Writing Prompts
Copy-paste prompts for your favorite AI tool.
These prompts are designed to help you write in your voice, not replace it. Paste one into ChatGPT, Claude, or whatever you use. The AI will ask you questions, and you'll talk through your answers. Then you edit the result until it sounds like you.
None of these are required. If you'd rather write from scratch, that's great too. These are just here if you want a running start.
How to use these
- Copy a prompt below (click the button)
- Paste it into your AI tool
- Answer the questions it asks you — talk like you're explaining to a friend
- Read what it gives you. Change anything that doesn't sound like you.
- Paste the final version into your profile
Tip: The AI is a starting point, not the finish line. The best pages have copy that's been touched by a human hand — yours.
Short Bio
This is the first thing families see — a sentence or two about who you are. It shows up at the top of your page, right under your name. Think of it as your elevator pitch, except warm and human.
I'm a doula writing a short bio for my professional page. This will be the first thing families read about me — it shows up right under my name and photo. It should be 1-2 sentences, warm and personal, not clinical or corporate. Before writing anything, ask me these questions one at a time: - What kind of doula work do I do? (birth, postpartum, full-spectrum, etc.) - How long have I been doing this? - What's the thing I most want families to know about me right away? - Is there anything about my approach that makes me different from other doulas in my area? After I answer, write a short bio that sounds like me talking to a friend — not a resume, not a brochure. Keep it under 200 characters if possible. I'll tell you if it needs adjusting.
Full Bio
This is your story — what brought you to this work and what families can expect from you. It's the heart of your page. There's no length requirement, but a few paragraphs usually feels right.
I'm a doula writing my full bio for my professional page. This is where families learn my story and decide if I might be a good fit. The tone should be warm, personal, and genuine — like I'm sitting across from them at a coffee shop, not reading from a script. Before writing anything, interview me. Ask these questions one at a time, and let me answer each before moving on: 1. What brought me to doula work? (Was there a specific moment, experience, or person?) 2. What kind of support do I offer? (Birth, postpartum, both? Any specialties?) 3. What's my training and certification background? 4. What do I want families to feel when they work with me? 5. Is there anything about my philosophy or approach I want to mention? 6. What do I do when I'm not doing doula work? (Only if I want to share — this is optional but helps families see me as a whole person.) After I answer everything, write a bio that: - Opens with something specific and real, not a generic "I'm passionate about..." - Flows naturally from my story to what I offer - Sounds like me, not like a LinkedIn profile - Avoids jargon unless it's meaningful to families - Ends with something that invites connection I'll edit it to make sure it actually sounds like me.
Testimonial Write-Up
If a client has given you permission to share their story, this prompt helps you shape it into something meaningful for your page. Testimonials are powerful — they let families hear from someone who's been where they are.
A note on sensitivity. Birth doesn't always go as hoped. If a client's story includes loss, trauma, or unexpected outcomes, handle it with the same care you brought to supporting them. Our platform supports content warnings on testimonials — families can choose when they're ready to read.
I'm a doula and a client has given me permission to share their experience on my professional page. I want to write up their story (or help them write it) in a way that's honest, respectful, and helpful to other families considering doula support. Important context: - Birth stories can involve loss, trauma, or outcomes that weren't planned. Never minimize or skip over difficult parts — but handle them with care. - The goal is authenticity, not marketing. Real stories resonate. Polished-up stories don't. - The platform I'm using supports content warnings, so we don't need to hide anything — just frame it thoughtfully. Before writing anything, ask me: 1. What was the situation? (Type of birth, who was involved, any context that matters.) 2. What did I help with? (What was my role in their experience?) 3. What would the client want other families to know? 4. Is there anything sensitive I should flag with a content warning? 5. Did the client write anything in their own words I can include? After I answer, write something that: - Centers the client's experience, not my services - Feels like a real person telling a real story - Includes a natural place for attribution (first name, or anonymous) - Notes if a content warning would be appropriate Keep it under 300 words unless the story needs more room.
Event or Class Description
Whether it's a childbirth prep class, a postpartum support group, or a community workshop — this prompt helps you describe it in a way that makes families want to show up.
