Reading time: ~8 min


Page Jarvis is useful across an entire organization โ€” not just for writers. Marketers use it for content workflows and campaign copy. Founders use it for outreach, documentation, and thinking-out-loud writing. Recruiters use it for personalized candidate outreach. Sales teams use it for prospecting messages and follow-ups. Support teams use it for faster response drafting. This post maps each team function to specific Page Jarvis workflows with real examples.

What you’ll learn:

  • Role-specific Page Jarvis workflows for 5 major team functions
  • Concrete examples with actual prompts for each use case
  • How cross-functional teams can share prompt libraries
  • How to onboard a team to browser-native AI workflows

AI writing tools are often positioned as tools for content creators โ€” people whose primary job is to write. But the reality is that every team function involves writing: marketers write campaign copy, founders write outreach and investor updates, recruiters write to candidates, sales reps write prospecting messages, and support teams write to customers.

Page Jarvis is a browser-native AI tool, which means it works wherever your team already writes โ€” in Gmail, LinkedIn, Google Docs, forms, and everywhere else in Chrome. This makes it a cross-functional productivity tool, not a content-team-only asset.

This post maps specific workflows to five major team functions.


For Marketing Teams

Marketing teams write constantly โ€” campaign emails, social posts, ad copy, blog drafts, product announcements, and sales enablement content. The volume is high and the need for fast turnaround is constant.

Campaign Email Copy

Workflow: Rough draft in a Google Doc โ†’ refinement in-page

  1. Write the rough campaign email โ€” subject line, body, CTA
  2. Highlight the body โ†’ Shorten this and make the CTA more compelling
  3. Highlight the subject line โ†’ Rewrite as a stronger subject line under 50 characters
  4. Review โ€” run a final Simplify this if the copy feels jargon-heavy

Social Media Posts

Workflow: LinkedIn post drafting and polishing

  1. Draft the raw version in LinkedIn’s composer
  2. Highlight โ†’ Shorten and make this more engaging
  3. Highlight the hook โ†’ Strengthen the opening โ€” what makes someone stop scrolling?
  4. Add a closing question to drive comments

Ad Copy Variations

Workflow: Generate multiple versions for testing

  1. Write one version of the ad copy
  2. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite this for a different audience segment
  3. Run Shorten this if the platform has character limits
  4. Save the best-performing version’s instruction as a saved prompt for future variations

Sales Collateral

Workflow: One-pagers and pitch deck talking points

  1. Draft rough talking points in Google Slides or Docs
  2. For each section: highlight โ†’ Simplify for a non-technical buyer
  3. Polish with: Shorten and make this more punchy

For Founders

Founders write more than almost anyone in an organization โ€” investor updates, partnership outreach, job posts, product documentation, thought leadership, and customer communication. The common thread: founders need to write well and fast, but they rarely have dedicated writing support.

Investor Updates

Workflow: Dense business update โ†’ clear, concise narrative

  1. Write the raw update โ€” bullet points of what happened, metrics, asks
  2. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite as a clear, engaging investor update โ€” narrative format
  3. Run Shorten this if the update is running long
  4. Review and send โ€” without leaving your email

Partnership Outreach

Workflow: Research-led cold outreach, personalized

  1. Read the prospect’s recent announcement or LinkedIn post
  2. Open Gmail, draft a rough message
  3. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite as personalized outreach referencing [specific insight]
  4. Shorten โ†’ Under 200 characters for the opening

Job Posts

Workflow: Attract the right candidates with clear language

  1. Draft the rough job description with requirements
  2. Highlight โ†’ Simplify this job description for a broader professional audience
  3. Run Strengthen the hook to make the opening more compelling
  4. Run Shorten to the essentials if the post is running long

Thought Leadership

Workflow: Article or LinkedIn post from working notes

  1. Have your working notes in Notion or Google Docs
  2. Highlight the key insights
  3. Run โ†’ Organize into a structured LinkedIn post with a strong hook and closing
  4. Polish with: Shorten the opening, Strengthen the call-to-action

For Recruiters

Recruiting is a high-volume writing function: outreach to candidates, follow-up messages, interview scheduling communications, and rejection notes. The challenge: personalized outreach at scale without sounding templated.

