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- Prompt Library
Prompt library: How to get the most out of Lyyli.ai
A good prompt is like a good brief – the clearer you communicate what you want, the better result you get. The AI assistant won't guess your thoughts, but it understands precise instructions.
At its best, a prompt tells who you're writing for, what purpose, which channel, and what style. The more context you provide, the less you need to edit.
Thank you message
Thanks for yesterday's meeting. Short and friendly.
Reminder to colleague
Remind Pekka about tomorrow's deadline. Casual but clear, for Slack.
Meeting time suggestion
Suggest two times to client for next week's demo meeting. For email, professionally.
Out of office message
Out of office message for email: on vacation June 15-22, urgent matters contact Sara.
Congratulations message for LinkedIn
Congratulate Laura on promotion on LinkedIn. Genuine and warm, not too long.
Quick update to client
Tell client that project is on schedule. Positive and trust-building, 3-4 sentences.
Meeting invitation text
Invite team to weekly meeting Friday at 10. Agenda: week's status and next week's priorities. For calendar invite.
Sales message to potential client
Write a sales message to a potential B2B client interested in improving communication efficiency. Target: Communications director at mid-sized tech company Goal: Get recipient to book a demo Channel: Email Length: 150–200 words Tone: Expert but approachable, not too sales-y Include: - Brief acknowledgment of client's challenge (communication inefficiency) - Concrete benefit (time savings + authenticity) - Clear CTA (book demo)
Thank you message after event
Write a thank you message to a client who attended your product demo. Target: Participant who was actively engaged in demo Goal: Reinforce positive experience and offer next step Channel: Email Length: 100–150 words Tone: Warm and grateful, but professional Include: - Thanks for participating - Brief summary of what was covered - Offer for follow-up conversation or trial
Thought leadership post
Write a LinkedIn post about "Why AI doesn't replace communications professionals, but empowers them". Target: Communications professionals, marketers, and leaders Goal: Spark discussion and strengthen expert brand Channel: LinkedIn Length: 800–1000 characters Tone: Thought-provoking, bold but constructive Structure: - Start with provocative statement or question - Share 2–3 concrete perspectives - End with open question that encourages commenting Use paragraph breaks and emojis in moderation.
Customer story
Write a LinkedIn post based on a customer story. Target: Potential clients considering AI use in communications Goal: Show concrete benefit with real example Channel: LinkedIn Length: 600–800 characters Tone: Inspiring and credible, not too advertisement-like Content: - Client's starting situation (challenge) - Solution (using Lyyli.ai) - Concrete result (e.g., time savings, better engagement) - Closing call: "If this sounds familiar, let's talk more." Use quotation marks from client's comment if possible.
Instagram post text
Write Instagram post text about a product update. Target: Younger professionals and startup crowd Goal: Generate interest and direct to profile/link Channel: Instagram Length: 100–150 words Tone: Casual, energetic, and visual Structure: - Start with hooking question or statement - Tell about update concisely - End with CTA (e.g., "Try it yourself – link in bio") Use 3–5 relevant hashtags at the end.
X (Twitter) thread
Write a 5-part tweet thread about "5 ways to improve communication without losing authenticity". Target: Busy professionals and entrepreneurs Goal: Share valuable content and demonstrate expertise Channel: X (Twitter) Length: Each tweet max 280 characters Tone: Concise, concrete, and easily shareable Structure: 1. Opening tweet: Attention-grabbing statement + thread promise 2.–5. Each tip in its own tweet, clearly numbered 6. Closing tweet: Summary + CTA Use emojis as visual separators.
Team update for Slack
Write a weekly update for team in Slack. Target: Own team (developers, sales, support) Goal: Keep everyone updated and motivated Channel: Slack (#general) Length: 150–200 words Tone: Encouraging, open, and energetic Include: - Week's key achievements - Upcoming priorities - Thanks to team for good work - Possible humorous note or emoji Use bullets for clarity.
Change communication internally
Write an internal email to team about a process change. Target: Entire team Goal: Explain change, reduce uncertainty, and get team on board Channel: Internal email Length: 250–300 words Tone: Clear, empathetic, and solution-focused Structure: - What's changing and why - How change affects in practice - What's expected from team - Who to contact with questions Avoid bureaucracy – speak to the person.
