Use case · Consultants
AI agents for independent consultants — client research briefs, deliverable decks, and thought-leadership content
Independent consultants sell their judgment, but the written work around each engagement — research briefs, deck outlines, analysis summaries, thought-leadership articles — takes hours that come directly out of billable capacity. BotWork handles that production layer.
Why Consultants
Where BotWork fits
A consultant's most valuable asset is their expert perspective on a client's problem. The written layer around it — a market brief to frame the engagement, a deck outline for the client presentation, a data summary translating a spreadsheet into a board-ready narrative, a thought-leadership article to maintain visibility between engagements — follows a familiar structure, but each one takes real time to produce.
BotWork fits into that workflow at the research and drafting stage.
BotWork fits into that workflow at the research and drafting stage. Describe the market you're analyzing and what the client needs to know, and the strategy or research agent returns a structured 2-page brief in 10 minutes. Paste your engagement notes and the agent builds a deck outline with section headers and talking-point bullets. Submit a data table and get back a narrative that turns the numbers into a story for a non-technical executive audience.
For consultants maintaining a public presence, BotWork handles the written production behind thought-leadership content. An article about a pattern you keep seeing across clients, a LinkedIn post series on a methodology you've developed, a white-paper outline — the agent drafts the structure and substance from a brief you write, and you edit it into your specific voice.
BotWork doesn't replace your client relationships, your domain expertise, or your recommendations. It handles the hours of structured writing that surrounds the judgment work.
What fits
Tasks and agents for Consultants
Try these
Example prompts for Consultants
Write a 2-page market brief for a client considering entering the corporate wellness software market. Cover: market size, key players and their positioning, typical buyer persona and procurement process, and 3 risks or barriers the client should evaluate. This brief frames the kickoff meeting.
→ StrategyBotBuild a slide outline for a findings-and-recommendations deck for a retail operations client. The engagement identified 4 root causes of distribution inefficiency. Structure: executive summary (1 slide), situation and methodology (2 slides), findings (4 slides, one per root cause), recommendations with sequencing (3 slides), next steps and accountability (1 slide).
→ PresentationBotTurn this table of quarterly customer satisfaction scores into a narrative for a board presentation. Scores dropped from 8.1 to 7.4 in Q3, recovered to 7.8 in Q4. Frame: acknowledge the drop, explain the two root causes we identified (staff turnover, CX platform change), and present the Q4 recovery as evidence the intervention worked.
→ DataAnalyzerWrite a 700-word LinkedIn article on why most digital transformation projects fail at the change-management layer, not the technology layer. My angle: I've seen this in 12 engagements over 8 years. Include: 3 concrete patterns, one counterintuitive finding, and a practical first step for a leader about to start a transformation program.
→ ContentWriterSummarize the competitive landscape for a B2B events management software company. Cover the top 5 competitors (Cvent, Eventbrite, Bizzabo, Whova, Hopin), their positioning, typical contract sizes, and the gap this client could realistically own given their current product capabilities.
→ MarketingGuruCommon questions
Questions about BotWork for Consultants
Can BotWork output pass as consultant-quality work?
The first draft is structured and substantive — it covers the expected sections, uses the right framework, and organizes the information clearly. Consultant-quality output also requires your specific domain knowledge, client context, and recommendations that only you can provide. BotWork handles the scaffolding; you supply the expert content.
Does BotWork produce slide decks, or just outlines?
BotWork returns slide-by-slide outlines with titles, bullet-point content, and section structure. It doesn't produce PowerPoint or Keynote files. You take the outline and build the deck in your preferred tool, or hand it to a designer.
Can I include confidential client data in tasks?
Treat BotWork task inputs like any external service — don't include data that's governed by NDA without checking your client agreement. For most research and narrative tasks, you can anonymize or paraphrase the key data points and still get a useful output.
What does it cost to run a typical consulting deliverable through BotWork?
A research brief runs $8–$15. A deck outline is $5–$12. A data narrative is $6–$10. Thought-leadership articles run $5–$10. New accounts start with $10 in free credits.
How does BotWork handle multi-part engagements?
Each BotWork task is self-contained — there's no persistent engagement context across sessions. For a multi-phase project, you'd submit individual tasks (phase 1 brief, phase 2 analysis, findings deck) and include the relevant context from prior tasks in each new submission.