simplification.
6 prompts for LinkedIn posts, FAQ pages, practice area pages, blog outlines, bios, and newsletter ideas.
7 prompts for status updates, follow-ups, billing reminders, document requests, and boundary-setting emails.
9 prompts for chronologies, witness prep, hearing checklists, mediation prep, transaction checklists, and due diligence.
6 prompts for explaining processes, risks, settlements, court documents, billing, and discovery to clients.
7 prompts for referral introductions, networking follow-ups, referral one-pagers, reviews, speaking pitches, and case studies.
The 7 golden rules for lawyers using AI, your personal prompt stack, revision commands, and voice customization.
Common problems, good uses, bad uses, and what to do when output is weak.
Watch over a lawyer's shoulder as they use the prompts in real time. See exactly how to get the best results from ChatGPT.
You got into law to practice, advise, and advocate. But somehow you spend more time:
Writing and rewriting client emails that pile up faster than you can send them
Turning messy intake notes into clean summaries when you'd rather be preparing for hearings
Staring at a blank screen trying to draft marketing content you've been putting off for months
Creating client explainers, status updates, and follow-ups that all sound the same
ChatGPT is an AI tool that writes whatever you ask it to — emails, intake summaries, client explainers, marketing content, first-draft outlines. It works 24/7 and drafts content in seconds instead of hours.
The catch? You need to know what to ask. Most lawyers try it once, get a generic answer, and give up. It's like having a great associate who needs very specific instructions.
This guide gives you those instructions. 55+ ready-made prompts, tested on real legal workflows. Just copy one into ChatGPT, swap in your details, and you'll have a polished draft in seconds. No learning curve, no tech skills, no guesswork.
You are a professional legal assistant. Write a consultation confirmation email for my [family law] practice.
Details:
- Consult type: [paid initial consultation]
- Client name: [first name from their inquiry]
- Date/time: [insert date and time]
- Location or format: [in-person at office / Zoom / phone]
- Duration: [30 minutes / 1 hour]
- Fee: [$250 for the first hour]
- What to bring: [any relevant documents, court papers, or questions they want to discuss]
Tone: Professional, warm, and reassuring. Make the client feel confident about the meeting without making promises about outcomes.
Include a brief line about confidentiality.
Subject: Confirmation of Your Initial Consultation
Dear Sarah,
Thank you for reaching out. I'm writing to confirm your initial consultation, which has been scheduled as follows:
Date: Tuesday, April 8, 2026 at 10:00 AM
Format: In-person at our office
Duration: 1 hour
Fee: $250 for the initial consultation
To make the most of our time together, please bring any relevant documents, court papers, or a list of questions you'd like to discuss. This will help me better understand your situation and provide you with the most useful guidance.
Please know that everything we discuss will be held in strict confidence.
If you need to reschedule or have any questions before our meeting, please don't hesitate to reach out. I look forward to meeting with you.
Warm regards,
[Your Name]
[Your Firm]
That's it. Review it, tweak a word or two, and you're done. What used to take 20 minutes now takes 2.
This guide saved me hours in the first week. I went from dreading client follow-ups to having templates ready in minutes.
I was skeptical, but these prompts are so practical. Finally something that actually helps with the day-to-day writing grind without compromising ethics.
The intake summary prompt alone was worth the price. I use it after every consult now.
One-time purchase. No subscription.
Think about it: If your billable rate is $250/hour, this guide pays for itself in the first day — and keeps saving you 5-12 hours every week after that.
Get instant access now. Start using prompts in 5 minutes.
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