I'm a doula writing a description for an event or class I'm offering. This will appear on my professional page where families can see what I have coming up. The tone should be inviting and clear — families should know exactly what they're signing up for and feel good about it. Ask me these questions first: 1. What's the event? (Class, workshop, support group, meet-and-greet, etc.) 2. Who is it for? (Expecting parents, postpartum families, partners, other doulas, etc.) 3. What will people get out of it? (Skills, information, community, support?) 4. Is there anything people should know before signing up? (Cost, what to bring, physical requirements, etc.) 5. What's the vibe? (Casual, structured, hands-on, discussion-based?) After I answer, write a description that: - Opens with who it's for and why they'd want to come - Covers the practical details without reading like a form - Ends with something welcoming, not salesy - Stays under 200 words No exclamation points. No "Don't miss out!" Just clear, warm, honest.
Service Description
For each service you offer, you can write a short description of what it includes and who it's for. This helps families understand the difference between, say, your birth doula package and your postpartum support.
I'm a doula writing a description for one of the services I offer on my professional page. Families will read this when deciding which type of support they need. The description should be clear, warm, and specific enough that they know what they're getting — without sounding like a contract. Ask me: 1. What's the service? (Birth support, postpartum care, lactation support, childbirth education, etc.) 2. What's included? (Visits, calls, hours, on-call availability, etc.) 3. Who is this for? (First-time parents, experienced parents wanting different support, specific situations?) 4. What makes my version of this service different from what other doulas offer? 5. Is there a price range I want to mention, or do I prefer "contact me for pricing"? After I answer, write a description that: - Leads with what the family gets, not what I do - Mentions specifics without reading like a menu - Sounds like me explaining it over the phone - Stays under 150 words
Group Page: Mission & Description
If you're part of a practice or co-op, your group page needs its own voice — not just a stack of individual bios. This prompt helps you write the description that tells families who you are together.
I'm writing the description for my doula collective's group page. This is what families read when they land on our shared page — before they click through to any individual member. The voice should feel like "us," not "me." Before writing anything, interview me. Ask these questions one at a time: 1. What brought this group together? (Shared training, a shared town, a shared philosophy, a friendship that turned into a practice?) 2. How do we work together? (Do we share clients? Cover each other? Teach together? Just share a website?) 3. What's consistent across all of us — the thing a family could count on no matter which member they end up with? 4. What's different about us? (Languages spoken, specialties, service areas, backgrounds.) 5. Why would a family come to the group rather than picking a single doula? After I answer, write a group description that: - Uses "we" naturally without sounding like a corporate "about us" - Honors what's shared without flattening individual members into a template - Ends with an invitation — how families should approach the group (browse members, contact us, come to an event) - Stays under 250 words Avoid: "passionate team," "dedicated to," "committed to excellence," and any other phrase you'd find on a dental practice website.
In Memoriam Tribute
When a member of a group passes, the collective can publish a tribute page honoring them. These are some of the hardest things to write. This prompt is a scaffold — not a template — and everything it produces should be shaped by the people who knew and loved the person.
A note on grief. There is no right length, no required form, and no wrong way to do this. If the AI's draft doesn't feel right, throw it away. Sometimes a single paragraph written by someone who was there means more than anything a tool could produce.
A member of our doula collective has passed, and our group wants to publish a tribute page in her memory. Help me draft something honest and warm — the kind of thing her families, her colleagues, and her loved ones would feel good reading. Before writing anything, ask me these questions gently, one at a time: 1. Her name, and the name she went by with families. 2. How long was she part of this work, and part of our group? 3. What kind of doula was she? (Birth, postpartum, full-spectrum, educator?) 4. What did the families she supported say about her? What was her way? 5. What do we — her colleagues — want to remember about her? A story, a habit, a thing she always said? 6. Is there anything her family has asked us to include (or leave out)? 7. Is there a cause, organization, or ongoing effort people can support in her memory? After I answer, write a tribute that: - Opens with her name and a line that feels like her, not a generic condolence - Moves through her work, her way, and a specific memory if I shared one - Leaves room for grief without drowning in it - Closes with something that honors her — a line from her, a photo suggestion, or the cause/organization to support - Stays under 400 words unless more is needed Keep the language direct and human. No "she lost her battle with," no "gained her wings," no euphemism unless her family uses one. Let her be what she was.
Remember: AI gives you a draft. You make it real. Read everything out loud before you paste it in — if it doesn't sound like something you'd actually say, change it until it does.
And if you'd rather skip all this and just write from the heart? Even better.