LinkedIn post illustration
Use case: You need a visual element for a LinkedIn post Create a LinkedIn post illustration on the topic [TOPIC]. Style: Modern, professional editorial illustration Colors: Use forest green as the primary, muted turquoise and soft rose as accents, white background Mood: [Inspiring/Educational/Thought-provoking] Visual concept: - Main element: [Describe the central visual element] - Supporting elements: [List 2–3 supporting elements] - Composition focus: [Left/Center/Right] Lyyli character: [Yes/No; if yes: Lyyli [action/pose], see reference image] Technical requirements: - Size: 1200x675 pixels (16:9) - Flat design with subtle shadows - High contrast for mobile readability - Enough whitespace for text [top/bottom] Avoid: [Overly generic elements/Too complex/etc.]
Blog article hero image
Use case: You need a visually impactful header image for a blog article Create a hero image for a blog article titled "[ARTICLE TITLE]". Style: Premium editorial illustration, SaaS aesthetic Color palette: Forest green primary, muted turquoise and soft rose accents, light gray (#F5F5F5) for background elements Mood: [Expert/Trustworthy/Innovative] Visual concept: - Center: [Primary visual metaphor for the topic] - Left: [Supporting element 1] - Right: [Supporting element 2] - Background: [Describe background and its elements] Lyyli character: [Yes/No; if yes: position and role] Composition: - Horizontal layout - Aspect ratio: 1200x600 pixels (2:1) - Focal point in the left third - Leave space in the top-left corner for the title Technical details: - Flat design with light depth - Sharp edges on primary elements, softer in the background - Light source from top-left - No photo elements – keep the illustration abstract Avoid: [Topic-specific pitfalls]
Square social media image
Use case: Instagram, Facebook, or other square-format channels Create a square social media image on the topic [TOPIC]. Style: Friendly, modern illustration Colors: Forest green, muted turquoise, soft rose, white background Mood: [Energetic/Warm/Inviting] Visual concept: - Centerpiece: [Main element in the middle] - Surrounding elements: [2–4 supporting elements] - Visual hierarchy: [How the gaze is directed] Lyyli character: [Yes/No; if yes: Lyyli [pose/action], see reference image] Technical requirements: - Size: 1080x1080 pixels (1:1) - Symmetrical or centered composition - Clear focal point in the center - Sufficient contrast for adding text - Space for text [Top/Bottom/Center] Typography integration: [If including text, define style] Avoid: [Topic-specific constraints]
Infographic illustration
Use case: Visualizing data, a process, or a concept Create an infographic illustration on [TOPIC/PROCESS/DATA]. Style: Clear, informative data visualization Colors: Forest green as primary; use muted turquoise and soft rose to distinguish categories Mood: Clear, easy to understand, trustworthy Visual concept: - Structure: [Linear/Cyclical/Hierarchical/Comparative] - Elements: [List the parts to visualize] - Data type: [Percentages/Steps/Comparison/Timeline] Lyyli character: [Yes/No; if yes: Lyyli explaining/pointing, see reference image] Layout: - Orientation: [Horizontal/Vertical/Both] - Size: [Define based on use] - Readability: Numbers and labels large enough - Icons: Simple, recognizable Technical details: - Consistent color-coding across the illustration - Clear headings and labels - Arrows or lines guiding the eye - Sufficient white space Avoid: Overly complex charts, too much data in one image, poor contrast
Tips for effective prompting
Give context
Tell what situation you're in and why you're writing.
Define target
Who are you messaging? What do they already know about the topic?
Set goal
Do you want to sell, inform, inspire, or activate?
Limit length
Give word or character count to get appropriately sized text.
Guide tone
Formal or casual? Expert or friendly?
Request structure
Bullets, paragraphs, numbered lists – tell how you want content structured.
Test and refine
If result isn't perfect, give additional instructions. Lyyli learns your style better the more you use it.
Remember: Short works too!
For everyday communication, often a few words instruction is enough. Lyyli fills in the rest.
Ready to try?
Start using Lyyli and see how you speed up your communication without losing authenticity.