Candidate Outreach (Passive Candidates)

Workflow: Personalized messages at scale

  1. Open the candidate’s LinkedIn profile โ€” note their latest post or current role
  2. Draft a rough outreach in Gmail or LinkedIn
  3. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite as personalized recruiter outreach โ€” specific, not templated
  4. Shorten โ†’ Under 300 characters for the connection note
  5. Run: Make it warmer and more respectful of their time

Recruiter InMail (LinkedIn)

Workflow: Role-specific outreach inside LinkedIn

  1. Draft the InMail with role details and candidate research
  2. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite as a brief, human InMail โ€” specific to this candidate
  3. Run Shorten to under 200 words if the InMail limit applies

Follow-Up After Silence

Workflow: Re-engage candidates who haven’t responded

  1. Draft a brief follow-up
  2. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite as a friendly, no-pressure follow-up
  3. Shorten โ†’ Under 100 words

Interview Confirmation and Logistics

Workflow: Clear, professional scheduling messages

  1. Draft the scheduling message
  2. Highlight โ†’ Simplify โ€” clear, professional, includes all necessary logistics
  3. Run Shorten to essentials

For Sales Teams

Sales writing is high-stakes: prospecting messages that get opened, follow-ups that re-engage, proposals that close deals. Every message needs to feel personal, relevant, and worth reading.

Cold Outreach Emails

Workflow: Research-led cold email

  1. Research the prospect โ€” company news, recent hires, mutual connections
  2. Draft the outreach in Gmail
  3. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite as a personalized cold email โ€” specific, not templated
  4. Highlight the subject line โ†’ Strengthen the subject line โ€” curiosity or value, not generic
  5. Shorten if needed โ†’ Under 60 characters for subject line

Follow-Up Sequences

Workflow: Multi-touch follow-up with variety

  1. Draft the first follow-up
  2. For subsequent touches, vary the approach:
    • Shorten this follow-up โ€” be more direct
    • Rewrite as a different angle โ€” reference [new insight]
    • Make this sound more urgent without being pushy

Proposal Language

Workflow: Tailoring proposal language to the prospect

  1. Write the generic proposal language
  2. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite for [specific company/industry] โ€” show you did the research
  3. Simplify if the proposal language is dense

Meeting Confirmation

Workflow: Confirm and prepare

  1. Draft the meeting confirmation with agenda
  2. Highlight โ†’ Simplify โ€” clear agenda, professional, confirms the time
  3. Shorten if the message is running long

For Support Teams

Support teams face a unique writing challenge: responses need to be fast, accurate, empathetic, and consistent. AI assistance in the support dashboard can dramatically speed up response drafting without sacrificing quality.

Initial Support Responses

Workflow: Acknowledge, diagnose, respond

  1. Draft the initial acknowledgment and diagnosis
  2. Highlight โ†’ Simplify this โ€” clear, empathetic, no jargon
  3. Shorten โ†’ Under the ticket character limit
  4. If technical: Simplify the explanation for a non-technical customer

Resolving Technical Issues

Workflow: Step-by-step guidance in plain language

  1. Write the technical steps
  2. Highlight โ†’ Rewrite as clear, numbered steps โ€” customer-friendly language
  3. If long: Shorten each step to the minimum required information

Escalation Notes

Workflow: Clear escalation documentation

  1. Draft the escalation summary
  2. Highlight โ†’ Simplify โ€” what happened, what's been tried, what's needed
  3. Shorten โ†’ Essential information only

Customer Follow-Up

Workflow: Post-resolution check-in

  1. Draft the follow-up message
  2. Highlight โ†’ Make this warm and genuine โ€” not templated
  3. Shorten โ†’ Under 150 words

Building a Shared Team Prompt Library

Teams get the most out of Page Jarvis when they share a common prompt library. Here’s how to organize it:

Team-level saved prompts:

  • [Team name] โ€” Cold outreach โ€” the team’s standard outreach format
  • [Team name] โ€” Follow-up โ€” the team’s preferred follow-up tone
  • [Team name] โ€” Simplify for customer โ€” team standard for customer-facing simplification

Individual team members can create personal prompts for their specific style while drawing on the team library for consistency.


Key Takeaways

  • Marketers: campaign email, social posts, ad copy, sales collateral
  • Founders: investor updates, partnership outreach, job posts, thought leadership
  • Recruiters: candidate outreach, InMail, follow-ups, scheduling
  • Sales: prospecting, follow-up sequences, proposals, meeting prep
  • Support: initial responses, technical explanations, escalation notes, follow-ups
  • Shared team prompt libraries ensure consistency while enabling individual style
  • Browser-native AI works wherever each team already writes โ€” no new tools required

Next Steps

Try this: Pick your team function and try the primary workflow above on a real piece of writing you’re working on this week. Save the prompts that work well for your team and share them with teammates.


Page Jarvis works for every team function. See how your team can use it and get started in minutes.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *